618:
helped implement them. He later served on the Senior
Advisory Committee of the U.S. Public Health Service, helped create the Board of Hospitals, headed the New York City Commission on Health, and led a mayoral task force charged with raising standards for medical care, eradicating waste, closing obsolete facilities, and integrating municipal services with those provided by voluntary and private hospitals. He was a founder of the Health Insurance Plan of New York (HIP). His work to reshape the city's health services has influenced how millions of New Yorkers have received care over many decades
458:
traditional funding sources" while choosing to "no longer consider grants in the arts or medicine". In the wake of the "devastating impact that the financial crisis on the City's already ravaged neighborhoods" the
Foundation "redoubled its efforts" and commitment to "the young and the aged, the poor and minorities" as well as "people and groups working to improve their own communities". Grants were given to several neighborhood preservation groups including the Pratt Institute Center for Community and Environmental Development and the Association of Neighborhood Housing Developers.
38:
405:"the advancement of education and the arts". President David M. Heyman said that the Foundation's goal was "to identify new areas of need and... put financial resources to work on those particularly pressing problems whose solutions would promise the greatest good". He noted that the Foundation's strength lay in its ability to "withdraw from a field as rapidly as it entered" and that the Foundation was "relying on a ready public response to carry a good work forward on its own".
573:. From his base on Wall Street, he was the foremost Jewish leader in what later became known as the "Schiff era," grappling with all major issues and problems of the day, including the plight of Russian Jews under the tsar, American and international anti-Semitism, care of needy Jewish immigrants, and the rise of
412:
reported that over $ 500,000 in grants had been made toward mental health programs, over $ 100,000 toward medical research groups studying "eye surgery, the deaf, protein structure, and the effects of radiation on genetics", and over $ 140,000 toward medical and nursing education, including one group
396:
saying "We have always felt that the
Foundation should be a leader in sensing the trends of society, in helping develop the means of adjusting society to its new problems... The Foundation must probe, experiment and gamble on new social forms... We try to be objective... We try to keep mobile and not
479:
Today the New York
Foundation is known as "a preeminent funder of grassroots groups". Since its founding the New York Foundation has given over $ 133 million to "a wide range of people and groups working in extraordinary circumstances. At the time of their 100th Anniversary celebration in 2009, more
475:
During the 1980s the
Foundation's grantees included crisis intervention programs run by youth for youth, advocacy services for welfare recipients, and training classes for surrogate grandmothers working with disadvantaged mothers and their children. As always the Foundation was "guided by the belief
436:
In the 1970s the
Foundation began making grants to "organizations concerned with affordable housing the revitalization of low-income neighborhoods". These included the West Harlem Community Organization, East Harlem Interfaith, the Upper Park Avenue Community Association, United Neighborhood Houses,
315:
commended the
Foundation on its ability to take "risks... in fields that no other philanthropic organization cared to enter". Calling the $ 8,000,000 given by the Foundation in its first four decades "an investment", the Times cited the "successful" Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York (H.I.P.)
404:
reported that these grants were "the largest for any comparable period since the
Foundation was organized in 1909". More than $ 1,000,000 went to "agencies concerned with public health and medicine", more than $ 500,000 went to "social welfare groups", and almost $ 400,000 went to groups supporting
377:
In the 1960s the
Foundation had begun making grants outside of its "traditional" restriction of the five boroughs. These included grants made to "selected civil rights efforts" in the Southern United States in the belief that "the struggle for civil rights in the South would have an enormous impact
448:
described as "a forum for the discussion of the courts and social change the first of its kind in the country". 30 New York judges, along with several prominent social scientists conducted a series of seminars and discussion groups. The institute's founder, Dr. Blanche D. Blank, was quoted in the
304:
called an "enriched school program" designed "to see whether juvenile delinquency and maladjustment can be reduced by a closer integration of school and community agencies". 18 teachers in 3 Harlem schools worked alongside "psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers and recreation counselors" to
365:
Between 1958 and 1962 the New York
Foundation gave more than $ 4,700,000 in grants. 40.4% of those grants were given as "'seed money' to stimulate research and expansion and modernization of existing medical school and hospital and nursing service programs. The Foundation's President at the time,
972:
an American social psychologist, Kenneth B. Clark was best known and most highly regarded black social scientist in the United States. Clark achieved international recognition for his research on the social and psychological effects of racism and segregation. His seminal work as a psychologist β
471:
By 1984 the New York Foundation had distributed close to $ 44 million to an extraordinary variety of people and organizations. Challenging the status quo of the times, the Foundation was "willing to take calculated risks to assess local resources and mobilize and deliver them at the neighborhood
617:
nephew of the original donor and a trustee since 1912 was elected president of the foundation in 1937. Heyman was an investment banker with wide-ranging interests in health and public policy. In the late 1930s, he developed financing plans for public housing of the federal government, and later
457:
In 1975 New York City's fiscal crisis began. In that year the Foundation Board's Planning Committee reviewed and revised the policies of the foundation, reemphasizing the foundation's role as an "innovator, as the provider of seed money to new programs that would eventually be picked up by more
170:
One year later when the conditions stipulated in Heinsheimer's will had not been met (the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies would not be founded until 1917) the $ 1 million bequest reverted into the hands of his brother, Alfred M. Heinsheimer, who, in turn, donated the money to the New York
420:
By 1968 the Foundation was again focused on addressing the economic, housing, and educational needs of local communities in New York City. Grants made funded everything from a study of lead poisoning among children in the South Bronx to a program of financial assistance for students from
288:
In 1930 the Foundation paid the salaries of "key staff members" of the Governor's Commission to Investigate Prison Administration and Construction, which created programs for the education and rehabilitation of state prison occupants. Grants were made to both the city and state
428:
In 1969 the impending decentralization of the public school system led the Foundation to give grants to the Public Education Association as well as the New York Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, which educated lawyers on the relevant legislation.
319:
In another article published contemporaneously the Foundation is praised for "serving a function that governments themselves could not yet adequately perform" in particular because the Foundation "has shown great interest in the problems of minority groups".
181:
The Foundation was officially incorporated in April 1909, when the charter drafted by Henderson, Schiff, Seligman, and Warburg was enacted by the New York State Legislature and signed by the Governor, making it one of the oldest organizations of its kind.
432:
In addition grants were made to several experimental programs in the public school system, including three "innovative" community schools: East Harlem Block School, the Children's Community Workshop School, and the Lower East Side Action Project.
305:
help over 5,000 elementary and junior high school students "receive special guidance" in the hopes of "correcting existing evils that have baffled school leaders for many years" as well as "promis future dividends in the way of better citizens".
1071:
424:
At the same time, funding was given to support national programs whose work "affected problems of concern at the local level", such as the National Council on Hunger and Malnutrition and the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing.
284:
Seeking to give grants to groups that might "correct the condition which cause... social maladjustment", in the 1930s the Foundation was determined to "seek out neglected areas and tension points" where their resources would be most effective.
601:. He headed the firm of Seligman & Hellman. He was a trustee of numerous social reform organizations and chair of the Committee of Nine, which attempted reform of New York City's municipal government. He was also a member of the
449:
Times, saying "We would like to make available to trial judges the insights and finding of current scholarship and, at the same time, bring to the academic world some of the special knowledge and experience of the bench".
361:
to head a commission studying the deterioration of municipal hospitals in the city. This study, along with funding from the Foundation itself, led to the founding of the Task Force on the Organization of Medical Services.
1296:
374:, saying "We are far from the day when private philanthropy can write off medicine as a piece of finished business... there is all too often a dismal gap between purse research and the practical application of it".
350:, an organization committed to educating and training young Puerto Ricans so that they might achieve leadership roles in their community, was initially funded in part by grants from the New York Foundation.
241:
tested and proved the superiority of an alternative to institutionalized care by placing orphans with foster parents in private homes. This program was made possible in part by funds from the Foundation.
178:, Isaac Seligman, and Paul Warburg in order that they might "distribute... resources for altruistic purposes, charitable, benevolent, educational, or otherwise, within the United States of America".
316:
as an example of the Foundation's ability to produce "return in social gain" and wrote "Probably no philanthropic organization ever received more for its money than the New York Foundation".
213:
227:
had personally requested funding from the Foundation for "an investigation of the Negro Public Schools in the United States" as well as for the "Bureau of Legal Redress for Colored People".
1067:
260:(CMCC) surveyed the need for medical care in the United States while the Committee for Mental Hygiene analyzed state mental hospitals, then notorious for their "secrecy and ignorance".
198:
so that they might provide low-income families who were unable to afford "hospitals beds" with visiting nurse service. This groundbreaking program led directly to the foundation of the
413:
supporting the "re-education of foreign physicians to meet state examinations". A $ 50,000 grant to the Hospital Research and Education Trust received special attention in the press.
1136:
is professor and vice chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Director of the Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center. She is the president of
274:
167:, died. In his will Heinsheimer bequeathed $ 1 million to "the Jewish charities of New York" under the condition that they choose to federate within a year of his death.
950:
385:, an "experimental, drug-free rehabilitation program" in California. This was followed by grants given to similar "therapeutic communities" in and around New York City.
1886:
1266:
220:
2284:
1861:
821:
762:
250:
In 1925 Lionel J. Salomon bequeathed $ 2.4 million to the Foundation in his will. He specified that the money go toward funding groups aiding children and elderly.
2279:
977:β contributed to the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that declared school segregation unconstitutional. Dr. Clark was the first African American to serve on the
973:
including his 1940s experiments using dolls to study children's attitudes about race and his expert witness testimony in Briggs v. Elliott, a case rolled into
937:
521:
160:
516:. In addition to establishing the New York Foundation, Heinsheimer was a chief benefactor of the Hospital for Joint Diseases. He donated his summer home in
417:
wrote that the program "promises the first important break-through in decades in reducing mounting costs of hospital care... for the chronically-disabled".
932:
bought the paper at the age of 38. She was also an active supporter of parks, environmental conservation, education, libraries and the welfare of animals
509:
421:
disadvantaged urban areas and from fuel cooperatives for tenant-managed buildings to the advanced training of minority personnel in various professions.
2203:
1260:
2137:
2099:
1211:. She has also worked for the Osborne Association, Samaritan Village in Queens, Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center, and Kings County Hospital
1734:
263:
In 1934 the Foundation funded a program which helped scholars forced out of Germany by Nazi persecution get jobs at leading American universities.
2119:
281:, chaired the mayoral committee which established the Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York, a model for prepaid health care systems to come.
1776:
1461:
577:. He also became the director of many important corporations, including the National City Bank of New York, Equitable Life Assurance Society,
293:, as well as the Social Service Bureau for Magistrate's Court, which provided counseling for criminals with "unfortunate social backgrounds".
191:
wrote an article about Alfred Heinsheimer's decision in which the Foundation's significance as a "non-sectarian" organization was emphasized.
2294:
266:
In 1935 $ 3,000 given by the New York Foundation to the New York City Bureau of Laboratories led to the development of a vaccine preventing
1549:
1148:. She was named one of the Best Doctors in NY numerous times, and listed in America's Top Doctors and Guide to America's Top Pediatricians
346:
The Foundation also began giving more grants to groups serving needy children, African-Americans, and the growing Puerto Rican population.
994:
343:'s building fundβthe original objective of which was to make the performing arts more affordable to a larger segment of the population.
277:
received funds from the Foundation in order that they might "experiment in voluntary prepaid medical care". The Foundation's president,
2289:
1564:
643:. He was a leader in the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee raising funds for European Jews facing poverty after World War I
468:
In 1978 the New York Foundation once again began making start-up grant to "new untested programs... involving a high element of risk".
308:
In the aftermath of a series of race riots that occurred in Harlem in 1944, the Foundation helped fund the Mayor's Committee on Unity.
1880:
1455:
946:
569:
banker and philanthropist, who helped finance, among many other things, the Japanese military efforts against Tsarist Russia in the
1953:
1327:
770:
1813:
1063:
803:
in New York State. She was also the first president of the Carrie Chapman Catt Memorial Fund (later the Overseas Education Fund)
17:
1619:
1534:
1413:
257:
1764:
1691:
1388:
1290:
339:
In 1954 the Foundation's trustees began approving grants to groups focusing on the arts and recreation with support going to
1898:
1782:
1685:
1503:
256:
In 1930 the Foundation financed studies which "served to focus attention on serious yet previously ignored problems". The
1837:
1407:
1006:
661:
1910:
1831:
1819:
1794:
1722:
1667:
1558:
1515:
1449:
1370:
1358:
1254:
657:
199:
216:
received funds from the Foundation for a "protective league" for "girls... working in factories, offices, and shops".
1959:
1649:
1315:
1039:
552:, had been founded in 1798 and would last into the Hitler era, when it was forcibly confiscated in 1938 by non-Jews
1752:
1485:
1309:
978:
2263:
1941:
1788:
1521:
1204:
1189:
1087:
1176:
was with Bloomberg Philanthropies and helped manage their philanthropy program for London, Europe and Asia at
253:
In 1929, ten years after his brother's death, Alfred M. Heimshiemer died, leaving the Foundation $ 6 million.
1613:
1491:
1376:
1137:
1022:
437:
and other programs committed to management training, tenant organizing, and housing rehabilitation services.
2241:
Ferretti, Fred "Lack of Funds Scaling Down July 4 Old New York Festival" The New York Times June 9th, 1976.
1843:
1540:
1419:
1382:
1321:
857:
548:, where he served as vice-governor in 1917 and 1918. Warburg's family bank, M. M. Warburg & Company in
324:
reported that at the time of the Foundation's fortieth anniversary their endowment was worth $ 11,000,000.
2155:
1855:
1697:
1637:
1631:
1431:
1103:
974:
889:
1971:
1570:
1278:
1208:
853:
2020:
465:
listed the Foundation as one of the largest funders of the city's Bicentennial Old New York Festival.
1987:
1935:
1710:
1673:
1643:
1588:
1473:
1272:
290:
1983:
1184:
as the first NYC Commissioner of the Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs. In 1996, Bhojwani founded
1740:
1352:
1185:
1123:
1002:
914:
765:, and served as a university trustee from 1944 to 1959. Sulzberger also served as a trustee of the
578:
909:. He was the author of two books, Our Plundered Planet (1948), and The Limits of the Earth (1953)
1923:
1746:
1479:
1364:
1248:
640:
602:
476:
that community residents had the will if not the means to make a difference in their own lives".
238:
195:
139:
880:
who was born in 1909, was a tour de force in American science. He discussed science policy with
1867:
1594:
1509:
1425:
1227:
1163:
for twenty years. She is currently an adjunct lecturer at CUNY's Graduate School of Journalism
1059:
892:, and served as a key boardroom figure in nearly 100 medical schools, museums and universities
844:
800:
766:
743:
537:
1091:
861:
735:
589:
545:
231:
135:
61:
2299:
1965:
1947:
1661:
1625:
1437:
1010:
817:
715:
694:
517:
400:
Between 1956 and 1957, the Foundation gave over $ 2,000,000 in grants to 140 institutions.
358:
1140:'s board and chaired the National Advisory Committee on Children and Terrorism. She was a
8:
1904:
1582:
1443:
1394:
808:
758:
598:
513:
267:
164:
109:
773:'s Gold Medal Award in recognition of outstanding contributions to the City of New York
2104:
1141:
1119:
1018:
955:
923:
752:
570:
297:
186:
1825:
1800:
1679:
1467:
1339:
1181:
1115:
1111:
1043:
872:
702:
664:. He was a pioneer in the field of public health, particularly public health nursing
1892:
1770:
964:
897:
632:
623:
224:
90:
2193:
Kaplan, Morris "Charitable Fund Marks 50th Year" The New York Times April 5, 1959.
581:, and the Union Pacific Railroad. In many of his interests he was associated with
440:
In 1973 a $ 10,000 grant from the New York Foundation went to the founding of the
1728:
1333:
1055:
1051:
985:
885:
881:
828:
738:
as the first Jewish representative to the Advisory Committee on Jewish Refugees.
711:
690:
609:
557:
528:
389:
367:
354:
278:
175:
57:
1929:
1655:
1497:
1223:
1099:
1095:
1047:
1030:
998:
929:
686:
648:
541:
441:
340:
2273:
1849:
1168:
1160:
1078:
726:
682:
669:
582:
566:
143:
86:
37:
1758:
1576:
1284:
1177:
1145:
1014:
719:
678:
636:
65:
888:, conceived the idea of a presidential science adviser, helped launch the
689:. An art collector, Sachs left the investment firm in 1914 and joined the
480:
than half of the foundation's grants went to community organizing groups.
223:, "a newly formed organization" whose Director of Publicity and Research,
2232:"Forum for Judges Set Up at Hunter" The New York Times November 23, 1973.
1984:"Small, Focused New York Foundation Should Serve as Grant-Making Model"
1716:
865:
837:
785:
1230:
for ten years and served as it deputy director from 1997 through 1999
332:
In 1951 the Foundation funded research that led to the development of
2223:"Fund Here Grants Record 2 Million" The New York Times July 29, 1958.
2181:"40 Years of Giving Renewed by Fund" The New York Times March 1, 1951
906:
333:
1192:
and on the advisory committee for the Charles H. Revson Fellowship
734:
banker, was head of the Joint Distribution Group, and served under
209:
so that they might establish a similar "visiting teacher" service.
1226:
and was a founder of Hispanics in Philanthropy. She worked at the
574:
549:
382:
1013:
and the founder of two influential national U.S. organizations:
816:
philanthropist and benefactor of the arts, was a founder of the
799:
a political and civic volunteer. She served as President of the
761:'s Jewish Advisory Board and served on the board of what became
1607:
1072:
Human Rights Award of the International League for Human Rights
347:
1094:
for several years. He has served on numerous boards including
953:. As an associate editor, he wrote a weekly medical column in
1107:
1086:
served as executive vice president-Global Communications for
536:
banker and an economist and was instrumental in creating the
2172:"Diversified Philanthropy" The New York Times March 1, 1951.
311:
The Foundation celebrated its fortieth anniversary in 1949.
2089:"75th Anniversary Annual Report" New York Foundation. 1984.
905:
a leading conservationist and chairman of the board of the
205:
One year later, in 1911 the Foundation gave a grant to the
1267:
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
1050:
affiliate in 1969. He also served as Acting United States
221:
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
194:
That same year the Foundation gave a $ 4,100 grant to the
174:
The New York Foundation was created by Edward Henderson,
945:
the father of rehabilitation medicine. Dr. Rusk founded
234:
also received a grant from the Foundation in that year.
122:
75:
Start-up Organizations, Community Organizing, Advocacy
2256:
159:
The New York Foundation was established in 1909 when
1545:
1953: Memorial Center for Cancer and Allied Diseases
685:. His mother was the daughter of the firm's founder
296:
In 1943 the New York Foundation cooperated with the
2266:Manuscripts and Archives, New York Public Library.
1297:New York Infirmary Indigent for Women and Children
1261:Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
1054:. Among Mr. Morse's awards were the United States
852:Philanthropist and financier, former Chair of the
788:magazine, and a former health insurance executive
408:Among the grants awarded to medical institutions,
836:investment banker who served as President of the
2285:Community foundations based in the United States
2271:
381:In 1963 the New York Foundation made a grant to
142:supporting community organizing and advocacy in
2280:Non-profit organizations based in New York City
2018:
1777:Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund
1462:University of Michigan School of Public Health
1735:Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
185:In an article published on November 5, 1910,
1550:Polytechnic Institute of New York University
378:on the lives of the city's black citizens".
2166:
1236:
995:Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
1565:National Association for Retarded Children
1001:, where he presided over the launching of
631:a member of the Warburg banking family of
2219:
2217:
2148:
2085:
2083:
2081:
2079:
2077:
2075:
2073:
2071:
2069:
2067:
2065:
2063:
2061:
2059:
2057:
2055:
1456:Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York
947:Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine
512:, had a degree in civil engineering from
388:On the Foundation's fiftieth anniversary
2189:
2187:
2053:
2051:
2049:
2047:
2045:
2043:
2041:
2039:
2037:
2035:
1954:New York Lawyers for the Public Interest
1554:1954: Institute of Public Administration
1328:Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
771:The Hundred Year Association of New York
769:from 1939 to 1957. In 1954, he received
2014:
2012:
2010:
2008:
2006:
2004:
1064:Order of Merit of the Republic of Italy
757:from 1935 to 1961. In 1929, he founded
693:. He was also a founding member of the
660:and headed the Welfare Division of the
14:
2272:
2264:New York Foundation records, 1909β2009
2214:
2130:
2092:
1881:Chinese Staff and Workers' Association
1620:Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital
1535:National Association for Mental Health
1414:Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital
258:Committee on the Costs of Medical Care
56:Alfred Heinsheimer, Edward Henderson,
27:1909 charitable foundation, NY, NY, US
2226:
2204:"Foundation Cites 4.7 Million in Aid"
2184:
2175:
2138:"Paralysis Vaccine is 85% Successful"
2112:
2100:"Gives Away Million Brother Left Him"
2032:
1765:United Presbyterian Church in the USA
1692:Southern Student Organizing Committee
1389:New York City Department of Hospitals
1291:Teachers College, Columbia University
1207:and former executive director of the
2295:1909 establishments in New York City
2235:
2001:
1899:Legal Information for Families Today
1814:St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center
1783:Urban Academy Laboratory High School
1686:National Welfare Rights Organization
1504:New York State Psychiatric Institute
714:investment banking firm β served as
336:, the first anti-tuberculosis drug.
214:The New York Prohibition Association
2196:
1838:Albert Einstein College of Medicine
1408:New York University Medical College
1007:Corporation for Public Broadcasting
884:, became a consultant to President
681:, a partner in the investment firm
662:Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
483:
24:
1911:Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
1832:Teachers and Writers Collaborative
1820:New York University Medical Center
1723:Floating Foundation of Photography
1668:American Social Health Association
1516:New York City Department of Health
1450:Visiting Nurse Service of New York
1371:American Friends Service Committee
1359:American Public Health Association
1255:Neurological Institute of New York
928:beginning in 1896 when her father
658:American Public Health Association
444:Institute for Trial Judges, which
397:committed for too long a time..."
200:Visiting Nurse Service of New York
25:
2311:
2290:Organizations established in 1909
2248:
2120:"German Scholars Get Places Here"
1960:Movement for Justice in el Barrio
1316:National Tuberculosis Association
1188:. She serves on the board of the
1159:the associate managing editor at
1122:, National Conference Board, and
1068:Order of Merit of Labor of Brazil
1040:International Labour Organization
784:publisher and principal owner of
520:to the hospital; the site is now
1753:Center for Constitutional Rights
1486:American Psychiatric Association
1203:is the president and CEO of the
959:that appeared from 1946 to 1969
36:
1977:
1795:National Women's Health Network
1090:, and was the president of the
1009:. He was also President of the
979:New York State Board of Regents
219:Two grants were awarded to the
1942:New York Civil Liberties Union
1789:New York Civil Liberties Union
1650:Blythedale Children's Hospital
1522:American Academy of Pediatrics
1088:Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc.
697:and donated its first drawing
13:
1:
1994:
1614:American Diabetes Association
1492:Harvard University Law School
1377:American Hospital Association
1023:Presidential Medal of Freedom
1844:Community Healthcare Network
1541:New York Academy of Medicine
1420:New York Academy of Medicine
1383:Maternity Center Association
1322:Peabody College for Teachers
858:Institute for Advanced Study
452:
327:
245:
207:Public Education Association
163:, a partner in banking firm
154:
7:
1698:Center for Community Change
1638:Congress of Racial Equality
1632:Operation Crossroads Africa
1432:American Prison Association
1205:New York Women's Foundation
1190:New York Women's Foundation
1104:Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.
1038:as director general of the
975:Brown v. Board of Education
890:National Science Foundation
597:a banker and a graduate of
275:Medical Society of New York
10:
2316:
1972:Brandworkers International
1571:Clarke School for the Deaf
1279:New York Heart Association
1173:2002β2004, 2007 β present
1138:The Children's Aid Society
854:Metropolitan Museum of Art
149:
1988:Chronicle of Philanthropy
1936:Sylvia Rivera Law Project
1711:Harlem School of the Arts
1674:Southern Regional Council
1644:Maimonides Medical Center
1589:Southern Regional Council
1474:United Negro College Fund
951:World Rehabilitation Fund
579:Wells Fargo & Company
291:Department of Corrections
230:The then-recently formed
118:
108:
100:
79:
71:
52:
44:
35:
2022:Taking Risks That Matter
2019:Barboza, Steven (2009).
1916:
1887:United Community Centers
1873:
1806:
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1237:Notable grantees by year
1186:South Asian Youth Action
1124:National Park Foundation
1005:and the creation of the
915:Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger
793:Lucille Koshland Heming
710:son of a founder of the
641:Kuhn, Loeb & Company
140:non-profit organizations
2156:"A Good School Program"
1924:Sustainable South Bronx
1862:New York AIDS Coalition
1856:Lutheran Medical Center
1747:Voter Education Project
1480:American Cancer Society
1365:Little Red School House
1249:Henry Street Settlement
1209:Gay Men's Health Crisis
822:American Ballet Company
820:, and a founder of the
763:Columbia-Barnard Hillel
603:Ethical Culture Society
239:Home for Hebrew Infants
196:Henry Street Settlement
18:The New York Foundation
1868:Medicare Rights Center
1595:Hamilton-Madison House
1510:Knickerbocker Hospital
1426:Harvard Medical School
1273:Travelers' Aid Society
1228:Rockefeller Foundation
1060:French Legion of Honor
845:J. Richardson Dilworth
801:League of Women Voters
767:Rockefeller Foundation
744:Arthur Hays Sulzberger
538:Federal Reserve System
502:Alfred M. Heinsheimer
138:which gives grants to
1092:National Urban League
736:Franklin D. Roosevelt
546:Federal Reserve Board
544:appointed him to the
232:National Urban League
136:charitable foundation
62:Isaac Newton Seligman
1966:Picture the Homeless
1948:Esperanza del Barrio
1662:Judson Health Center
1626:Accion International
1438:Menninger Foundation
1310:Mount Sinai Hospital
1011:Carnegie Corporation
938:Howard A. Rusk, M.D.
818:Museum of Modern Art
716:Governor of New York
695:Museum of Modern Art
522:Bayswater State Park
359:Robert F. Wagner Jr.
165:Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
161:Louis A. Heinsheimer
2210:. October 24, 1963.
2144:. January 25, 1935.
2126:. January 28, 1934.
2108:. November 5, 1910.
1905:Audre Lorde Project
1583:Lenox Hill Hospital
1444:Goodwill Industries
1395:University in Exile
1180:. She served under
809:Edward M.M. Warburg
778:George G. Kirstein
759:Columbia University
639:, and a partner in
599:Columbia University
514:Columbia University
357:was asked by Mayor
268:infantile paralysis
132:New York Foundation
32:
31:New York Foundation
2208:The New York Times
2162:. October 3, 1943.
2160:The New York Times
2142:The New York Times
2124:The New York Times
2105:The New York Times
1222:is a professor at
1153:Janice C. Simpson
1142:White House Fellow
1130:Angela Diaz, M.D.
1120:Drucker Foundation
1042:, he accepted the
1021:. He received the
1019:Independent Sector
956:The New York Times
925:The New York Times
754:The New York Times
571:Russo-Japanese War
463:The New York Times
446:The New York Times
415:The New York Times
410:The New York Times
402:The New York Times
394:The New York Times
372:The New York Times
322:The New York Times
313:The New York Times
302:The New York Times
298:Board of Education
188:The New York Times
30:
1826:Outward Bound USA
1801:New Ballet School
1680:Legal Aid Society
1468:Sydenham Hospital
1340:Howard University
1234:
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1182:Michael Bloomberg
1116:Legal Aid Society
1112:Howard University
1044:Nobel Peace Prize
873:William T. Golden
703:Herbert H. Lehman
656:president of the
635:, the brother of
590:Isaac N. Seligman
510:Louis Heinsheimer
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633:Hamburg, Germany
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1056:Legion of Merit
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886:Harry S. Truman
882:Albert Einstein
829:George D. Woods
712:Lehman Brothers
691:Fogg Art Museum
610:David M. Heyman
558:Jacob H. Schiff
529:Paul M. Warburg
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1995:References
1717:Jazzmobile
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1133:1994β2002
1083:1983β1985
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907:Bronx Zoo
862:Princeton
453:1975β2010
353:In 1958,
334:isoniazid
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246:1920β1949
155:1909β1919
110:Endowment
1070:and the
1046:for the
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1003:Medicare
949:and the
856:and the
472:level".
461:In 1976
212:In 1912
91:New York
87:New York
80:Location
1146:Clinton
575:Zionism
550:Hamburg
383:Synanon
150:History
123:NYF.org
119:Website
53:Founder
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1678:1968:
1672:1967:
1666:1967:
1660:1967:
1654:1967:
1648:1966:
1642:1966:
1636:1966:
1630:1965:
1624:1965:
1618:1963:
1612:1963:
1608:ASPIRA
1606:1961:
1593:1959:
1587:1958:
1581:1958:
1575:1957:
1569:1957:
1563:1955:
1557:1954:
1548:1954:
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1514:1949:
1508:1947:
1502:1946:
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1478:1945:
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1466:1944:
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1454:1944:
1448:1944:
1442:1943:
1436:1943:
1430:1941:
1424:1940:
1418:1940:
1412:1940:
1406:1940:
1393:1939:
1387:1935:
1381:1933:
1375:1933:
1369:1933:
1363:1932:
1357:1932:
1351:1931:
1338:1927:
1332:1923:
1326:1922:
1320:1922:
1314:1921:
1308:1920:
1295:1916:
1289:1913:
1283:1912:
1277:1912:
1271:1911:
1265:1911:
1259:1911:
1253:1910:
1247:1910:
1066:, the
1062:, the
1058:, the
348:ASPIRA
101:Method
64:, and
2026:(PDF)
1917:2000s
1874:1990s
1807:1980s
1704:1970s
1601:1960s
1528:1950s
1401:1940s
1346:1930s
1303:1920s
1242:1910s
1108:NYNEX
491:Name
134:is a
72:Focus
1017:and
993:was
130:The
48:1909
2276::
2216:^
2206:.
2186:^
2158:.
2140:.
2122:.
2102:.
2034:^
2003:^
1986:,
1118:,
1114:,
1110:,
1106:,
1102:,
1098:,
864:,
860:,
270:.
202:.
146:.
89:,
60:,
2028:.
20:)
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