THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION
2012 REPORT TO THE COMMUNITY | 2011 ANNUAL REPORT
NOURISHING
OUR COMMUNITY
Inside front and back covers: “1,000 Flowers� mosaic wall at The Enrichment Center
NOURISHING
OUR COMMUNITY
WHEN A COMMUNITY is thoughtfully focused on its own nourishment,
actively supporting ideas, ambitions, and initiatives that help strengthen and grow the community for the benefit of everyone, its residents are more likely to live in a spirit of trust and mutual respect. When people believe their community is serious about becoming healthier, and that they have a stake in its bright future, they are better able to see and value the big picture. This is how sustainable progress happens. Proper nourishment is about making smart decisions every day, living with balance and following a plan.
Yes, this takes time. But consider this: however long it takes to nourish, it takes exponentially longer to counteract the damage of not nourishing. We are fortunate to live in a community brimming with nourishing ideas: Growing diverse leadership. Expanding cooperation. Catalyzing positive change. Broadening access to healthcare. Invigorating the arts. Encouraging the local food movement.
The Winston-Salem Foundation is privileged to be involved on an ongoing basis in this essential work.
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YEA R IN R EVIEW
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N OU R ISH IN G OU R CO M M UNI TY
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G R AN TS
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FUN D S AN D D ON ORS
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FIN A N CIA L OVER VIE W
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FOU N D A TION COMMI TTE E S
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STA FF
MISSION:
OUR
To invest in our community by making philanthropy and its benefits available to all. THE FOUNDATION’S EFFORTS ARE INSPIRED BY FOUR CORE VALUES:
GENEROSITY – To support sharing in all its forms, linking resources with ideas that improve community life.
INCLUSION – T o embrace the contributions of individuals from diverse backgrounds, beliefs, experiences, and perspectives.
INTEGRITY – To operate with respect, honesty, accountability, and fairness to all.
EXCELLENCE – To aspire to the highest standards in everything we do.
MESSAGE
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AKE A LOOK at this report’s cover. You’ll see a small bounty of
string beans from the West Salem Community Garden, located on the edge of downtown, an oasis just blocks away from bustling Business 40. Robust with vegetables in the summer heat, this garden is tended by a diverse group of residents who take pride in their neighborhood, in their city, and in nourishing both the minds and bodies of others. And where does the Foundation fit into this picture? One connection is that recent Community Grants have funded a staff position at Cooperative Extension Service to nurture the exploding public interest in developing community gardens just like this one. Community gardens are helping with broad issues that Foundation grantmaking is addressing every day, including health and hunger, but they are also supporting valuable social capital-building, which we also think is very important. Here you’ll find neighbors of diverse races, religions, and socioeconomic backgrounds, working together, and getting to know each other, all the while growing bushels and bushels of produce to both keep and share. We’d like to encourage that experience throughout Forsyth County and beyond! The first community foundation in the world was established in Cleveland in 1914, and Col. Francis Fries made sure that Winston-Salem was not far behind when he established The Winston-Salem Foundation in 1919 with an initial donation of $1,000. Fast forward 93 years: in 2011 the Foundation made over $20.8 million in charitable grants — more than $2.1 million of which were directed through our Community Grants program, which provides grants to organizations such as Cooperative Extension. These programs are having a positive long-term impact on our community — improving lives in areas as varied as arts and culture, community and economic development, education, health, and human services.
TO THE COMMUNITY
During the 2011–2012 school year, the Foundation helped more than 550 local students achieve their dreams of higher education with more than $1 million in student aid — and for the third consecutive year at that level. Today we have over 1,300 funds established by charitable individuals, families, businesses, and organizations that help support all of this important work. Just as important, however, is an even broader role that we play. The Foundation provides independent, objective, and visionary community leadership, by convening partners, resources, and ideas to create positive change in Winston-Salem. We help identify current and emerging issues and serve as a catalyst of collaboration, inviting individuals, governmental agencies, corporations, and community nonprofits to the table — helping to move our community forward — together. Please know that The Winston-Salem Foundation is your community foundation — join with us as we nourish our community for many years to come!
KAY D. LORD
SCOTT F. WIERMAN
Chair
President
The Winston-Salem Foundation Committee
The Winston-Salem Foundation
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OVERVIEW [ 3 ]
YEAR IN REVIEW
2012
COMMUNITY LUNCHEON
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RECORD CROWD of almost 1,000 community members gathered
on May 2 at the Benton Convention Center for the 2012 Community Luncheon, which highlighted the growing local food movement. Keynote speaker Dr. Nancy Creamer, director of the Center for Environmental Farming Systems and distinguished professor at N.C. State University, spoke about the movement’s positive potential impact on economic development, health, social capital, and access to locally grown food in our community. More than 70% of the luncheon menu’s ingredients were intentionally sourced from North Carolina, giving attendees an example of how making deliberate choices to support regional farmers can make eating healthier, while also positively impacting the greater economy. During the program, John Burress was presented with the 2012 Winston-Salem Foundation Award, and five 2012 ECHO Award recipients were announced: Adventure Sail, El Cambio, CHANGE Member
Network, Forsyth Humane Society’s New Leash on Life program, and Dirk Robertson. The luncheon culminated with a community update from Forsyth County Manager Dudley Watts, who described the local food study currently being conducted by Forsyth Futures and funded by Forsyth County and the Foundation. Study results should be available in December 2012. Our appreciation goes to Cooperative Extension Service of Forsyth County for their participation in the luncheon program and for growing the robust plants that served as centerpieces and that were offered to attendees to share with others or plant in their own gardens. Many thanks to our 72 generous table sponsors who signed on to be Community Investors, Community Builders, and Community Supporters — their support allowed the Foundation to provide greater community access to the luncheon, which is always our goal. Mark your calendar for next year’s luncheon on Wednesday, May 1, 2013!
Forsyth County Manager Dudley Watts
Keynote speaker Dr. Nancy Creamer the winston-salem foundation annual report
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2012
AWARDS
THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION AWARD
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HIS AWARD, THE FOUNDATION’S HIGHEST HONOR,
is given to individuals who demonstrate the Foundation’s values of generosity, excellence, inclusion, and integrity, along with visionary leadership in a community activity or on behalf of a community organization. The 2012 Winston-Salem Foundation Award was given to John Burress, who has been a supporter, advocate, and resource for much of Winston-Salem’s nonprofit community for decades. John highly values excellence in education, and he has recently focused much support toward programs for students with learning differences.
trating the recent merger of Triad Academy into a division of Summit School. He was also a key advocate for the establishment of ABC of NC Child Development Center, which now provides services for over 100 children with autism in our community, most of whom could not otherwise afford quality behavioral interventions. John has spent many days at the North Carolina legislature to encourage increased aid for autism as well as insurance coverage for autistic children. This award was selected by a committee comprised of members of various Foundation committees as well as the community-at-large. This very well-deserved recognition comes with a $10,000 Foundation grant, which John designated to the Augustine Project for Literacy and to the WinstonSalem Street School.
THE ECHO AWARDS
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John Burress (center) with Drew Hancock and Scott Wierman
John has served as a steady and dependable advocate of Triad Academy, a community resource for children with dyslexia and reading and writing disabilities. John led the effort to triple Triad Academy’s financial aid budget, and he was instrumental in orches[6] YEAR IN REVIEW
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STABLISHED IN 2001, the ECHO Awards honor individuals and
groups who are connecting and building trust in our community. ECHO Award recipients have created bridging social capital by building relationships among diverse people, thus contributing to a safer, stronger, and more inclusive community. The 2012 ECHO Awards were jointly presented by the Foundation and the ECHO Network at the May Community Luncheon. Congratulations to award recipients Adventure Sail, El Cambio, CHANGE Member Network, Forsyth Humane Society’s New Leash on Life program, and Dirk Robertson for uniquely connecting people and building trust — and for making our community a better place for all. The ECHO Awards were selected by a committee representing the Foundation, the ECHO Network, and the community-at-large. Recipients received $1,000 to grant to a nonprofit organization of their choice. For more information on social capital-building in our community, go to www.echonetwork.org.
2012 ECHO AWARD RECIPIENTS Forsyth Humane Society’s New Leash on Life program Robert Leak III; Natasha Gore; Mark Uren, Forsyth Humane Society Executive Director; past participant DeWarren Carter; and Drew Hancock
CHANGE Member Network Robert Leak III, 2009 ECHO Award Recipient; Natasha Gore, ECHO Network Executive Director; Ryan Eller, Mary Lynn Wigodsky, Janet Owen, Hobart Jones, and Mustafah Abdullah of CHANGE; and Drew Hancock, Foundation Committee Vice-Chair
Adventure Sail Robert Leak III; Natasha Gore; Karen Vallecillo-Pereira of YMCA of Northwest NC; Chase Moore, program participant; Fred and Dean Clifford, volunteers; and Drew Hancock
Dirk Robertson Robert Leak III; Natasha Gore; Dirk Robertson; and Drew Hancock
El Cambio Natasha Gore; Robert Leak III; Moises Serrano, Wooten Gough, Giovanna Hurtado, and Uriel Alberto of El Cambio; and Drew Hancock
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YEAR IN REVIEW
THE
LEGACY SOCIETY DINNER
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N NOVEMBER 2011, the Foundation hosted 225 Legacy Society
members at historic WinMock at Kinderton, once one of the largest dairy farms in North Carolina. The evening included conversation, dinner, and Foundation highlights, as well as remarks from representatives of, and participants in, two programs that were past Community Grant recipients. Attendees heard how these grants have helped the Shepherd’s Center of Greater WinstonSalem’s Congregational Nurse and Health Ministry program, which promotes holistic health in Forsyth County faith communities, as well as the Digital Connectors program, which provides technology and Internet access to low-resource communities. The Legacy Society honors individuals and couples who have established permanent endowments in their lifetimes or who have made a charitable bequest or other planned gift of $10,000 or more. Their generosity greatly contributes to the quality of life in our community, both now and into the future.
Skip and Beth Boswell
Judy and Bill Watson
Nancy Lide with Jim and Mary Allen Martin
Legacy Society members enjoying dinner and conversation
Mary and W.T. Jenkins
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SCHOLARSHIP CELEBRATION
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ORE THAN 200 STUDENTS AND DONORS gathered at
Winston-Salem State University in August 2012 to honor 2012-2013 Foundation scholarship recipients and the donors who made their scholarships possible. The breakfast also celebrated the third consecutive year in which over $1 million in student aid was granted to more than 500 students. The program included a special welcome from Michelle Cook, WinstonSalem State University’s Vice Chancellor for University Advancement. Dr. Amber Baker, principal of Kimberley Park Elementary School, spoke about her educational journey and the support she received from the Foundation’s Kate B. Reynolds Scholarship. Students and donors also heard from Reese Wells, a Nell and Spencer Waggoner Scholarship recipient and a rising senior at UNC-Chapel Hill, as he gave his thoughts on the scholarship, his college experience, and his future aspirations.
Guidance Counselor Dexter Felder of the Early College of Forsyth with student Mario Castro
Maclyn Powell with scholarship recipient Eun-Ju Seo
Annette Lynch of the Foundation with speakers Dr. Amber Baker, Reese Wells, and Michelle Cook
Bill and Cynthia Tessien with scholarship recipient Joshua Ung
A record crowd enjoys the Scholarship Celebration Breakfast at Winston-Salem State University
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BROADENING
PHILANTHROPY
BLACK PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE
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HE BLACK PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE (BPI) builds philan-
thropic relationships in the African-American community through both education and engagement. BPI supports issues that impact the black community, with a special focus on education, financial literacy, and parenting and life-skills training. In October 2011, the BPI advisory committee hosted a country buffet fundraiser at the home of Janet and Butch Wheeler. More than 165 people attended, and in addition to wonderful food and fellowship, the crowd heard directly from previous BPI grantees about how the initiative had positively impacted their programs.
BPI Committee members Tony Burton, Alison Ashe-Card, and Rev. Donald Jenkins with representatives from grantees Ashley Elementary School, Forsyth Technical Community College, and Kimberley Park Elementary School (not pictured: Winston-Salem State University)
Food and fellowship were enjoyed at BPI’s October 2011 fundraising dinner
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In February 2012, at a breakfast event at Winston-Salem State University, BPI announced four education grants totaling $17,544. Grant recipients were: Ashley Elementary School, Forsyth Technical Community College, Kimberley Park Elementary School, and WinstonSalem State University, for programs supporting African Americans in the area of education. Over the course of the past four years, the Black Philanthropy Initiative has provided over $83,000 in program grants to local nonprofits in the areas of education, financial literacy, and parenting and life-skills training. BPI announced its fifth grant cycle in late summer 2012, requesting proposals for programming focusing on financial literacy in the black community, and grant recipients will be announced in early 2013. For more information on BPI, go to the “Community Leadership” section of www.wsfoundation.org.
THE WOMEN’S FUND OF WINSTON-SALEM
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N 2011, THE WOMEN’S FUND launched a series of events known
as the Social Change Exchange. The Social Change Exchange is an occasional forum where Women’s Fund members, grantee partners, and the community can discuss the issues raised in The Fund’s groundbreaking report — Through A Gender Lens: The Economic Security of Women and Girls in Forsyth County and other pressing social issues impacting women and girls in our community. Topics at these events included: The Intersections of Race, Gender and Poverty; Our Community’s Childcare Crisis; and Teen Pregnancy. In 2011, The Women’s Fund was featured in the Women’s Funding Network’s report Twelve Women’s Funds in the South: Common Context, Collective. The report represents a collaborative effort to present the common context and collective impact of 12 women’s funds working to address the critical issues affecting women in the southern United States. At their annual luncheon in November 2011, The Women’s Fund awarded $108,856 in grants to six local nonprofit organizations to address the economic security of women and girls in Forsyth County, and they also
2011 grant recipients at The Women’s Fund luncheon
set aside $20,000 for a teen pregnancy prevention mini-grant program. The teen pregnancy prevention mini-grants were awarded to nine organizations in May 2012 following the release of the Issue Brief entitled Teen Pregnancy and Parenting: Community Concern, Community Solutions. More information about The Women’s Fund may be accessed at www.womensfundws.org.
YOUTH GRANTMAKERS IN ACTION
books for Cook Elementary HE 2011–2012 SCHOOL YEAR brought with it an enthusiastic new School; group of Youth Grantmakers in Action (YGA). By the end of the school P.E.A.C.E. year, this diverse group of teenagers from 11 area high schools had developed Academy of grant guidelines, solicited grant proposals, and made grants to four youth-led Winston-Salem projects in Forsyth County. for addressing YGA members had many opportunities for learning and fellowship youth bullying throughout the year, including an August full-day retreat and the October and violence; 2011 NC Youth Giving Summit, which drew youth grantmakers from across and WinstonYouth Grantmakers in Action with their 2012 grant recipients the western portion of the state and provided leadership and networking Salem Youth opportunities. Council for making gift baskets for Habitat for Humanity families. In April 2012, YGA held its annual grant celebration at Delta Fine Arts YGA’s grants are funded through the Foundation’s Youth Philanthropy Center. Four grants totaling $2,005 were made to Forsyth County youth for Initiative Fund; the endowment fund grows each year through YGA parpositive projects that will make a difference in our community. Grant recipi- ticipants’ fundraising, as well as through donor contributions. For more ents were: Health Occupations Students of America for making quilts for information on YGA, go to www.youthgrantmakersinaction.org. Victory Junction youth; Mount Tabor High School Key Club for purchasing
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NOURISHING
OUR COMMUNITY
AS THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION collaborates with individuals and organizations representing
a variety of diverse interests, a common theme arises: We are all dedicated to nourishing a strong and healthy community. Our organization’s purposeful involvement in Forsyth County goes back to 1919, a rich history for which we remain ever grateful. On the following pages we highlight a few success stories that illustrate great moments of community nourishment. Whether for individuals or organizations, the environment or the economy, the arts or education, for big initiatives or small inspirations, the Foundation stewards community-born ideas and resources so they can grow and make life better for all.
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N O U R I S H I N G O U R CO M M U N I T Y [ 1 3 ]
COMMUNITY GRANTS
NOURISHING A NEIGHBORHOOD NC COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE, FORSYTH COUNTY
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N ANY GIVEN SUMMER EVENING, neighbors carefully tend to
vegetables in the West Salem Community Garden. Eighteen raised vegetable beds hold a lush collection of seasonally appropriate crops, including tomatoes, okra, eggplant, carrots, radishes, colorful flowers, basil, thyme, and other herbs. Plastic bags full of fresh vegetables dangle along the split rail fence lining the garden edge until someone stops by to pick one up. “If you want the food, it is available,” notes Jeff Yates, a Cooperative Extension master gardener volunteer and mentor to this community garden who enjoys sharing with and learning from other gardeners. As neighbors dig in the dirt, weed, and water the plants together, they sow seeds for food and for friendships. But the real beauty of the garden comes from the many ways it touches the community. “It’s two-fold,” says Del Perry, who founded the garden in 2004. “The people who are here usually have a better community sense of the needs in the neighborhood, and certainly people who need the food benefit from it.” Irma Jackson, a master gardener who also lives in the community, says, “Without somebody thinking about these people, some of them would fall through the cracks.” In 2004, Perry asked, and Piedmont International University agreed, to allow neighbors to use its land on the corner of South Green and Bank Streets for a community garden. The West Salem community is diverse
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and includes renters, homeowners, and large and small businesses. Residents come from a range of socioeconomic means and ethnicities. The garden serves as a central place where people can stop and chat. Garden chairs beneath a big shade tree are placed there as a gathering spot. Jeremy Holderfield works in the neighborhood and has enjoyed getting to know folks of different ages who garden together. “It’s a direct way of helping people,” he says. West Salem’s garden is one of the 100 community gardens Mary Jac Brennan with the Forsyth Cooperative Extension Service supports as community garden resource coordinator. Not only does she work directly with the community gardens, she has also developed gardening leadership through a mentoring program in which volunteer master gardeners and other experienced area gardeners are matched with community gardens to share their expertise. Brennan has also begun linking community gardens to nearby local food pantries that give fresh produce to individuals who need it. And the bounty is growing: last year, the West Salem gardeners alone gave away 595 bags of fresh vegetables, and this year’s goal is 1,000 bags. Community gardener Ledon Lopez, originally from New Jersey, enthusiastically offers to share his recipe for the vegetarian lasagna he has made with eggplant and other vegetables that he’s growing. “All of us, it just brings the community together,” Lopez says. “You get to know your neighbors and help neighbors.”
THE FOUNDATION AWARDED $40,000 to support the Cooperative Extension Service’s community garden resource program in 2010 and granted $35,000 in 2011 to support the program for a second year. The grant enabled the agency to hire a community garden resource coordinator, to establish a mentoring program for community gardens, and to support 100 community gardens that gave away approximately 8,000 pounds of fresh produce in 2011.
IN 2007 THE WEBERS ESTABLISHED the Art and Dannie Weber Education Fund, a field of interest fund for education, the Art and Dannie Weber Fund for Forsyth Technical Community College, and the Art and Dannie Weber Scholarship. They also established a charitable remainder trust at the Foundation in 1998 and are members of the Foundation’s Legacy Society.
DONORS
SUPPORTING EDUCATION, CHANGING LIVES DANNIE AND ART WEBER
D
ANNIE AND ART WEBER LEAD VERY ACTIVE LIVES, but they
have never been too busy to remember their adopted community of Winston-Salem, which they say has given them so much. The Webers first lived here in the late 1950’s when Art was a pharmaceutical sales representative, and he says, “We fell in love with this community.” After moving back to Art’s home state of Indiana for six years, the couple was able to return to Winston-Salem for Art’s new position at R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. He says, “Winston-Salem had everything that a young family would love to have.” He adds, “We’ve been here ever since, happy as can be.” Art and Dannie opened a Sir Speedy Printing franchise in WinstonSalem in 1974 and purchased an existing store in High Point in 1982. Both remain family businesses today. Early on they had heard about “the special Foundation” here in Winston-Salem, and they were impressed that a city this size could have such a strong community foundation. “I wanted to see if it really worked,” Art says. “It does. The way the Foundation is set up, they’re very helpful without being demanding. There are so many ways to support the community.” The Webers have a deep belief that education is the key to a successful community. “It’s the foundation of everything,” Dannie says. And because of that, the Webers decided to target their philanthropic resources to provide educational support for the community and opportunities for students who might not otherwise be able to afford it. The Webers’ field of interest fund for education has supported a Community Grant to Bolton Elementary School’s Girl Talk mentoring program, which targeted girls who were at-risk of dropping out of school due to behavioral problems. Dannie says that the program’s success further
validated their belief that the Foundation knows how to maximize community resources. She says, “We know it’s going to be done well.” The Webers also established a designated fund for Forsyth Technical Community College after learning that one of Forsyth Tech’s largest segments of students is comprised of single mothers trying to get an education. “I think we are blessed here in Winston-Salem with Forsyth Tech,” Art says, noting that not only is the campus impressive, it also offers a wide variety of classes for students of all ages to help them move forward — even Dannie has been a student there. She has taken Spanish at Forsyth Tech for a number of years and is happy to be able to practice her second language while volunteering at the Community Care Center. “It’s so important for young people who want a higher education to be able to get one,” Art says. “If funds are a problem, then scholarships can help young people move ahead. I think it’s great that the Foundation is set up to help so many.” The Webers also established a student aid fund at the Foundation to support college students both in Forsyth County and in Alleghany County, where the couple has a mountain cottage. They have enjoyed getting to know their scholarship recipients and following their college years. They even have a special file for the thank you notes they’ve received from students who have been able to further their education as a result of their funds administered by the Foundation. “Reading those notes just touches me so much,” Art said.
“It’s so important for young people who want a higher education to be able to get one,” Art says. “If funds are a problem, then scholarships can help young people move ahead.”
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COMMUNITY GRANTS
1,000
FLOWERS SOW SEEDS OF FRIENDSHIP THE ENRICHMENT CENTER
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EMEMBERED JOKES AND EASY LAUGHTER reveal a lasting bond
between Winnie Pompell, who attends The Enrichment Center, and visiting artist Jan Detter. Their friendship began when they worked together on “1,000 Flowers,” a mosaic that has become a focal point for the entrance to the Center’s Gateway Gallery. Detter, who has been creating public art since 1975, served as a resident artist at the Center in 2011 where she worked with students to build the mosaic wall. They created 1,000 flowers out of discarded items such as buttons, beads, door pulls, bits of glass, and mirrors. The project was funded by a 2010 Foundation Community Grant to support two artist residencies, including Detter’s work.
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“Winnie’s flowers were always better than mine,” says Detter, who teaches creativity and innovation at Wake Forest University. “I think it’s because Winnie has a very open heart. I think she breathes it and lives it, and that open-heartedness has been a great gift to me. Winnie has been my teacher.” “Here the students are so unusually porous in that whatever you put in front of them, they are up for it…. The students here are so flexible in looking at things.” Winnie rides a bus to the Center and has been attending for five years. “It’s a great opportunity,” she says. Almost 30 years ago, a group of parents saw the need for a resource such as The Enrichment Center. Executive Director Valerie Vizena notes, “When children with intellectual and developmental disabilities left the traditional school system, there was nothing for them. What makes us so unique: they have an experience similar to a college experience, not just a safe haven. It was set up to be totally an enriching opportunity.” The Enrichment Center was established in 1983 as an arts-based day program with only three students. Now it serves more than 500 individuals and also offers programs that assist clients in finding employment and in managing their bill paying. The arts-based program offers classes in studio art, textiles, photography, jewelry, multimedia, digital media, music, percussion, drama, theatre, dance, job training, and functional life skills. Ceramics and mixed-media specialist Stacey Sword-Halsey has also worked with Winnie on several projects. Stacey says one of Winnie’s lessons in particular has stayed with her: “Don’t say ‘can’t’.” “There were not many options for this population besides workshops before The Enrichment Center opened,” says Stacey, who has been teaching at the Center for eight years. “This allows them to be who they really are. There are no limitations.”
THE ENRICHMENT CENTER received a 2010 Foundation Community Grant of $19,875 to fund two artist residencies. A previous 2009 Foundation grant of $17,000 was used to construct a sculpture garden to display metal sculptures made by Enrichment Center artists and three local sculptors. In 2007, The Enrichment Center established an Agency Endowment at the Foundation, and funds were raised through a 1:4 matching grant program. Winnie Pompell (l) and Jan Detter
DR. AMBER BAKER received scholarship funding from the Kate B. Reynolds Scholarship, which was established at the Foundation in 1979 to provide financial aid for traditional and non-traditional age students from Forsyth County. Kimberley Park’s community garden project was funded by a 2009 grant from The Women’s Fund of Winston-Salem, and the News Worthy program was funded by a 2011 grant from the Foundation’s Black Philanthropy Initiative.
STUDENT AID
PASSION FOR EDUCATION
A
DR. AMBER BAKER
D
R. AMBER BAKER SEEMS to be as at home on the playground at
Kimberley Park Elementary School as she is in her office or in a classroom — her affection for her students is palpable. And her childhood memories of growing up during desegregation in Louisville, Ky., have impacted her role as an educator today. Baker, who is beginning her fifth year as principal at Kimberley Park, says, “that experience dealing with racism up close and personal, having a teacher refuse to teach us because of the color of our skin — I was a ball of anger when I got here. I was a fighter.” She moved to Winston-Salem in 1981 and graduated from North Forsyth High School in 1982. She studied marketing and management at Howard University before dropping out and moving back home with her young daughter, Ashlei. “At that point I didn’t have anything to lose. When I had a chance to go back and reinvent myself, I knew education was what I wanted to do.” At the age of 25, with support from the Kate B. Reynolds Scholarship held at the Foundation, Baker enrolled at Winston-Salem State University. “The Winston-Salem Foundation is probably one of the most diverse organizations in terms of what they do,” Baker said. “In other cities, I wouldn’t have been able to go back to school.” She graduated with a degree in elementary and special education and a minor in English and history. At Ohio State University, she completed an accelerated dual-degree program in which she received a master’s degree and a doctorate in curriculum instruction and education administration.
Baker subsequently taught at Winston-Salem’s Kennedy Middle School and then worked in school administration in Charlotte and Minnesota. For the past five years her heart and her home have been at Kimberley Park Elementary School. Baker has passionately pursued unique program opportunities and funding to expand her students’ education. For example, a community garden project was designed to strengthen bonds between 4th-grade girls and their mothers. A program called News Worthy exposed students to broadcast journalism and in the process strengthened their skills in reading, writing, and public speaking. The school’s campus, which was bare and depressing when she arrived, now boasts three colorful playgrounds, a landscaped stage area, as well as a new running water feature. The school also opens up its grounds for neighborhood gatherings — a wonderful means of community-building. Baker expects a lot from her students in return for her work on their behalf. She says, “My kids don’t get an excuse from me for not doing their best. They don’t get a pass. The answer is education, and education does not just occur in the classroom.”
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N O U R I S H I N G O U R CO M M U N I T Y [ 2 1 ]
DONORS
HONORING A
SON’S MEMORY PAM AND BILL LONGYARD
W
HEN PAM AND BILL LONGYARD’S SON TIEN BUI died unexpect-
edly at age 34, they decided to honor his memory by creating a scholarship to help other engineering students. “The best way to preserve his memory is to have something that will last a long time,” Bill says. “A scholarship does that. It’s going to carry on for many years, and hopefully it will inspire many.” In 2007, Bill and Pam established the Tien Bui Scholarship for a Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools student attending N.C. State University’s College of Engineering. The scholarship is especially meaningful because both Bill and Pam know what it means to need help during their lives. After her first husband was killed in war-torn Vietnam, Pam gathered her sons Tien, then 3, and Hoan, then 5, and escaped with five other family members to Thailand in a small boat. They later arrived in the United States, where the eight of them shared an apartment. Bill’s early years weren’t easy either. His birth parents were alcoholics, and he and his two siblings suffered malnourishment until they were adopted by a caring couple and saw first-hand how generosity can change lives. Bill and Pam met while working at The Washington Post and eventually moved to Winston-Salem for its affordable quality of life. A gifted student athlete who excelled in wrestling, Tien attended Reynolds High School and the Career Center in Winston-Salem and graduated magna cum laude from N.C. State University with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electrical Engineering. He later earned a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering. He was an expert in chip technology for cell and satellite phones, and he traveled the world working for Ericsson, Sony, and Texas Instruments. “He could do anything,” Pam says. “He was a people person. He put people at ease.”
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Since it was established in 2007, their scholarship fund has helped five students attend the College of Engineering at N.C. State. The Longyards have met several of their scholarship’s recipients, and Bill says, “They are outstanding.” The Longyards have also decided to include the Foundation in their estate plans, and they are Legacy Society members. “We are not wealthy people,” says Bill, a retired high-school English teacher. Pam is a retired chef. “We want to inspire other middle-class folks. It’s not an elitist thing to be involved in a charity like The WinstonSalem Foundation. The Foundation gives us the comfort to know that our limited charity money is going to be invested and spent wisely; it’s going to go to appropriate recipients.” For Pam, who knows so well the price of freedom, supporting education is a way to contribute to America. For those who receive the scholarships, Pam notes, “They are in a sense Tien’s children. They are benefitting from his work.”
the winston-salem foundation annual report
IN 2007, PAM AND BILL LONGYARD established the Tien Bui Scholarship in memory of their son, Tien, to provide support for an aspiring student in the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools to attend N.C. State University’s College of Engineering. The Longyards are also members of the Foundation’s Legacy Society.
THE SALVATION ARMY received a $25,000 Community Grant from the Foundation in 2011 to support the Academy of Music and Arts. Other music-related Foundation grants to The Salvation Army have included a 2006 grant of $12,500 to enable the purchase of brass instruments and a 2000 grant of $15,935 to start a drum corps for members of the Boys and Girls Club.
COMMUNITY GRANTS
MAKING MUSIC AND CHANGING LIVES THE SALVATION ARMY
T
HE BELIEF THAT MUSIC AND THE ARTS should be available to
everyone led The Salvation Army to create an Academy of Music and Arts that offers high-quality music instruction to children who might not otherwise have the opportunity to participate. “Music can change their lives,” says Sarah Jewett Clarke, the assistant to the Director of Operations at The Salvation Army in Winston-Salem. The Academy began in 2003 with just 15 students, and the program has grown steadily over the years. Now, 55 students ages 7 to 18 regularly attend, and 70 percent come from low-income households. Full-day participation in the summer program costs a maximum of $40 per week, and the Academy also holds afternoon programs during the school year as well as a spring break camp and field trips. “Diversity is abundant,” says Program Director Jeff Clarke. “It’s definitely a part of who we are.” Each student participates in band and plays either brass or percussion, continuing a historical tradition of The Salvation Army, which was begun as a street movement in the 1800s by a Methodist minister who used brass bands to attract people’s attention. Students choose electives such as chorus, music theory, guitar — and a favorite: the drum line. Students who develop an interest in their instruments can borrow them to use in school band programs, and their instructors are experienced, professional musicians. Funding from the Foundation has made a big impact because balancing limited resources is difficult. Other Salvation Army programs, which are providing people with basic necessities such as food and shelter, are in high demand in this economy. “It’s proven that music helps kids in a variety of ways,” Sarah says. “Kids who are exposed to music and music theory score higher in math and reading comprehension.” Yet the Academy offers more than an academic boost. Former Academy participant Rachel Hodge graduated in 2012 from Parkland Magnet High
School and has earned a full college scholarship. For Hodge, the Academy became a “home away from home.” “I wanted a place I could be away from home and make friends, a way to connect,” says Hodge, who this summer has taken on a leadership role as an instructor. “It’s completely changed my life.” “They learn everything; they’ll find something that they like,” says Jeff as he leads several youngsters playing guitars in a Bob Marley song. “I love it: This is a 9-year-old girl that’s shredding it up on the guitar. You see it again and again and again: kids becoming musicians over the summer.” “For a lot of kids, the key is opportunity: giving them something to do, something to be proud of, a place to perform, a place where people can appreciate what they’ve done. I really feel like we’ve accomplished that.”
the winston-salem foundation annual report
N O U R I S H I N G O U R CO M M U N I T Y [ 2 5 ]
GRANTS 2011 Foundation grants provide significant support to two main constituencies: to NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS as they make communities a healthier place to call home and to LOCAL STUDENTS as they pursue higher education. In 2011, the Foundation: > Made more than $20.8 MILLION in TOTAL CHARITABLE GRANTS, the majority of which remained in our local service area > Awarded more than $2.1 MILLION through our COMMUNITY GRANTS PROGRAM > Assisted more than 550 STUDENTS with STUDENT AID support totaling over $1,000,000* in the 2011–2012 school year
*$892,000 in Scholarships and $143,000 in Student Loans
[26] GRANTS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
TYPES OF
GRANTS
DONOR-ADVISED GRANTS, made from both endowed and non-endowed
DESIGNATED GRANTS ensure long-term annual support from an
funds, connect donors with the power of philanthropy through individually
endowment fund’s income for one or more organizations that were
advised funds as well as funds that are advised by outside committees.
specified by the donor at the time the fund was created.
COMMUNITY GRANTS provide funding assistance to nonprofit
SCHOLARSHIPS assist students in paying for their post-secondary
organizations that are having a positive long-term impact on our
education. For additional information on the Foundation’s Student Aid
community. Funding for these important grants comes from Unrestricted
application process, which also includes low-interest student loans, go
and Field of Interest endowment funds that have been established
to the “Students” section of www.wsfoundation.org.
by donors. For more information on how organizations can apply for a Community Grant, please refer to the “Grant Seekers” area on the
AGENCY ENDOWMENT GRANTS provide support to charitable
Foundation’s Web site at www.wsfoundation.org.
organizations through endowments that were established by nonprofits to support their work in the community.
2% <1% OTHER GRANTS
2011 FOUNDATION GRANTS
AGENCY ENDOWMENT GRANTS
4% SCHOLARSHIPS
12% DESIGNATED GRANTS
(by Fund Type)
43% DONOR-ADVISED (NON-ENDOWED) GRANTS
13% COMMUNITY GRANTS
26% DONOR-ADVISED (ENDOWED) GRANTS the winston-salem foundation annual report
GRANTS [27]
COMMUNITY GRANTS 2011
In 2011, the Foundation supported nonprofit programs with over $2.1 MILLION in Community Grants that are making a difference in a wide variety of areas in Forsyth County. Funding for these timely grants comes from UNRESTRICTED AND FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS that have been established by donors, as well as from the Foundation’s GRANTMAKING PARTNERS program.
2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS (by Program Area)
3% RECREATION
3% ANIMAL WELFARE
4% HEALTH
5% ENVIRONMENT
30%
9%
HUMAN SERVICES
ARTS & CULTURE
11% COMMUNITY & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
20% PUBLIC INTEREST
[28] GRANTS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
15% EDUCATION
GRANTMAKING PARTNERS TODAY, MANY DONORS WANT active grantmaking that is responsive to the changing community and
reflective of their personal interests, and the Foundationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s GRANTMAKING PARTNERS program provides this opportunity. Throughout the year, donor-advised fundholders are notified of COMMUNITY GRANT requests from eligible nonprofits, and many choose to partner with the Foundation to support them through their own funds. These fundholders benefit from Grantmaking Partners by: > LEVERAGING more charitable dollars to respond to opportunities > BEING AWARE of timely community funding opportunities > MATCHING their interests with community nonprofits in order to make effective grants > LEARNING ABOUT new organizations and programs that are addressing issues that matter to them IN 2011, 20 DONOR-ADVISED FUNDHOLDERS contributed a total of $56,562 toward the partial or full
funding of Community Grants in a wide variety of interest areas. This funding is impactful â&#x20AC;&#x201D; it equates to the estimated annual income that would be generated by a $1,256,933 endowment! As such, we are most grateful for our 2011 GRANTMAKING PARTNERS: Anonymous
Jane Craven
Walt and Martha Ann Murray
Gordon and Tommy Pfefferkorn
David and Liz Albertson
Mary Eagan
Mil Naugle
Tom and Kem Schroeder
Martha Albertson
Robert and Amy Egleston
Lucian and Robie Neal
John and Peggy Taylor
Gayle Anderson and Carey Hedgpeth
Bob and Lisa Gfeller
Katherine W. Otterbourg
Randall and Claire Tuttle
Woody and Helen Clinard
Jim and Debbie Millis
Dwight and Annie Pardue
Ralph H. Womble
the winston-salem foundation annual report
GRANTS [29]
COMMUNITY GRANTS 2011 ANIMAL WELFARE ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Dog Park at Tanglewood
$30,000
to assist with construction of a dog park
Edna B. Parkin Georges Animal Fund, Lassiter Animal Welfare Fund
Forsyth Humane Society
$40,000
for additional staff
Edna B. Parkin Georges Animal Fund
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO ANIMAL WELFARE
$70,000
ARTS AND CULTURE ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Ava Gardner Museum
$2,500
for exhibit redesign
Ava Gardner Fund
Carolina Music Ways
$5,000
to educate students about the region’s music heritage for a second year
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund
Körner’s Folly Foundation
$25,000
for a resource development/marketing manager
George and Edna Blanton Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
NC Black Repertory Company
$38,250
to hire an audience development manager
Charles Babcock, Jr. Field of Interest Fund, Eisenberg Family Fund for Arts and Culture, Gayle Anderson/Carey Hedgpeth Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, Tuttle Family Charitable Fund
Salvation Army
$25,000
to support the Academy of Music and Arts
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund, Katherine W. Otterbourg Fund
SECCA Foundation
$20,000
for an exterior lighting project
Charles Babcock, Jr. Field of Interest Fund
Twin City Stage
$25,000
to support a collaborative playbill for five community theatres
Community Arts Fund
Winston-Salem Symphony
$40,000
to support audience development and marketing efforts
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund
Winston-Salem Symphony
$6,000
to support collaborative planning with the Greensboro Symphony Orchestra
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund
Winston-Salem Theatre Alliance
$13,000
to fund a marketing and development consultant and advertising materials for a third year
Charles Babcock, Jr. Field of Interest Fund
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO ARTS AND CULTURE
$199,750
COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Creative Corridors Coalition
$50,000
to help create a master design plan for roadway infrastructure projects
Mr. and Mrs. Lucian H. Neal Advised Fund, Charles Babcock, Jr. Field of Interest Fund, Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund
Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership
$5,000
to support a development position for a second year
Samuel and Elizabeth Rose Fund
Neighbors for Better Neighborhoods
$10,379
to provide funds for neighborhood projects and programs
George and Edna Blanton Fund
Neighbors for Better Neighborhoods
$50,000
to support the development of community assets in neighborhoods
Lila Church Bradford Memorial Fund, Charles E. Norfleet Memorial Fund, Richard E. Ashburn Trust
to help support the restoration of the historic Red Bank School
J.C. Tise Fund
to help support a pool of funds to support operating costs and technical assistance for mature and emerging community development corporations
Louise Futrell Fund, The Community Fund, Henry M. Carter, Jr. Fund, Nancy T. Pleasants Community Development Fund, R. Edward Lasater Endowment Fund, Dr. Calvin and Ruth H. Ogburn Trust
Save Historic Red Bank School
$5,000
Winston-Salem Community $125,000 Development Support Collaborative
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
[30] GRANTS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
$245,379
EDUCATION ORGANIZATION NAME Benjamin Mays Scholars
GRANT AMOUNT $500
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
to support the We the People debate team
Youth Activities Fund
Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Museum of $30,000 to help support a development and marketing position Winston-Salem for a second year
Jessica T. Fogle Fund, Camp Robert Vaughn Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, Thomas D. and Katherine E.M. Schroeder Fund, James and Deborah Millis, Jr. Fund
Community Education $50,000 to support family engagement positions in the Collaborative Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Public Education Fund, Robert A. and Constance C. Emken Education Fund, Art and Dannie Weber Education Fund, Jessica T. Fogle Fund, A. F. Clement Trust for Youth
Crosby Scholars Community $6,500 to support a part-time senior advisor for a second year Partnership
Robert A. and Constance C. Emken Education Fund, John A. and Marguerite B. Taylor Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
Kappa League of Winston-Salem
to fund a historical enrichment experience for young men
Youth Activities Fund
for a program coordinator
Harvey Seward Martin Fund, Elizabeth Lovett Education Endowment, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, Ava Gardner Fund, Richard and Becky Davis Fund for Education, George and Edna Blanton Fund, Anonymous
Neighborhoods of Promise
$1,000 $25,000
Northwest Child Development $45,000 to support an education technology integration specialist Centers
Joseph G. Gordon Fund, D. Elwood and Helen H. Clinard Fund, J.C. Tise Fund
One Economy Corporation
to support the Digital Connectors program for a second year
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
to support Peace Academy
J.C. Tise Fund
for marketing and communications
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund
The Centers for Exceptional $20,000 Children
to support an additional nurse for the children at The Centers for Exceptional Children for a second year
Claire Lockhart Follin-Mace Fund
Winston-Salem Street School
to provide support for accreditation activities for a second year
A. F. Clement Trust for Youth
Winston-Salem/Forsyth $33,180 County Schools
to help support a bilingual community outreach worker for teen mothers and their children for a third year
Mae W. Hubbard Trust, A. F. Clement Trust for Youth, Thomas H. Davis Advised Trust
Winston-Salem/Forsyth $29,652 County Schools
to support the high school component of Rachelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Challenge
J.C. Tise Fund
Winston-Salem/Forsyth $8,445 County Schools
to determine how to improve progress for special education students by using Android tablet technology
Claire Lockhart Follin-Mace Fund
Winston-Salem/Forsyth $14,731 County Schools
to help support a bilingual community outreach worker for teen mothers and their children for a fourth year
Lila Church Bradford Memorial Fund, Jessica T. Fogle Fund, A. F. Clement Trust for Youth
YMCA of Northwest NC
for the Ledges afterschool program for a third year
J. Frank and Mary S. Mock Fund
Piedmont Triad Regional Council The Centers for Exceptional Children
$20,000 $1,000 $10,000
$10,000
$10,000
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO EDUCATION
$315,008
the winston-salem foundation annual report
GRANTS [31]
COMMUNITY GRANTS 2011 ENVIRONMENT ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Carolina Farm Stewardship $30,000 to employ a program manager and match EBT benefits Association at the farmers market
Hugh E. Bynum, Jr. and Elizabeth H. Bynum Memorial Fund – Unrestricted, Mil and Marsh Naugle Fund, Donna Germain Rader and Martin H. Rader Fund, R. Worth Allen and Atha J. Allen Fund, Hayes and Amy Wauford Fund, Frank E. Llewellyn T.B. Fund, John W. and Alice Rose Alspaugh Memorial Funds
NC Cooperative Extension Service, $35,000 Forsyth County
to support the community garden resource program for a second year
Anne Hanes Willis Fund, Drane V. McCall Fund for Winston-Salem Beautiful, Raymond B. Hooker, Jr. Fund – Unrestricted, Anonymous
NC Cooperative Extension Service, $4,000 Forsyth County
to build social capital by expanding community gardens in Forsyth County
Anne Hanes Willis Fund
Paul J. Ciener Botanical Garden
$15,000
to create a new Web site to enhance the garden and its programs
Lila Church Bradford Memorial Fund
Piedmont Land Conservancy
$6,000
to preserve historic fruit orchards in Bethania
Anne Hanes Willis Fund
W-S/FC Community Appearance $4,000 Commission
to support beautification at three schools in Forsyth County
Anne Hanes Willis Fund
Yadkin Riverkeeper
to support a director of operations and programs position for a second year
Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund, Gfeller Family Fund
$22,500
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO ENVIRONMENT
$116,500
HEALTH ORGANIZATION NAME Arts for Life Gardening Guys and Gals
GRANT AMOUNT $6,240 $750
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
to expand the music fellowship program
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund
for a nutrition enrichment program
Youth Activities Fund
SECU Family House
$30,500
to support the manager of educational services
The Community Fund
Southside United Health Center
$40,000
to fund a family medicine clinic on the Southside
Katherine W. Otterbourg Fund, John W. and Alice Rose Alspaugh Memorial Funds
Wake Forest School of Medicine
$1,000
to support the Pediatric Enhanced Care Program
Twin City Hospital Funds
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO HEALTH
$78,490
HUMAN SERVICES ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
$35,000
for a full-time shelter director
Spencer and Nell Waggoner Charitable Fund – Unrestricted, Bess Gray Plumly Fund
Children’s Law Center of $17,000 Central NC
to fund a part-time development professional for a second year
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund
Crisis Control Ministry
to conduct a facility analysis
Fenwick-Rice Fund, Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services, Colin and Mary Louise Stokes Fund, Anonymous
Bethesda Center for the Homeless
[32] GRANTS
$15,000
the winston-salem foundation annual report
HUMAN SERVICES (CONTINUED) ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Exchange SCAN
$38,304
to expand the parent/teen education group
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund, Nancy R. Baity Trust, Craven Family Fund, L. Gordon and June D. Pfefferkorn, Jr. Fund, D. Elwood and Helen H. Clinard Fund, Ava Gardner Fund, Blount Fund, Mae W. Hubbard Trust, John Wesley Alspaugh and Celeste Tucker Alspaugh Memorial
Family Promise of Forsyth County
$12,500
to support a case management position for a third year
William and Allan Hollan Charitable Fund, Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
Family Services
$35,000
to help support the grant services manager position for a second year
Vera Goldberg Memorial Fund, Marcus Lew Davis Memorial Fund, Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
Horizons Residential Care Center
$57,748
for a major repair to the Atrium building
Eugene and Iola Daniels Memorial Trust Fund for the Mentally Handicapped
iCan House Services
$30,000
to support a fundraising professional
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
NC Victim Assistance Network
$6,402
to help crime victims or crime victim service providers attend the annual statewide training conference
Chrissy Gallaher Victimâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Assistance Fund
Next Step Ministries
$15,345
to support a nighttime staff position
Albert L. Butler, Jr. Fund, Etta Mae Pope Trust, Stokes Ivey and Orpha Marie Leonard Pope Family Trust, Marcus Lew Davis Memorial Fund, Ava Gardner Fund, Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
Partnership for a Drug Free NC
$50,000
to help support the costs of a development officer
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
Piedmont Down Syndrome $20,000 to support a part-time executive director Support Network
Eugene and Iola Daniels Memorial Trust Fund for the Mentally Handicapped
Prevent Blindness NC
$10,000
to train vision screeners for elementary and middle schools in Forsyth County
Claire Lockhart Follin-Mace Fund
Prodigals Community
$18,000
to help support the Best Chance internship program for a second year
Shepherding Fund, George and Edna Blanton Fund, D. Elwood and Helen H. Clinard Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, Anonymous
$2,500
Riverwood Therapeutic Riding Center
to support a professional development opportunity
Edna B. Parkin Georges Animal Fund
Samaritan Ministries
$50,000
to increase fundraising capacity prior to a capital campaign
Albert L. Butler, Jr. Fund, Martha Albertson Fund, Mr. and Mrs. Lucian H. Neal Advised Fund, Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, Dwight E. and Annie E. Pardue Advised Fund, William D. and Jane F. Hobbs Fund, Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC
$15,000
for Web site design
Bess Gray Plumly Fund
Senior Services
$60,000
to provide nutritious food to homebound older adults through the Meals-on-Wheels program
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund, Clifton E. and Ruth Brewer Beck Memorial Fund, Otis B. and Genevieve Parrish Fund, Sturmer Samaritan Fund
Senior Services
$75,000
to provide nutritious food to homebound older adults through the Meals-on-Wheels program
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund
Sunnyside Ministry of the $17,000 to support a part-time food pantry manager Moravian Church
D. Elwood and Helen H. Clinard Fund, Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund
United Way of Forsyth County
to fund the director of the Ten-Year Plan to End Chronic Homelessness
Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
to fund an overflow shelter for the homeless through collaborative funding with United Way of Forsyth County and Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust
Emma Jane Skinner Fund
$20,000
Winston-Salem Forsyth County $3,120 Council on Services for Homeless
Winston-Salem State University $11,100 for a Collaborative for Offender Reentry Enhancement Foundation
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund, J. Frank and Mary S. Mock Fund, Louis and Gretchen Klaff Trust, Allan M. Hutcherson Fund
Youth In Transition Task Force
John Wesley Alspaugh and Celeste Tucker Alspaugh Memorial Trust
$27,000
to support the Youth In Transition Task Force
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO HUMAN SERVICES
$641,019 the winston-salem foundation annual report
GRANTS [33]
COMMUNITY GRANTS 2011 PUBLIC INTEREST ORGANIZATION NAME CHANGE
GRANT AMOUNT $35,000
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
to support a new fellow position and to expand the office manager position for a second year
D. Elwood Clinard Charitable Trust
Consumer Credit Counseling $30,000 to support the foreclosure program for a third year Service of Forsyth County
Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund, John A. and Marguerite B. Taylor Fund, Kerr and Naomi Pinnix Discretionary Fund, Louis and Jane Shaffner Fund, George and Edna Blanton Fund
ECHO Award $3,000 2011 ECHO Award Grant Designations
BB&T Fund
Forsyth Futures
$75,000
to fund a community collaborative to improve positive outcomes for children, adults, and families
The Community Fund, William N. Hailey Fund, Howard Gray Endowment
Forsyth Futures
$25,000
to support an assessment of the impact of local food
Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund, Twin City Hospital Funds
HandsOn Northwest NC
$20,000
for additional support to build capacities of nonprofits and increase volunteerism
Samuel and Elizabeth Rose Fund
HandsOn Northwest NC
$62,500
to support capacity building for nonprofits and increase volunteerism
BB&T Fund, The Community Fund, James R. Deadrick Fund, R. Edward Lasater Endowment Fund
$7,500
Historic Bethabara Park
to improve educational resources in the Visitors Center
J.C. Tise Fund
Institute for Dismantling Racism
$20,000
to support a program manager for a fourth year
Vera Goldberg Memorial Fund, Margaret and Harrell Hill Fund
Leadership Winston-Salem
$18,000
to help support a part-time development professional for a second year
Pleasants Hardware Company Trust, Isabel McRae Fund
Rufus Dalton Awards
$4,000
to award the Rufus Dalton Award to four officers who were injured/killed in the line of duty
Rufus W. Dalton Trust
WinstonNet
$36,000
for an information technology project manager for a second year
Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund
Winston-Salem Foundation Award
$10,000
2011 Winston-Salem Foundation Award Grant Designations
BB&T Fund
Winston-Salem Urban League
$30,000
to help support the coordinator position for the Digital Inclusion Initiative
George and Edna Blanton Fund
YWCA of Winston-Salem/ Forsyth County
$50,000
to support the Gateways to Responsibility campaign
Barbara Lasater Hanes Trust, James A. Gray Family Fund
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO PUBLIC INTEREST
$426,000
RECREATION ORGANIZATION NAME
GRANT AMOUNT
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
FUND NAME(S)
Old Hickory Council, Boy Scouts $70,000 to support the capital campaign of America
Sandehill Recreation Fund, George and Edna Blanton Fund, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Fund, Lillian S. Stultz Fund, Camp Robert Vaughn Fund, Wachovia Bank of North Carolina Fund
Winston Elite Youth Sports
$500
to fund registration fees for youth who cannot afford to participate
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund
Winston-Salem Indians
$500
to support youth who cannot afford the required registration fees
Youth Activities Fund
to support the reading enhancement program
Youth Activities Fund
Winston-Salem Tiny Vikings
$1,000
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS TO RECREATION
$72,000
TOTAL 2011 COMMUNITY GRANTS
$2,164,146
[34] GRANTS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS 2011 FOR 93 YEARS, committed donors have invested generously in the current and future nour-
ishment of our community and beyond. These charitable individuals, families, and organizations have provided substantial support in areas as varied as education and health to arts and culture and human services, enriching the lives of neighbors near and far. At the end of 2011, the Foundation administered more than 1,300 CHARITABLE FUNDS for a wide variety of philanthropic purposes.
1% REAL ESTATE FUNDS
FOUNDATION ASSETS (by Fund Type)
4% DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS (NON-ENDOWED)*
5% AGENCY ENDOWMENT FUNDS
7% STUDENT AID FUNDS
30% DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS (ENDOWED)
13% CHARITABLE LEAD TRUSTS AND CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUSTS
21% DESIGNATED FUNDS *includes Temporary Funds
[36] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
19% UNRESTRICTED AND FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS FOR COMMUNITY GRANTS
TYPES OF
FUNDS
ENDOWED FUNDS:
NON-ENDOWED FUNDS:
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS FOR COMMUNITY GRANTS offer the
NON-ENDOWED ADVISED FUNDS , which are essentially charitable
broadest option for charitable giving. Income from these funds will be
checking accounts, offer donors a simple and efficient vehicle for
used to meet changing funding opportunities in our community over
annual charitable giving.
time through Community Grants. TEMPORARY FUNDS give the Foundation the ability to hold a limited FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS FOR COMMUNITY GRANTS give donors
number of funds for organizations and individuals for charitable
the opportunity to provide Community Grantmaking support within
projects.
a specific area of interest, such as arts and culture, environment, or human services.
CHARITABLE TRUSTS:
DESIGNATED FUNDS are established by donors who wish to provide
CHARITABLE LEAD TRUSTS (CLTS) enable donors to make significant
annual support to specific charities.
charitable gifts for the term of the trust while transferring substantial assets to beneficiaries later.
STUDENT AID FUNDS provide students with scholarships and loans to
pursue their academic goals. Donors may establish scholarship funds
CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUSTS (CRTS) allow donors and/or a
to support students from a particular high school, church, or county, or
designated beneficiary to receive income for the life of the trust,
for those who attend a specific college or university.
with the remainder going to support charitable causes.
DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS enable up to two family generations of donors
or outside committees to make charitable grant recommendations. These funds are a convenient method of simplifying charitable giving and are an attractive alternative to a private foundation. AGENCY ENDOWMENT FUNDS are established by charitable
organizations, which benefit from the Foundation’s professional investment management administration, and allow the agency’s staff and board to focus on providing necessary services to its constituents.
HOW TO ESTABLISH A FUND: Setting up a fund and establishing your giving legacy is simple. Our Philanthropic Services staff will walk you through the steps to make sure that the fund you establish meets your charitable giving goals. Please contact us at giving@wsfoundation.org or call us at (336) 725-2382 for more information.
REAL ESTATE FUNDS are properties designated for a charitable use
and titled in the Foundation’s name.
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [37]
ENDOWED FUNDS
UNRESTRICTED AND FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS FOR COMMUNITY GRANTS
U
NRESTRICTED FUNDS offer the broadest option for charitable giving. Income from these endowed funds is used to meet the changing needs of our community over time through Community Grants. FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS give donors the opportunity to provide
Community Grantmaking support within a broad interest area (e.g., environment, human services, health, arts and culture, etc.). NEW FUNDS IN 2011
PURPOSE
Agnew Hunter Bahnson and Elizabeth Hill Bahnson Memorial Fund
Established with proceeds from the sale of the Bahnson House as an unrestricted fund
Richard K. Scott Memorial Fund Established by clients of Mr. Scott as an unrestricted fund
FUND
YEAR
PURPOSE
Louise and Sam Adams Community Fund
2005 Established through a charitable trust to support the charitable needs of the community
Lena Albright Memorial Fund
1979 Established by family and friends for organizations that provide comfort and benefit to those suffering from cancer, especially leukemia
R. Worth Allen and Atha J. Allen Fund
2005 Established by Mrs. Atha Allen in 1989 in memory of her husband and later endowed
John W. and Alice Rose Alspaugh Memorial Funds
1964 Established by bequest by John W. Alspaugh to provide health care to underprivileged people
John Wesley Alspaugh and Celeste Tucker Alspaugh Memorial Trust
1964
Established by bequest by John W. Alspaugh in memory of his parents to support programs for disadvantaged youth
Anonymous Trust #2
1999 Established by an anonymous donor as an unrestricted fund
Richard E. Ashburn Trust
2002 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Warren David Ashburn Fund
1968 Established for charitable purposes of the Foundation
Charles Babcock, Jr. Discretionary Fund
2006 Established with a gift from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation to honor Charles Babcock, Jr. and his lifelong support of emerging and changing community needs
Charles Babcock, Jr. Field of Interest Fund
2006 Established with a gift from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation to honor Charles Babcock, Jr. and his lifelong interest in arts and culture in the community
Mary Reynolds Babcock Cultural Improvement Fund
1950 Established for grants and loans to cultural and arts groups in the community
Nancy R. Baity Trust
2000 Established in memory of her husband Ira W. Baity, Jr. to support programs for disadvantaged children and youth
William P. and Katharine T. Baldridge Endowment
2006 Established as an unrestricted fund
Bank of America Corporation Fund
1995 Established as an unrestricted fund in honor of the Foundation’s 75th Anniversary
BB&T Fund
1994 Established as an unrestricted fund in honor of the Foundation’s 75th Anniversary
Clifton E. and Ruth Brewer Beck Memorial Fund
2010 Established through the estates of Clifton and Ruth Beck
George and Edna Blanton Fund
2010 Established with the remainder of the George and Edna Blanton Charitable Annuity Trust
Blount Fund
2010 Established by Frederick A. Blount, MD to support programs for high-risk youth and single teen parents
Lila Church Bradford Memorial Fund
1999 Established as an unrestricted fund
John W. Burress Community Fund
2007 Established as an unrestricted fund
Albert L. Butler, Jr. Fund
1997 Established by the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust in memory of Mr. Butler to support the poor and needy
Hugh E. Bynum, Jr. and Elizabeth H. Bynum Memorial Fund–Unrestricted
2000
Camp Robert Vaughn Fund
Donor-Advised Funds 1990 Established from the proceeds of the sale of Camp Robert Vaughn to support grants for children youth Unrestricted and Field ofand Interest Funds––continued continuedon onnext nextpage page
[38] FUNDS AND DONORS
Established by the estate as an unrestricted fund
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
PURPOSE
Carolina Steel Endowment Fund
1988 Established as an unrestricted fund to support worthy public purposes
Henry M. Carter, Jr. Fund
1997 Established by friends of Mr. Carter at his retirement as president of The Winston-Salem Foundation as an unrestricted fund
A. F. Clement Trust for Youth
1971 Established in 1970 and repurposed in 2011 to benefit worthy children in Forsyth County in their suitable maintenance
D. Elwood Clinard Charitable Trust
1974 Established as an unrestricted fund by D. Elwood Clinard, Jr. in memory of his father
Community Arts Fund
1985 Established to support programs of arts organizations
The Community Fund
1919 Established by Col. F.H. Fries to address the changing needs of our community
Franklin Cromer Cordell Fund
1994 Established by family and friends to support programs that assist individuals who suffer from substance abuse problems
Rufus W. Dalton Trust
1983 Established by bequest to assist injured law-enforcement officers and the spouses and children of officers killed in the performance of their duties
Eugene and Iola Daniels Memorial Trust Fund for the Mentally Handicapped
1998
Marcus Lew Davis Memorial Fund
2004 Established as an unrestricted fund by Mr. G. Franklin Davis in memory of his son
Richard and Becky Davis Fund for Education
2010 Established by Richard N. Davis with a grant from the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust to honor his board service
Established by the estate of Bobby A. Daniels to benefit mentally handicapped people of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County
Thomas H. Davis Advised Trust
1992 Established with special emphasis on programs for youth
James R. Deadrick Fund
1989 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Marian G. and Charles W. DeBell Trust
2001 Established as an unrestricted fund
John and Julia Denham Fund
2007 Established as an unrestricted fund
Eisenberg Family Fund for Arts and Culture
2007 Established as a field of interest fund to support arts and culture
Emergency Loan Fund of Northwest N.C.
1983 Established by the Donors Forum of Forsyth County to provide emergency loans to nonprofits in Northwest North Carolina
Robert A. and Constance C. Emken Education Fund
2000 Established to support educational programs
Fenwick-Rice Fund
2004 Established from the Ron and Muriel Rice Fund and the Elizabeth Fenwick Fund for the Downtown Church Center to support the homeless, elderly, children, and the underserved in the community
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [39]
Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
Victor I. Flow, Jr. Family Fund
PURPOSE
2000 Established by Mr. and Mrs. Victor I. Flow, Jr. as an unrestricted fund
Harriet Taylor Flynt Fund
1998 Established by bequest to benefit the handicapped, the elderly, or others with disabilities
Jessica T. Fogle Fund
1964 Established by bequest to support the education and development of North Carolina children
Claire Lockhart Follin-Mace Fund
1991 Established by family and friends to benefit physically disabled individuals in North Carolina
Louise Futrell Fund
1991 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Chrissy Gallaher Victim’s Assistance Fund
1992 Established in honor of Chrissy Gallaher by family and friends to support victims of violent crimes
Ava Gardner Fund
2005 Established by the Ava Gardner Trust for community grantmaking
Edna B. Parkin Georges Animal Fund
1996 Established by bequest as a special purpose fund to benefit domestic animals
Edna B. Parkin Georges Youth Fund
1996 Established by bequest to benefit disadvantaged youth
Vera Goldberg Memorial Fund
1998 Established by Milton Goldberg in memory of his wife as an unrestricted fund
Joseph G. Gordon Fund
1997 Established by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation in memory of Dr. Gordon to benefit disadvantaged youth
Vergil and Vicki Gough Fund
2008 Established as an unrestricted fund
Howard Gray Endowment
1987 Established as an unrestricted fund
James A. Gray Family Fund
1989 Established as an advised fund, then converted to an unrestricted fund at Mr. Gray’s death
William N. Hailey Fund
2004 Established with the remainder interest from the William N. Hailey CRT
Bill and Helene Halverson Fund
2006 Established as an unrestricted fund from a bequest by John W. Halverson
Barbara Lasater Hanes Trust
1988 Established as an unrestricted fund
Mr. and Mrs. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Trust
1998 Established by Mr. and Mrs. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. as an unrestricted fund
James R. Hankins Fund
1967 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Carl W. and Annie M. Harris Endowment
1970 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Samuel A. and Roslyn S. Harris Fund
1980 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund with special interest in music education
Vicki Van Liere Helms Art Fund
2004 Established in memory of Vicki Van Liere Helms by her family and friends to support organizations and programs serving aspiring painters, sculptors, and other artists
Bob and Ruth Herring Fund
2003 Established as an unrestricted fund by Mr. B. J. Herring
Margaret and Harrell Hill Fund
2007 Established as an unrestricted fund
William D. and Jane F. Hobbs Fund
2008 Established by charitable bequest to support the poor and needy of the community
William and Allan Hollan Charitable Fund
2004 Established with memorial gifts to William E. Hollan, Sr. to support human services
Raymond B. Hooker, Jr. Fund–Unrestricted
2000 Established by an estate gift as an unrestricted fund
Mae W. Hubbard Trust
1987 Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund with special consideration for the development, welfare, and education of underprivileged and handicapped children
Allan M. Hutcherson Fund
1944 Established by bequest for Forsyth County youth programs with special consideration to those affecting underserved minority children
Earline heath King Fund
2005 Established to support art and art-related endeavors of the Foundation within North Carolina
Louis and Gretchen Klaff Trust
2010 Established by bequest from Louis and Gretchen Klaff to support at-risk children
Martha K. Knott Fund
1926 Established to provide support for general charitable purposes
R. Edward Lasater Endowment Fund
1950 Established to provide support for general charitable purposes
Lassiter Animal Welfare Fund
2003 Established with an estate gift from Allene D. Lassiter for the benefit of animals in Forsyth County
Lipscomb Fund
2004 Established in honor of Guy and Margaret Lipscomb by their granddaughter
Frank E. Llewellyn T.B. Fund
1970 Established by bequest by Elizabeth P. Llewellyn for general health purposes with a priority for tuberculosis purposes whenever possible
[40] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
PURPOSE
Elsie Ann Long Memorial Fund
1995
Established through an estate gift for programs and activities benefiting needy persons living in the Appalachian region
John C. Long, M.D. Fund
1994
Established by friends of Dr. Long for support in the area of health
Elizabeth Lovett Education Endowment
1996
Established as a fund to support education
Thomas Jack Lynch Memorial Fund
1996
Established by an estate gift as an unrestricted fund
Harvey Seward Martin Fund
1996
Established by bequest by Mrs. Martin for educational purposes at the discretion of the Foundation Committee
Masich Fund
2004
Established by Jane and Tony Masich as an unrestricted fund
Drane V. McCall Fund for Winston-Salem Beautiful
2008
Established by Dr. Bill McCall in honor of his wife, Drane V. McCall
John Alexander McClung, DDS, FACD Trust
1994
Established by Mary Louise Gray in memory of her father to support Christian-related programs or organizations in the local community as determined by the Foundation
Isabel McRae Fund
1981
Established by bequest as an unrestricted fund
Michalove Fund
2004
Established as an unrestricted fund with 41 consecutive years of contributions to the Community Fund
Anonymous Trust #2
1999
Established by an anonymous donor as an unrestricted fund
J. Frank and Mary S. Mock Fund
2003
Established through a CRT to benefit needy children in Forsyth County
Algine Foy and Julius Dobson Neely Memorial Fund
1989
Established by Algine Neely Ogburn in honor of her parents for empowering and encouraging individuals to improve their lives and the lives of their families
Charles E. Norfleet Memorial Fund
1976
Established by Grizzelle M. Norfleet in memory of her brother, who served as secretary of the Foundation during its early years
Jeannette Norfleet Fund
1982
Established by family and friends to support health and medical programs, with special consideration for programs that benefit people suffering from cancer
Dr. Calvin and Ruth H. Ogburn Trust
1978
Established to provide support for general charitable purposes
Margaret W. Parker Fund
1997
Established as an unrestricted fund
Otis B. and Genevieve Parrish Fund
1987
Established to support programs for older adults with debilitating health conditions, especially Alzheimer’s disease
Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund for Human Services
2009
Established by the Mary Ann Payne Revocable Charitable Trust to benefit human services
Thomas R. and Georgia L. Pepper Family Fund
1997
Established by Dr. Francis D. Pepper in memory of his grandparents as an unrestricted fund
Kerr and Naomi Pinnix Discretionary Fund
2006
Established by a testamentary trust created by Naomi Ingram Pinnix to provide financial counseling and advice
Pfafftown Jaycees Community Fund
2005
Established by the Pfafftown Jaycees
Pleasants Hardware Company Trust
1987
Established for general charitable purposes
Nancy T. Pleasants Community Development Fund
1997
Established to support economic development, education and training, leadership development, community long-range planning, community appearance, historic preservation, and regional cooperation
Virginia S. Pleasants Fund
1996
Established by an estate gift as a discretionary fund
Bess Gray Plumly Fund
1965
Established by bequest for general charitable purposes of the Foundation
Etta Mae Pope Trust
2000
Established by Louis B. Pope in memory of his sister to support the poor and needy
Stokes Ivey and Orpha Marie Leonard Pope Family Trust
2000
Established by Louis B. Pope in memory of his parents to support the poor and needy
Donna Germain Rader and Martin H. Rader Fund
2005
Established as an unrestricted fund to honor the memory of Donna Rader’s parents, Owen E. Germain and Emilie Drapalski Germain
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Fund
1975
Established as a part of the company’s 100th anniversary celebration
Mary Neil Henderson Rice Fund
1998
Established by Thomas B. Rice, III in memory of his mother as an unrestricted fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Rice Memorial Fund
1991
Established by family and friends for general charitable purposes
Ann and Clay Ring Fund
1997
Established as an unrestricted fund
Samuel and Elizabeth Rose Fund
1998
Established by bequest by Samuel M. Rose to support general charitable purposes
Sarah Shore Ruffin Fund
2004
Established by beneficiary designation of the Sarah S. Ruffin IRA
Kenard Eugene Sales Memorial Fund
2001
Established in memory of Kenard E. Sales by family and friends to support programs benefiting disadvantaged youth
Sandehill Recreation Fund
1986
Established to promote competitive swimming and water sports in Forsyth County
Louis and Jane Shaffner Fund
2007
Established as an unrestricted fund
Emma Jane Skinner Fund
2001
Established by Frank B. Hanes to support human services organizations Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds – continued on next page
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [41]
Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
PURPOSE
Peggy and Ralph Stockton Fund
1995 Established as an unrestricted fund
Ralph and Frances Stockton Trust
1993 Established as an unrestricted fund
Colin and Mary Louise Stokes Fund
1991 Established as an unrestricted fund to support charitable purposes in Forsyth County
Lillian S. Stultz Fund
1982 Established by bequest for general charitable purposes of the Foundation
Sturmer Samaritan Fund
1997 Established by Martha M. Sturmer in honor of her in-laws, Charles A. and Ernestine Hill Sturmer, to provide support for financially needy patients and residents in nursing homes in Forsyth County
The Sunshine Fund
2007 Established by Robert Jasinkiewicz to benefit domestic animals in Forsyth County
Edward and Mary Alice Tarulli Fund
2006 Established with the charitable remainder of a charitable remainder trust to provide services or programs that benefit individuals who are visually handicapped
Robert Edwin Taylor and Margaret Long Taylor Memorial Fund
2005
Established with the remainder of the Margaret Long Taylor Charitable Remainder Unitrust
J.C. Tise Fund
1927 Established by bequest to support general educational purposes with an emphasis on programs providing enrichment and outreach
Nelson and Dorothy Tomlinson Fund
1997 Established as an unrestricted fund
Twin City Hospital Funds
1920 Established by the executive board of the Hospital by bequest from John W. Alspaugh to benefit projects on behalf of the medically indigent in the community
Wachovia Bank of North Carolina Fund
1987 Established with a gift for unrestricted use and added to in 1994 in honor of all former and current Wachovia employees and in memory of Herbert Brenner
Spencer and Nell Waggoner Charitable Fundâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;Unrestricted
2005
Hayes and Amy Wauford Fund
2007 Established as an unrestricted fund
Art and Dannie Weber Education Fund
2007 Established as a field of interest fund for education
Anne Hanes Willis Fund
1997 Established by Frank B. Hanes in memory of his sister to assist landscaping, gardening, and beautification in the city when public funding is not available
Established through the estate of Nell Kerns Waggoner
Bobby Ray Wilson Human Fund
1996 Established to benefit incarcerated persons in Forsyth County
Nancy H. Wilson Fund
2009 Established by bequest for unrestricted purposes
Winston-Salem Foundation Staff Endowment
2002 Established by B. Thomas Lawson in honor of his former Winston-Salem Foundation colleagues
Edna Motsinger Wooten Fund
2010 Established by bequest for unrestricted purposes
Aubrey Marcus Zimmerman Fund for Recreation for the Handicapped
1984
[42] FUNDS AND DONORS
Established to provide recreational opportunities for the handicapped
the winston-salem foundation annual report
ENDOWED FUNDS
DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS
D
ONOR-ADVISED FUNDS ENABLE UP TO TWO FAMILY GENERATIONS of donors or outside committees to make charitable grant recommendations. Foundation staff can also assist donors with background information on charities or help identify pressing community
needs. These endowed funds are a convenient method of simplifying charitable giving and are an attractive alternative to a private foundation.
NEW FUNDS IN 2011 Susan and Jerry Arnold Trust
Nathan, Jordan, and Nicholas Budd Fund
1998
Joseph B. and Mary M. Dudley Advised Fund
1997
Fries-Willingham Fund
Richard P. and Sylvia S. Budd Fund
1983
Nancy W. Dunn Trust for Spiritual Development
1995
Alice Jane Goodson Fund
Burr Family Trust
2006
Mignon Durham Charitable Fund
1997
Lippard Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Fund
John W. Burress Advised Fund
2008
Christopher Richard Eagan Fund
2002
Steve and Carolyn Phelps Fund
Cardwell-Archer Charitable Fund
2001
EHI Fund
2004
Roaring Gap Fund Education Endowment
Douglas and Marilyn Cardwell Fund
2010
Lynn and Barry Eisenberg Endowed Fund
1998
Bill and Judy Watson Fund for the Arts
Mary J. and Kenneth P. Carlson Advised Fund
2000
Elkin Community Trust
1993
Carr Family Advised Fund
2006
C.B. Eller Education Fund
1987
FUND
YEAR
Sam N. Carter and Pauline H. Carter Fund
2000
Grace H. Emken Fund
1993
1997
Cawood Charitable Fund
1993
Ann and John Faris Community Fund
2008
Celeste Tucker Alspaugh Memorial Trust
1964
Lee Chadwell Fund
2002
Finley-Anderson Fund
1994
Robert G. Auchincloss Fund
2000
Chuck and Bobbie Chambers Advised Trust
1992
Firetree Fund
2008
Philip S. Auchincloss Fund
2000
Chapman Family Fund
2010
Robert and Carol Ford Charitable Trust
1996
Marshall B Bass Children’s Fund Endowment
2004
Lucy Hanes Chatham Fund
1949
James A. and Elizabeth K. Fyock Trust
1999
Bartlett and Wyatt Bassett Fund
2004
Lucy Hanes Chatham Library Fund
1951
Gaddy Educator Fund
2010
Andrew Beattie Endowment
2010
Richard T. Chatham Fund
1972
Dr. Kenneth R. Gallup, Jr. Family Charitable Fund
1996
Ted and Charlotte Blount Fund
1997
Thomas Lenoir and Anna Hanes Chatham Fund
1998
Thad W., Mildred B. and Kathryn W. Garner Trust
1998
Karla Bolen Memorial Fund
2003
Gerald and Lee Ann Chrisco Family Trust
1998
Genesis Fund
2007
Eleanor and Sam Booke, Jr. Fund
1998
Robert Clark Family Fund
1997
Glade Valley School Fund
1988
Elizabeth E. and Henry M. Booke Trust
1994
Phillip M. Clifton, MD Memorial Fund for Children
2003
Annie Bennett Glenn Fund
2010
Sam and Anne Booke Family Trust
1989
Brenda Kulynych Cline Fund
1998
Madlon and Kirk Glenn Family Fund
2010
Julian R. and Mary P. Bossong Fund
1998
Clover Street Fund
2003
Skip and Beth Boswell Trust
2007
Ron and Jeff Coppage Cancer Fund
1999
Alice O’Kelley Goodson and William A. Goodson, Jr. 1991 Family Trust
Braswell Family Charitable Fund
1995
A. Robert Cordell Family Trust
1998
Mike and Wendy Brenner Trust
2002
Joan R. and David L. Cotterill Advised Trust
1994
Paul and Judy Moore Briggs Family Fund
2000
Credence Fund
1997
Royall and Alice Brown Advised Trust
1993
Bill and Betty Gray Davis Fund
2000
Royall R. Brown, Jr. Advised Trust
1992
John and Terrie Davis Family Fund
1999
Budd Group Foundation
2001
DeForest Family Fund
2003
Christopher David Budd Fund
1996
Ashley Holland Dozier Charitable Fund
1998
Joseph R. Budd Family Trust
1997
Driscoll Family Fund
1997
William T. and Sylvia F. Alderson Fund
William A. and Georgia H. Goodson Fund
1968
Louis and Marcia Gottlieb Family Fund
1996
Grace Court Trust
1996
Margaret N. Graham Art Fund
1942
Bernard and Anne Howell Gray Advised Fund for the Community
1998
Green Angel Fund
1997
J.T. Greene, Jr. Charitable Trust
1995
Emily Grousbeck Fund 1988 Donor-Advised Funds – continued on next page
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [43]
Donor-Advised Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
Elsie L. Morris Fund
1999
Pearl and Ray Sams Family Trust
2000
Hanes Family Downtown Fund
2003
Morgan Family Charitable Trust
2010
Phoebe B. and William M. Satterwhite, Jr. Fund
2005
R. Philip and Charlotte M. Hanes Community Trust
1988
Gene and Margaret Motsinger Family Fund
2006
Daniel and Linda Sayers Charitable Fund
1996
Harrison Family Fund
2001
Mil and Marsh Naugle Fund
1999
Margaret Scales and Graydon Pleasants Endowment 2007
Sam and Kathryn Hauser Fund
2005
Neal Family Fund
2001
Andrew J. and Ellen N. Schindler Advised Fund
Thomasine Herring Hayes Fund
2009
Lucian and Robie Neal Fund
2002
Adrian R. and Robert D. Shore Trust
1999
L. Stephen Hendrix Fund
2001
Stephen L. Neal Advised Fund
1997
SKM Charitable Fund
2004
Emily Millis Hiatt Fund
2010
T. David Neill Family Fund
1998
Katie Sleap Memorial Fund
2005
Bill and Leslie Hollan Fund
1994
Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien Family Fund
2005
Zach Smith Fund
2009
Judith Hoots Family Fund
2005
Sam C. Ogburn, Sr. and Mary Ceile F. Ogburn Fund
2007
F. Conard and Jean Snyder Fund
2005
B.F. Huntley and Josephine Huntley Trust
1997
Orr Family Charitable Trust
1999
Morris and Lillian Sosnik Memorial Fund
1987
David A. and Roberta W. Irvin Fund
2000
Katherine W. Otterbourg Fund
2003
Jonathan Mark Spaugh Memorial Charitable Fund
2010
Janeway Family Fund
1996
C.T. Overby Youth Golf Fund
2006
William A. and Eleanor W. Starbuck Advised Fund
2010
W.T. and Mary Cobb Jenkins Family Fund
2005
Marlene and Craven Page Trust
1997
William A. and Eleanor W. Starbuck Charitable Fund 2010
Bill Johnson Trust to Benefit Stokes County
1999
Dwight E. and Annie E. Pardue Advised Fund
2004
Rufus T. Stedman Memorial Fund
1931
Florinda C. Johnson Charitable Fund
2005
Harry O. and Margaret W. Parker Family Trust
2006
Nealie Belk Stevens Fund
1962
Garland Johnson Fund for the Benefit of Elkin Public Library
2001
Nathan E. and Lisa J. Parrish Advised Fund
2007
Richard and Wendel Stockton Fund
1997
Eugene and Ann Paschold Fund
1996
Janice Kulynych Story Fund
1998
Bob Pate Memorial Fund
1987
Charles V. Taft Family Charitable Trust
1995
Pauline Davis Perry Fund
1996
John A. and Marguerite B. Taylor Fund
1986
L. Gordon and June D. Pfefferkorn, Jr. Trust
1993 1999
Thompson/Rotary Club of Winston-Salem Educational Fund
1950
L. Gordon, Jr. and June D. Pfefferkorn Trust-2 Piedmont Federal Fund
1993
Ruth M. and Clifton E. Pleasants Trust
1990
Michael J. Pollak Trust
1995
J. Michael Johnston Memorial Fund
1996
Jones Family Fund
2006
Christopher and Lucinda Kellam Jones Fund
1997
Thad and Catherine Jones Charitable Fund
1996
Leon and Renee Kaplan Fund
1999
Dale and Mary King Fund
2004
L. Andrew Koman and Leigh E. Koman Fund
1999
Thomas J. and Lynne Koontz Charitable Trust
1996
A. Thad and Margaret W. Lewallen Advised Trust
1994
A.J. Linville Memorial Fund
2006
Lowy Family Fund
1997
Lydia Phillips McCabe Advised Fund
1997
McGowen Charitable Fund
1996
McGuirt Family Fund
1996
J. Frank and Laura Turnage McNair Charitable Trust
1996
William and Kim Means Charitable Fund
1996
Medlin Charitable Fund
1994
John and Kelly Merritt Family Charitable Trust
2007
Henry S. Miller Advised Fund
2005
Molly Millis Hedgecock Fund
2010
James and Deborah Millis, Jr. Fund
2009
Dr. John H. and Elizabeth B. Monroe Fund
2002
[44] FUNDS AND DONORS
Ashburn Wright Wall Pollock Charitable Trust
1994
Frances and Steve Porter Family Fund
2010
Billy D. and Deborah Prim Donor Advised Fund
2004
Gladys Cain Pulliam and Grady R. Pulliam, Jr. Fund
2007
Purcell Family Fund
2006
Realty-Analytix Triad Stewardship Fund
2009
David and Deborah Rice Fund
1995
Roaring Gap Fund Endowment
2010
T. Wayne Robertson Memorial Fund
1998
Roslyn Trust
2000
Rubin Family Fund
2000
Tom and Kathy Rucker Charitable Trust
2000
Guy and Liz Rudisill Fund
1993
Benjamin and Avon Ruffin Family Fund
2007
Jack and Betty Runnion Fund
1996
the winston-salem foundation annual report
2004
Thornton Family Fund
2001
Tuttle Family Charitable Fund
2005
Harry and Nancy Underwood Advised Trust
1994
Margaret M. Urquhart Advised Fund
2001
Carolyn H. Vaughn Fund
1997
Wake Forest Baptist Church Fund
1992
Wall Family Trust
2002
Maytrice Walton Fund
2010
Ward Family Advised Trust
1995
Sharon L. Washington-McBryde Memorial Fund
2005
Jean and Phil Waugh Family Trust
2001
Edward Kent Welch Memorial Fund
2005
A.T. Williams Oil Company Fund
1988
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Crime Prevention Fund
1996
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Public Education Fund
1996
Catherine R. Williams Family Fund
2003
John W. and Donna H. Willingham Advised Fund
2006
Diana Dyer Wilson Endowment Fund
1971
Donor-Advised Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
Jane Butler and J.D. Wilson Family Trust
1983
Paula Wimmer Memorial Fund
2006
Ann King Windham Fund
2004
Winston-Salem Dash Baseball Community Trust
1999
Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Economic Development Fund
1985
Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Excellence in Education Endowment Fund
1982
Winston-Salem Police Benefit Fund
1980
Winston-Salem Regional Association of REALTORS 2005 Charitable Fund Winston-Salem Twin City Host Lions Club Endowment Fund
1999
Wolfe Family Fund
2000
Womanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Club of Winston-Salem
1935
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fund Endowment
2007
Rick and Lyn Worf Fund
1998
Elizabeth L. Wyeth Fund
1998
Bryan D. and JoAnn M. Yates Fund
2008
Lynn and Jeff Young Charitable Fund
2010
Yasser and Georgia Youssef Family Trust
2008
Youth Philanthropy Initiative
2004
Blanche Raper Zimmerman Fund
1986
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [45]
ENDOWED FUNDS
DESIGNATED AND AGENCY ENDOWMENT FUNDS
D
ESIGNATED FUNDS are established by donors who wish to provide annual support to specific charities. Should the organization(s) cease to exist, the Foundation has the responsibility to ensure that a donor’s original intent is met. Charitable organizations can establish
AGENCY ENDOWMENT FUNDS to benefit from the Foundation’s professional investment management administration, thus allowing their staffs and boards to focus on providing necessary services to their constituents. NEW FUNDS IN 2011
PURPOSE
Buena Vista Median Restoration Endowment Established by neighbors and friends of the Buena Vista Median Restoration Project for use by Keep Winston-Salem Beautiful, Inc. Albert L. Butler, Jr. and Elizabeth Bahnson Butler Fund Established by the Albert L. Butler, Jr. Charitable Remainder Trust to benefit various organizations A.F. Clement Trust – Designated Established in 1970 and repurposed in 2011 to benefit education programs at The Children’s Home Elkin Public Library Endowment Established by the library as an agency endowment Lawrence and Wilda Hine Charitable Fund Established with the remainder of the Lawrence R. Hine Irrevocable Trust for the benefit of Friedland Moravian Church and The Masonic Home for Children at Oxford Outer Banks Relief Foundation Fund Established as an agency endowment Stafford Fund for Bunker Hill Cemetery Established with the remainder of the Donald W. Stafford 2007 Charitable Remainder Trust to support the Bunker Hill United Methodist Church cemetery Pearl Fields Stafford Fund for Salem Academy Established with the remainder of the Donald W. Stafford 2007 Charitable Remainder Trust to support Salem Academy Hal G. Worley Endowment Fund Established with an estate commitment for the benefit of various charities
FUND
YEAR
Louise and Sam Adams Designated Fund
2005
Joyce Adger Endowment for Bethesda Center
2009
Emily Allen Wildflower Preserve Protection and Management Endowment
2001
John Wesley Alspaugh and Celeste Tucker Alspaugh Memorial Trust–Children’s Home
1964
American Red Cross (Northwest North Carolina Chapter) Endowment Fund
1997
Amos Cottage–Harry O. Parker Wing Fund
2004
Marshall B Bass Best Choice Center Endowment Fund
1997
Marshall B Bass Fund for Senior Services
2008
Marshall B and Celestine P. Bass Endowment for St. Anne’s Episcopal Church Child Care Center
2008
Bill and Hallie Beckerdite Trust Fund
2010
Nathalie L. Bernard Fund
1963
Big Brothers/Big Sisters Services, Inc. Endowment
1996
Mary Leight Booe Fund
Camp Civitan Fund
1986
William Joyce Camp Dogwood Endowment
1995
Dorothy M. Carpenter Fund
2008
Carr Family Fund–Designated
2006
The Centers for Exceptional Children Endowment
2010
Centenary United Methodist Church Sunday School Fund
1927
1989
Perry B. Clark Memorial Fund of Leadership Winston-Salem
1987
Arts Council Endowment Fund
1957
Arts for Life Endowment
2008
Daniel and Jo Ann Boucher Industries for the Blind Endowment
2004
Joel and Blanche Clingman Charitable Trust
2009
Ashburn Trust–Bowery Mission and Young Men’s Home
1970
Gertrude and Morris Brenner Fund
1993
Community Care Center for Forsyth County, Inc. Endowment
2007
Ashburn Trust–World Vision
1970
Community Marrow Donor Program, Inc.– Forsyth County Area Endowment
2000
Associated Charities Fund
1928
Nottie Riddle Cook Fund
1986
Sarah Austin Child Development Center Trust
1995
1987
Sarah Austin Family Services Shelter Trust
1991
Planned Parenthood Dewitt Cordell Education Endowment
Mary Ruth B. Barrett Fund
Crimestoppers Endowment Fund
1992
Celestine Pate Bass Memorial Hospice Fund
Crisis Control Ministry, Inc. Endowment Fund
1987
[46] FUNDS AND DONORS
Hal Brownfield Endowment
2007
Nick Bunce Friendship Fund
2002
Bryon Tyler Burdick Memorial Fund
1989
Bess Lee Burke Memorial Fund
2003
2006
Hugh E. Bynum, Jr. and Elizabeth H. Bynum Memorial Fund-Designated
2000
2007
Calvary Baptist Church Fund
1998
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Designated and Agency Endowment Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
Crosby Endowment Fund
1987
Crosby Scholars Endowment Fund
2008
Selden Cundiff Memorial Trust for the Endowment 2002 of Holly Haven care home of AIDS Care Service, Inc.
William D. and Jane F. Hobbs Rector’s Discretionary Fund of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
2008
James E., Jr. and Betty Jones Holmes Fund
1999
Lawrence Byerly Holt, MD Memorial Fund
1988
Raymond B. Hooker, Jr. Fund–Designated
2000
Old Hickory Council/Camp Raven Knob Endowment 1989 Old Hickory Council Endowment Fund
1997
Harry O. and Margaret W. Parker Ophthalmology Research Fund
2004
Margaret W. Parker Fund for Amos Cottage– Discretionary
2004
Margaret W. Parker Fund for Amos Cottage– Operations
2004 1998
Bunny and Bill Davis Highland Scouting Fund
2000
Hope Trust of Crisis Control Ministry
1995
Enrichment Center Endowment
2006
Judith and Marbry Hopkins Endowment
1996
Alex C. Ewing North Carolina School of the Arts Campus Fund
1999
Louise S. Hunter Fund
2004
John H. Felts, M.D. Fund
2000
Institute for Dismantling Racism Endowment
2009
Margaret W. Parker–Ronald McDonald House of Winston-Salem Endowment Fund
Forsyth Jail and Prison Ministries Endowment
2002
Viola and Dwight Jackson Memorial Fund
1999
Otis B. and Genevieve W. Parrish Endowment Fund II 1992
Forsyth County Dental Society Endowment
2010
Ella Mae Johnson Fund
1994
Mary A. Payne Charitable Fund
2009
Friendship Force of Central North Carolina Fund
1987
Johnson Family Cemetery Trust Fund
1999
Lucy Paynter Fund
2005
Guy R. and Florence M. Fulp Charitable Trust
2000
Jimmy Johnson Memorial Fund
2005
2010
Galloway Memorial Episcopal Church Endowment
2009
June Porter Johnson Fund for Salem Academy and College
2006
Peace Haven Baptist Church of Winston-Salem Endowment Fred Taylor Peden Trust of St. Paul’s Wilkesboro
2001
Germanton United Methodist Church Fund
2005
Trey Jones Philmont Scholarship Fund
2007
Penland Endowment for Art Education
2010
J. Kirk Glenn Jr. Endowment for Crisis Control Ministry
2008
Junior League of Winston-Salem Endowment Fund
1998
Penland School of Crafts Fund
1983
Goodwill Industries of NW NC, Inc. Endowment
1997
Peter R. Kellogg Fund of Riverwood Therapeutic Riding Center
2006
Francis D. and Fannie Byrd Smith Pepper, Sr. Fund
1997
William (Billy) and Maggie Gordon Memorial Fund for Haw Pond Church of Christ
1998
Jane R. Kennedy Endowment Fund
1989
Bowman and Gordon Gray Trust
1970
Bowman Gray Trust– Bowman Gray School of Medicine
1970
Gordon Gray Trust– Bowman Gray School of Medicine
1982
James A. Gray Endowment
1946
James A. Gray Foreign Mission Fund
1948
Group Homes of Forsyth, Inc. Endowment
1993
Habitat for Humanity of Forsyth County Endowment Fund–II
1999
Mr. and Mrs. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Designated Trust
2010
Gordon Hanes Memorial Endowment for Crisis Control Ministry
1995
Jennifer Lowy-Dock Fund
1997
Jacob F. Hanes Fund for The Children’s Home
1935
Lowy Fund–Shepherd’s Center
2000
Jacob F. Hanes Fund for Superannuated Methodist Ministers
1935
Anne and Bill Magness Meals-on-Wheels Fund
2008
Joan H. Hanes Fund
1983
G.L. Millsaps Memorial Trust
2000
Lewis Lee and Suzanne Ellis Hawley Memorial Fund
2008
J. William Moir Charitable Trust
2006
Charles E. and Pauline L. Hayworth Fund
1994
Montague Scholarship Medal Fund
1939
Thomas K. Hearn, Jr.– Leadership Winston-Salem Scholarship
2010
William G. Montgomery, MD Fund for Senior Services
1995
Henderson Endowment for Galloway Memorial Episcopal Church
2010
National Trust for Historic Preservation in the United States
1981
Ada Hill and Jesse Davis Powers Fund
2005
North Carolina Academy of Physician Assistants Endowment
1992
Mary Hill Habitat for Humanity Fund
1996
George S. Norfleet Bible Fund
1932
Elizabeth C. and Ralph B. Ogburn Fund
1984
Francis D. and Phyllis Canup Pepper, Jr. Fund
1997
Louise A. Peterson Trust
2002
Pfafftown Jaycees Designated Fund
2005
Louis and Gretchen Klaff Trust-Designated
2010
Petro Kulynych/Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation Endowment
2003
John W. Landingham Fund
2009
Peggy Bowen Leight Fund
2001
Maintenance Trust for Lewisville United Methodist Church
1998
Little Theatre Endowment Fund
1996
Richard and Barbara Pope Trust
1998
Lloyd Presbyterian Church Fund
2001
Larriston Hill Powers Memorial Fund
2005
Regina Derwin Lofland Fund
2009 2008
Preservation North Carolina–Winston-Salem Regional Office Endowment Fund
1997
Love’s UMC Capital Needs Fund Love’s United Methodist Church Memorial Fund
2008
Piedmont Opera Endowment Fund
1987
Kerr and Naomi Pinnix Designated Fund
2006
Pinedale Christian Church Fund
1997
Julia Davis Pollard Memorial Fund
1969
Orpha Marie Leonard Pope Fund
1986
Kenneth O. Raschke Literacy Initiative Trust
1996
Mary Neil Henderson Rice Designated Fund
2010
Stephen G. Richey Memorial Fund
1986
Wood Richmond Memorial Fund
1960
Golding H. Riddle Fund
1953
Golding H. Riddle St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Fund
2001
Right Turns for Youth Endowment
2003
Jimmy Roddick Fund
2010
Ronald McDonald House of Winston-Salem, Inc. Endowment Fund
1985
Lorraine Flynt Rudolph Endowment Fund
2004
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Endowment
1946
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Mission Fund
1950
St. Paul’s Wilkesboro Endowment Fund 2001 Unrestricted and Field of Interest Funds – continued on next page
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [47]
Designated and Agency Endowment Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
2005
Winston-Salem Piedmont Triad Symphony Heritage Fund
John and Pauline Hoots Waller Trust
1999
Winston-Salem Symphony Chair Endowment Fund
1971
Ina B. Watson Trust
2000
Dorothy E. Wolf Charitable Fund
2010
Wilkes Library Endowment
2001
Wolfe Family Charitable Fund
1996
Wilkes Playmakers Inc. Endowment
2007
Wolfe-Steele Young Life Trust
1996
Mr. and Mrs. A. Tab Williams, Jr. Fund
1998
Jane Gilbert Womble Fund
2010
A.T. Williams, Jr. Family Fund for St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
1993
William F. and Jane Gilbert Womble Fund for Arbor Acres
2010
1983
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Fund for the Salvation Army of Winston-Salem
1996
William F. and Jane Gilbert Womble Fund for Senior Services
2010
James Reynolds Sheffield, Sr. and James Reynolds Sheffield, Jr. Trust
1995
A. Tab Williams, Jr. St. Paul’s Building Fund
2007
World Law Fund
1994
Shepherd’s Center of Greater Winston-Salem Endowment Trust
2005
LuTelle Sherrill Williams Fund
1986
1999
2001
Irving and Minnie Sheppard Memorial Fund
1999
Willow and Woody Memorial Trust for the Riverwood Therapeutic Riding Center
Bland and Ada Worley/Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation Trust
1993
Chris Yarborough Memorial Sawtooth Center Library Trust
1998
Diana Dyer Wilson Organ Maintenance Fund Winston-Salem Civitan Fund
2009
YMCA of Greater Winston-Salem Heritage Club Endowment
1995
Special Children’s School– Jacqueline Styers Young Fund
2001
St. Philip’s Episcopal Church Fund
1953
St. Stephens Episcopal Church Endowment
1997
Samaritan Ministries Endowment Fund
2001
Sawtooth School for Visual Art Endowment
1996
Sawtooth School for Visual Art Scholarship Fund
1996
Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina Fund
1997
Senior Services, Inc. Endowment
1994
R.Y. and Eileen Sharpe Fund
Spencer and Nell Waggoner Charitable Fund– Designated
Sloan S. Sherrill Fund
1978
Richard Edmund Shore Memorial Fund
2003
Siloam Baptist Church Endowment Fund
1997
Winston-Salem Delta Fine Arts, Inc. Endowment Fund
1995
Paul and Sara Sinal Fund
1997
Winston-Salem National Little League Endowment
2000
Frances Horne Smith and Howard H. Smith Memorial Fund
1968
Gilbert W. and Gail S. Spencer Fund
2008
Sprinkle Mission Fund
1982
Lucy L. Stedman Memorial Fund
1931
Ruth Stevenson Stewardship Endowment
2004
Ralph and Peggy Stockton Arbor Acres Fund
2006
Sturmer Spay and Neuter Fund
1993
Summit School Endowment Fund
1959
Robert E. Taylor Memorial Fund
1995
William Mills and Margaret Parks Taylor Fund
2007
Tower Fund
2008
Trinity Center Endowment Fund
2000
Bynum E. Tudor Fund for Reynolda House Museum of American Art
2001
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Endowment
2002
United Way Caring Shares Endowment
1990
United Way Joel A. Weston, Jr. Memorial Endowment
1988
Forrest and Gene Vogler Arts Endowment
2008
H. and E. Vogler Fund
1978
Voluntary Action Center Training Endowment Fund
1986
[48] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
1999
ENDOWED FUNDS
STUDENT AID FUNDS
S
INCE 1923 THE FOUNDATIONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S STUDENT AID FUNDS have provided local students with the resources to pursue their academic goals. Donors may establish scholarships or grants with a minimum of $20,000 to support students from a particular high school, church,
or county, or for those who attend a specific college or university. NEW FUNDS IN 2011
PURPOSE
Mark Collier Caudill Scholarship Established by Virginia Whichard Caudill to honor her husband and to provide scholarships for graduating R.J. Reynolds High School seniors A.F. Clement Trust for Scholarships Established in 1970 and repurposed in 2011 as a need-based student aid fund Billy Dwight Memorial Scholarship Established with memorial gifts from friends and family to support scholarships for graduating North Forsyth High School seniors Robin and Danny Greenspun MBA Scholarship Established by Ian Jankelowitz to support scholarships for Wake Forest University MBA students Joyce Kohfeldt Endowment for Crosby Scholars Established as an agency endowment to support scholarships Lambeth Family Scholarship Established by Donny and Pam Lambeth to provide scholarships for graduating Parkland High School seniors Salem Lodge #139 / Robert A. Miller Memorial Scholarship Established in 2009 and endowed in 2011 by Salem Lodge #139 in memory of Robert A. Miller to provide scholarships to graduating high school seniors attending a historically black college or university Bill and Cynthia Tessien Scholarship Established with a grant from the T. Rowe Price Program for Charitable Giving, upon the recommendation of Bill and Cynthia Tessien, to provide scholarships for graduating Parkland High School seniors Woodbine Big Dreams Scholarship Established by The Woodbine Agency, Inc. to provide scholarships for graduating high school seniors who are interested in pursuing careers in the communication arts field
FUND
YEAR
Annie S. Alexander Memorial Scholarship
2009
Ray S. Church Memorial Scholarship Fund
2006
Marlene Marie Pope Flinchum Scholarship
Kate Allred Education Grant
2010
Gwenn Steward Clements Scholarship
2009
Forsyth County Nursing Scholarship Fund
1969
William H. Andrews/HAWS Scholarship Fund
1993
Elmer and Rosa Lee Collins Scholarship
2006
William Ragsdale Froelich Memorial Scholarship
2010
Zack H. Bacon IV Scholarship
2005
Lloyd E. and Rachel S. Collins Scholarship Fund
2001
Joe E. Gaddy, Jr. and Margaret W. Gaddy Scholarship 1995
Marshall B Bass Endowed Scholars Program at Winston-Salem State University
2002
Mary Rowena Cooper Scholarship Fund
1991
Marshall B Bass Scholars Endowment Program at Forsyth Technical Community College
2005
2005
The Garden Club Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County Scholarship
2004
Ray and Jackie Cope Scholarship Fund D.C. Cornelius Memorial Scholarship Fund
2004
Matthew Alan Gfeller Memorial Scholarship
2009
Marshall B Bass Scholars Endowment Fund at Livingstone College
2007
Serena D. Dalton Scholarship Fund
1977
Joseph E. Davies Scholarship Fund
2002
Marshall B Bass Scholars Fund at Voorhees College
2004
Bunny and Bill Davis Highland Scholarship Fund
2000
F. A. and Charlotte Blount Scholarship
2007 1989
Oliver Joel and Ellen Pell Denny Healthcare Scholarship
1985
Sam L. Booke, Sr. Scholarship Fund Boyles-Eidson Scholarship Fund
2001
Joyce and Jim Dickerson Scholarship Fund
2000
Jeanna Brown Memorial Scholarship Fund
1986
Digestive Health Specialists Scholarship
2010
Tien Bui Memorial Scholarship
2007
Wade and Marcelene Duncan Scholarship Fund
2004
Wes Burton Memorial Scholarship
2005
East Forsyth High School Alumni Scholarship
2002
Carver High School Alumni Association Scholarship 2010
James M. and Mary P. Edwards Memorial Scholarship 2010 James L. Einstein College Scholarship Fund
2009
2001
Claire Tillson Gladding Scholarship
2010
James A. Gray High School Alumni Scholarship
2002
Josh Gray Memorial Scholarship
2010
Claude B. Hart Memorial Scholarship
2004
William T. Hatch and Mabel P. Hatch Scholarship Fund
1994
Fred and Mozelle L. Hinshaw Scholarship Fund
1995
Walter R. Hoag Scholarship Fund
1990
Fred Colby Hobson Scholarship Fund
1994
Jack and Barbara Holt Memorial Scholarship Fund
2000
Brevard R. Hoover, Jr. Leadership Award
2007
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [49]
Student Aid Funds, continued FUND
YEAR
Emma Kapp Ogburn Memorial Fund
1946
Art and Dannie Weber Scholarship
2007
Orthopaedic Specialists of the Carolinas’ Nursing Scholarship
2002
Art and Dannie Weber Fund for Forsyth Technical Community College
2007
Willis H. Overby Scholarship
2010
Erma Drum Webster Fund
1996
2007
Jeannette Anderson Parker Memorial Scholarship Fund
2008
A.T. Williams Oil Company Fund II– H. Frank Steelman Scholarship
2001
1996
Otis B. and Genevieve W. Parrish Scholarship
2010
A.T. Williams Oil Company Scholarship Fund
1998
1996
Alice Conger Patterson Scholarship
2007
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Scholarship Fund
2003
Stella B. Johnson Scholarship Fund
1987
William H. and Lena M. Petree Trust
1996
Elizabeth T. Williams Memorial Scholarship
1999
Tripp Joye Memorial Scholarship Fund
2009
L. Gordon, Jr. and June D. Pfefferkorn Scholarship
2004
2007
Kapp-Weaver Scholarship Fund–Greensboro College 1997
L. Gordon, Jr. and June D. Pfefferkorn Scholarship Fund for Forsyth Technical Community College
2004
Edwin H. and Louise N. Williamson Endowed Scholarship
2001
The Winston-Salem Foundation Student Loan Fund
1947
Philo ABC Memorial Scholarship Fund
Winston-Salem Hospitals Consortium Nursing Student Loan Fund
1981
Erica Wolfe Memorial Scholarship Fund
1998
Yadkin County Association of Educators (YCAE) Scholarship Fund
1985
Marcus Raper Zimmerman Scholarship Fund
1983
I.W. Hughes Scholarship Fund
2008
Sergeant Mickey Hutchens Leadership Scholarship
2009
A. Ruth Hutchins Memorial Scholarship
2010
Elizabeth Loving James Memorial Scholarship John Russell Jarman Scholarship Fund Flora Royall Johnson Scholarship Fund
Kapp-Weaver Scholarship Fund– R.J. Reynolds High School
1997
J. Lee Keiger, Jr. Family Fund
1999 2007
Pfafftown Jaycees/Lynn Canada Memorial Scholarship Fund
2005
Douglas Gray Kimel Scholarship Fund Law Enforcement Benefit Fund
1993
Dean Prim Scholarship Fund
1989
Law Enforcement Family Scholarship Fund
1994
Robert G. Prongay Memorial Scholarship
2001
Leinbach Chain-Breaker Scholarship Fund
1992
Patty Brendle Redway Fund
1996
William H. Lester Packaging and Graphics Scholarship Fund
1990
Kate B. Reynolds Scholarship Fund
1979
2008
R.J. Reynolds High School Class of 1968 Memorial Scholarship Fund
1998
Johnny Lineberry Memorial Scholarship Fund L.D. and Elsie Long Memorial Scholarship Fund
1980
John S. and Jacqueline P. Rider Scholarship
2004
Love’s United Methodist Church Scholarship for Christian Education
2008
Evelyn Ripple Winston-Salem Beta Sigma Phi Scholarship Fund
1996
Love’s United Methodist Church Scholarship Fund
2008
Dr. Eugene Rossitch, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Fund
1998
Edwin E. and Grace Kimrey Maddrey Scholarship Fund
2003
Samuel K. Rowland Trust
1928
Ray and Pearl Sams Scholarship Fund
1999
Samuel Griffin Seawell and Patsy Moore Seawell Memorial Fund
2008
Roy Eugene and Collie Byrd Sebastian Memorial Scholarship Fund
1997
Sharpe Student Loan Fund
1981
Mary Speer Martin Scholarship Trust
1997
R. Bruce Matthews Student Assistance Fund
2010
Mark James Mendenhall Memorial Scholarship Fund 2009 Millennium Charter Academy College Scholarship
2007
Julia Yokeley Miller Memorial Scholarship Fund
1983
N. W. Mitchell/Piedmont Federal Endowed Scholarship Fund
2003
Gray W. Mock Family Scholarship Chester Arzell and Helen Miller Montgomery Scholarship Fund Paul Holcomb Murphy Memorial Fund
Bruce Shelton Scholarship Fund
1991
Thomas E. Shown, MD Scholarship Fund
2006
2005
Jonathan LaRon Skinner Memorial Scholarship
2010
2007
Paul and Evelyn Snow Scholarship Fund
1998
Ann Lewallen Spencer Scholarship Fund
1995
1983
Stultz Scholarship Fund
1982
Paul Holcomb Murphy Memorial Fund– Invested Income
1983
Summit School Opportunity Fund
2006
Murray Supply Company Scholarship
2006
Virginia Elizabeth and Alma Vane Taylor Nursing Scholarship
1966
Michael Nachman Scholarship Fund
1995
Jeff Turner-Forsyth Audubon Scholarship Fund
2005
NC USSSA Scholarship
2007
Nell and Spencer Waggoner Scholarship Fund
2005
[50] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION
SCHOLARSHIP AND EDUCATION GRANT
T
HE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIP AND EDUCATION GRANT, established in 2008, provides scholarships to Forsyth County students as they pursue post-secondary education. Recipients must demonstrate outstanding leadership, school service, and community
involvement and should exemplify the Foundationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s core values of generosity, inclusion, integrity, and excellence.
The Foundation greatly appreciates the previously established student aid funds listed below that were combined to provide the initial funding
for The Winston-Salem Foundation Scholarship and Education Grant. Contributions to the fund from the public are also welcomed as we seek to make our community stronger through the higher education of our youth.
COMPONENT FUND
YEAR ESTABLISHED
Stanley D. Hartgrove Memorial Scholarship Fund
1997
W.N. Reynolds Student Loan Fund
1931
2006
Keith Jackson Memorial Fund
1976
M.D. Stockton Education Fund
1927
Leo Caldwell Memorial Student Loan Fund
1923
Andrew Lane Memorial Scholarship
2006
N.D. Sullivan Charitable Trust
1971
Stanley Michael Elrod Scholarship Fund
2004
Lasater Student Loan Fund
1927
George B. Whitaker Memorial Student Loan Fund
1927
Emergency Loan Fund
1937
Rachel Tolson Law Memorial Scholarship Fund
2008
John L. Gilmer Student Loan Fund
1947
Ricky Douglas Mitchell Scholarship Fund
2009
John Gold Memorial Fund
1976
Norfleet Memorial Fund
1976
Mr. and Mrs. David Friedman
Anna Hodgin Hanes Student Loan Fund
1926
Lucy Simmons Puryear Memorial Scholarship Fund
1994
Mr. Colin M. Snyder
Guy J. Bridges, Jr. Educational Fund
DONORS IN 2011
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [51]
NON-ENDOWED FUNDS
NON-ENDOWED ADVISED FUNDS
N
ON-ENDOWED ADVISED FUNDS allow donors to make grant recommendations from the principal of their fund. Because of the simplicity and efficiency of these funds, many donors use them for annual charitable giving purposes.
NEW FUNDS IN 2011 Bill Benton Non-Endowed Fund
Masich Family Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Wine)
David C. Eagan Fund
Hof and Kathryn Milam Charitable Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Zurlo)
For Katieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Sake
Miller Family Advised Fund
Michael and Jill Rogers Fund
Forsyth Medical Center Community Benefit Fund (Thomas)
Richard H. and Nola G. Miller Advised Fund
Suzie and Dennis Ross Fund
Bo and Jenny Fulton Charitable Fund
Pitt Hopkins Syndrome Fund
Sherwood Forest Elementary School Fund
Kelley and Drew Hancock Advised Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Belden)
Shaun Edward Stewart Fund
Tommy L. and Patricia B. Hickman Family Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Fairchild)
Alex and Elliott Turner Advised Fund
Julie Holland Charitable Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Gary)
Whitaker Elementary Endowment Fund
Hope For The Hopeless - Spencer Meyer Foundation Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Gutliph)
Winston-Salem Children & Youth Fund
Mike and Brooke Joyce Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Hoover)
w.u.r.k.s. Charitable Fund
Lineberger Family Fund
Prince William Community Benefit Fund (Magalski)
Tom and Jean Adams Fund
Edward S. and Barbara T. Beason Advised Fund
Henrietta Dibrell Brown Advised Fund
David and Liz Albertson Fund
Stewart and Tracey Beason Charitable Fund
Kenton and Amy Brown Fund
Hannah Albertson Fund
Ranlet S. and Frank M. Bell, Jr. Advised Fund
Kirby C. Brown Fund
Martha Albertson Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Graham F. Bennett Advised Fund
Patty and Malcolm Brown Fund
Elms and Harriet Allen Advised Fund
Bentley Fund
Rodney C. and Martha R. Brown Fund
Gayle Anderson/Carey Hedgpeth Fund
Deborah L. Best Advised Fund
Callahan Family Fund
Dr. Stephen G. and Cynthia Anderson Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Bettis Advised Fund
Canary Fund
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Andrews Fund
Frank L. Blum Fund
Angela and William Carr Advised Fund
ARC Fund
June and Jack Blunk Fund
Susan Cobb Carson Advised Fund
Marie and Guy Arcuri Family Fund
Paul Breitbach Fund
Virginia L. Carson Advised Fund
Douglas D. Arnold and Lynn E. Calhoun Advised Fund
Brendle Advised Fund
Thomas A. and Kay B. Carter Advised Fund
Dan and Margaret Austell Fund
Felice and Richard A. Brenner Fund
David and Deborah Cassels Fund
Dr. Khosrow Bahrani Advised Fund
Mike and Wendy Brenner Charitable Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Caudle Advised Fund
Charles S. and Beth D. Baldwin Advised Fund
James T. and Betty S. Brewer Fund
Cavanaugh Fund
Pam and Bill Ball Advised Fund
Bridgeford Charity Fund
Steve and Tonya Cavanaugh Hope Fund
R. Barrett Family Fund
Michael Britt Family Fund
Hobart and Adelaide W. Cawood Fund
Marshall B and Celestine P. Bass Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Dr. Richard A. Brodkin Advised Fund
Chuck and Bobbie Chambers Advised Fund
Michael and Julie Baughan Fund
Brookfield Fund
Dudley C. and Winborne S. Chandler Fund
Bill and Louise Bazemore Fund
Grace and Jimmy Broughton Fund
Barbara F. Chatham Advised Fund
[52] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Non-Endowed Advised Funds, continued Jerry and Brenda Cheek Charitable Fund
Eisenberg Family Advised Fund
Robin M. Hanes Fund
Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Enrichment Fund
Jerry and Janet Enos Fund
Kathy and Jim Hardison Advised Fund
Christopher Fund
Gerald and Ann Esch Donor Advised Fund
Robert B. and Lisa B. Harrell Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Nick and Jennifer Chrysson Advised Fund
Lisbeth C. Evans and James T. Lambie Advised Fund
John and Anne Harrison Advised Fund
Jeff T. and RenĂŠ F. Clark Advised Fund
Falken Family Fund
Hash Advised Fund
Perry and Kelli Clark Charitable Fund
Donna and Michael Fina Advised Fund
Linda Adair Hatcher Memorial Fund for Eating Disorders
Gwenn S. and Michael L. Clements Advised Fund
Gary G. and Diana B. Fleming Fund
Charles H. and Susan R. Hauser Advised Fund
D. Elwood and Helen H. Clinard Fund
Gary Flower Advised Fund
Dick and Karen Hedrick Advised Fund
Kirtan Coan and Al Greene Advised Fund
Representative Dale and Synthia Folwell Family Fund
Dr. Eugene Heise Advised Fund
Sophia Cody Advised Fund
T. Vernon and Jennifer K. Foster Fund
Edna and Jeff Helms Fund
Robert F. Coil Advised Fund
Alice M. Foster-Ficken Fund
Jay and Jane Helvey Advised Fund
Gary W. and Virginia F. Cole Advised Fund
Cecil and Henrietta Foushee Advised Fund
Page Daniel Hill Fund
David and Carole Collins Fund
Sheila F. and John C. Fox Fund
Doris and William Hohman Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Teresa L. Conrad Fund
Alice Dibrell Freeman Family Fund
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Hollan, Jr. Advised Fund
Barry and Dottie Cook Fund
Nella P. Fulton Advised Fund
James E. Holmes, Jr. and Betty J. Holmes Fund
Harry Corpening Fund
Paul Fulton Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Homebuilders Association of Winston-Salem Charitable Fund
James and Barbara Corrigan Advised Fund
Camille and Jim Galloway, Jr. Advised Fund
Bob and Gwynn Hooks Fund
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Cowan Advised Fund
Dr. Kenneth R. Gallup, Jr. Advised Fund
Mark and Betsy Hoppe Family Fund
Nancy and Scott Cramer Advised Fund
Caroline Gamble Charitable Fund
Hamilton C. Horton, Jr. Family Advised Fund
Craven Family Fund
Harold and Patricia Garner Donor Advised Fund
Wava Howard Runnymede Beautification Fund
Jane and Penn Craver Advised Fund
John and Linda Garrou Advised Fund
Eric N. Hoyle Advised Fund
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Crockett Advised Fund
Gfeller Family Fund
Robert C. and Catherine C. Huber Advised Fund
O.K. Crouch Family Fund
Jim and Mary Alice Gibbs Advised Fund
Tom and Lucia Hughes Family Fund
Rick and Sara Crowder Charitable Fund
John Munro and Flavel McMichael Godfrey Advised Fund
Ann and Dudley Humphrey Advised Fund
Grace L. Cullinan Advised Fund
Ted and Julia Ann Goins Advised Fund
John W. Hunt Advised Fund
Julia C. Cullinan Advised Fund
Tony and Vi Golding Fund
Hunter Family Fund
Walker M. Cullinan Advised Fund
Alice and W. A. Goodson, Jr. Advised Fund
Frank and Margaret Hunter Fund
S. G. Dale Fund
Judy S. and William A. Goodson, III Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Irvin Advised Fund
Bill and Betty Gray Davis Advised Fund
Thomas O. and Leesa L. Goodson Advised Fund
Jim and Dianne Iseman Charitable Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Davis, Jr. Advised Fund
William A. and Georgia H. Goodson Fund/Goodson Advised
Susan Cameron (Ivey) Advised Fund
Richard and Mary Dean Family Fund
William A. and Georgia H. Goodson Fund/Saunders Advised
Francis and Adele James Advised Fund
Deaton Family Advised Fund
Kathryn Hanes Snow Advised Fund
Jarrahi Family Advised Fund
Louis Nelson Dibrell III Family Fund
C. Boyden Gray Advised Fund
JG Advised Fund
Patricia Ann Rudolph Dixson Advised Fund
Hunter Gray Advised Fund
Elizabeth G. and Stephen A. Johnson Charitable Fund
Kay and Dan Donahue Fund
Alfa and Gerry Gunzenhauser Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Ann and Halbert Jones Charitable Fund
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Douglas Advised Fund
Carlota G. Haberkern Fund
JSCG Donor Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Douglas III Advised Fund
Hall Family Fund
Pam and Fred Kahl Advised Fund
Ashley H. and Graham P. Dozier Advised Fund
Martha S. Hancock and James A. Hancock, Jr. Advised Fund
David and Rachel Katzer Charitable Gift Fund
Dale E. and Luci H. Driscoll Advised Fund
Hands and Feet Fund
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Kay, Jr. Advised Fund
Noel Lee Dunn Advised Fund
Ann S. and F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Advised Fund
Sherry A. Kellett Fund
Eagan Brothers LLC Fund
Helen C. Hanes Fund
Stanhope A. and Elizabeth Kelly Advised Fund
Mary M. Eagan Fund
Jim Hanes Fund
Charlie L. Kennedy, MD Donor Advised Fund
Robert and Amy Egleston Advised Fund
Marcus Hanes Fund
Robert M. and Mary R. Kerr Advised Fund
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [53]
Non-Endowed Advised Funds, continued Nancy T. and Richard J. Keshian Fund
Judson J. and Alice C. Milam Fund
John and Dominique Patrick Fund
Cornelius Vanstory King Advised Fund
Charles W. Miller Fund
Lucie and Chuck Patton Fund
Robert W. and Candy E. Kiser Charitable Fund
Susan Dibrell Miller Family Fund
Carol and Raymond Pearson Charitable Fund
Edith and Bill Knott Fund
Mist Island Foundation Fund
Peter Perret Fund for Young Musicians
D. Joyce Kohfeldt Fund
J. Frank and Lynda K. Morris Advised Fund
Clifford and Elizabeth Perry Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Robinson Kornegay, Jr. Advised Fund
Frank and Mary Jo Murphy Advised Fund
Ford and Jeanene Perry Advised Fund
Petro Kulynych Advised Fund
Dan and Bonnie Murphy Charity Fund
Pauline Davis Perry Advised Fund
Gilmour and Nancy Lake Advised Fund
Murphy-Smith Family Fund
William H. Petree, Jr. and Katherine Weathers Petree Adv Fund
Lambeth Family Fund
Murray Supply Company Advised Fund
Pfefferkorn Company Advised Fund
Susan and George Lautemann Advised Fund
Walter V. and Martha W. Murray Advised Fund
L. Gordon and June D. Pfefferkorn, Jr. Fund
Annette M. Leight Advised Fund
Robert F. and Bonnie L. Naas Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Phelps Advised Fund
Margaret G. Leight Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Lucian H. Neal Advised Fund
David and Ingrid Pisetsky Advised Fund
Mary A. Leight Advised Fund
J. & J. Neely Advised Fund
William Pitser Advised Fund
Kathy and Mike Lewis Fund
David and Scottie Neill Advised Fund
Margaret Scales and Graydon Pleasants Advised Fund
Lillieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Friends Foundation Fund
Dr. and Mrs. Lewis H. Nelson III Advised Fund
Nancy and Ed Pleasants Advised Fund
Dr. A. Stanley and Mary Margaret Link Fund
William Robert and Elizabeth H. Newell Advised Fund
Ruth M. and Clifton E. Pleasants Fund
George and Susan Little Advised Fund
Fred and Lillian Nordenholz Fund
Dr. Harold C. Pollard III Fund
Matt and Emmie Long Fund
Keith and Lisa Norman Family Advised Fund
Dr. and Mrs. Eddie Pollock Advised Fund
Frank and Kay Lord Advised Fund
Robert S. and Marianne D. Northington Advised Fund
Robert S. and Wanda E. Pool Fund
David and Libby Lubin Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Aluko)
Jane and Joe Potter Fund
Gail Lybrook Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Baughan)
Nan and Tim Prout Charitable Fund
John F. and Annette P. Lynch Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Belk)
T.J. and Nancy Pulliam Advised Fund
Dr. Mark P. Maier Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Conrad)
Mrs. Elizabeth L. Quick Advised Fund
Richard A. and Carrie Wall Malloy Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Evans)
George and Susan Ragland Fund
Deborah S. Marshall Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Gordon)
Rainey Charitable Fund
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Martin Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Ketner)
Ramona Fund
Janet and O.C. Martin III Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Stolz)
David B. Rea Non-Endowed Advised Fund
Dr. Richard Marx Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Tillman)
Reaves Family Charitable Trust
Doug and Mary Anne Maynard Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Valentine)
Burton and Frances Reifler Fund
Drane and Bill McCall Advised Fund
Novant Community Benefit Fund (Woodlief)
Dick and Sandy Respess Fund
Thomas P. and Anne B. McDowell Fund
Anita and Tom Ogburn, Jr. Fund
Reynolda Rotary Benevolence Fund
Walter McDowell Advisory Fund
Laney and Merritt Orr Fund
Dr. Vade Rhoades Fund
Sarah Murphy McFarland Advised Fund
Judith R. and Samuel H. Owen Fund
Lori and Pat Riazzi Fund
Nancy Davis McGlothlin Fund
Ben C. and Mildred W. Paden Advised Fund
Richard T. Rice Fund
Cathleen and Ray McKinney Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Craven B. Page Advised Fund
Rickelton Fund
John and Grace McKinnon Advised Fund
Mary Beth and Bob Parker Fund
Jacqueline P. Rider Advised Fund
J.P. McMichael, Jr. Advised Fund
Margaret Weatherspoon Parker Fund
John and Lynn Roach Advised Fund
J. Frank and Laura Turnage McNair Advised Fund
Brookes H. Parrish Fund
Roaring Gap Fund
Mrs. C.C. McNeely Advised Fund
Joe and Britt Parrish Fund
Pauline and Norwood Robinson Fund
Thomas C. McNeil and Sandra B. McNeil Advised Fund
The Pathways Fund
Roddick Benevolence Gift Trust
[54] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Non-Endowed Advised Funds, continued Charles and Courtney Rowe Charitable Fund
Jack and Cindy Sutton Fund
Winters Advised Fund
David F. and Martha Wilson Rowe Advised Fund
Nancy King Tanner Advised Fund
Winston-Salem Rotary Benevolent Fund
Steve and Nancy Rowell Charitable Fund
Targacept TargaCare Fund
Winston-Salem Twin City Host Lions Club Advised Fund
Michael and Deborah Rubin Advised Fund
John A. Taylor Advised Fund
Calder and Martha Womble Advised Fund
Curtis Flynt Rudolph Advised Fund
Marguerite B. Taylor Advised Fund
Erna and Bill Womble, Jr. Advised Fund
Carver and Betsy Rudolph Advised Fund
Thomas Teague Fund
Ralph H. Womble Advised Fund
Sanford Harrison Rudolph Advised Fund
Ron and Merle Tedder Charitable Fund
William F. Womble Advised Fund
James M. and Lorre C. Ruffin Fund
Louise Dibrell Theberge Family Fund
James and Johanna Yopp Fund
Sarah Shore Ruffin and Dalton D. Ruffin Advised Fund
John B.R. Thomas Donor Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Scott K. Young Charitable Fund
Jill Runnion Fund
F. Nelson Tomlinson Advised Fund
Lynn and Jeff Young Fund
Dr. Wilson and Marcia Russell Fund
Dr. and Mrs. James F. Toole Advised Fund
Stephen and Bonnie Zades Advised Fund
SGK Fund
Triad Academy Scholarship Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Nick G. Zegrea Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. W.P. Sandridge, Jr. Advised Fund
Triantos Fund
William Madison and Phoebe Barnhardt Satterwhite Fund
Mary Kay Tucker Advised Fund
M. Garnett and Georgia G. Saunders Fund
Eleanor James Vance Advised Fund
Robert D. and Pamela B. Saunders Fund
Stuart F. and Frances McD. Vaughn Advised Fund
Thomas D. and Katherine E.M. Schroeder Fund
Peter and Carol Vrooman Advised Fund
The Servanthood Fund
Susan B. Wall Advised Fund
Beverly Britton Rudolph Shaw Advised Fund
Lee Wallace Fund
Bill and Shirley Shaw Fund
Bruce D. Walley, M.D. Fund
A. Lincoln and Nancy D. Sherk Fund
Hans W. and Elizabeth K. Wanders Advised Fund
Adrian and Bob Shore Advised Fund
Jack and Jean Ward Advised Fund
Dr. Thomas E. Shown Advised Fund
William G. Ward, MD Family Advised Fund
Martha and Tom Simpson Advised Fund
Leslie R. and Robert E. Warhover Advised Fund
Catharine N. and Kenneth N. Sisk Fund
Bill and Judy Watson Fund
Bucky and Debbie Sizemore Fund
Cornelia K. Weigl and Lachlan MacLachlan Advised Fund
Mike and Beth Skorich Advised Fund
John M. & Nancy Kyle Wells and Frances & C.C. Graham Fund
Bruce W. and Sara C. Smith Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. P. Everett Wells III Advised Fund
Kenny and Amy Smith Fund
Togo D. West, Jr. Advised Fund
Brant and Kay Snavely Fund
Harden and Janet Wheeler Fund
Snyder Family Fund
Louisa Whitaker Advised Fund
John and Nancy Southard Advised Fund
William A. Whitaker Advised Fund
Spaugh Family Fund
Nancy and Monty White Advised Fund
Mary Jo W. and R. Arthur Spaugh Fund
Scott and Lauren Wierman Advised Fund
Ann Lewallen Spencer Fund
Paul and Jan Wiles Charitable Gift Fund
Nancy Spencer Advised Fund
Arthur T. and Catherine R. Williams, III Advised Fund
Michael W. Sperry Advised Fund
Dr. and Mrs. S. Clay Williams, Jr. Advised Fund
W. Fletcher and Anna B. Steele Family Fund
John G. and Patricia G. Williard Fund
Stratford Rotary Benevolence Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Ben S. Willis, Jr. Advised Fund
Rick and Kate Streng Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. H. Norton Willis Fund
Richard and Nancy Sullivan Fund
Robert M. Willis Fund
John J. and Betty Pratt Sutton Advised Fund
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wilson, Jr. Advised Fund
Sutton Family Fund
W.T. Wilson Advised Fund
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [55]
NON-ENDOWED FUNDS
TEMPORARY FUNDS
T
EMPORARY FUNDS give the Foundation the ability to hold funds for a limited time for organizations and individuals for charitable projects.
Black Philanthropy Fund
Greenxscapes Fund
Waltrip Brothers Charitable Fund
Azalee Clements Memorial Fund
Douglas N. Marlette Memorial Scholarship Fund
Paul M. Wiles Scholarship Fund
Dog Park at Tanglewood Fund
NCGS Fund
Equality Winston-Salem Fund
Peppercorn Children’s Theatre Fund
Winston-Salem Community Development Collaborative Fund
Flow Automotive Companies Scholarship Fund
Carl R. Sapp Field Enhancement Fund
Friends of the Hollywood Cemetery Fund
Helen Simoneau Danse Fund
Gateway Environmental Initiative Fund
Theatre On Common Ground Fund
Greater Gift Initiative Fund
Michael and Buffy Waltrip Charitable Fund
[56] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
The Women’s Fund of Winston-Salem Youth Activities Fund
CHARITABLE TRUSTS
T
HE FOUNDATION SERVES AS TRUSTEE of charitable lead trusts (CLTs) and charitable remainder trusts (CRTs) for donors and their families. CLTs allow donors to direct income from the trust to the Foundation and/or other charities for a designated period of years. At the
end of that period, the principal can be redirected according to the terms of the original trust documents. CRTs provide life income to designated individuals with the remainder interest of the trust ultimately going to charity.
CHARITABLE TRUSTS Abner Alexander Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
Nancy Davis McGlothlin Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Elms and Harriet Allen Unitrust
John B. and Grace D. McKinnon Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Stephen G. Anderson Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Bonnie B. and James C. Messick Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
James L. Barnhardt Charitable Remainder Trust
Margaret W. Parker Charitable Lead Unitrust
Edward S. and Barbara T. Beason Unitrust
Emerson Walter Pitts, Jr. 2011 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Edna Newsome Blanton 2006 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Ruth Fay Pitts 2011 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Edna Newsome Blanton 2007 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
C. Edward Pleasants Charitable Remainder Trust
Frederick A. Blount and Charlotte F. Blount Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
Nancy T. Pleasants Charitable Reminder Trust
Patricia Ann L. and Grady E. Boyles, Jr. 2007 Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Ruth M. Pleasants Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Ann Blanton Breese 2007 Charitable Remainder Unitrust
J P Rider Charitable Remainder Trust dtd 5/9/96
Harry O. Corpening Charitable Remainder Unitrust
F. Conard and Jean Snyder Charitable Lead Annuity Trust
Athalene Couch 2007 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Nancy H. Southard Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Athalene Couch 2007 Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Nancy S. Spencer Charitable Remainder Trust
Joyce H. and James P. Dickerson Charitable Remainder Trust
Edward E. Stivers Charitable Annuity Trust
Frank E. and Mary B. Driscoll Charitable Remainder Trust
John J. Sutton, Jr. and Betty P. Sutton Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Elizabeth T. Edmondson Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
David H. Tate Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Rita D. Fitzgerald Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
Jesse C. Temple 2007 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Donald F. Folger Charitable Remainder Unitrust
L. Frances S. Temple Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Kathryn W. Garner Irrevocable Living Unitrust
L. Frances S. Temple and Jesse C. Temple Charitable Remainder Unitrust
J. Beeson Grubbs Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
M. Louise Thomas Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Nancy and Paul Gwyn 2005 Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Louvenia Cox Tucker 2006 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Edmund B. Hopkins Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Hans W. Wanders Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Lucy Kaplan Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Arthur G. and Susanne S. Weber Charitable Remainder Unitrust
William A. and Edith T. Knott Irrevocable Living Unitrust
A. Tab Williams, Jr. Charitable Annuity Lead Trust
William G. and Ava O. Koronis Charitable Unitrust
Willingham Irrevocable Living Annuity Trust
Mary Annette Leight 2002 Charitable Unitrust
Mathilda G. Wolfe Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Douglas Lewis Family Charitable Remainder Trust
W.F. Womble Irrevocable Living Unitrust
Curtis and Sara Long Charitable Remainder Unitrust
H.C. Woodall, Jr. Family Charitable Remainder Trust
Sara S. and Curtis E. Long 2005 Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Roma Lee Woosley 2005 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
William and Drane Vaughn McCall Irrevocable Living Unitrust
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [57]
BOOK OF
T
MEMORY
HE BOOK OF MEMORY WAS ESTABLISHED in 1946 as a means of preserving the names of those in whose memory gifts were made to the
Foundation. These specially-commissioned, leather-bound books are displayed in the Foundation’s reception area and contain more than 8,800 names.
THE FOLLOWING NAMES WERE ENTERED INTO THE BOOK OF MEMORY IN 2011: Virginia Dean Amos
Sarah Lane Ivey DeRamus
Luanne Mahannah Hinshaw
Joseph Henry Mickey
Stancil Spivey
Allison Ray Atkins
Margaret Glenn Dillard
Harold Galen Hoak
Donna Marie Nevius
Jean Stewart
Earl Eugene Barber
Sarah Greason Duerson
Lewis R. Holding
Algine Neely Ogburn
John Jackson “Jack” Sutton, Jr.
John Linder Barber, Sr.
Erik Durchman
James E. Holmes, Jr.
Katharine Davis Ogburn
Olivia LaVerne Campbell Swinton
Max Lloyd Barnhardt, Jr.
Mary Mills Dyer
Mary Hutchinson
F. Roger Page, Jr.
Laura Ann Melchor Thomas
Marilyn Grace Bauer
Theodore Elgin Ebert, Jr.
Tam Hutchinson, Sr.
Maxwell Peddle, Jr.
Mark Allen Tisdale
William Evans Bean
Omnia Floyd Fowler
Frank Griswold Hall Keel
Ernest Eugene Tucker, Jr.
George Beischer
Anne Whitlow Francis
Douglas Gray Kimel
Mary Virginia Warren “Ginner” Poe
Lyle Johnston “Pat” Benbow
Marjorie Husband Froeber
Earline heath King
Pat Bradham Bennett
Mary Dougall Gilbert
May Olivia Boney Kinlaw
Thomas Allen Bennett
Nawal Alexandra Ebeid Giscard d’Estaing
Margaret Elizabeth “Libby” Lamberti
Bill Dow Glance
Dr. Thomas W. Littlejohn, III
Mary Richardson
Sara Stevens Glenn
Curtis Eugene Long
M. Stewart Robertson, Jr.
Alice Jane Goodson
David Nowlin Marion
Robert “Rob” Joseph Romanello
Doris Swann Googe
Helen Booe Marley
Eugene Rossitch
R. Philip Hanes, Jr.
Teddie Palmer Martin
Georgia Goodson Saunders
David Harrington
Jane Pepper Masich
Anne Lillian Womble Seippel
Anne Hunt Hartzog
Harry G. McGinn, Jr.
James Shelnutt
Dr. Richard Eli Hedrick
Clara Lee McLean
Henry Howard Sherrill, Jr.
Betty Spainhour Hennessee
Spencer David Meyer
Evelyn Ardella Sides Sloan
Theodore David Hill, Jr.
Sherwood Albert Michael
Jeannine Rose Meacham Smith
Frances Lucille Cathey Bost Abraham “Abe” Brenner Ruth Jarvis Brewer Mary Ann Cooper Broughton Claire Rose Buckley Rev. Dr. David H. Burr Azalee Clements Lanny Ross Cook Nancy Arnott Cramer Jamie Berrier Crutchfield Eula Deaton
[58] FUNDS AND DONORS
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Nancy Clare Prout Martha Simms Rambo Lawrence Reaves, Sr. Thomas Renn
Margaret Turner Frances Miller Sowers Vogler Margaret Spaugh Watkins Margaret Jones Watlington Carolyn Watts Mary Parks Bell Weathers Alice Carmichael Williamson Gordon C. Willis Lucy Page Wilson Howard Osler Woltz, Jr. Mary Patricia “Pat” Gwyn Woltz Doris Lowder Wright Glenn Yoder, Jr. Callie Pauline Young
THE
T
LEGACY SOCIETY
HE FOUNDATIONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S LEGACY SOCIETY honors those generous individuals or couples who have established or added to permanent endowments totalling $10,000 or more at the Foundation or those who have made provisions of $10,000 or more for the Foundation through
deferred or planned gifts, such as charitable bequests, charitable remainder or lead trusts, life insurance, real estate, or beneficiary designation. The following individuals were members of the Legacy Society of The Winston-Salem Foundation as of December 31, 2011. If you have fulfilled this Legacy Society criteria and you are not listed, please let us know. On behalf of future generations, we gratefully thank these donors for their plans to contribute to such an enduring legacy for our community.
LEGACY SOCIETY MEMBERS Anonymous (16)
Mr. Marshall B Bass
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Budd
Mrs. Hessie Church
Dr. and Ms. James P. Dickerson
Ms. Katherine Acton and Mr. Gerald Smith
Dr. and Mrs. Edward S. Beason
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Budd
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Diggs
Mrs. Barbara C. Beattie
Mr. Hoan Bui and Ms. Ngoc Nguyen
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Cleland
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Bell, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Norman Bunce
Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Clements
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Donahue
Mrs. Marie Bellin
Dr. Patricia P. Bundy
Mr. and Mrs. D. Elwood Clinard, Jr.
Mrs. Elaine D. Dowdell
Ms. Sami O. Bills
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Burress III
Mrs. Brenda K. Cline
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Downing
Mr. and Mrs. R. Gordon Bingham
Mr. and Mrs. K. Blaine Burton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wayne Clodfelter
Mr. and Mrs. Graham P. Dozier III
Dr. Donna D. Alexander
Mr. David B. Blanco
Mrs. David B. Butler
Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Cole
Ms. Grace Draman
Dr. and Mrs. Elms L. Allen
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Blount
Ms. Jane Calloway
Mr. Elmer Collins
Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Driscoll
Ms. Gayle N. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hal Bolin
Ms. Susan M. Cameron
Mr. George L. Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Driscoll
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Booke
Dr. and Mrs. W. Douglas Cardwell
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Corpening
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Dudley
Mr. and Mrs. John Appel
Mr. Sam L. Booke, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carlson
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Cotterill
Ms. Nancy Dunn
Mr. W. A. Armfield, Jr.
Claude and Judy Booker
Mrs. Anne Maddrey Carpenter
Ms. Athalene Couch
Mr. Noel Lee Dunn
Dr. and Mrs. Donald L. Armitage
Mr. and Mrs. Julian R. Bossong
Mr. Coy C. Carpenter, Jr.
Mrs. Donna H. Craige
Ms. Mignon Durham
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Arnold
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Boswell, Jr.
Mrs. William H. Carr
Mr. J. Scott Cramer
Mrs. John T. Eagan, Jr.
Mrs. Teresa R. Ashburn
Dr. and Mrs. Edwyn T. Bowen, Jr.
Miss Genie Carr
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Dalton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Eidson
Drs. Anthony and Katherine Atala
Mr. and Mrs. Grady E. Boyles, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Carter, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Einstein
Mr. and Mrs. Philip S. Auchincloss
Dr. Sherrill Braswell
Ms. Peggy C. Carter
Mr. Jason Davies and Mrs. Julia Frost-Davies
Mr. Robert G. Auchincloss
Ms. Susan F. Braswell
Ms. Dorothy A. Caudill
Ms. Lisa L. Austin
Ms. Ann Blanton Breese
Mr. and Mrs. C. Ray Caudle
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Babcock
Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Breitbach
Mr. M. Campbell Cawood
Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Baker, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Brenner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Chambers
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Baldridge
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Briggs
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Barnes
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Broadway
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Barnes
Mrs. Lenora J. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Zeb E. Barnhardt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Royall R. Brown, Jr.
Mrs. Diane D. Barrett
Mr. John D. Budd
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mitchell Agnew, Jr. Mrs. Sylvia F. Alderson The Honorable and Mrs. Abner Alexander
Mr. G. Franklin Davis Mr. and Mrs. John W. Davis III Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Davis Mr. and Mrs. William A. Davis II Ms. Rebecca M. Deaton Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. DeForest III
Mrs. Norma Charles-Sink
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delia
Mrs. Barbara F. Chatham
Dr. and Mrs. John W. Denham
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Chrisco
Ms. Jan M. Detter
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Eisenberg Mrs. Robert A. Emken Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Essic, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Ewing Dr. and Mrs. John C. Faris Mrs. Rita D. Fitzgerald Ms. Marlene P. Flinchum Mr. and Mrs. Victor I. Flow, Jr. Mr. Gary Flower Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Folger
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [59]
Legacy Society Members, continued Dr. and Mrs. Robert V. Ford, Jr.
Mr. Peter E. Hawley
Mrs. R. William Joyce
Ms. Debbie Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. T. David Neill
Mr. Woody H. Fox, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Hege
Ms. Lucy Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Nordenholz
Dr. and Mrs. Larry W. Freeman
Mr. Charles R. Hemrick
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Kay, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. John A. Maselli
Mr. Chester T. Nuttall, Jr.
Mr. David W. Fuller
Mr. L. Stephen Hendrix
Mrs. J. Lee Keiger, Jr.
Mr. David P. Masich
Dr. and Mrs. David Reese Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien, Jr.
Mr. Paul Fulton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Henley III
Ms. Susan Kerner-Hoeg
Dr. and Mrs. K. Frank McCain
Mr. and Mrs. Sam C. Ogburn, Sr.
Mrs. James A. Fyock
Mr. M. N. Hennessee
Mr. and Mrs. Truman T. Kiger
Dr. and Mrs. William McCall, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Glenn Orr, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Joe E. Gaddy, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Herring
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse M. King
Dr. Bruce R. McCune
Mr. and Mrs. Willis H. Overby
Mr. John K. Gallaher
Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Hetrick
Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Kinken, Jr.
Mrs. Nancy Davis McGlothlin
Mr. and Mrs. Craven B. Page
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Gallup, Jr.
Ms. Emily Millis Hiatt
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Knott
Dr. Timothy McGowen
Mr. John V. Pappas
Ms. Kathryn W. Garner
Mr. Hardin P. Higgins
Ms. Joyce Kohfeldt
Dr. W. Frederick McGuirt
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight E. Pardue
Mr. Harold R. Garrison
Mrs. Harrell B. Hill
Dr. and Mrs. L. Andrew Koman
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ray McKinney
Rev. and Mrs. Nathan E. Parrish
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Gehring
Mrs. Alice Hinman
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Koontz
Mr. and Mrs. John B. McKinnon
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Paschold
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Gladding
Mrs. William F. Hohman
Bill and Ava Koronis
Ms. Sally R. McLeod
Mr. and Mrs. J. Kirk Glenn, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara Wall Holcomb
Ms. Brenda H. Kulp
Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank McNair IV
Dr. John Patrick and Dr. Dominique Patrick
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Goodson
Mrs. William E. Hollan, Sr.
Mr. Petro Kulynych
Dr. and Mrs. William E. Means
Mr. William A. Goodson, Jr.
Ms. Leslie Hollan
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold N. Lakey
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Medlin, Jr.
James Gore
Mr. William E. Hollan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Donny C. Lambeth
Mr. and Mrs. Danny J. Mendenhall
Natasha Gore
Mrs. James E. Holmes, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Merritt
Mrs. Bryce Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Hoover
Mr. James Lambie and Ms. Lisbeth Evans
Dr. Louis N. Gottlieb
Drs. Judith and Marbry Hopkins
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Gottlieb
Mrs. Edmund B. Hopkins
Mr. Vergil H. Gough
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hunt
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Gray
Mrs. Jacqueline S. Hunt
Mrs. James A. Gray, Jr.
Mr. John W. Hunt
Mrs. J.T. Greene, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Judd Hunt
Mr. J. Beeson Grubbs
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Irvin
Dr. Caryl Guth
Dr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Irvin II
Dr. and Mrs. Paul P. Gwyn
Dr. and Mrs. Francis M. James III
Mrs. William N. Hailey
Ms. Mary Jamis and Ms. Starr Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. J. Andrews Hancock III Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hancock, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Hancock Ms. Charlotte M. Hanes Mr. and Mrs. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Borden Hanes, Sr. Ms. Susan F. Harris Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Dennis G. Hatchell Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hauser
[60] FUNDS AND DONORS
Mr. and Mrs. B. Thomas Lawson, Jr. Mrs. Annette M. Leight The Honorable Molly Leight Mr. and Mrs. A. Thad Lewallen III Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R. Lewis Ms. Elizabeth C. Lewis Ms. Nancy C. Lide Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lineberry Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lippard Dr. and Mrs. Dan S. Locklair Mr. Joseph P. Logan
Dr. Richard Janeway
Mrs. Curtis E. Long
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jarman
Mr. and Mrs. William Longyard
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Jenkins, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Lord III
Mrs. Florinda C. Johnson
Mrs. Elizabeth Lovett
Dr. and Mrs. Peter C. Johnson
Mrs. Carolin Lowy
Ms. Beverly Johnston
Ms. Annette P. Lynch
Mr. James W. Johnston
Ms. Patti Ann Lynch
Mrs. Catherine M. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. E. Erwin Maddrey II
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Parker Maddrey
Mr. and Mrs. Scott D. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. John Mann
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Mr. James C. Messick Mr. and Mrs. James E. Messick, Jr. Ms. Melanie Micale Dr. Henry S. Miller, Jr. Mrs. Barbara B. Millhouse Mr. and Mrs. James H. Millis, Jr. Mrs. Molly Millis Hedgecock
Ms. Julie J. Pearce Ms. Brenda B. Penney Dr. and Mrs. Francis D. Pepper, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Perry, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Petree Mr. and Mrs. L. Gordon Pfefferkorn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Phelps Mr. Emerson Walter Pitts, Jr. Ms. Ruth F. Pitts Mr. and Mrs. C. Edward Pleasants
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Millsaps
Mr. Graydon Pleasants and Ms. Margaret Scales
Mr. Richard G. Mock
Mrs. Ruth M. Pleasants
Ms. Ellen N. Monahan
Dr. Michael J. Pollak
Dr. and Mrs. John H. Monroe
Mrs. Richard E. Pope
Mr. and Mrs. C. Arzell Montgomery
Frances and Steve Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy R. Moore
Mr. Billy D. Prim
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Morgan
Mr. J. Timothy Prout
Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Morgan
Mr. Grady R. Pulliam III
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel N. Moury
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Purcell
Mr. and Mrs. Marty Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Quick
Mrs. Mildred Naugle
Mr. and Mrs. H. Chris Ramm
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Neal
Dr. Dariel L. Rathmell
Mr. David L. Neal
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Reaves, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lucian H. Neal
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reavis
The Honorable Stephen L. Neal
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Riazzi
Legacy Society Members, continued Dr. and Mrs. David G. Rice
Ms. Rebecca Ann Sebastian
Dr. and Mrs. Charles V. Taft
Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Wall
Mr. R. M. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Rice III
Mrs. Robert D. Shore, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. David H. Tate
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Wanders
Mr. William T. Wilson III
Mrs. John S. Rider
Mrs. Rosemary V. Shortt
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Ward
Ms. Betty S. Winslow
Mr. Clay V. Ring, Jr.
Dr. Thomas E. Shown
Mrs. Margaret Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Washington
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Wohlford
Mrs. James A. Roddick, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sinal
Mr. Jesse C. Temple
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Watson
Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Wolfe
Mrs. Eugene Rossitch
Mr. Willis Slane and Dr. Caroline Chiles
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Tessien
Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. S. Waugh, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. John R. Wolfe
Ms. Sylvia Theriault
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Weber
Mrs. Rochelle Wolfe
Dr. and Mrs. John B. R. Thomas
Dr. Glenda Weber and Mr. Wayne Weber
Mrs. Calder W. Womble
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rotgin, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Michael H. Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rucker Mr. and Mrs. C. Guy Rudisill III Ms. Avon Ruffin Mr. Dalton D. Ruffin Mrs. H. J. Runnion, Jr. Ms. Karen Sanders Dr. and Mrs. William M. Satterwhite, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Sayers Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Schindler Dr. and Mrs. Robert P. Schwartz Mrs. Lyttleton B. Scott, Jr. Mrs. Anthony W. Seamon Mr. Rick Seamon
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Smith Mrs. Richard G. Smith, Jr. Mr. James N. Smoak Dr. and Mrs. John K. Southard, Jr. Ms. Ann Lewallen Spencer Mr. and Mrs. James Y. Spencer Ms. Betsy Spencer Mrs. William O. Spencer III Edward Eugene and Jean Jennings Stivers Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stockton Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Stopyra Mrs. Janice K. Story Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Sullivan Mrs. John J. Sutton, Jr.
Ms. M. Louise Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Thornton Mr. and Mrs. F. Nelson Tomlinson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James F. Toole
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wheliss Mr. and Mrs. Scott F. Wierman Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Wiles
Mrs. Louvenia Cox Tucker
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wilhem
Mrs. Bynum E. Tudor, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Tab Williams, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Williams III
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Tuttle Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Underwood II Ms. Margaret M. Urquhart
Ms. Cynthia A. Williams Mr. Stephen T. Williams Mr. B.J. Willingham
Mrs. Deborah H. Vaughan
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Willingham
Ms. Patricia A. Vaughn Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Vaughn, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Ramon Velez
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Welch, Jr.
Mr. Ralph H. Womble Mr. William F. Womble Mr. H. C. Woodall, Jr. Ms. Roma Lee Woosley Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Worf Mrs. Hal G. Worley Bryan and JoAnn Yates Mr. and Mrs. Karl F. Yena Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Young Dr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Young Mr. and Mrs. Yasser Youssef
Mrs. Francis F. Willingham Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wilson, Jr.
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [61]
2011
DONORS
DONORS TO THE COMMUNITY FUND, THE COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP FUND, AND THE BOOK OF MEMORY These contributions are listed alphabetically on the following two pages. For a list of 2011 donors to other named funds, please visit our Web site at www.wsfoundation.org. Both the Foundation and the community are grateful for all of these gifts — from the smallest to the largest. Collectively these contributions reflect that the Foundation’s mission — to invest in our community by making philanthropy and its benefits available to all — is alive and well.
VISIONARIES – $5,000 OR MORE Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Bell, Jr. Mr. J. Scott Cramer
BENEFACTORS – $2,500–$4,999
Ms. Bé Haver Mr. Charles R. Hemrick/Mrs. Norma Charles Sink
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Brenner Mrs. Calder W. Womble
The Senah C. & C.A. Kent Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Wiles
ADVOCATES – $1,000–$2,499
[62] FUNDS AND DONORS
Dr. David Albertson and Dr. Liz Albertson
Grover C. and Jane C. McNair Charitable Foundation Trust
Dr. and Mrs. Elms L. Allen
Ms. Judith B. Halverson
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Booke
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Hauser
Mr. Sam L. Booke
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Hensel
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Branch
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy L. Hickman
Mr. Graydon Pleasants and Ms. Margaret Scales
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Burress III
Dr. and Mrs. Francis M. James III
Mr. and Mrs. Richard O. Rogers III
Mr. and Mrs. F. Hudnall Christopher, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Lautemann
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Schindler
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Cleland
Mr. and Mrs. W. Randolph Loftis, Jr.
The Strickland Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Driscoll
Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Lord III
Mr. and Mrs. F. Nelson Tomlinson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Eisenberg
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Medlin
Mr. Michael Waltrip
Glenn Family Foundation
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
Mr. and Mrs. H. Vernon Winters
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Goodson
Mr. and Mrs. Lucian H. Neal
the winston-salem foundation annual report
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Orr Mr. John V. Pappas Mr. and Mrs. L. Gordon Pfefferkorn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Phelps
SUPPORTERS – $500–$999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Adams
Mrs. Barbara F. Chatham
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Gay III
Mercedes-Benz of Winston-Salem
Dr. and Mrs. James F. Toole
Mr. and Mrs. John Appel
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Clein
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gibbs
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight E. Pardue
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Trawick
Mrs. Amy P. Barnhardt
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Cotterill
Mr. and Mrs. Murray C. Greason, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pleasants
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Wanders
Dr. and Mrs. Rolland Barrett
Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Robins
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Weber
Mr. and Mrs. Graham F. Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Douglas III
Greater Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce
Mr. W. David Shannon
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Willingham
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carlson
Mrs. Elaine D. Dowdell Mr. and Mrs. Graham P. Dozier III
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Hanes III
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Womble, Jr.
Mr. M. Campbell Cawood
Mr. Willis Slane and Dr. Caroline Chiles
Mr. and Mrs. Robbie O. Chandler
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Edwards
Mr. and Mrs. Stanhope A. Kelly
Mr. G. Dee Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Lawyer
Mrs. Robert B. Sosnik
Ms. Rebecca M. Deaton
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Iseman, Jr.
Ms. Ellen N. Monahan
Amy K. Smith and Kenny Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Dillard
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon W. Jenkins
Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Dull, Jr.
Mr. John C. Jessup
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Mountcastle, Jr.
Ms. Phyllis H. Dunning
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnson
Mr. Wil Elder
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas S. Jones
Dr. and Mrs. William Elesha
Dr. and Mrs. F. Whitney Jones
Dr. Steve Felts
Dr. Joseph Jorizzo and Ms. Irene Carros
Mr. Michael D. Gunter
PHILANTHROPISTS – UP TO $500 Dr. Jon Abramson and Dr. Cynthia Lees Dr. and Mrs. David H. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Miller Allen Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Aronson Mr. Dan W. Austell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William P. Baldridge Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Baldwin III Bank of America Charitable Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus W. Bazemore, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Edward S. Beason Mrs. Jean S. Blanton Dr. Ann Q. Bogard Mr. H. Michael Britt Mr. Coy C. Carpenter, Jr. Ms. Genie Carr Ms. Jo Ellen Carson Mr. and Mrs. Scott E. Cawood Mr. and Mrs. Harris F. Clein Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Clements Mrs. Sophia S. Cody Mr. and Mrs. James H. Corrigan, Jr. Mr. Gregory A. Cox Mr. and Mrs. Marcus B. Crotts Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Crowder, Jr. Mrs. Viola H. Crump Dr. Courtland H. Davis, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Fisher Mr. William A. Goodson Mr. and Mrs. William A. Goodson III Mrs. Emma Graham Mr. Jonathan D. Halsey Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hancock, Jr. Ms. Sally Dudley Harper Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Dennis G. Hatchell Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hedgpeth II Mr. and Mrs. Harry Heilig Mr. William E. Hollan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Holliday, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Holmes Ms. Sarah R. Holthouser Mrs. E. R. Howard Mrs. Frances R. Huber Mrs. Jacqueline S. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. John Hunter Immedia Print
Mr. Thomas C. Munden Mr. and Mrs. Grover M. Myers Mr. and Mrs. William R. Myers Mr. and Mrs. David B. Neal Ms. Marjorie Northup
Mr. and Mrs. Milbourne L. Joye, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. David G. Park
Ms. Sherry A. Kellett
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Patton
Dr. and Mrs. David L. Kelly, Jr.
Ms. H. Geraldine Patton
Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Kelly, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. V. Paul Pauca
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Kiser
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Perkinson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Knott
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford W. Perry, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Kraft
Ms. Pauline D. Perry
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Lambeth
Ms. Susan Pfefferkorn
Mr. and Mrs. B. Thomas Lawson, Jr.
Mr. J. Timothy Prout
Mrs. Annette M. Leight
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Alan Purcell
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lippard
Dr. and Mrs. David Y. Rainey
Mr. Joseph P. Logan
Mrs. Lucille B. Ransby
Mr. John H. Loughridge, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Rhodes
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Lynch III
Mr. Clay V. Ring, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Mauceri
Ms. Daisy Rodriguez
Dr. James A. McCool
Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Sanders, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John B. McKinnon
Ms. Georgia Saunders
Ms. Sally R. McLeod
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Saunders
Dr. and Mrs. J. Wayne Meredith
Mr. and Mrs. William Shaw
Dr. and Mrs. Henry S. Miller, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Todd Slate
Mrs. Vernon H. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Spach Judge and Mrs. Ronald E. Spivey Kate and Rick Streng Mrs. William C. Thacker Mr. and Mrs. Ben W. Thomason, Jr. Ms. Ann M. Tillett Mr. Erling S. Tronnes Mr. and Mrs. Stuart F. Vaughn Mr. and Mrs. William R. Wallace, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David C. Wesson Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. West Mr. and Mrs. Harden B. Wheeler, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Whitaker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Scott F. Wierman Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Wilkinson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Williard Mrs. Francis F. Willingham Mr. and Mrs. Ben S. Willis, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wilson, Jr. Wilson-Covington Construction Co. Mr. John G. Wolfe III Mr. and Ms. James E. Yarbrough, Jr. Mr. Ralph W. Yokeley Mr. and Mrs. Nick G. Zegrea
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FUNDS AND DONORS [63]
FINANCIAL OVERVIEW COMBINED STATEMENTS OF ASSETS, LIABILITIES, AND NET ASSETS (MODIFIED CASH BASIS) DEC. 31, 2011 AND 2010 ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Securities
2011
2010
$12,444,297
$28,583,494
205,608,654
179,881,488
1,081,852
1,028,366
RECEIVABLES: Student loans Notes
20,033
20,033
16,792,057
16,354,493
Assets held in trust – real estate
4,174,211
4,208,211
Building, improvements and equipment
994,840
1,044,179
34,927,740
36,862,790
Investment in partnerships
Split interest assets held in trust (Note 1) Other assets TOTAL ASSETS
951,065
792,309
$276,994,749
$268,775,363
LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS LIABILITIES: Amounts withheld from employees Agency deposits Split interest assets held in trust (Note 1) Total liabilities
$6,141
$10,119
2,113,148
2,794,589
34,927,740
36,862,790
37,047,029
39,667,498
UNRESTRICTED NET ASSETS: 28,137,182
28,781,938
Field of interest
Discretionary
24,664,862
26,322,648
Scholarship
16,368,644
16,856,414
Student loan Donor advised
1,453,203
1,416,408
96,118,668
80,109,968
Donor designated
57,254,723
58,147,812
Agency endowments (Note 2)
14,006,930
13,873,089
Real estate Administrative Total net assets
4,100,878
4,378,452
(2,157,370)
(778,864)
239,947,720
229,107,865
$276,994,749
$268,775,363
COMMITMENTS (Note 3) TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS
Note 1: The Foundation serves as trustee for several charitable remainder trusts and charitable lead trusts. The portion designated for the Foundation was $22,782,825 and $24,341,829 as of December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively. Note 2: For audited financial statements, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 136 classifies agency endowments as liabilities instead of net assets. However, these endowments are legal assets of the Foundation and therefore are shown as net assets in these unaudited finanicals to mirror their treatment on the Foundation’s Form 990. Note 3: Unpaid grant commitments from endowed funds approved by The Winston-Salem Foundation Committee amounted to $2,123,159 and $1,967,924 at December 31, 2011 and 2010, respectively.
[ 6 4 ] FINANCIAL OVERVIEW
the winston-salem foundation annual report
COMBINED STATEMENTS OF RECEIPTS, DISBURSEMENTS, AND CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (MODIFIED CASH BASIS) YEARS ENDED DEC. 31, 2011 AND 2010 CHANGE IN NET ASSETS
2011
2010
$36,188,414
$27,461,692
4,867,192
4,091,680
RECEIPTS: Donations and bequests Interest, dividends, and other investment income Other receipts
270,477
152,741
Total receipts
41,326,083
31,706,113
20,865,232
18,817,103
2,667,376
2,627,991
Trustee banksâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; and investment management fees
63,797
596,235
Brokerage fees
27,421
42,774
318,023
328,642
23,941,849
22,412,745
DISBURSEMENTS: Grants Executive office operations
Other disbursements Total disbursements RECEIPTS OVER DISBURSEMENTS BEFORE NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAINS (LOSSES)
17,384,234
9,293,368
(6,544,379)
18,007,204
10,839,855
27,300,572
BEGINNING OF YEAR
$229,107,865
$201,807,293
END OF YEAR
$239,947,720
$229,107,865
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAINS (LOSSES) INCREASE IN NET ASSETS NET ASSETS
These financials represent information for The Winston-Salem Foundation only and do not include the consolidation of two supporting organizations, The Millennium Fund and Partners for Homeownership, Inc. If you would like a complete copy of the 2011 audited financial statements, please contact J. Todd Slate, Vice President, Finance and Administration at (336) 725-2382, e-mail your request to todd.slate@wsfoundation.org, or visit our Web site at www.wsfoundation.org.
the winston-salem foundation annual report
FINANCIAL OVERVIEW [ 6 5 ]
THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION
COMMITTEE
THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION CONCEPT that Colonel Francis Fries brought to Winston-Salem in 1919 included a critical role for community
leaders. The Foundation is fortunate to have an extraordinarily dedicated and generous group of community volunteers on its Foundation Committee, which is the primary governing body of the organization, as well as on its supporting committees, which are listed on the following page.
KAY LORD
J. ANDREWS HANCOCK
H. VERNON WINTERS
PEGGY CARTER
Chair
Vice Chair
Treasurer
Secretary
Retired Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer Habitat for Humanity of Forsyth County
President Frank L. Blum Construction Company
Retired Chief Investment Officer Mellon Financial Corporation
Retired Vice President Forsyth Medical Center Foundation
SIMPSON “SKIP” O. BROWN, JR.
DR. GARY GREEN
President – Triad and Tennessee Regions First Community Bancshares, Inc.
President Forsyth Technical Community College
STAN KELLY
M. CARLYLE KINLAW, JR., CFA
DAVIDA W. MARTIN
Regional President, Carolinas Community Banking Wells Fargo
Merrill Lynch
Forsyth County Attorney
MIKE WELLS
JANET P. WHEELER
CYNTHIA A. WILLIAMS
Partner Wells Jenkins Lucas & Jenkins
Retired Vice President R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
Executive Vice President and Chief Communications Officer BB&T Corporation
[ 6 6 ] F O U N D AT I O N C O M M I T T E E S
the winston-salem foundation annual report
TOMMY HICKMAN Senior Vice President – Operations R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION
SUPPORTING
COMMITTEES
2012 ASSET DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE Michael J. Fisher, Chair
Susan G. King
Napoleon Richardson
J. David Branch
Deborah S. Marshall
Amy K. Smith
Skip Brown
Ward B. Miller
Kimberly H. Stogner
John W. Burress III
Timothy R. Moore
Michael A. Trawick
Robbie O. Chandler
C. Edward Pleasants, Jr.
Randall Tuttle
Lynn Eisenberg
James K. Reaves, Jr.
Hayes Wauford
Gordon W. Jenkins
Anna Reilly
Philip R. S. Waugh
2012 STUDENT AID COMMITTEE
BLACK PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE 2012 ADVISORY COMMITTEE Rev. Donald Jenkins, Chair
Paula McCoy
Dr. Betty Alexander
Corena Norris-McCluney
Alison Ashe-Card
Crystal Reynolds-Jones
Greg Brewer
Napoleon Richardson, Jr.
Tony Burton
Dr. Charlie Shaw Lydell Thompson
Betty Acey Alexander
Eddie Hernandez
Daisy Rodriguez
Florence Corpening
Mary Ellen Candillo
Andrea Huligan
Larry Stephenson
RaVonda Dalton-Rann
Shannon Thompson Dr. Lelia Vickers Kayla J. Williams
John Candillo
Lamar Joyner
Jane Suitt
Lynn Fuller-Andrews
Algenon Cash
Barbara Lancaster
Linda Tilley
Andrea Jenkins Chris Leak
Gwenn Clements
Barbara Masi
Paula Turner
Ernie Copenhaver
Carolyn Matthews
Becki VanderKlok
Shannon Cramer
George McLendon
Teresa White
Lindy Ellis
Richard Mock
Nancy Wilson
James Gallaher
Janet Mullins
Malishai Woodbury
Phillip Grande
Patricia Norris
Karl Yena
Chase Beason
Tiara Jones
Carolyn Gray
Kenneth Raymond
Nancy Young
Jamilla Benton
Ying Lin
Khalieb Henry Benton
Sofia Lyons
Sam Blumstein
De’Gary Martin-Hargrave
Erin Fulp
Kimberly Mayes
THE WOMEN’S FUND OF WINSTON-SALEM 2012 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
YOUTH GRANTMAKERS IN ACTION 2011–2012 PARTICIPANTS
Carrie Fulton
Sequoia Miller
Florence Corpening
Karen Pranikoff
Treyaun Fulton
Leslie Rainey
Holly Marion, Vice-Chair
Tonya Deem
Kathy Stitts
Rachel Glock
Regina Richardson
Anita Bain, Treasurer
Sharee Fowler
Mary Craig Tennille
Hannah Harris
Bre’Ida Riddick Christopher Snowden
Allison Brashear, Chair
Renee Taylor, Secretary
Mary Jamis
Ashley Vogel
J. Austin Jackson
Alison Ashe-Card
Susan McBurney
Tory White
Gralicia Jones
Sandra Boyette
Jane Martin
Wendy Brenner
Lisa Purcell
the winston-salem foundation annual report
F O U N D AT I O N C O M M I T T E E S [ 6 7 ]
THE WINSTON-SALEM FOUNDATION
STAFF
OPERATIONS/SUPPORT Scott F. Wierman — President Lisa P. Purcell — Executive Vice President Cici Fulton — Director, Marketing and Communications David Gore — Director, Information Systems and Technology Christina Perrin-Stewart — Receptionist Leila Warren — Executive Assistant Todd Slate — Vice President, Finance and Administration Betty Johnson — Financial Assistant Mary Jo Morgan — Accounting Associate Dee Smitherman — Comptroller COMMUNITY INVESTMENT Michael Clements — V ice President, Community Investment Edna Barker — A dministrative Assistant, Student Aid Betty Gray Davis — Senior Program Officer Robin Burr DeVane — Grants Manager Kay Dillon — Director, Student Aid Andrea Hulighan — Program Officer Sandra Fishel-Booth — Program Officer Brittney Gaspari — Director, Grants Tari Hanneman — Director, Women’s Fund
Seated ( from left) – Michael Clements, Scott Wierman, Sandra Fishel-Booth
PHILANTHROPIC SERVICES
First row – Betty Gray Davis, Meridith Whitaker, Betty Johnson, Cici Fulton, Robin Burr DeVane, Leila Warren, Jo Ann Kyslinger, Andrea Hulighan, Lisa Purcell, Marisa Ray
Annette Lynch — Vice President, Philanthropic Services Jonathan Halsey — Donor Services Officer
Second row – Edna Barker, Annette Lynch, Christina Perrin-Stewart, Jonathan Halsey, Mary Jo Morgan, David Gore
Jo Ann Kyslinger — Gifts Processor
Third row – Dee Smitherman, Kay Dillon, Brittney Gaspari, Tari Hanneman, Todd Slate
Marisa Ray — Development Officer Meridith Whitaker — Philanthropic Services Associate
Design: M Creative | Photography: Christine Rucker | Printing: Hutchison Allgood | Story Writing: Kathy Norcross Watts The inside pages of this annual report contain fiber sourced from well-managed forests.
[ 6 8 ] S TA F F
the winston-salem foundation annual report
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860 West Fifth Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101-2506 Telephone (336) 725-2382 Toll-free (866) 227-1209 Fax (336) 727-0581 www.wsfoundation.org
Confirmed in Compliance with National Standards for U.S. Community Foundations