Banner image            Home    What's New    Articles    Images    Subjects    Corrections    Advanced Search    Timeline    Maps    Multimedia    About
The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

LOUISE HARKNESS AND DAVID SINTON INGALLS FOUNDATION, INC. - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

The LOUISE HARKNESS AND DAVID SINTON INGALLS FOUNDATION, INC., was founded and incorporated in 1953 in Cleveland by Louise Harkness and DAVID SINTON INGALLS†. The stated purpose of the foundation is "the improvement of the physical, educational, mental, and moral conditions of humanity throughout the world." The foundation supports secondary and HIGHER EDUCATION, community funds, health care, and cultural programs, contributing mainly to organizations known to the trustees. In the early 1980s the Ingalls Foundation granted $1 million over 3 years to UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS CASE MEDICAL CENTER capital campaign. Recipients of smaller grants ($25,000) in the 1980s represented a variety of interests. They included ORBIS, a Texas-based agency which provides medical care to developing countries, the CLEVELAND PLAY HOUSE, and the Naval Aviation Museum of Pensacola, FL. In 1984 the foundation helped support the building of the CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART's new wing. In 1994 the foundation, with assets of over $16.5 million, disbursed $748,000 for 29 grants. Louise Ingalls Brown served as the foundation's president; other family members served on the board.


See also PHILANTHROPY and FOUNDATIONS.

Last Modified: 18 Jul 1997 01:47:35 PM

Related Article(s)
This site maintained by Case Western Reserve University