Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Applications Available for Stephen Carpenter Scholarship for Norfolk Public School Counselors

Stephen Ashby Carpenter loved being a Norfolk Public School guidance counselor.

Although he worked just a short time in his chosen field before a car accident took his life just over 20 years ago, Stephen's enthusiasm for his career lives on today. The Stephen Ashby Carpenter Memorial Scholarship started by his family continues to help Norfolk Public School counselors gain additional education.

After Stephen died Emily and Tom Carpenter, Stephen's mom and dad, set up a scholarship fund at the Hampton Roads Community Foundation. Memorial donations from friends, colleagues and family helped build the permanent endowment in his name.

The Carpenter Scholarship has helped numerous counselors over the years. April 1 is the

Stephen Carpenter's passion was
helping Norfolk students.
deadline for counselors in the
Norfolk Public School system to apply to be the next Carpenter Scholar. The recipient will receive a scholarship for 2014-15 to help pay for graduate study. There is a preference for counselors who work with disadvantaged Norfolk youth. Click here to learn more about applying for the scholarship.


Stephen Carpenter was just 25 years old and working as a guidance counselor at Azalea Gardens Middle School when he died in November 1993. He had just started at the school a few months earlier. Ironically, one of his first accomplishments was setting up a grief program for students having no idea they would need it so soon.

Stephen's family knew how hard the Hampden-Sydney College graduate had worked to earn his master's degree in counseling at Regent University while teaching French in a Norfolk middle school. That's one reason they chose to start a scholarship to help guidance counselors like Stephen gain additional education and skills.

The first Carpenter Scholarship recipient in 1996 was Dr. Reuthenia Clark, who was a guidance counselor at Azalea Garden Middle when she was selected. Today she is principal of the same school and credits the Carpenter scholarship with helping her complete her master's degree at Columbia University in New York. She went on to earn a doctorate from the University of Virginia.

"I knew I wanted to be somewhere where I could make a difference for students through their teachers," Clark says.

Another early Carpenter Scholarship recipient is Dr. Susan Sigler, the Maury High School guidance counselor in charge of scholarships. "The Carpenter Scholarship opened a world to me," she recalls. "It helped me earn my doctorate.from Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale." From there Sigler has gone on to head various programs in the Norfolk school district and also to teach college courses in the area.

 (The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)


Thursday, February 27, 2014

How Can I Help People Go to College and Succeed in Life?

To give the gift of education, you can be like Fannie Royster Cooke and her husband Richard Cooke. You can endow a scholarship at your area community foundation and have it last forever. There are more than 700 community foundations serving specific geographic areas in the United States. Your thoughtfulness will help people forever.

In 1951 the Cookes, who were long-time Norfolk, Virginia residents, created the first fund
Fannie Royster Cooke
at the
Hampton Roads Community Foundation, which was founded in 1950 as Virginia's first community foundation. The Cookes' goal was to honor their two adult sons and to help send southeastern Virginia students to Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond.

Sixty-three years later, the Richard Dickson Cooke and Sheppard Royster Cooke scholarship is alive and well. Hampton resident John C. McClure is the latest in a long line of Cooke Scholars being helped long after Fannie, Richard and their sons have passed away.

The Cooke Scholarship is one  of more than 60 endowed scholarship funds administered by the Hampton Roads Community Foundation -- most for undergraduate education. During the 2013-14 academic year there are 358 students receiving more than $1 million from endowed scholarship funds.

Each scholarship fund reflects the unique interests of the donors who started it. Some scholarships are for specific fields of study such as architecture or education. Others are for graduates of specific high schools such as Ocean Lakes High in Virginia Beach or Maury High in Norfolk. And, some scholarships are for students attending specific colleges and universities such as the University of Virginia or Hampden-Sydney College. 

Since 1951 more than 3,900 individuals have received more than $18 million in Hampton Roads Community Foundation scholarships. Most of them have been a scholarship recipient for up to four years of study.

Tomorrow, February 28, is the application deadline for students to apply for 2014-15 Hampton Roads Community Foundation scholarships. This year there are eight new scholarship funds available because caring donors last year entrusted the Hampton Roads Community Foundation to forever help students in their names. Learn more.

Scholarship application season is an occasion to pause and say thank you to the generous donors who make education a reality for so many students.  

 (The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Philanthropist to Help Future Generations Nurture The Environment


Jane Batten is a Hampton Roads philanthropist, mother and grandmother who loves
The Learning Barge gets kids on the water.
children and preserving the environment. For Batten, helping kids become adults committed to caring for the world around them "makes good sense."
That's why Batten recently made the Elizabeth River Project the latest Batten Endowment Challenge grant recipient. The environmental group was announced in January 2014 as the eighth area nonprofit to benefit from the Hampton Roads Community Foundation program that gives organizations $1 million endowments and then challenges them to double that amount. This is the Elizabeth River Project's first permanent endowment fund.

Here is how the latest Batten Endowment Challenge works for the Elizabeth River Project:


 *A $1 million grant from the Batten Educational Achievement Fund has created an endowment fund for Elizabeth River Project at the Hampton Roads CommunityFoundation.
Jane and Frank Batten
The grant came from a donor-advised fund Jane and her late husband Frank started in 2003 at the community foundation with a $20.3 million gift.  

*Jane Batten has challenged the Elizabeth River Project to raise within five years another $500,000 from additional donors. She will match every dollar donated up to $500,000 -- essentially doubling the Elizabeth River Project's endowment.

"I'm impressed by the way the Elizabeth River Project is getting industries to be its partners," Batten says. She also likes its innovative programs that are helping create "a generation of children who go home and talk to their parents who may not have thought much about the environment."

Each year the Elizabeth River Project works with more than 30,000 area students -- from preschoolers to high school seniors. Programs are held on its learning barge parked in area waterways, in classrooms and in the new Paradise Creek Nature Park in Portsmouth. In addition 150 area schools are River Star Schools where teachers involve students in hands-on environmental projects each year.

For Marjorie Mayfield Jackson, executive director of the Elizabeth River Project, the new endowment and its challenge mean "stability" and that the organization she founded 21 years ago to restore the tainted Elizabeth River is "maturing."

The endowment will initially provide the Elizabeth River Project annual grants from the community foundation of 4.5 percent of the fund's value -- $45,000 the first year. As the endowment grows, the amount of grants coming to the environmental group each year will increase.

"When you have major urban rivers used and abused for years, you need dollars to stretch as far as you can," Jackson says. The new endowment will help Elizabeth River Project expand its efforts to once again make area rivers safe for swimming and fishing.

Donations to the Batten Endowment Challenge should go directly to the Elizabeth River Project by:
  • Sending a check to the Elizabeth River Project earmarked for the Batten Endowment Challenge. Mail it to 475 Water Street, Suite 103A, Portsmouth, VA 23704.
  • Clicking here to donate online to the Elizabeth River Project's Batten Endowment Challenge.
  • Calling the Elizabeth River Project at (757) 399-7487 to talk about other ways you can support the endowment challenge.

(The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)
 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Lang Lang to Warm Donor E.K. Sloane's Heart

There will be two international stars on stage at Norfolk's Chrysler Hall on February 13, 2014 for Virginia Arts Festival's preview concert for its upcoming spring season.

Lang Lang doing what he loves
One of them is Lang Lang, the 31-year-old energetic piano virtuoso from China, who has ignited the music world since he was discovered as a teenager.

The other star is a new Steinway D grand piano made in Hamburg, Germany. The arts festival bought the instrument in January with help from a major grant from the E.K. Sloane Fund of the Hampton Roads Community Foundation.

"It's the cream of the crop," Robert W. Cross, executive director of the festival, says of the new piano. It previously graced Carnegie hall's stage and has been declared by renowned concert pianist Andre-Michel Schub to be "the best piano I have ever played." Schub directs the festival's annual chamber music series.


E.K. Sloane, a Norfolk engineer who died in 1997 at age 90, loved piano music even though he didn't play the
Edwin Knapp Sloane
E.K. Sloane
instrument. Because he thought to put a bequest in his will for a field-of-interest fund at his community foundation for pianos, our region has more than 110 amazing Sloane pianos. They are valued at more than $3 million and belong to more than 60 different nonprofit organizations. 

There were flames on stage at the Grammy Awards last month in Los Angeles when Lang Lang stole the show by performing with Metallica. Click here for a video

We expect Lang Lang and the new Hamburg Steinway to generate all the heat on Thursday at the 7:30 p.m. Norfolk show. And, we think E.K. would be thrilled with the spectacle. His pianos anchor many stages throughout our region will be featured venues during the festival, which will run from April 2 through May 25.
For information on Lang Lang and how to get tickets click here. Tickets range in price from $20 to $75. 

A dollar from each ticket will be donated to the Virginia Arts Festival Endowment at the Hampton Roads Community Foundation. The endowment helps the festival bring special concerts to Hampton Roads audiences. The festival's endowment was established in 1997 -- the same year E.K. Sloane's bequest created his permanent fund for pianos.

(The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)
 

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Grants to Help Southeastern Virginia Youth Baseball & Softball Leagues

Dal Paull has helped about 20 leagues  since 2005.

Dal Paull is passionate about the game of baseball. It was a game his late father taught him to appreciate when Dal was growing up. He has never outgrown his admiration for the game and what it teaches you.  

Dal, a Norfolk, Virginia resident, wants area children to grow up knowing the thrill of catching a fly ball, running the bases and seeing how hard work teamwork pay off on the field and in life. 

That's why each year he funds grants to help youth baseball and softball leagues in southeastern Virginia. He does this through his donor-advised fund at the Hampton Roads Community Foundation.

February 15 is the deadline for leagues to apply for 2014 grants from the Dal Paull Fund Dal created in 2005 at the community foundation. Grants can be used to help leagues buy uniforms and or pay for needed equipment to help the players on their teams. Grants also can be used to improve the parks where teams play. 

Dugout improvements, batting cages, breakaway bases and lawn mowers are just a few examples of what Dal Paull grants have funded over the past eight years. His efforts have helped hundreds of young ballplayers have better equipment and athletic complexes in Hampton Roads, Western Tidewater and the Eastern Shore of Virginia.

Click here to learn more about this helpful fund, see which leagues have received grants in past years and download a 2014 application.

Baseball season will be here shortly, and there are bound to be plenty of needs in the various leagues working with area youth eager to play softball and baseball. 

Please help spread the word about this wonderful charitable fund that reflects the passion of its donor. 

(The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)
 

Friday, January 24, 2014

How Can You Become a Legendary Philanthropist Like Josh Darden?

It has been a sad few days in Hampton Roads.

The reason? The death on January 22, 2014 of Joshua P. Darden Jr. -- one of southeastern Virginia's legendary philanthropists.

Josh was a kind and generous Virginia Beach, Virginia resident who was part of the Hampton Roads Community Foundation family for many years -- 27 of them as a board member including 10 years as our board chair. He was a donor and a member of both our Legacy Society for Hampton Roads (a group of future donors) and Community Leadership Partners (a giving group of current donors). He was a tireless advocate for the community foundation concept that enables people from all walks of life to become philanthropists.

So what are the lessons Josh leaves behind for those who strive to be like him? Listen to him in the 2011 interview included here, and you will hear some wise advice. Below are a few observations from years of watching Josh in action:

  • Never ask anyone to do what you won't do. Josh was incredibly generous and would enthusiastically enlist others to support causes he believed in like the new Ray and Joan Kroc Corps Community Center the Salvation Army's Hampton Roads Command will open in Norfolk, Virginia in 2014. But, no matter the cause he was championing, he always was the first to donate, and he never wanted any kudos for doing that. He just wanted more people to join him in supporting important causes.
  • Be welcoming. Josh was always available to meet with people whether he knew them or not. They could have just moved to the area, and he would be eager to meet them. He once said, "I like meeting new people. I get ideas from them and sometimes I can help them."
  • Invest in the future. Josh did this in many ways. To make sure students from South Hampton Roads public schools had opportunities, he co-founded the ACCESS College Foundation. To date its services and scholarships have helped more than 40,000 students go to college. To keep a pipeline of engaged community leaders, he helped start the CIVIC Leadership Institute, which continues to train citizens to become community leaders.


Josh Darden & scholarship recipient
Sydney Palese, a JMU student, met in 2013.
In 2009 more than 40 of Josh's friends and colleagues joined forces to create the $1.2 million Friends of Joshua P. Darden Scholarship at the Hampton Roads Community Foundation. Many donors were former colleagues at Colonial Chevrolet whom Josh had mentored and helped get their own car dealerships. Josh was thrilled his "Friends" scholarship would be for public school graduates from southeastern Virginia attending public colleges in the Commonwealth. Today there are 14 Darden Scholars in college. Among them is James Madison University senior Sydney Palese of Virginia Beach. She is the first in her family to attend college, and she had the opportunity to meet and thank Josh while interning at St. Mary's Home in the summer of 2013. He thoroughly enjoyed hearing about her plans and knowing his scholarship was helping her achieve them.


Josh was a tireless advocate for philanthropy who believed all of us have the ability to make our communities better. For that we say thank you!

(The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)

Friday, January 17, 2014

How Can I Continue to Support My Favorite Causes After I Die?

William Goldback supports arts & education forever.
Like many people, you likely have special charitable causes you care about and routinely support through donations to nonprofits working in key areas.

Enhancing the arts, helping unwanted animals find homes, improving the environment, supporting education, helping homeless people get back on their feet .... the list of good causes relying on your charitable gifts is endless.

Have you ever thought about what the causes you support will do when you pass away?

Your generosity doesn't have to end with your death. One way to continue helping your favorite causes forever is through your area community foundation. In North America there are more than 700 of these charitable foundations built by donors from all walks of life. Each underpin in specific geographic areas good causes and the nonprofits involved with them. With one simple charitable gift made through a bequest in your will or other estate plans, you can help your favorite causes long after you are gone.

Perhaps you could be like the donors doing good works forever through the Hampton Roads Community Foundation -- the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia. Here is a sampling of them:

  • William Goldback, a Norfolk businessman who loved going to concerts and plays and valued good health. He donated regularly to organizations working in these areas. Even though Bill died in 2007, today the field-of-interest fund he started at the community foundation through a bequest provides grants to nonprofits working in his areas of interest -- performing arts and  medical services, education or research that help people in Hampton Roads live healthier lives.
  • H. Lee Kanter, a Virginia Beach attorney and founder of the Farm Fresh grocery
    Lee Kanter is 'Bravoman'
    chain, put a provision in his will to start after his death two field-of-interest endowments for the performing arts. Although he passed away in 2001, his grants through the community foundation still help organizations bring music, dance and theater performances to his home region. We like to think this man, whose son nicknamed him "Bravoman" for being the first to leap to his feet after arts performances, is still leading the ovations every time a  grant goes out in his name.
  • Perry & Bunny Morgan
    will help others forever.
  • Peggy and Bunny Morgan, a Virginia Beach couple who passed away in the 1990s, live on today through unrestricted and field-of-interest funds entrusted to the Hampton Roads Community Foundation. Perry was a sharecropper's son who went to college on the G.I. bill, which changed his life and propelled him to a career as a newspaper publisher. A bequest from his estate created permanent charitable funds that reflect his interests by supporting scholarships for area college students and grants to human service and arts organizations in Hampton Roads.
All of these forward-thinking donors to the Hampton Roads Community Foundation live forever through the bequests they put in their wills to support their favorite causes. Through the power of endowment the amounts of grants going out in their names continue to increase as their funds rise in value.

To learn how you can create a permanent fund through the Hampton Roads Community Foundation click here. To learn more about this community foundation and its good works it does in southeastern Virginia on behalf of its donors click here.

Click here for a Council on Foundations map that will help you locate the community foundation nearest you.


(The Hampton Roads Community Foundation is a regional community foundation started in 1950 as the first community foundation in Virginia. It is the largest grant and scholarship provider in southeastern Virginia and manages more than 400 charitable funds created by donors from all walks of life. Over the decades it has provided more than $195 million to improve life for residents living in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, including the cities of Chesapeake, Franklin, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Smithfield, Suffolk and Virginia Beach. It also serves people in Isle of Wight and Southampton counties and the Eastern Shore of Virginia, including Accomack and Northampton counties. Learn more at hamptonroadscf.org.)