Chapter 1 - Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Transcription
Chapter 1 - Greater Milwaukee Foundation
CHAPTER 1 WHO WE WERE AT T HE BEGINNING The Milwaukee Foundation’s founding fathers were an impressive coterie of city power brokers representing industry, banking and the law. As Milwaukee edged into the 20th century, it was already a bustling community making a definite mark on the world with its broad range of breweries, foundries, factories, packing plants, lending institutions, transportation and related high-power commercial endeavors. There was strength in this town, economic power. Pabst building in downtown Milwaukee Photos courtesy of the Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 1 CITY HALL AND FIRST WISCONSIN BUILDING: Both Milwaukee City Hall and the First Wisconsin Bank building have long been symbols of Milwaukee’s political and economic muscle. Photos courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society Citizens pointed with pride at Milwaukee City Hall, their civic symbol of power. The structure, completed in 1895, soared 15 stories and reached 393 feet. It was the tallest habitable building in the world when finished. To the locals, the presence of that massive Flemish-style landmark, with its tower and giant clock high above the streets, said something indeed about Milwaukee’s civic might. However, the new First Wisconsin Building, home of the First Wisconsin Trust, surpassed Milwaukee City Hall as both the tallest building in Milwaukee and the state. The structure was topped off Aug. 29, 1972, at 601 feet and 42 stories tall and finally completed in 1973. The greater Milwaukee area also was exploding with an influx of immigrants, many from Eastern Europe eager to fi d stability in the New World. Adding to the city’s vibrant mix of German, Irish, Yankee and French influences were newcomers from Russia, Italy and other countries. By 1899, more than 30,000 Poles had moved to Milwaukee, a figure growing to 100,000 by 1915. This made the city one of the largest Polish communities in the country. Like other earlier arrivals, many took low-paying, entry-level jobs, and in time, all these hard workers and their offspring contributed greatly to Milwaukee’s élan. ITALIAN AND POLISH IMMIGRANTS Proud, hard-working Italian and Polish immigrants were among the many new Milwaukeeans in the early 20th century. Photos courtesy of the Milwaukee County Historical Society 2 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 At the end of the 19th century, the fi st suburbs were born, greatly expanding the business clout of the entire area. Bay View was an independent village from 1879 to 1886. In 1892, Whitefis Bay, South Milwaukee and Wauwatosa were incorporated. Next came Cudahy in 1895 and the village of North Milwaukee in 1897. East Milwaukee (Shorewood) arrived on the scene in 1900. Almost immediately after, West Allis was organized in 1902 and West Milwaukee in 1906. These “inner-ring” suburbs provided a newly emerging middle class that was able to move up and out of the rough and tumble Third and Fifth wards where they originated. The upper crust had it even better, with their fi e mansions creeping outward along the northern lake frontage from downtown and west along Grand Avenue (Wisconsin Avenue) and in the Concordia neighborhood. SUBURBAN SCENE (SHOREWOOD) Empty lots in 1924 Shorewood were quickly filling in as hundreds of new homes were built. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 3 BIRTH OF THE MILWAUKEE FOUNDATION As greater Milwaukee was growing, it was obvious there were pressing community needs, particularly in the areas of health care, child welfare, education, housing and worker safety. In 1914, Cleveland had launched the nation’s fi st community foundation as a “means of intelligent charity.” Under the plan devised by banker/attorney Frederick Goff, “a competent administration” would ensure perpetual use of donated funds for the good of the community. Goff’s idea was a way to overcome the limitations of charitable trusts and foundations at the time. He wanted to do away with the “dead hand of charity,” whereby the uses of charitable bequests became obsolete. His concept pooled together charitable resources of local residents into a single trust, and the distribution of the income was overseen by a committee of community members. That committee had the power and the wisdom to research a community’s needs and distribute the money accordingly. The following year, The Chicago Community Trust, California Community Foundation, The Boston Foundation, Greater St. Louis Community Foundation and the Minneapolis Foundation were launched. MAYOR EMIL SEIDEL Milwaukee Mayor Emil Seidel was in office when the first meetings of the Milwaukee Foundation were held. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society His administration received national kudos for its concern for public welfare and its efficient management. Milwaukee took notice. At this time, the city also was poised to shake off the mayoral scandal and city council corruption of past administrations, as well the memory of bloody labor unrest in the late 1800s. These challenges, contributing to the growing pains of the burgeoning urban scene, were already being tackled following the 1910 elections in which Mayor Emil Seidel and many like-minded aldermen and other public officials secured office. Seidel, the country’s fi st Socialist mayor of a major city, soon raised the minimum wage and passed an eight-hour day standard for city workers. WHAT WE DID GREATER MILWAUKEE FOUNDATION CENTENNIAL MILESTONES 4 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 Yet even Seidel and his forward-thinking cohorts, nicknamed the “Sewer Socialists” who sought to improve day-to-day services for the citizenry, were hard pressed to keep up with the demand for charitable assistance. Although the bureaucrats created parks, repaired roads and generally enhanced the quality of life for residents of all income levels, numerous challenges remained. Subsequently, several of the community’s power elite gathered to seriously discuss how to help. Considering the Cleveland model, their evolving thought was to create a Milwaukee Foundation to channel philanthropic resources. 4May 24, 1915: Led by the efforts of Oliver C. Fuller, president of the Wisconsin Trust Company, a Declaration of Trust is signed and adopted to create the Milwaukee Foundation Leading these captains of commerce was Oliver Clyde Fuller, president of Wisconsin Trust Company and founder of the First Wisconsin National Bank. He knew of the Cleveland plan and was eager to try a similar idea locally. Fuller was joined by the Irish-born Patrick Cudahy, whose long list of business accomplishments included being president of Patrick Cudahy Family Company, a real estate powerhouse; president of Cudahy Brothers Company meat packing empire; and director of First Wisconsin National Bank. Another friend involved in these early discussions was Adolph Finkler, who had been an architect prior to becoming secretary and treasurer of the Albert Trostel & Sons Company tannery. Called a noted “Wisconsin man of progress” by those with whom he worked, Finkler married Ida Trostel, Albert Trostel’s daughter. Long active in civic affairs, Finkler would go on to become a five-term president of the Milwaukee Art Museum. Trostel Received Frye Award In 1987, Kim Trostel, wife of Albert Trostel Jr., received the William C. Frye Award. A noted Milwaukee philanthropist and community activist, she died at age 100 in 2009. The Frye Award was named for the late William C. Frye, former president of Rex Chainbelt Company and chair of the Foundation Board in 1954. The award, first given out in 1957, honors individuals who, through their volunteer work, have made Milwaukee a better place. Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation 6 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 Then there was Isaac D. Adler, a director of Wisconsin Trust Company and a noted wholesaler of men’s clothing. His father, David, had founded the David Adler & Sons company, then one of the oldest fi ms in Milwaukee. Isaac’s son, also named David, would become one of the country’s greatest architects. Among other gracious homes, he designed Milwaukee’s Villa Terrace, built in 1924 for the Lloyd R. Smith family. Isaac Adler knew Cudahy through their many business dealings. The entire Adler family was noted for its support of Jewish causes, particularly in supporting orphanages. Fred S. Hunt was secretary for the Milwaukee Dustless Brush Co., which was founded in 1897 and received a gold medal at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair for its versatile products. As of 2013, the fi m was still manufacturing a wide range of brushes. Hunt was a prominent member of the Merchants and Manufacturers Association of Milwaukee, serving on the organization’s membership committee. Consequently, he knew all the players in the city, a handy affi iation when the time would come to seek out big time donors for the cause. A sixth member of the group was distinguished former Judge Paul D. Carpenter of the Milwaukee County Circuit Court’s First Division, who was then an assistant U.S. attorney. He was a lecturer at Marquette University Law School and gave its commencement speech in 1912. Carpenter also was well known in political circles, being the son of the formidable U.S. Sen. Matthew Hale Carpenter who represented Wisconsin in the late 1860s through the early 1880s. While in the Senate, the elder Hale was president pro tempore during the 43rd Congress and was considered one of the nation’s leading constitutionalists. With this family background and connections, it was a plus to involve such a figure as the younger Carpenter. Ohio-born Clement C. Smith, president of First National Bank Milwaukee and head of the Evanston Railway Company, started his career as a civil engineer. The Wisconsin Home and Farm School in Dousman, with its headquarters in Milwaukee, was already a favorite charity when Smith and the others talked about expanding their philanthropic endeavors. Smith, as well as the Albert Trostel & Sons Company, donated funds and purchased acreage for the farm as part of a communitywide effort WORLD WAR I MILITARY IN DOWNTOWN MILWAUKEE CELEBRATING THE END OF WAR World War I was raging when the Milwaukee Foundation was established in 1915, and there was joy in the streets when the war finally ended. Photos courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 7 to secure tillable space where boys would learn farming skills. One of its missions was to “make the misfit boy fi in some useful place in the great fabric of the community” as well as to rescue those “who were just starting on the road to crime and ruin.” With this wealth of talent, legal and business skills and existing track records of philanthropy, it wasn’t difficult to formally organize the Milwaukee Foundation. The group met officially for the fi st time at the Wisconsin Trust Company on Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1915 at 11:30 a.m. On that auspicious day, however, their founders’ enthusiasm as reported in The Milwaukee Sentinel was dampened by other headlines. German troops were rapidly advancing on Warsaw in the bloody Gorlice– Tarnów offensive, and civilians were being evacuated from the city. Outside the staid rooms of the Trust building where the founders were gathered, Milwaukee’s large German and Polish populations were swept up in war fever, arguing and fighting each other. Despite what was happening on Milwaukee’s streets and overseas, the founders forged ahead with their plans. The initial configuration was a charitable trust called the Milwaukee Foundation, with an organizational structure similar to other foundations at the time. The Wisconsin Trust Company was the original trustee and was principally responsible for managing the Foundation’s investments. The Milwaukee Foundation Committee consisted of community leaders appointed by public officials, the trustees and existing Board members. The committee was responsible for the administration of the Foundation and grantmaking decisions. Members were to serve five-year terms. Adolph Finkler was named fi st chairman, with the governing body made up of Adler, Hunt, Carpenter and Smith, who replaced Cudahy when the latter decided not to serve after being appointed by the trust company directors. Wisconsin Trust Company was represented by its president, Oliver C. Fuller, and its secretary, Fred C. Best. The first gift recorded was made at that fi st meeting in 1915 by Fuller in the amount of $1,000, with $500 designated as donor directed and $500 for operating expenses of the Foundation. The balance was to be 4 4August August 4, 1915: Fuller makes fifirst st gift to be divided evenly between operating expenses and “among organized, charitable associations in the city of Milwaukee,” subject to his approval 8 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY SETTLEMENT The Wisconsin University Settlement was one of the first social service agencies to receive Milwaukee Foundation financial assistance. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society distributed at the committee’s discretion. It wasn’t long before the fi st grant was approved. Six days later, $50 from the Oliver C. Fuller Fund, per his recommendation, was given to Wisconsin University Settlement. Founded by sociologist Herbert Jacobs, the settlement’s managing association fought the city’s social and economic problems. The settlement was geared toward helping underprivileged neighborhoods and providing needy families with clubs and classes in English literature, arithmetic and sewing. After a long relationship with the Milwaukee Foundation, the settlement association closed its doors in 1931. At the time, The Milwaukee Journal reported that “the main idea of the plan is a perpetual community trust through the medium of which a multitude of charitable bequests may be combined into one fund which will be large enough . . . to be of great benefit to the community.” Additional 1915 grants from the Oliver C. Fuller Fund included $25 each to the Wisconsin Home and Farm School Association, a project favored by Foundation director Smith, and to Volunteers of America. This national group still actively serves veterans, victims of abuse and those with other social and family issues. 4August 4 August August 10, 1915: First grant of $50 made to Wisconsin University Settlement per Fuller’s request MILWAUKEE CHILDREN’S FREE HOSPITAL Milwaukee Children’s Free Hospital was one of the first institutions to receive financial assistance from the Milwaukee Foundation. Reprinted with permission of Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin Word of the Foundation’s work spread quickly through Milwaukee’s philanthropic community as committee members got out and around, vigorously praising the value of supporting local causes. It was noted in the meeting minutes of Sept. 8, 1915, that “the trustee had been informed that the Milwaukee Foundation had been named as beneficiary in several wills.” through subsequent donations for education, medicine, the dispossessed and children. Among those receiving grants were the Associated Charities, $50; Wisconsin University Settlement, $50; Wisconsin Home and Farm School, $25; Volunteers of America, $25; Boys’ Busy Life Club, $25; Home for Friendless, $50; Milwaukee Infants’ Home, $50; and $50 to the Milwaukee Children’s Free Hospital. By the next year, the Foundation was already hitting its stride. The fi st slate of grants approved in 1916 totaling $325 was again from the Oliver C. Fuller Fund. These early grants set a precedent that would continue The committee sought to obtain a broader list of charitable organizations in Milwaukee County by reaching out to the Merchants and Manufacturers Association of Milwaukee. 4November 16, 1915: Patrick Cudahy creates fi st permanent public fund with a $25,000 gift, directing the income be paid in equal portions to Associated Charities, Little Sisters of the Poor, St. Rose’s Catholic Orphan Asylum and St. Vincent’s Catholic Infant Asylum GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 9 This effort could be considered the Foundation’s fi st request for proposals. After sending out 56 inquiries, the committee received responses from the St. Aemilian’s Orphan Asylum in St. Francis; Mother’s Aid Society of the Milwaukee Maternity Hospital; Our Big Sisters Home Association; St. Joseph’s Orphanage; The Big Brothers and Big Sisters; Children’s Home Society of Wisconsin and Marie Institution for Infants and Children. While some of these organizations have faded into history, others have survived to contemporary times. For example, in 2013, the Foundation awarded a three-year, $450,000 grant to SaintA (formally St. Aemilian’s) to support its efforts toward improving children’s welfare. Aware of the need for transparency in its transactions, the Foundation worked with Price, Waterhouse & Company to conduct the first audit of the ledger sheet in 1916. Also, toward the end of the year, Fuller directed the Foundation to make a grant of $50 “to a Jewish charitable organization or aid society.” Subsequently, the committee forwarded that amount to the Jewish (aka Hebrew) Relief Fund on Dec. 13, 1916. ST. AEMILIAN ORPHAN ASYLUM (Top) St. Aemilian’s was one of the early recipients of a Milwaukee Foundation grant. (left) Youngsters at St. Aemilian’s play on the institution grounds. Photos courtesy of SaintA 41916: Inventor and Chain Belt Company founder Christopher Warren Levalley and his wife, Helen, make the fi st documented deferred gift through a remainder interest in a $100,000 trust 10 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 At the Jan. 8, 1917 meeting, the committee included the following in the minutes, noting one of the fi st documented deferred gifts to the Foundation. S P O T L IGH T ON E A R LY S UP P OR T E R S CHARLES FRIEND “The Committee charged with the administrative distribution of the Milwaukee Foundation has considered with deep sympathy the specific trust created by the generous gift of Christopher Warren Levalley, and his wife, Mrs. Helen Pitkin Spencer Levalley, as defi ed in their trust indenture dated December 20, 1916. The humane, enlightened and far sighted objects graciously expressed by the donors, no less than their munifi ent provision for the execution of those objects, must make a potent appeal to the respect, the gratitude and the emulation of the community they have taken (sic) order so effectively to serve. The Milwaukee Foundation is gratifi d to be permitted to cooperate in its sphere toward the fulfillment in perpetuity of the object which the donors have wisely and beneficently prescribed and believes the future generations will do honor to the founders of the Levalley Trust.” The committee, knowing the extensive array of needs in Milwaukee, drew up a list of charitable organizations as a guide in distributing grants. Ensuring the success of the Foundation over the next 16 years, Cudahy gave $75,000 to the cause. The gift constituted most of the Foundation’s earliest assets. The need to reach out to others was obvious, as attested by Foundation trustee George Luhman in the 1920s, who urged a stronger effort in educating Milwaukee as to the value of the trust. This outreach did bring in other important gifts, especially when the Henry Harnischfeger Fund was set up by the president and founder of the Harnischfeger crane manufacturing fi m. He provided a bequest of $50,000 to establish his fund, emphasizing education. Marie E. Harnischfeger remained interested in the fund, even after her husband’s death in 1930. In 1934, the Harnischfeger Fund joined the Cudahy Fund within the Foundation’s folds. Charles Friend was president of the Hebrew Relief Association in 1916 when the organization received a major grant from the Foundation. He was typical of the era’s concerned professionals who ensured that Foundation contributions would be put to good use. Photo courtesy of Jewish Museum of Milwaukee HENRY HARNISCHFEGER Cofounder of the Harnischfeger Corporation, German-born Henry Harnischfeger is credited with inventing the first gasolinepowered dragline after World War I and developing numerous other heavy equipment products. Many of the firm’s ideas came from Photo courtesy of the Alonzo Pawling, Harnischfeger’s Milwaukee County Historical engineering partner. Pawling died Society in 1914 and was an inductee into the National Mining Hall of Fame in 2009. Harnischfeger carried on the company, becoming one of Milwaukee’s leading industrialists and philanthropists. By 1922, the Harnischfeger fi m was making upwards of $7 million a year and employing more than 1,600 workers. Among his causes was the Associated Charities of Milwaukee. The Harnischfeger Corporation is now part of Joy Global Inc., which markets surface mining equipment worldwide through its P&H Mining Equipment division. Joy Global’s corporate headquarters in Milwaukee still offers significant charitable financial support to local organizations working on education, as well as urban renewal and human services issues. 41917: Cudahy makes $50,000 gift, saying while he “prefers not to make any splash about the gift, as at this particular time everybody and everything is pointed toward helping to win the war. . .” he understands “you would like to do a little advertising in order to awaken some interest in the Foundation” GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 11 12 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 THERE WAS HARDLY A MORE NEEDY TIME IN MILWAUKEE’S HISTORY Prohibition had a deleterious effect on Milwaukee during the 1920s and 1930s by impacting the brewery industry, one of the city’s major industries. Next, the Great Depression, a horrific economic catastrophe, resulted in tens of thousands losing their jobs. There was hardly a more needy time in Milwaukee’s history. Help from the Foundation saved many a charitable group from collapsing during this troubled time. Despite hard times, two additional funds – the Hummel, Gregg and Wells Fund and the Howard E. Mitchell Fund – joined the Foundation in this era. Soon, six more funds joined them, helping boost the Foundation’s assets to $715,000-plus by the mid-1930s. Around this time, the Emil Blatz Fund, James D. Shaw, Wenthe-Davidson Engineering Co. and Malcolm F. Rogers funds were started. During World War II, the Foundation continued its charitable outreach. By 1954, it had become a metropolitan resource, especially with the addition of the William A. Wasweyler Fund. Wasweyler designated 21 organizations to benefit from his fund, two of them based in Waukesha County. Today, the Foundation includes 365 funds created by Waukesha, Ozaukee and Washington County donors. Grantmaking to organizations in these three counties is expanding as their populations increase. HOOVERVILLE IN MILWAUKEE Destitute Milwaukeeans during the Great Depression lived in camps called “Hoovervilles,” a derisive nod to President Herbert Hoover. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 13 SOBERING CHANGE FOR BREW CITY A crowd assembled around a gushing beer keg as Prohibition began. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee County Historical Society 14 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 In 1956, the Foundation finally reached $1 million in assets with a $200,000 bequest establishing the Edith C. and J. Oscar Greenwald Fund. Oscar Greenwald was the grandson of Adam Gimbel who had founded a major department store chain. Greenwald became manager of the Milwaukee department store in 1910 and then became president of Gimbels Midwest. He was on the Foundation Board from 1925 to 1941 and was also a member of the Foundation’s distribution committee. Greenwald died in 1941. 41945: 4 1945: Foundation’s first fi st scholarship fund is created thanks to $100,000 from bequest from Emil Blatz, the son of Blatz Brewery founder Valentine Blatz, “to purchase scholarships for worthy young men and women” BRING BACK BEER A sign about bringing back beer told the story of Prohibition’s impact on Milwaukee. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee County Historical Society 41956: 4 1956: Foundation reaches $1 million in assets, thanks to a fund created through a bequest of the widow of Oscar Greenwald, grandson of the founder of Gimbels GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 15 A SHIFT IN THE TAX CODE – FOR THE BETTER In 1967, attorney Andrew Lauritzen returned to his hometown after receiving his law degree from Harvard University. He accepted an opportunity to join Dudley Godfrey Jr. and Gerald Kahn, who had founded one of the city’s most notable business law fi ms, Godfrey & Kahn. Prior to Lauritzen, Godfrey was the Foundation’s major legal adviser. Lauritzen fi st began providing legal services to the Milwaukee Foundation in 1970, following the enactment in 1969 of numerous changes to the Internal Revenue Code, which affected community foundations and other 501(c)(3) organizations. investment returns and required community foundations to meet annual public support tests to retain public charity status. The 1969 tax law also clarified the requirements for donor advised funds and authorized the creation of supporting organizations. Many of these code provisions exist today and continue to influence the structure and operation of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation and other community foundations. 41969: 4 1969: Tax Reform Act of 1969 passed with some provisions that add a number of constraints on private foundations, making community foundations more advantageous as a vehicle for charitable giving 4 4Foundation Foundation opens fi st office at the Pabst Building, 110 E. Wisconsin Ave. When Lauritzen initially became involved with the Foundation, the First Wisconsin Trust Company (which ultimately became Firstar Trust Company and then a part of U.S. Bank) managed the greatest percentage of the Foundation’s assets. Donald Buzard, executive ANDY LAURITZEN vice president of the First Attorney Andrew Lauritzen was a longtime Wisconsin Trust Company, was legal adviser to the Milwaukee Foundation, an influential member of the beginning in 1970 when he assisted the trustees’ committee and one Foundation in complying with various of the principal influences on tax law changes affecting community the operation of the Milwaukee foundations and other charitable Foundation Trust. He took a personal interest in the organizations which were enacted in 1969. Foundation throughout his Photo courtesy of Andrew Lauritzen career. Buzard died at age 86 on April 15, 2012, with suggested donations in his name going to the Foundation’s DSB Fund, an This was a watershed moment for the Greater Milwaukee Foundation Acorn Fund he created in 1993. and other community foundations because, among other things, the tax changes required all component funds to be subject to a variance power. Buzard was aware of the changes in the tax laws made in 1969 and This gave the Board the ability to modify any restriction or condition of contacted Dudley Godfrey and asked if there was anyone at Godfrey a fund if, in their sole judgment, such restriction or condition became & Kahn who could help the Foundation comply with the new tax code unnecessary, obsolete or inconsistent with the charitable needs of the requirements. William D. Vogel, chairman of the Milwaukee Foundation community or area served. For example, a donor could wish to support Board, was also acquainted with Dudley Godfrey and asked Godfrey & a particular agency, but if that nonprofit went out of business, the Kahn to serve as counsel to the Foundation. Board could use the power to reallocate the funds to support a similar nonprofit. Godfrey requested Andy Lauritzen, one of the firm’s bright young attorneys, to work on Foundation matters. Before long, Lauritzen was The new tax code also required community foundation boards to handling all of the Foundation’s legal work. Although Lauritzen was only have the power to replace trustees for inability to produce reasonable 30, he had a good working relationship with Buzard, who had a great 16 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 sense of humor and was businesslike and easy to work with. As a result, among Lauritzen’s initial endeavors on behalf of the Foundation was amending the organizational documents of the Milwaukee Foundation Trust to meet the requirements of the new tax law. Perhaps one of the most transformative actions taken in the Foundation’s fi st 50 years occurred when its leadership met with the leaders of two private foundations, the Faye McBeath Foundation and the Walter and Olive Stiemke Foundation. GODFREY AND KAHN Dudley Godfrey Jr. (left) and Gerald (Jerry) Kahn met as undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin and remained friends throughout law school. In 1957 they formed the firm of Godfrey & Kahn, which was the primary legal adviser to the Foundation for many years. MILWAUKEE FOUNDATION FORGES AHEAD With attorney Andy Lauritzen’s assistance, the Foundation engaged in several major initiatives over the years, some of which were precedent-setting for community foundations nationally. These included the following: • In 1989, the Foundation organized a corporation now known as the Greater Milwaukee Foundation Inc. to operate as a corporate community foundation in tandem with the original Milwaukee Foundation Trust. The IRS subsequently ruled that the original Milwaukee Foundation Trust and the new Milwaukee Foundation Corporation could be treated as a single community foundation for tax purposes. One of the principal reasons for organizing the corporation was to permit the Foundation to engage investment managers independent of the trustees. • Another IRS ruling, a first, made it acceptable for the Foundation to establish various investment pools in which donated funds could be invested and to permit donors to designate the particular pools to which their funds would be allocated. • Over the years, the Foundation has assisted in the establishment of several supporting foundations, which are independent 501(c)(3) organizations set up exclusively to carry out one or more of the purposes or functions of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation. Such supporting organizations have been established to operate as geographic partners of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, including the West Bend Community Foundation, Oconomowoc Area Foundation and the Greater Cedarburg Foundation, and also by some private donors who preferred to maintain their own independent foundation to support the geographic areas they serve. Photo courtesy of Godfrey & Kahn 41970: 4 1970: Hiring of David Huntington, Foundation’s fi st full-time executive director and staff member; also serves as administrator for Stiemke and McBeath foundations 4Attorney 4Attorney Andrew Lauritzen, with Milwaukee’s Godfrey & Kahn law fi m, begins 40-year career of providing legal guidance to the Foundation GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 17 Together, the three foundations decided to establish an office and employ staff to give professional assistance to their boards in fulfilling their charitable purposes. The three shared an association with the First Wisconsin Trust Company, a focus on the Milwaukee community and a real wish to handle their affairs more efficiently. Under the guidance of Paul F. Meissner, an attorney on the McBeath board, the three foundations created Foundation Studies Inc. in 1968 and the following year hired A.T. Kearney, a Chicago executive search fi m, to fi d someone to run the operations. The fi m brought in David Huntington, former director of placement at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, to meet with Vogel, First Wisconsin Trust’s Catherine Cleary, Herbert Mueller of the Stiemke Foundation and Faye McBeath Foundation head Howard Tobin. After extended conversations, the leaders determined that New Englander Huntington fi the bill and offered him the job. For Huntington, it was “a chance to jump to the other side of the fence” and to accept additional challenges, although he wasn’t that familiar with the Milwaukee charitable or development scene. He began his new job on Jan. 1, 1970. Initially, the two private foundations contributed $7,000 each toward the 1970 budget, and the Milwaukee Foundation, $6,000. The Foundation later got help in the form of grants from the Stiemke Foundation beyond what it paid for services. In 1975 and 1979, for example, the Steimke Foundation contributed $10,000 toward “developing and operating a community trust.” A $15,000 grant in 1984 aided the “development and public awareness program of the community trust.” The IRS soon determined that Foundation Studies would not qualify for tax exemption, suggesting instead that it would be most appropriate for those functions to be handled by the Milwaukee Foundation itself. That change was speedily made: the Foundation leased office space and from then on simply charged the two private foundations for executive services. That assistance from Stiemke was an important resource for the fledgling foundation. Huntington was subsequently made administrator of the Stiemke Foundation, a position he held until 1984, and was secretary of the McBeath Foundation through 1986 and executive director and secretary of the Milwaukee Foundation until 1992. Among his duties, Huntington composed all the agendas, minutes, agency contacts, correspondence and handled grants management for each foundation, as well as prepared and distributed printed annual reports. 18 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 DAVID M.G. HUNTINGTON David M.G. Huntington was executive director and secretary of the Milwaukee Foundation from 1970 to 1992. Over those 22 years, the Milwaukee Foundation grew from a 55-year-old shell of a foundation, unstaffed with some $4 million in total assets, to an entity of about $125 million with a staff of 10. It was ranked among the top 20 of about 400 community foundations then in place around the country. When Huntington was picked to head the Foundation, he had two Harvard degrees and three years’ experience in customer relations with a large Wall Street bank. He had been through infantry training in the Army and served in the Philippines and Korea at the end of WWII before successfully managing administrative posts at two major universities. Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation Huntington was instrumental in taking the Foundation to new heights. A Harvard man, he had a long career in fund development, from banking to academia. He had spent about seven years in development work at the University of Chicago, fi st as assistant director of development for the university during a major campaign and then as director of development for the division of biological sciences, then the largest component of the university, including both its hospitals and medical school. The position put him in contact with foundations of all sizes, a valuable experience from which he learned a lot. In addition to these skills, he was outgoing, friendly and concerned about his adopted city and its residents. CATHERINE CLEARY Photo courtesy of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company archives Huntington immediately began developing grant programs, working out of a small office at 110 E. Wisconsin Ave. He was helped by Colette Carlson, a part-time secretary on loan from First Wisconsin Trust. During this time, the Huntington-Lauritzen team brought the Foundation’s organizational documents into compliance with the tax code. The young attorney then took on additional assignments, including drafting gift acceptance policies, standardizing donor agreements and gift forms, and fie ding general questions relating to the operation of the Foundation, donor relations and various legal issues. With Gardner Friedlander, principal of the Gardner Foundation, Huntington convened a luncheon group now known as the Donors Forum of Wisconsin to share information and interests with other foundations in the area. The forum was instrumental in establishing a foundation reference collection called the Funding Information Center at the Marquette University Library. The collection keeps tax returns on all local private foundations available to help local agencies and institutions in their search for support. The group held regular grantseeker sessions at the Foundation’s office, talking with agencies about the Milwaukee, McBeath and Stiemke foundations and the policies, practices and procedures used in applying for grants. Blaine Rieke started with the First Wisconsin Trust Company in 1973 as a senior executive after being invited to join the staff by Catherine Cleary, then First Wisconsin Trust president and the first woman in the country to hold such a high office. When Cleary retired in 1976, Rieke became president and CEO. He worked closely with senior trust officers. Don Buzard and Rieke directed policy issues for the trust company. Others involved were trust vice presidents Lee Wolcott and Max Grefig. Attorney Dick Gallagher was also a great support because of his interest in philanthropy and knowledge of estate planning. After his retirement from First Wisconsin Trust, Rieke maintained a supportive interest and served on the Foundation Board from 1996 to 2006. BLAINE RIEKE Photo courtesy of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company archives FOUNDATION FORUM OF WISCONSIN Incorporated on April 1978, the Foundation Forum of Wisconsin, under the able leadership of Richard Yeo, began the networking, peer-to-peer education and professional development that became the organization’s mission. Yeo was a director of the Patrick and Anna Cudahy Fund. In 1991, the Foundation Forum changed its name to the Donors Forum of Wisconsin. Connie Bach, executive director from 1987 to 1999, expanded services to include site visits, hosted regional and national speakers, and joined the Forum of Regional Association of Grantmakers. During its 25th year in 2003, the forum was led by Doug Jansson, as chair of the Donors Forum board, and Deborah Fugenschuh as president. GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 19 MANY FIRSTS MARKED EDITH FINLAYSON JOSÉ OLIVIERI FRED GUTIERREZ Edith Finlayson was the fi st African American on the Foundation Board. Moving to Milwaukee in 1958 with her husband, William, she became the fi st African American nurse at Milwaukee’s Veterans Administration hospital. A “professional” volunteer, she was a presence locally and nationally. A founding member of the National Organization for Women, Finlayson died in 2001. Finlayson was Board vice chair under Milwaukee Journal publisher Irwin Maier from 1973 to 1974 and Board chair from 1974 to 1976. She was replaced on the Board by community activist Gwen Jackson, chair emeritus of the American Red Cross in Southeastern Wisconsin and its fi st African American Board chair. The first Latino Board member was José Olivieri, a partner with Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, who was appointed by the Milwaukee Bar Association in 1994. He became chair of the firm’s Labor and Employment Relations Practice Group and co-chair of the Government and Public Policy Group. A native of Puerto Rico, Olivieri was the Foundation’s Board vice chair (with Polly H. Van Dyke) from 1996 to 1997 and chair from 1997 to 1999. In 1991, Fred Gutierrez was the fi st Latino on the Foundation’s staff and was still working there in 2014 as a senior program officer. The late Sarah Ford was the fi st African American on staff. Photo by Jim Moy Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation 41972: Edith Finlayson, appointed by the senior judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District, is Foundation’s fi st African American Board member 20 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 41976: Milwaukee Brewers create the Hank Aaron Youth Fund at the time of his retirement as a tribute to the home run king. The fund provides scholarships to help talented young people ages eight to 12 pursue their dreams . POWER PLAYERS FAYE MCBEATH WALTER AND OLIVE STIEMKE HERBERT J. MUELLER The Faye McBeath and the Walter & Olive Stiemke foundations added clout and financial muscle early on to partner with the Milwaukee Foundation on many causes. The three foundations always acted independently and separately, yet regularly compared notes. Walter and Olive Stiemke also were important players on the city’s charitable scene. Stiemke had been president of the Trackson Company and general manager of the Caterpillar Company plant in Milwaukee for many years. When he died in 1967, he left an estate worth $7 million, and his wife, Olive, succeeded him as chair of the Walter and Olive Stiemke Foundation, which acquired most of his estate. The foundation had awarded more than $2 million in grants to numerous organizations since its beginning in 1964. Sharing staff, it joined forces with the Milwaukee Foundation in 1970. Olive Stiemke died in 1982. The Stiemke’s philanthropy included support of the Stiemke Studio, one of three theaters within the Milwaukee Repertory Theater complex on East Wells Street. Herbert J. Mueller, a local estate planning attorney, was instrumental in helping the Stiemkes establish their foundation. By the time of his death in 2001 at age 91, Mueller had helped start more than a dozen such Greater Milwaukee Foundation funds with gifts totaling nearly $50 million. In recognition of his efforts, the Foundation formed the Herbert J. Mueller Society, honoring other advisers who have been helpful to the Foundation or have recommended starting a fund to their charitably minded clients. Hundreds of planners have subsequently been recognized from A to Z, from John A. Affeldt to Nate Zastrow. Faye McBeath graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1913 and taught school until 1916 when her uncle, Lucius W. Nieman, founder of The Milwaukee Journal, encouraged her to join the Journal Company, where she worked for the next 20 years. When Nieman died in 1935, McBeath inherited one-fourth of his holdings in the publishing company, a substantial amount of which was used to establish the Faye McBeath Foundation. She became one of the city’s greatest philanthropists, supporting programs addressing education, assistance for the blind and the arts. She died in 1967, and the bulk of the McBeath Foundation was due to be paid out by 2014. GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 21 Stiemke and Mueller were closely involved in the motivation behind and the transition of the Foundation to a multi-trust community foundation. When Stiemke wanted to initially set up a private foundation, Mueller was the one who suggested that he consider transferring his assets to a community trust. Health Department and Community Health Concepts. The latter had received grants from both the Foundation and the Faye McBeath Foundation, so Huntington knew of her work. Moore was hired as a program officer and eventually became the director of research and development before retiring in 2009. Stiemke, after looking into the Milwaukee Weeks after hiring Moore, Jim Marks and Doris Foundation, thought it wasn’t as strong as Heiser were hired. After receiving his master’s it could have been at the time and decided degree from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee instead to create his own private foundation. in 1971, Marks took a planning position with However, he didn’t dismiss the idea of joining what was then called the Mental Health Planning the community trust later on. In fact, one of the Committee, later the Planning Council for Health purposes of Stiemke’s private foundation was and Human Services. As director of the Planning to encourage the development and effective Council, he learned how to work with a nonprofit JIM MARKS operation of Milwaukee’s community trust. board and nonprofit budgeting and financial Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Stiemke met with officials from the Council management. In late 1974, he was appointed Foundation on Foundations, dutifully researched other executive director, a position he held until joining community foundations at the time – including the Foundation in 1984. Cleveland and Chicago – and ventured around the country to get a firsthand account of how they operated. Through his research, he found that While at the Planning Council, Marks applied to the Milwaukee community foundations had greater strength and faster growth if they Foundation for a grant related to mental health services, a Foundation had more than one financial institution as a trustee. priority area at the time. In 1984, Gwen Jackson, who was on both the Foundation and Planning Council boards, suggested to Huntington that Hoping to build the Milwaukee Foundation into a more substantial force he contact Marks to see if the Planning Council could help with proposal within the community, Stiemke worked with Mueller to encourage First reviews. Marks assigned his associate director to this project on a Wisconsin to modify the declaration of trust. They drew inspiration from time-limited contract basis but was hopeful that the Foundation would other trust agreements and the model declaration of trust proposed by continue to contract with the council longer term rather than hiring its the council. Sadly, Stiemke didn’t live to see his efforts bear fruit. He died own staff. Huntington didn’t agree, however, and eventually hired Jane in early 1967 before the declaration of trust was modified later that year. Moore for the program officer position. M&I Marshall & Ilsley Bank and Marine National Exchange Bank agreed to be added as trustees. As part of the amended declaration, all of the Foundation trustees had to approve of any major policy changes within the organization, including expanding the Board and naming an independent investment adviser. In 1984, it quickly became obvious that with the size of the job, Huntington could use additional help. Among his fi st hires in 1984 was Jane Moore, former Peace Corps volunteer who had experience in planning, evaluation and research with the City of Milwaukee In the meantime, Marks learned that the Foundation was looking to hire someone with finance and budgeting experience in anticipation of the Stiemke Foundation being folded in as a fund by the end of the year. That got Marks to thinking that it might really be interesting to work for a foundation, although the position they originally were looking for was an administrative assistant. He subsequently proposed to Huntington that he make the opening an assistant administrator position, basically second in command. Huntington liked the idea and presented it to his board, which agreed. 41983: Shaw Scientist program begins, thanks to bequest from Dorothy Shaw, widow of Milwaukee attorney James D. Shaw. University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Michael M. Cox and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Peter J. Wejksnora are fi st recipients 22 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 41984: Jim Marks, Doris Heiser and Jane Moore hired to assist the rapidly growing Foundation FOUNDING FATHERS JUDGE PAUL D. CARPENTER ADOLPH FINKLER CLEMENT SMITH OLIVER C. FULLER FRED S. HUNT PATRICK CUDAHY Photos courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 5 Once hired, Marks’ biggest challenge was preparing financial statements. In fact, he was the fi st staff person to compile such documents for the Foundation. Prior to that time, auditors did this work. As the Foundation grew in size and complexity, it became clear that it needed someone with more accounting expertise to manage its finances on a full-time basis. At that time, Marks transitioned into his role as director of grant programs. Later in his tenure, Marks took on the responsibility for the Foundation’s largest individual fund – the Ceres Foundation – a $16 million supporting organization with a primary focus on sustainable agriculture. This was extremely time intensive, given the size of the fund and the passion of the donor for the cause. Marks managed all aspects of the fund, from soliciting proposals to gathering basic organizational information, as well as following up with the grantees and the donor. Next hired was Doris Heiser, who had attended the Donors Forum as a representative of the Junior League of Milwaukee. Early in 1984, Huntington told Heiser about a half-time position at the Milwaukee Foundation working with donors. Heiser thought about the job and called Huntington a couple of weeks later saying she would like to apply and asked if the position was still open. It was. Compared to the hustle and bustle of work at the Foundation a few years later, the environment was quite low key when Heiser began. DORIS HEISER Photo by Jim Moy CERES FOUNDATION SUPPORTS ORGANIC AGRICULTURE Demonstrating its diverse funding opportunities, the Foundation has assisted the Ceres Foundation, named after the ancient goddess of agriculture. The Ceres Foundation provides grants to support organic agriculture initiatives primarily in western Wisconsin, eastern Iowa and Minnesota. It has also been a leading supporter nationally of research and advocacy efforts to preserve pollinators and natural environments as well as to remove toxins from food sources. JANE MOORE Photo by Jim Moy 41985: 4 1985: Foundation’s Walter and Olive Stiemke Fund makes $750,000 grant to the Milwaukee Repertory Theater toward the construction of the Stiemke Studio in the Milwaukee Center Complex GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 23 DOROTHY SHAW Photo courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation The Foundation was always eager to help recognize community leaders. It created the Shaw Scientist Award in 1982 with a bequest from Dorothy Shaw, widow of James D. Shaw, a prominent Milwaukee attorney. Her $4.3 million gift endowed the James D. Shaw and Dorothy Shaw Fund within the Foundation. She directed that the fund be used to advance the fie ds of biochemistry, biological science and cancer research at UW–Madison and UW–Milwaukee. Since then, the asset value of the Shaw Fund has grown to more than $15.5 million, even as it has distributed millions of dollars in grants over the years. SCHOOL OF FRESHWATER SCIENCES Each young Shaw Scientist receives $200,000 in unrestricted research support. Since its launch, in addition to $2 million in special grants, Shaw’s fund has awarded more than $12.5 million in grants to 65 scientists from both universities. Huntington always pointed out that the awards were perfect examples of what a community foundation could do. Another example of the program’s impact came in 1985, when veteran researcher Dr. Kenneth H. Nealson became the Shaw Distinguished Professor at the Center for Great Lakes Studies, predecessor of the School of Freshwater Sciences, a key player in Milwaukee’s efforts to establish itself as an international leader in water research and innovation. The position allowed him to continue his studies on metals and microbes. THE FIRST SHAW SCIENTIST RECIPIENTS: University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Michael M. Cox (left) and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Peter J. Wejksnora (right) Photos courtesy of Greater Milwaukee Foundation 24 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 KENNETH H. NEALSON, PH.D. Photo courtesy of the J. Craig Venter Institute REBECCA KLAPER Shaw Associate Professor at University of WisconsinMilwaukee’s Great Lakes Water Institute Photo by Jim Moy HARRY ANDERSON, TREE PLANTING On June 4, 1980, Harry Anderson, executive director of the Milwaukee County Historical Society, presented a major speech at the 65th annual meeting of the Milwaukee Foundation. After the formal business meeting, the attendees toured a Historical Society exhibit featuring the work of the Milwaukee Foundation over the years and were then invited outside for a tree planting. The ceremony, according to Foundation Board Chair William C. Messinger, was to commemorate “our roots, past, present and future.” On hand to provide an historical link to the past were Michael Cudahy, great-grandson of a Foundation founder Patrick Cudahy; George Chester, nephew of Clement C. Smith, another founder; and Douglas E. McKey, son of Douglas F. McKey, secretary pro tem for the Foundation in 1915. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee County Historical Society GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 25 BUILDINGS WE’VE CALLED HOME The Foundation has migrated to several office buildings over the years. It fi st had a room and a half in the Pabst Building, 110 E. Wisconsin Ave., before moving to the Plankinton Building, 161 W. Wisconsin Ave. After 25-year sojourn to larger quarters at the German-English Academy Building, 1020 N. Broadway, next led to the current locale in Schlitz Park, 101 W. Pleasant St. Pabst Building, 110 E. Wisconsin Ave. 1969-1975 26 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 Plankinton Building, 161 W. Wisconsin Ave 1975-1984 German-English Academy Building, 1020 N. Broadway 1984-2009 Schlitz Park, 101 W. Pleasant St. 2009-present GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 27 SHARON LOXTON Photo by Jim Moy Another team member was Sharon Loxton, hired from Arthur Andersen & Co., where she was an auditor. In 1988, the Foundation was looking for a fiscal officer, and Huntington sent a note with a position description to Steve Graff, the office managing partner at Andersen. Loxton’s background in auditing financial institutions and nonprofits was a good fi for the Foundation, which at that time had only seven employees. She became the Foundation’s fi st controller in 1989, the fi st fiscal officer of any type at the Foundation. By then, the Foundation had about 180 funds and just over $71 million in assets. There weren’t any comprehensive systems available that integrated financial, grantmaking and contribution activities at the time. Loxton’s fi st task was to understand the fi ancial records and begin preparation for the audit. In addition, she staffed the Investment Committee, which selected a corporate investment manager, and set up the accounting for the Foundation’s new investment pool. As part of that process, the Foundation’s investment policy was rewritten. Capitalizing on a trend beginning in the endowment fie d at the time, the Foundation’s payout practices for grants were converted from “spend actual income earned” to one that spent a percentage of growth. An extensive study calculated and projected the impact of the change, and presentations were made to donors to convey the benefit. Colonial Consulting from New York was hired to help and eventually became the Foundation’s regular investment consultant. Loxton also prepared tax returns in house rather than sending them out to the accounting fi m. The Foundation staff had its work cut out for it. In the 1980s, it received 70 to 100 proposals every quarter, each requiring Board committee review. This time-consuming system resulted in declining 90 percent of the requests for various reasons. This was onerous to grant applicants after all their hard work preparing submissions. By instituting a letter- 41986: Creation of Journal Foundation funds, a cluster of permanent funds that represents contributions from more than 33 active and retired employees of Journal Communications 28 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 of-inquiry process, however, the staff could readily review up to 100 concepts and invite the most promising to submit full proposals. Everyone agreed this system was a great improvement, made at relatively no cost. Over time, the Board and staff also felt that grantmaking was fragmented and disconnected. Many small, one-year grants were being made, and it was difficult to measure their impact. Eventually, for the most promising projects that demonstrated measurable results, the Foundation and its funding partners made larger grants over multiple years. As a result, grantmaking became more strategic, synergistic and collaborative. It was also important that the Foundation’s story was spread by a variety of means, from newspaper ads to annual reports. The first promotional piece was a slim pamphlet put together by Catherine Cleary at the First Wisconsin Trust in 1969. When Stan Hack was Board chair in 1975, he asked Milwaukee public relations specialist Robert Zigman to help get out the word about the Foundation. Former newsman Bob Riordan, initially a volunteer and eventually a paid consultant, was also instrumental in helping publicize the Foundation. In those days, foundations supported collaboration among nonprofit organizations but did not often collaborate with other foundations. The Faye McBeath Foundation office was adjacent to Jane Moore’s. When Sarah Dean became executive director of the McBeath Foundation, the two began discussing common issues and concerns. This led to more discussions with Robin Mayrl at the Helen Bader Foundation. In turn, the three organizations began to collaborate in earnest, bringing in other donors and public-private funders. By partnering with other foundations and Foundation donors, discretionary dollars expanded to develop and sustain projects that had a greater impact on the Milwaukee community. Among these were the Sponsor-A-Scholar program, Compass Guide, Nonprofit Management Fund (a coalition of local foundations, corporations and United Way of Greater Milwaukee), UWM Helen Bader Institute for Nonprofit Management, Connecting Caring Communities, economic development in transitional neighborhoods, redevelopment of Menomonee Valley and Project Lead the Way. Moore played a pivotal role in helping these organizations work together. 41989: Foundation hires Sharon Loxton as its fi st controller MENOMONEE VALLEY COMPASS GUIDE By partnering with other foundations and Foundation donors, discretionary dollars expanded to develop and sustain projects that had a greater impact on the Milwaukee community. HEALTHY NEIGHBORHOODS INITIATIVE SPONSOR-A-SCHOLAR Having been “on the other side of the table,” Moore wanted to make the grant process and experience more transparent by creating “Grantseeker” sessions for anyone interested in knowing how the Foundation reviewed grants, what questions to anticipate and how to “make the case.” Later, she focused her experience and developed a graduate course at Marquette titled “Nonprofit Organizations, Management and Trends in the Third Sector.” Among many executives who lent their expertise to the Foundation at this time was Brent Rupple, former chairman, president and CEO of Robert W. Baird. Rupple served the Foundation in various capacities, including as a Board member for 10 years and as a member of the Investment Committee for 24 years. By its 75th birthday in 1990, the Foundation included 200 funds with total assets of $83 million. It launched the fi st of several grantmaking initiatives, including the Neighborhood and Family Initiative, focusing on the economic revitalization of Milwaukee’s Harambee and near North Side neighborhoods. It was the fi st of many Foundation initiatives that combined grants from several funds to leverage grant commitments from other foundations. One of the highest-profile successes was the Foundation support in establishing Riverworks Development Corporation, a nonprofit 501(c)3 organization formed in 1992 after the closing of the sprawling American Motors Corporation complex in Milwaukee’s northeast industrial corridor. Riverworks focuses on helping train and place Milwaukee residents into jobs while providing benefits and financial coaching at the same time. When David Huntington indicated he was considering retirement in 1992, the Foundation conducted a national search for his replacement. Gene Struckoff, a headhunter hired by the Foundation who wrote the defi itive handbook on how to start community foundations and was skilled in providing technical assistance to new community foundations, found an attractive candidate in Douglas Jansson. After receiving a master’s in public administration from the Maxwell School at Syracuse University and spending years leading a relief program in Nigeria following that country’s civil war, Jansson became an analyst in the Governor’s Offi e of Policy Research in Columbus, Ohio. The office was funded largely by the Ford Foundation to provide the governor with nonpolitical research on issues facing the state such as alternatives to incarceration, how to regulate the new cable television industry and related issues. TAKING THE INITIATIVE Foundation donor Dorothea Mayer, a bus tour attendee, and former Foundation Board chair Gwen Jackson take part in the Milwaukee Foundation Associates tour of the Harambee neighborhood, supported through the Foundation’s Neighborhood and Family Initiative. Photo by Frank Miller 41988: Wisconsin AIDS Fund is established to support programs directed at the prevention and further spread of AIDS, as well as care and treatment services 30 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 41990: Development of the Neighborhood and Family Initiative for Milwaukee’s Harambee neighborhood with funding from the Ford Foundation Three things motivated Jansson to accept the position at the Foundation. First, he knew the Foundation did not need to be “fixed.” Huntington had assembled a terrifi staff, and the Board was highly motivated to see Jansson take the Foundation to the next level. Second, Jansson was impressed with the beauty of Milwaukee – the lakefront, its cultural facilities, its local and state parks and its strong civic organizations. Third, he said, “It just felt right for me to be back in the Midwest.” THE CALATRAVA ON THE MILWAUKEE LAKEFRONT After a few years in Columbus, Jansson became a program officer with the Chicago Community Trust before heading up the Rhode Island Foundation for roughly 12 years, during which time the foundation’s assets had grown from $25 million to nearly $200 million. By then, Jansson was ready for a new challenge. Jansson had fi st gotten to know Huntington when he worked for the Chicago Community Trust. He was invited to meet with the board of the Faye McBeath Foundation, which Huntington also staffed early on, to discuss how the Trust approached its grantmaking in the area of children and youth services. DOUG JANSSON Greater Milwaukee Foundation president and CEO from 1993 to 2010. Photo by Jim Moy Under Jansson’s leadership from 1993 to 2010, the Foundation enjoyed one of the most successful periods in its long history. Assets more than quadrupled, more than $300 million in grants were made to nonprofits, and the Foundation launched the partner foundation concept. GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 31 GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERS Demonstrating the Foundation’s outreach into the broader community, the first regional affi iate to become a philanthropic partner with the Foundation was the West Bend Community Foundation. The idea for its creation came from two West Bend civic leaders, the late Cliff Nelson and Douglas Ziegler. After much research, they determined that it made more sense to create a foundation as an affi iate of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation rather than a new, freestanding community foundation. By doing so, they could benefit from the Foundation’s staff resources and investment pools. Together, Nelson and Ziegler personally pledged $1 million in unrestricted contributions to jumpstart the West Bend Community Foundation. The Oconomowoc Area Foundation was launched through the efforts of Jim Marks and Fred Gutierrez. Together, they assembled community leaders, presented the idea and provided the ongoing staff support. The Foundation also agreed to rely on the board of the Oconomowoc Area Foundation to make grants from the Hilbert Scherffius Fund, a substantial fund created by the donor to benefit that community. The Greater Cedarburg Foundation was also launched and over time, the founders determined that it could operate more economically and effectively as a Foundation affi iate. Particular credit in this partnership went to Mal Hepburn, a local entrepreneur and philanthropist. Overall, these three geographic affi iates have demonstrated that they will continue to grow as essential partners with the Foundation. West Bend Community Foundation Greater Cedarburg Foundation Oconomowoc Area Foundation 32 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 BLUE CHIP REGATTA IN OCONOMOWOC SCIENCE LAB IN WEST BEND Wider community outreach was made possible by creating Foundation affiliates, which could benefit from Foundation staff resources and investment pools. MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART IN WEST BEND CEDAR CREEK IN CEDARBURG OCONOMOWOC IMAGINATION STATION COINVESTMENTS In 2006, the Foundation started a concerted effort to engage donors as co-investors, and since that time has secured more than $10.2 million in coinvestments from donor advisers for a wide range of programs and projects. For the Foundation, community leadership and co-investment are symbiotic, providing donors with exciting opportunities. As a result, donors contribute more and have a feeling of ownership. In its various reports, the Foundation has viewed co-investment as a multipronged strategy that (a) builds and solidifies relationships throughout the community, (b) strengthens the Foundation’s reputation as a philanthropic leader, (c) increases the number of people and institutions involved in and knowledgeable about an issue and (d) increases the potential magnitude and sustainability of impact. One of the most exciting programs developed at the Foundation under her watch was Match Day, when community members united to raise funds for area food and shelter agencies. Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, a good friend of the Foundation, called the organization a partner in strengthening the city. He explained that by advancing important initiatives, the Foundation provides financial resources, but its role is so much more. The people, the energy and the ideas it brings make a huge difference in the outcomes of these initiatives. There are numerous examples of what such coinvestments have helped fund over the years. They allowed Urban Ecology Center to purchase 30 microscopes; supported the Museum of Wisconsin Art’s capital campaign for its new building in West Bend; supported the food pantry at the AIDS Resource Center of Wisconsin; helped Milwaukee children attend summer camp; backed UWM’s LGBT Film Festival; supported Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council’s fair lending program to prevent predatory lending and mortgage rescue scams; and promoted the Women in Science program at the Medical College of Wisconsin. More than 1,100 grants have been awarded since the idea of coinvesting took off. With Doug Jansson’s retirement, Ohioan Ellen M. Gilligan joined the Foundation in 2010 as its leader. She previously spent 12 years at the Greater Cincinnati Foundation where, as vice president of community investment, she directed and oversaw all of its grantmaking programs for an eight-county service area. She also served as president and secretary of The HealthPath Foundation of Ohio, a $21 million supporting organization of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation. Experienced in building coalitions and partnerships to address critical needs and issues including education, neighborhood and community development, race relations and safety net services, Gilligan eagerly plunged into the Milwaukee charitable scene. She brought new and innovative ideas with her to immediately leverage the Foundation’s charitable assets to address areas of vital concern in the community. 41994: Camps for Kids scholarship program created by the Foundation, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a number of youth-serving agencies to give central city children a chance to attend summer camps 34 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 The fi st Match Day was held in 2012 as an online event, and a total of $1.8 million was raised in less than 24 hours by Foundation donors and the greater Milwaukee community in support of 19 nonprofits. Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele and Waukesha County Executive Dan Vrakas Photo by Jim Moy 41996: Foundation awards fi st $1 million grant (thanks to the Walter and Olive Stiemke Fund, Halbert and Alice Kadish Fund 1 and Elinor Gallun Pritzlaff Fund); Milwaukee Art Museum is recipient Through its leadership and generous support of its donors, the Foundation has helped develop and nurture projects such as the Mequon Nature Preserve (above), the Urban Education Fellows Program (below left) and the Healthy Neighborhoods Initiative (below right), among many others. Overall, 30 percent of the total grants made in 2013, or about $11.9 million, supported health- and human services-related programs. Education was the second-largest funding area, with nearly 19 percent, or $7.3 million, in grants awarded to education-related projects and programs. Jeff Monday and Jennifer Morris, Urban Education Fellows Program 4 41996: 1996: Foundation reaches $200 million in assets 41997: 4 1997: Foundation and YMCA of Metropolitan Milwaukee join together to create Sponsor-A-Scholar mentoring program for low-income high school students GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 35 A good example of the Foundation’s evolving role in the community is Milwaukee Succeeds, a communitywide collaboration launched under Gilligan’s direction, which aims to improve educational outcomes for every child in Milwaukee. As Barrett said, “[The Greater Milwaukee Foundation] has unique reach, influence and drive to accomplish this goal.” Milwaukee Succeeds is an expansive partnership with more than 300 community and educational organizations involved in varying aspects of the work. With a focus on every child – cradle to career – the program helps bridge the gaps among different school systems and provides a holistic perspective on strategies that will make a difference in the lives of Milwaukee’s children and their families. Echoing the mayor, Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele noted that in the 20 years he has lived in Milwaukee, he has watched the Foundation grow the number of grants it gives and the amount it is able to give, but, more importantly, he has watched it increase its professionalism, demand for outcomes and the degree to which it strategically makes decisions. He pointed out that the Foundation leadership “is fantastic and getting better” under Gilligan, saying that she “is great to work with, and her vision is an excellent addition to our community. I’m looking forward to seeing the impact I know the Foundation will continue to have for the next 100 years.” With this support and encouragement, the Greater Milwaukee Foundation is eagerly moving into its next century, looking forward to many more years of civic involvement, emphasizing ongoing concern for its donors, accepting and overcoming challenges and continuing to care for the area’s citizenry. MILWAUKEE SUCCEEDS CO-CHAIRS John Schlifske, Jacqueline Herd-Barber and Mike Lovell Photo by Jim Moy 36 | GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 GREATER TOGETHER 1915-2015 | 37