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CONSERVATIVE FUNDERS
View all funders organized by the total assets or grants paid.

Please see the Scaife Foundations page for more information on the Allegheny Foundation and Richard Mellon Scaife.
$ 51,520,996 total assets at end of 2006 $ 2,211,800 grants paid $ 5,143,784 total revenue
$ 2,724,133 total expenses
$ 18,020,705 total assets at end of 2005 $ 781,750 grants paid $ 1,329,886 total revenue
$ 1,059,897 total expenses
The Ave Maria Foundation is the tax-exempt funding vehicle of Tom Monaghan, the Dominos Pizza magnate who is one of the most influential members of the Catholic Right. An advocate of laissiez-faire economics as well as an ultra-orthodox brand of faith, he has advanced those twin agendas by both his actions and his financial muscle.
The Ave Maria Foundation reported net assets of $153 million in 2004. That same year it made over $91 million in grants, more than double the previous year's giving of $41.9 million. In 2004 the AMF gave $73 million in start-up costs and construction for its new Ave Maria University in Florida.
$ 121,385,829 total assets at end of 2005 $ 33,140,817 grants paid $ 26,054,430 total revenue
$ 37,203,918 total expenses
$ 3,524,626 total assets at end of 2006 $ 5,033,916 grants paid $ 2,436,930 total revenue
$ 5,066,481 total expenses
$ 5,053,397 total assets at end of 2006 $ 474,000 grants paid $ 263,255 total revenue
$ 493,618 total expenses
Changed its name from the "W.H. Brady Foundation" in 2003.
$ 13,092,719 total assets at end of 2005 $ 60,000 grants paid $ 728,280 total revenue
$ 141,282 total expenses
In 1975, the Adolph Coors Foundation was created as a private family foundation and initially was supported financially by the Adolph Coors Jr. Trust. In 1993, the Castle Rock Foundation was created from the [Adolph Coors Foundation's] unrestricted funds, receiving a $36,596,253 endowment. Now, the Adolph Coors Foundation focuses almost exclusively on projects and organizations within Colorado, while the Castle Rock Foundation provides grants to public policy and other organizations nationwide.
$ 59,547,290 total assets at end of 2006 $ 2,473,000 grants paid $ 1,241,808 total revenue
$ 2,662,009 total expenses
David and Charles Koch, sons of the ultraconservative founder of Koch Industries, Fred Koch, direct the three Koch family foundations: the Charles G. Koch Foundation, the David H. Koch Charitable Foundation, and the Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation. David and Charles control Koch Industries, the second-largest privately owned company and the largest privately owned energy company in the nation; they have a combined net worth of approximately $4 billion, placing them among the top 50 wealthiest individuals in the country and among the top 100 wealthiest individuals in the world in 2003, according to Forbes.
Following in the footsteps of their father, a member of the John Birch Society, the Kochs clearly have a conservative bent. Charles Koch founded the Cato Institute, and David Koch co-founded Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) [now FreedomWorks], where he serves as chairman of the board of directors. David also serves on the board of the Cato Institute. The Koch foundations make substantial annual contributions to these organizations (more than $12 million to each between 1985 and 2002) as well as to other influential conservative think tanks, advocacy groups, media organizations, academic institutes and legal organizations, thus participating in every level of the policy process.
$ 76,012,934 total assets at end of 2005 $ 2,625,951 grants paid $ 30,617,936 total revenue
$ 3,611,046 total expenses
$ 4,709,775 total assets at end of 2006 $ 653,542 grants paid $ 400,514 total revenue
$ 706,143 total expenses
For information on the Claude Lambe Charitable Foundation, along with the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation and the David H. Koch Charitable Foundation see the Koch Foundations page
$ 18,872,126 total assets at end of 2005 $ 3,551,020 grants paid $ 346,874 total revenue
$ 3,869,727 total expenses
For information on the David H. Koch Charitable Foundation, along with the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation and the Claude Lambe Charitable Foundation see the Koch Foundations Page
$ 3,704,661 total assets at end of 2006 $ 4,340,000 grants paid $ 3,047,936 total revenue
$ 4,351,123 total expenses
One of the DeVos Family Foundations.
$ 33,672,375 total assets at end of 2005 $ 7,014,464 grants paid $ 14,523,047 total revenue
$ 7,481,362 total expenses
$ 61,971,515 total assets at end of 2005 $ 11,441,524 grants paid $ 8,763,530 total revenue
$ 12,735,116 total expenses
$ 484,579,224 total assets at end of 2005 $ 22,563,450 grants paid $ 42,089,654 total revenue
$ 25,756,354 total expenses
$ 33,159,986 total assets at end of 2005 $ 20,141,077 grants paid $ 26,725,403 total revenue
$ 20,602,722 total expenses
$ 123,364,899 total assets at end of 2005 $ 5,632,754 grants paid $ 4,014,924 total revenue
$ 6,835,290 total expenses
$ 19,679,840 total assets at end of 2005 $ 1,028,500 grants paid $ 2,409,252 total revenue
$ 1,080,869 total expenses
$ 16,773,578 total assets at end of 2005 $ 6,168,385 grants paid $ 4,270,042 total revenue
$ 6,432,039 total expenses
$ 25,865,369 total assets at end of 2005 $ 1,396,873 grants paid $ 1,980,486 total revenue
$ 2,096,033 total expenses
[Editor's note: The John M .Olin Foundation will be closing its doors in November 2005.]
The New York-based John M. Olin Foundation, which grew out of a family manufacturing business (chemical and munitions), funds right-wing think tanks like the American Enterprise Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the Manhattan Institute for Public Policy Research, and the Hoover Institute of War, Revolution and Peace. It also gives large sums of money to promote conservative programs in the country's most prestigious colleges and universities. After Michael Joyce left to take charge of the Bradley Foundation, William Simon continued as president at Olin...(Editor's note: William Simon passed away in 2000).
$ 20,037,650 total assets at end of 2005 $ 9,020,275 grants paid $ 483,180 total revenue
$ 10,689,275 total expenses
$ 947,837,251 total assets at end of 2004 $ 29,432,136 grants paid $ 552,934,433 total revenue
$ 39,752,609 total expenses
$ 91,859,178 total assets at end of 2005 $ 5,105,902 grants paid $ 18,441,957 total revenue
$ 6,284,259 total expenses
$ 15,449,446 total assets at end of 2005 $ 946,525 grants paid $ 1,542,300 total revenue
$ 1,186,837 total expenses
In 2003 a confusing deal, described in The Randolph Foundation's 2003 IRS 990, was made by The Randolph Foundation and The Smith Richardson Foundation (SRF). The deal created a new The Randolph Foundation with a new EIN (47-0892971), transferred all of the old The Randolph Foundation's assets - $49 million - to the new entity, renamed the old The Randolph Foundation to the H. Smith Richardson Charitable Trust (HSRCT), and transferred $48 million from the Smith Richardson Foundation to HSRCT (essentially replacing the money given to the new The Randolph Foundation). The agreement setup a deal whereby the HSRCT gave money to the Smith Richardson Foundation each year that the SRF would then disburse - and which would report the grants in its IRS 990. For that reason we will not be including HSRCT grants in our database.
Questions about the curious arrangement were not answered by people either at the new HSRCT or the Smith Richardson Foundation. For example, why would the SRF give $48 million to HSRCT, only to have HSRCT give it back to SRF, year by year, to dispurse as SRF sees fit?
$ 69,027,869 total assets at end of 2005 $ 3,080,933 grants paid $ 3,730,656 total revenue
$ 4,812,655 total expenses
The Richard and Helen DeVos Foundation, incorporated in 1970, ranked ninth in total assets ($97,049,407) among the top 20 conservative foundations studied and third in total grants ($26,574,754) in 2001. The foundation's grantmaking has grown dramatically in the past decade, from only $4 million in 1990 to more than $25 million in 2001. The foundation is the oldest and wealthiest of the DeVos family foundations, which also include the Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation (1990), the Daniel and Pamela DeVos Foundation (1992), and the Douglas and Maria DeVos Foundation (1992). Richard DeVos is co-founder of Amway Corporation and owner of the Orlando Magic (2004), and served as the finance chairman of the Republican National Committee.
$ 51,535,870 total assets at end of 2005 $ 45,391,219 grants paid $ 50,087,013 total revenue
$ 54,546,854 total expenses
$ 8,555,580 total assets at end of 2005 $ 631,281 grants paid $ 1,657,802 total revenue
$ 667,894 total expenses
$ 38,553,402 total assets at end of 2006 $ 1,698,000 grants paid $ 3,482,573 total revenue
$ 2,043,932 total expenses
$ 2,589,658 total assets at end of 2005 $ 1,329,750 grants paid $ 585,515 total revenue
$ 1,617,507 total expenses
Though the Noble Foundation gave away more than $63 million in 2005, it only paid $6.8 million in actual grants. Most of its money is given to three operating divisions involved in plant and agricultural research. In 2005 its Agricultural Division spent $14.6 million; the Forage Improvement Division spent $16.3 million, and the Plant Biology Division spent $23 million.
$ 1,269,572,071 total assets at end of 2005 $ 7,911,353 grants paid $ 136,545,808 total revenue
$ 52,418,537 total expenses
Financed by the Mellon industrial, oil and banking fortune. At one time its largest single holding was stock in the Gulf Oil Corporation. Became active in funding conservative causes in 1973, when Richard Mellon Scaife became chairman of the foundation. In the 1960s, Richard had inherited an estimated $200 million from his mother, Sarah. Forbes magazine has estimated his personal net worth at $800 million, making him the 138th richest person in the U.S. He controls the Scaife, Carthage and Allegheny foundations. In 1993, Scaife and Carthage reportedly gave more than $17.6 million to 150 conservative think tanks. As of December 31, 1992, Scaife assets were $212,232,888 and Carthage assets were $11,937,862.
$ 289,533,932 total assets at end of 2005 $ 13,871,000 grants paid $ 14,998,082 total revenue
$ 16,197,272 total expenses
Please see the Scaife Foundations page for more information on the Allegheny Foundation and Richard Mellon Scaife.
Note: The Scaife Family Foundation seems to have broken off from Richard Mellon Scaife's control. It moved to Palm Beach, and is no longer listed at the Scaife Foundations' website.
$ 87,465,105 total assets at end of 2006 $ 3,301,777 grants paid $ 9,332,335 total revenue
$ 4,165,614 total expenses
$ 111,311,064 total assets at end of 2005 $ 4,321,614 grants paid $ 5,619,823 total revenue
$ 5,198,603 total expenses
Financed by the Vicks Vaporub fortune, this foundation is estimated to have assets of about $250 million. Became active in supporting conservative caues in 1973 when R. Randolph Richardson became president. Funded the early "supply-side" books of Jude Wanniski and George Gilder. The Richardsons are estimated by Forbes to have a net worth of $870 million, making them one of the country's richest families.
$ 498,683,646 total assets at end of 2005 $ 17,249,786 grants paid $ 42,739,224 total revenue
$ 21,943,515 total expenses
Please see the Scaife Foundations page for more information on the Allegheny Foundation and Richard Mellon Scaife.
$ 30,108,877 total assets at end of 2006 $ 4,227,500 grants paid $ 5,631,853 total revenue
$ 5,025,690 total expenses
With $706 million in assets (2005), the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation of Milwaukee, Wisconsin is the country's largest and most influential right-wing foundation. As of the end of 2005, it was giving away more than $34 million a year [The Bradley Foundation 2005 IRS 990 PF].
$ 706,076,838 total assets at end of 2005 $ 34,829,501 grants paid $ 116,204,016 total revenue
$ 49,187,087 total expenses
Sister organization to the Thomas B. Fordham Institute
$ 45,288,846 total assets at end of 2005 $ 440,770 grants paid $ 3,542,364 total revenue
$ 1,991,257 total expenses
$ 1,328,793,250 total assets at end of 2005 $ 157,989,927 grants paid $ 442,936,246 total revenue
$ 161,327,512 total expenses
Also see MT's William E. Simon profile.
$ 146,823,188 total assets at end of 2005 $ 8,340,212 grants paid $ 8,916,766 total revenue
$ 9,758,031 total expenses
$ 128,803,437 total assets at end of 2005 $ 4,990,933 grants paid $ 12,365,062 total revenue
$ 7,233,028 total expenses
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