Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln Celebrates a Century of Philanthropy

Announces $100,000 in grants to Eight County Fairs and the Illinois State Fair

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[November 20, 2024]  Springfield, IL – Most organizations only have one birthday, but the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln celebrates two.

This year, the Community Foundation’s predecessor organization, the Sangamon County Fuondation, is celebrating its 100th anniversary. With roots tracing back to 1924, the Sangamon County Foundation was established by three local banks, when they joined forces to create a philanthropic organization to provide financial resources to local charitable causes.

The original Foundation was formed by notable Springfieldians who were leaders at Ridgely-Farmers State Bank, Marine Bank, and First State Trust and Savings Bank, including Jacob Bunn, R.C. Lanphier, George W. Bunn, John G. Oglesby, George Pasfield, Jr., Joseph F. Bunn, and George F. Reisch.

Grant Announcement – 100 for 100

To mark the 100th anniversary of the Sangamon County Foundation and its legacy of philanthropy in Central Illinois, the Community Foundation is deploying $100,000 in grants to the eight county fairs in its service area, including Cass, Christian, Logan, Macoupin, Menard, Montgomery, Morgan, and Sangamon counties, as well as the Illinois State Fair.

“We are awarding $10,000 to each of the eight county fairs in our region and a $20,000 grant to the Illinois State Fair as a way to celebrate philanthropy and help festivals that our communities enjoy every year,” says Community Foundation President and CEO John Stremsterfer. “In making these grants, we are asking organizers to think of ways these funds can make their fairs more accessible to all citizens.”

The announcement of the grant awards coincides with Community Foundation Week, an annual, nationwide celebration that recognizes the increasingly important role that community foundations play in strengthening local regions. More than 900 community foundations currently operate in urban and rural areas in every state in the United States.

History of the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln

According to the April 27, 1927, Illinois State Register, the first Foundation was formed “by trust companies and banks having trust departments in Springfield for handling charitable bequests efficiently and in a business-like manner, to protect the principal.”

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The Sangamon County Foundation had no money to grant for 52 years until Lucy S. Shepherd of Springfield changed that. When she died in 1975, she left the Foundation $140,000 in her will. According to local newspapers, after Shepherd’s bequeathment, the Foundation began making annual grants to a variety of charitable groups.

Years later, recognizing the need to serve the region better and broaden its impact, Foundation leaders legally transitioned the organization from a private foundation to a community foundation in 2002, renaming it the Sangamon County Community Foundation. This organization would ultimately evolve into what we know today as the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln, carrying forward the legacy of connecting people who care with causes that matter throughout Central Illinois.

“In 2011, we changed our name to the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln to reflect that we now serve an eight-county region,” said Stremsterfer.

As the Foundation celebrates its 100-year history, it reflects on a legacy of growth and generosity that has strengthened communities across the region. Today, the Foundation has grown to approximately $85 million in assets, administers more than 300 charitable funds, and it has distributed more than $32 million in grants and scholarships.

This century-long journey reflects a deep commitment to fostering positive change and support for our community.

Through philanthropic services, strategic grantmaking and community leadership, the Community Foundation for the Land of Lincoln “connects people who care with causes that matter.”
 

[Text received from Stacy Reed]


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