Women’s Fund Founders Built Legacy for Community’s Daughters and Granddaughters

The Women’s Fund now has more than $1.2 million in total assets and has awarded nearly $450,000 in grants since inception.

Peggy Ogden remembers a woman walking into her office about 25 years ago to contribute to the newly-created Women’s Fund of Central New York. “She said it was the first time she had written a $1,000 check,” Ogden recalled. “It was self-empowerment for her: ‘This is something I believe in and will use my resources to support.’”

Ogden was among several Syracuse-area women who harnessed determination and donations to start the Women’s Fund of Central New York, an endowed fund to address gender inequity that limited opportunities for the region’s women and girls.

After participating in the national Leadership Women America program in the mid-90s, a small group of Syracuse-area women wanted to use their leadership positions, skills and resources at home. Hillary Clinton’s 1995 declaration to the United Nations that “women’s rights are human rights” had highlighted the low profile and paltry resources the community committed to women’s and girl’s programming. A nod to the region’s history of female leaders in the Iroquois Confederacy and the women’s suffrage movement also influenced their thinking.

“We’re leaving a legacy for our community, our daughters and our granddaughters,” one fundraising appeal noted. “This fund is another chapter in that legacy of women’s rights,” said Aminy Audi, who hosted one of the early organizing meetings.

Their initial goal was to raise $100,000 through 100 founding donations of $1,000. They raised more than $170,000 in about four months. “Women just took out their checkbooks and started writing checks,” Ogden said. “We were helping women recognize the power of philanthropy.”

“The timing was right,” said Ann Higbee. “Women were looking for an outlet to be supportive of ideas and programs that were meaningful to them and supported women and girls. It was bite sized. It was manageable. It was local.”

The founders partnered with the Central New York Community Foundation to create the endowment, formalize their goals and create an advisory council. The Women’s Fund now has more than $1.2 million in total assets and has awarded nearly $450,000 in grants since inception.

Marcie Sonneborn, who was teaching entrepreneurship at Syracuse University at the time, was frustrated at the stark difference between how male and female students talked about startups and venture capital. “The men were gung-ho and ready to go out and do something and the women said, ‘My ideas are not well thought out enough.’” She hoped the fund would help women realize their ideas were valuable, too.

Council members also got a chance to learn leadership skills through networking and assessing grants. “It was a first experience for many women,” Judy Mower said. “That builds leadership. That’s a skill. That builds mental capacity. It makes women better at civic leadership and entrepreneurship.”

Audi agreed: “You don’t have to be the CEO to be a leader. Being able to see how others function, how they resolve conflict and how they interact with others, provide valuable lessons in leadership skills for women at every level.”

Maeve Lanning Stockman, current Women’s Fund Advisory Council chair, leads the 28-member group in assessing and awarding grants. “We are the stewards of this fund,” she said. “We receive many more applications than we can fund.”

She finds the nonprofits’ stories both inspiring and heart-breaking. “We know that women are often the economic powerhouse of their family,” she said. “It is an honor and privilege and a heavy weight to be able to support these extremely worthy organizations to keep the basic foundation under the people they serve.”

In 2022, the fund awarded 10 grants totaling $50,000. They included: Black Girls Don’t Get Love, to convert a popular book into a short film for girls; Partners for Education and Business, to connect girls with local companies and hands-on activities to explore engineering, manufacturing and skilled trade careers; and BLOOM of CNY, to facilitate workshops for girls and young women on health and wellness, financial literacy and building healthy habits.

Council members are being more intentional about diversity, equity and inclusion in their operations and grantmaking. They also want to hold events for girls around age 12 to start learning self-empowerment at early ages.

They’d also like to engage more with the founders, a goal the founders share. “It was a different time for women then, but the problems facing our community are the same,” Lanning Stockman said. “We are extremely grateful for the generosity and foresight and gumption of these women.”

The founders, meanwhile, are still full of ideas: What are the unmet needs? How do we help women feel comfortable moving into the circles still filled by men? How can we act as connectors? The work, they noted, goes on.

Related Stories

故事 June 5, 2024

通过粮食正义运动传递希望

在 COVID-19 大流行之初,纽约中部宗教间工作组织开始分发美国奶制品协会的剩余牛奶,并由此建立了一个庞大的食品储藏室网络,目前为 32 个基层储藏室提供支持。

出版物 April 22, 2024

超越美好愿望影响无穷的意外礼物

露西的遗赠出人意料且不受限制,这与个人即使在生前没有公开支持的情况下,也能对其所珍视的事业产生默默而深远的影响不谋而合。

出版物 April 22, 2024

科纳家族基金:有其父必有其女

教育是科纳家孩子的基石,他们的父母都是成功人士,具有公民意识。 现在,他们的父母通过社区基金会继承了他们的遗志,塑造年轻人的思想,支持重要的事业,确保子孙后代拥有更加光明的未来。

故事 March 19, 2024

无缝奉献莱拉-莫吉洛

莱拉-莫吉廖(Leyla Morgillo)总是乐善好施,无论是付出时间还是金钱。 现在,她帮助她的客户在纽约州中部及其他地区进行同样的变革。

故事 March 5, 2024

正在发生的事情

2024 年冬季之声:正在发生的事情

Pamela Monaco sitting with her dog
出版物 March 5, 2024

规划永不停歇

2024 年冬季 "奉献之声":奉献很重要

故事 February 12, 2024

捐赠视角:苏珊和迈克尔-米斯

社区基金会的 "5forCNY "倡议邀请社区成员将自己的部分资产捐献给纽约州中部的慈善机构,这立即引起了迈克尔和苏珊-米斯的共鸣。

故事 December 11, 2023

让扫盲无障碍

最近,中北卡罗来纳州联合之路从我们的扫盲倡议基金中拨款 10 万美元,通过支持奥农达加扫盲联盟(Literacy Coalition of Onondaga)来推动当地的扫盲工作。

故事 November 15, 2023

以捐赠为中心琳达-弗尼-威廉姆斯

2021 年 10 月,琳达-弗尼-威廉姆斯(Linda Verni Williams)首次开办奥奈达湖泊艺术与遗产中心(以下简称 “中心”)时,她并不确定是否会有人来。 长期以来,她一直梦想着为艺术家和各年龄段的人创建一个共同学习、分享和成长的中心聚会场所,但在希尔凡海滩却没有这样的场所。 该中心位于奥奈达县、奥农达加县、奥斯韦戈县和麦迪逊县的中部。 琳达深知,要在一个季节性度假胜地创办并维持一个全年开放的社区艺术中心,难度可想而知,但她还是有意选择了这个地点,希望能吸引纽约中部乃至其他地区的人们前来参观。 “琳达说:”我做过各种各样的事情,却不知道自己做不到。 “你可以以小博大。我想,’Glimmerglass 从一个谷仓开始发展壮大。也许我们也可以在这里发展'”。 短短两年时间,中心已经取得了长足的进步。 琳达在儿孙、董事会成员、以前的学生和社区志愿者的帮助下,将以前的餐厅改造成了艺术画廊、排练场、舞池、表演区和教室。 ...

故事 June 5, 2024

通过粮食正义运动传递希望

在 COVID-19 大流行之初,纽约中部宗教间工作组织开始分发美国奶制品协会的剩余牛奶,并由此建立了一个庞大的食品储藏室网络,目前为 32 个基层储藏室提供支持。

出版物 April 22, 2024

超越美好愿望影响无穷的意外礼物

露西的遗赠出人意料且不受限制,这与个人即使在生前没有公开支持的情况下,也能对其所珍视的事业产生默默而深远的影响不谋而合。

出版物 April 22, 2024

科纳家族基金:有其父必有其女

教育是科纳家孩子的基石,他们的父母都是成功人士,具有公民意识。 现在,他们的父母通过社区基金会继承了他们的遗志,塑造年轻人的思想,支持重要的事业,确保子孙后代拥有更加光明的未来。

故事 March 19, 2024

无缝奉献莱拉-莫吉洛

莱拉-莫吉廖(Leyla Morgillo)总是乐善好施,无论是付出时间还是金钱。 现在,她帮助她的客户在纽约州中部及其他地区进行同样的变革。

故事 March 5, 2024

正在发生的事情

2024 年冬季之声:正在发生的事情

Pamela Monaco sitting with her dog
出版物 March 5, 2024

规划永不停歇

2024 年冬季 "奉献之声":奉献很重要

故事 February 12, 2024

捐赠视角:苏珊和迈克尔-米斯

社区基金会的 "5forCNY "倡议邀请社区成员将自己的部分资产捐献给纽约州中部的慈善机构,这立即引起了迈克尔和苏珊-米斯的共鸣。

故事 December 11, 2023

让扫盲无障碍

最近,中北卡罗来纳州联合之路从我们的扫盲倡议基金中拨款 10 万美元,通过支持奥农达加扫盲联盟(Literacy Coalition of Onondaga)来推动当地的扫盲工作。

故事 November 15, 2023

以捐赠为中心琳达-弗尼-威廉姆斯

2021 年 10 月,琳达-弗尼-威廉姆斯(Linda Verni Williams)首次开办奥奈达湖泊艺术与遗产中心(以下简称 “中心”)时,她并不确定是否会有人来。 长期以来,她一直梦想着为艺术家和各年龄段的人创建一个共同学习、分享和成长的中心聚会场所,但在希尔凡海滩却没有这样的场所。 该中心位于奥奈达县、奥农达加县、奥斯韦戈县和麦迪逊县的中部。 琳达深知,要在一个季节性度假胜地创办并维持一个全年开放的社区艺术中心,难度可想而知,但她还是有意选择了这个地点,希望能吸引纽约中部乃至其他地区的人们前来参观。 “琳达说:”我做过各种各样的事情,却不知道自己做不到。 “你可以以小博大。我想,’Glimmerglass 从一个谷仓开始发展壮大。也许我们也可以在这里发展'”。 短短两年时间,中心已经取得了长足的进步。 琳达在儿孙、董事会成员、以前的学生和社区志愿者的帮助下,将以前的餐厅改造成了艺术画廊、排练场、舞池、表演区和教室。 ...

查看更多