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Arts Grants for Nonprofits in Texas
41
Available grants
$668.5K
Total funding amount
$8.8K
Median grant amount
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Elevance Health Foundation: Behavioral Health Grant
Elevance Health Foundation
As the philanthropic arm of Elevance Health, Inc., the Elevance Health Foundation promotes the organization’s commitment to improving lives and communities.
For 25 years, we’ve been committed to, connected with, and invested in communities across the country. It all started with our signature Healthy Generations program, through which the Foundation targeted specific preventable health concerns while addressing the disparities and social drivers that affect them. By using innovative social-mapping technology and by analyzing public-health data, we gained a snapshot of the major health issues affecting each state, which allowed us to drill down to the zip-code level and target initiatives positively affecting the conditions that matter most. We called this “putting science behind the art of grantmaking.”
In 2021, the effects of COVID-19, together with social unrest, began to call attention to racial inequities and health disparities that have plagued our communities for too long and resulted in poorer health outcomes. Recognizing that health is so much more than healthcare, and understanding the needs of our communities, the Elevance Health Foundation redefined its approach and tightened its focus.
Over a three-year period (July 2021–July 2024), the Foundation committed up to $90 million toward partnerships and programs that improved maternal health, encouraged food as medicine, reduced substance use disorders, and supported community resiliency and disaster relief. We are proud to report that the Foundation has exceeded its commitment and awarded $97.3 million in grants, providing funding to over 12,000 nonprofit partners across the country. The Foundation will continue to focus its efforts in four key areas: Maternal/Infant Health, Food as Medicine, Behavioral Health, and Community Resiliency & Disaster Relief.
Behavioral Health Grant
As a catalyst for positive change, the Elevance Health Foundation drives innovative and scalable solutions to address physical, behavioral, and social needs through a multi-lever approach to community investment.
Over the next five years, we will continue our grantmaking focus on substance use disorder (SUD) and expand our support to include mental health (MH) initiatives. We invite qualified nonprofits with a history of successful community initiatives to join us in this mission.
The Foundation will prioritize funding for programs that increase the number of individuals receiving treatment for MH and/or SUD, support prevention and early-intervention strategies, and seek to reduce loneliness among individuals with these disorders.
Types of Programs / Locations
Elevance Health will consider proposals from qualified organizations across the U.S. with an emphasis on:
National programs. Promoting scalable and sustainable systemic change, or
Local programs. Implementing relevant interventions in California, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Missouri, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Texas, and Virginia.
Grant Program Goals
Elevance Health Foundation is requesting proposals for programs and initiatives that support one or more of the following goals:
- Achieve a percent increase in the number of individuals receiving treatment services for MH and/or SUD
- Support prevention and early intervention strategies to reduce risks and harms associated with MH and/or SUD
- Reduce social isolation and feelings of loneliness among individuals with MH and/or SUD
Background
Our Community Investment Program contributes to nonprofit organizations that operate within the immediate H-E-B service area. Depending on the need we may contribute in-kind product, volunteers, or monetary funding towards activities, projects, and causes that make a visible and possible difference. Our Community Investment Program primarily supports organizations focused on arts and humanities, disaster relief, diversity and inclusion, education and literacy, environmental and sustainability, health and wellness, hunger relief, military and veteran support, and general social services.
Please see FAQs for additional guidelines.
Hodges Family Foundation
Welcome to the Hodges Family Foundation website. The Hodges Family Foundation was created as a 501(c)(3)organization by Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hodges.
The Foundation provides funds to assist with various nonprofit organizations in West Texas and beyond. Our funds have addressed community outreach programs, missionary work work, youth initiatives, and programs that enhance overall education and the arts.
About Us
Eddie and Nelda Hodges have dedicated their lives to serving others with charitable contributions. Mr. Hodges was born and raised in West Texas and also owns and operates the Hords Creek Ranch in Coleman, Texas.
The Hords Creek Ranch is located near Coleman and offers a great getaway for people wanting to experience a working ranch and enjoy staying at the Whispering Winds Cabin. The ranch has also hosted many retreats for nonprofit organizations.
Meadows Foundation Grant Program
Meadows Foundation Incorporated
We are a private family foundation on a mission to improve the quality and circumstances of life for the people of Texas now and in the future.
What We Fund: Our Program Areas
Texas is diverse. So is our giving.
We provide grants throughout Texas within our program areas and also our initiatives in education, environment, homelessness, and mental health.
Arts and Culture
Our founders were passionate about the arts’ ability to illuminate and reflect our communities, reimagine conversations, promote public engagement, and preserve memories. We support organizations throughout the state that provide opportunities for all Texans to experience and benefit from the arts. Our most significant partner is Southern Methodist University Meadows School of the Arts and the Meadows Museum.
Civic and Public Affairs
Communities thrive when effective civic leadership and healthy public systems are supported by a strong network of nonprofit organizations. We assist communities in developing leadership talent, promoting civic and public collaboration, supporting nonprofits through management and capacity-building, and improving processes and infrastructures for delivery of services to all residents. We also recognize the importance of animals and the role they have in many people’s lives. We fund projects that improve their welfare and enhance the human-animal connection.Education
The link between quality of education and quality of life is undeniable. Knowledge empowers choices that influence our social and family environment, health and mental well-being, home and community, and career and income. Each additional year of schooling increases earnings by 8-10%. In addition, early reading, high-quality instructors, access to resources, and high expectations for all students improve life-long study skills and academic achievements.
Environment
With our population in Texas expected to increase by 73% to 51.5 million people in 2070, the impacts on our environment will be significant. We focus on preserving our rich ecological and biological resources for future generations while meeting our growing needs.
Health
Access to quality health care is essential. Health and mental health programs that offer a chance to rethink what can be accomplished with new knowledge and technology ultimately lead to Texans living healthier lives. We invest in programs and initiatives that promote innovation in services and delivery and strengthen the ecosystem of health and mental health care.
Human Services
In communities across Texas, people face overwhelming challenges and times of personal or family crisis. We support programs and agencies that thoughtfully weave compassion and respect into the support systems that improve the quality of life for the most vulnerable Texans. We also place emphasis on supporting efforts that reduce homelessness in the Dallas area.
What We Fund: Initiatives
Five initiatives are linked to our long-term goals, and requests in these areas receive additional consideration in the review process.
Postsecondary Completion
The changing economic landscape requires a shift in the kind of preparation offered to connect Texans to jobs, career paths, livable wages, and economic and social mobility. By 2030, 60% of the Texas workforce will need a postsecondary credential to be gainfully employed, a driving factor for the state’s higher education plan. We aim to ensure that awarded postsecondary degrees, credentials, and certificates align to real-time labor needs, are affordable for all Texans, and offer value to students and society. We are working with our partners to increase postsecondary completion rates beyond current projections to meet current and future workforce demands.
Educator Preparation
Quality teachers are consistently identified as the most important school-based factor in student achievement. On average, a high-performing teacher increases student learning by 50% more than expected growth over the course of a school year. Texas has hundreds of educator preparation programs of varying quality and varying levels of accessibility to aspiring teachers. The teacher pipeline must be robust to meet the needs of a growing state with a growing student population. We are working with our partners to define, build, and scale models of high-quality educator preparation.
Water Conservation
Texas has grown rapidly, and the state’s population is projected to expand by 70% from 2020 to 2070. While this growth can fuel robust economic development, ensuring the vitality of Texas’ cities, industries, and agriculture while also protecting natural resources will require careful water management. As water demand increases, state water supplies will drop by 18%. The state water plan suggests that water conservation strategies could meet 30% of future water supplies.
While conservation success can be determined in part by policies, everyday water users are the conservation decision makers, and how they value water is the most crucial element of achieving an overall demand reduction. We are working with our partners to advance water conservation, with the goal of reducing the planned use of water by 30% by 2030.
Depression
Depression is the most common mental illness in the U.S. In North Texas alone, 300,000 adults and children experience depression annually. We know that mental health treatment works: two-thirds of individuals who receive evidence-based, measurement-based care get better. However, less than one in 10 receive this type of care.
With appropriate training and support, primary care physicians can screen, identify, and provide effective behavioral and mental health treatment and referrals to their patients, which could fill this gap in care. In fact, at least 80% of individuals diagnosed with depression can be treated by their primary care physician. We are working with our partners to integrate evidence-based practices into primary care at large healthcare systems, with the goal of ending untreated depression in North Texas by 2030.
Homelessness
Thousands of individuals experience homelessness every year in Dallas and Collin counties. Our neighbors face several challenges as they try to exit homelessness, such as affordable housing shortages, increased cost of living, and limited access to resources that help them remain housed. Access to adequate housing provides the safety needed to survive and the stability needed to thrive. We are working with our partners to make homelessness in Dallas and Collin counties rare, brief, and nonrecurring. Our goal is to house 6,000 individuals experiencing chronic homelessness by 2025.
Types of Funding
- Specific programs or projects account for almost 85% of our total giving
- Although not a significant part of our funding, we will consider
- Capital projects aligned with our initiatives and green building guidelines
- Program-related investment loans
- Endowment and scholarship grants are rare
Please see FAQs for additional guidelines.
Moody Foundation Grant
Moody Foundation
All Over Texas We are Here to Help
The Moody Foundation strengthens the future of Texas by investing in charitable projects that exhibit innovative ideas and make long-term improvement in our communities. Learn more about our grantees and the amazing work they are doing.
What We Fund
- Arts, Humanities, Religion
- Community and Social
- Education
- Health
- Science
The Moody Foundation proudly supports organizations of all sizes—from large-scale institutions and universities to small community-based groups. In short, the Foundation aims to support organizations who are dedicated to making a deep and sustained impact in their communities. While the Foundation prefers to make grants for specific programs or projects, the Foundation will consider most types of funding requests (including general operating, program, and capital).
The Foundation is currently focusing on grants that are in line with the following key areas of giving: education, social services and family well-being, health and wellness, and the arts. However, the Foundation maintains broad flexibility in grantmaking, both geographically and categorically within Texas, which allows timely responses to community needs and concerns.
Sunderland Foundation Grant
Sunderland Foundation
Since its inception, the Foundation, which is still led by Lester T. Sunderland's descendants, has focused on supporting construction projects, awarding grants to nonprofits in the Kansas City region and other markets traditionally served by the Ash Grove Cement Company.
The Foundation prefers to make grants for construction and special interest projects rather than for annual operating expenses.
Grants for planning, design, construction, renovation, repairs and restoration of facilities are considered. Areas of interest include higher education, youth serving agencies, health facilities, community buildings, museums, civic projects and energy efficient affordable housing projects sponsored by qualified tax-exempt organizations.
Funding Areas
In recent grant cycles, the Board of Trustees has awarded the majority of grants in four broadly defined areas:
Higher Education
In 2022, the Foundation awarded $49 million to more than 35 educational organizations. Grantees included community colleges, private colleges, and public universities.
Human Services
The Foundation awarded $30 million to human service nonprofits in 2022, and many grants in this area went to groups that provide essential services to youth and families. Grantees included a range of youth-focused groups, including Reconciliation Services, the Nebraska Youth Justice Initiative in Omaha, Nebraska and the Sno-Valley Senior Center in Carnation, Washington.
Arts and Culture
Arts and culture projects received $23 million in 2022, including grants to the Springfield Art Museum in Springfield, Missouri, the Omaha Zoo and the Seattle Aquarium in Seattle, Washington. Health Care and Hospitals.
Health Care and Hospitals
This is a growing area of need in many communities the Foundation serves. In 2022, $65 million was awarded to hospitals and health-care groups to build and improve their facilities.
Ted & Shannon Skokos Foundation Grant
Ted and Shannon Skokos Foundation
Ted & Shannon Skokos Foundation Grant
The Skokos Foundation is a family foundation established in 2008. The Foundation supports nonprofit organizations that impact communities in the fields of arts, humanity, education, and faith.
The Skokos Foundation invests in visionary leaders of nonprofit organizations that provide impactful programs and services to individuals with sustainable minimal overhead, integrity, transparency, and collaboration.
We believe there is a direct connection between a nonprofit's results and the strength of its leadership. This leadership includes staff as well as its board of directors. We take an all-encompassing look at the people, infrastructure, values, past and present practices, and policies that the staff and board embrace and promote for organizational success. We realize that a cross-section of stakeholders, rather than isolated efforts by a single organization or individual, result in more effective means of tackling an issue.
The Skokos Foundation receives considerably more requests for funding than we can support.
Criteria
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Leadership: (Executive Director, Board & Key Staff)
- What level of visionary leadership does your organization have within the executive director, board and key management or programmatic staff? We look at both individual and collective experience, expertise, passion, commitment, recognition and professional and community reputation. We compare your group’s approaches and solutions to what others are doing.
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Impact: (Program, Project, Service Model)
- What impact on the community does your program or project have? Is it a model of service for others in the nonprofit sector? We consider your group’s unique circumstances and ask more questions. Will your proposal’s impact be direct and exponential? Will it bring about systemic change? Is your project idea unique? How are you measuring impact and effectiveness? Is there an evaluation system in place? If yes, please describe.
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Sustainability: (Organization and/or Program, Project or Service Model)
- We look at the sustainability of both your program or project and your organization as a whole. We assess the strength, stability and diversity of your nonprofit’s finances as well as your board’s contribution to your organization’s financial strength. At the program or project level, we assess whether a grant would trigger significant contributions from other sources or whether a sustainability model may require on-going foundation involvement. We insist on sustainable minimal overhead.
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Organizational Strength: (History, Reputation, Structure & Management Systems)
- What is your group’s history, reputation, structure and management? Is your organization regarded as a provider of high-quality, relevant and meaningful services? Qualities that are needed to do the hard work of system change include strong management and communication systems, positive staff morale, integrity, and financial and operational transparency.
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Collaboration: (Collaboration with other nonprofits, sponsors, patrons, government)
- Collaboration is an important tool among nonprofits. We ask whether your organization is well-integrated into its community and involved in public-private partnerships. We also consider whether your organization has developed strategic partnerships as an ongoing part of its work.
Ryan Foundation Grants
Thomas M Helen Mckee And John P Ryan Foundation Inc
About Us
The Ryan Foundation was founded by Helen McKee Ryan and her son, John P. Ryan in 1983. Helen Ryan was the widow of Thomas M. Ryan, a prominent businessman in Fort Worth. The Ryan family owned several businesses including Waples Platter Company, Ranch Style, Inc., White Swan Foods, Ryan Mortgage Company, and First Life Insurance Company. John P. Ryan served as President and CEO for most of these companies at one time or another.
The Foundation received its initial funding from the Estate of Helen Ryan upon her death in 1983. The Foundation received additional funding from John Ryan during his lifetime and from his Estate upon his death in 2003. The name of the Foundation was changed to The Thomas M., Helen McKee & John P. Ryan Foundation, Inc. to adequately reflect all the names of the significant donors to the Foundation.
The Foundation is governed by a Board of Directors with 5 members all from Fort Worth. The mission of the Foundation is to support a wide variety of public charities in Fort Worth and Tarrant County, as this is the lifelong home of the donors of the Foundation. Areas of interest include health care, human and social services, education, children services, and the arts.
Our grants range in size from $5,000 to $1,000,000. The median or typical size grant is around $30,000.
Powell Foundation Grant Program
The Powell Foundation
Education
Early Childhood Development & Education
The Powell Foundation seeks to ensure that all children benefit from high-quality early environments and services that foster their healthy development, foundational skill-building, school readiness, and lifelong success.
Our Early Childhood investments are focused in the following areas:
- High-quality providers & educators
- Supportive caregivers
- High-capacity sector
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Develop, sustain, and scale the availability of high-quality early childhood programs for infants, toddlers, and young children.
- Train and build the capacity of early childhood educators and providers.
- Strengthen the knowledge and capability of parents and other caregivers to nurture and guide their children’s early development and learning.
- Improve the coordination and reach of the intersecting systems impacting early childhood.
Quality Public K-12 Schools
The Powell Foundation believes that all students should receive a high-quality public K-12 education through access to effective schools, curriculum, programming, and support services that ensure they graduate from high school prepared for post-secondary success.
Our Quality Public K-12 Schools investments are focused in the following areas:
- Excellent educators
- Student supports
- Quality schools & school models
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Strengthen preparation, pathways, training, and development for teachers, school leaders, and district leaders.
- Ensure students receive high-quality, evidence-based academic instruction, programming, and supports.
- Promote the positive development of non-cognitive skills, social-emotional learning, and positive school climate and culture.
- Scale and expand access to high-quality district and public charter school models that strengthen educational outcomes for all students.
Post-secondary Pathways to Success
The Powell Foundation seeks to ensure that all students are prepared for, can access, and complete a post-secondary program that leads to meaningful employment opportunities.
Our Post-Secondary Pathways to Success investments are focused in the following areas:
- Post-secondary access and success
- Post-secondary readiness
- Policies and systems
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Increase access to and participation in advanced coursework, career awareness programming, and college and career entrance exams.
- Strengthen post-secondary advising and counseling and provide replicable and scalable tools to improve access.
- Bolster the academic preparedness of students to pursue post-secondary pathways; increase student proficiency in non-cognitive and affective skills critical to post-secondary success.
- Strengthen post-secondary persistence, certificate/degree completion, and career attainment.
- Support policies that increase post-secondary access, persistence, and success.
Aligned Cradle-to-Career Education System
The Powell Foundation supports efforts to coordinate and connect people, programs, systems, and policies and collective efforts to create a seamless and integrated educational pathway for children and youth.
Our Aligned Cradle-to-Career Education System investments are focused in the following area:
- Effective tools, policies, and systems
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Promote continuity across the education system, supporting students at pivotal transition points and accelerating high-impact practices.
- Convene and build a coalition of advocates in support of a sustained and scaled cradle-to-career continuum.
- Invest stakeholders in an aligned vision for strengthening and better connecting early childhood, K-12, and post-secondary.
- Democratize access to user-friendly data and the creation of tools to track and monitor outcomes for students across the full continuum.
Supportive Communities
The Arts
The Powell Foundation works to promote vibrant communities by expanding equitable access to educational experiences in the arts and encouraging public engagement with diverse arts and culture.
Our Arts investments are focused in the following areas:
- Arts education
- Public arts and culture access
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Provide arts education and cultural experiences to K-12 students, particularly those attending schools in “arts deserts”.
- Provide training on teaching and learning techniques that integrate the arts.
- Expand the community’s access to and engagement in the arts.
- Increase diversity and representation in the arts, with a lens towards historically marginalized groups.
Conservation
The Powell Foundation seeks to foster environmental benefits for current and future generations by connecting people to nature, building environmental stewardship, and addressing critical problems in the local environment.
Our Conservation investments are focused in the following areas:
- Conservation & Environmental education
- Connecting people to nature
- Environmental protection
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Create high-quality conservation and environmental science learning experiences for children and youth.
- Foster an appreciation and understanding of nature, the natural environment, and environmental stewardship, particularly among children and youth.
- Increase equitable access to public parks and urban greenspaces to support community wellbeing.
- Address critical environmental issues and efforts focused on protecting, preserving, and improving natural resources impacting our geographies through the support of programs, initiatives, and advocacy efforts.
Human Services
The Powell Foundation seeks to foster community wellbeing by empowering children, families, and individuals with the resources and supports they need to flourish.
Our Human Services investments are focused in the following areas:
- Stabilization & empowerment
- Emotional wellbeing
We invest in organizations who champion efforts to:
- Address food security and hunger alleviation at scale for children, youth, families, and other vulnerable populations.
- Provide housing, wrap-around services, and skill-building programs for homeless and housing insecure individuals, including transition-age youth.
- Promote emotional wellbeing of children and youth in crisis by providing mental/behavioral health interventions and supports.
- Coordinate and build the capacity of school systems to use evidence-based practices to promote students’ mental and behavioral health, including prevention, identification, and treatment efforts.
Web Maddox Trust
Charitable organizations and charitable purposes in Tarrant County, Texas that do not receive funding from United Way.
Program Areas: Animal Welfare, Arts and Culture, Civic Activities, Community Development, Education, Environment, Health and Medical Research, Human and Social Services, Religious, Scientific.
Hoblitzelle Foundation Grant
Hoblitzelle Foundation
Hoblitzelle Foundation Grant
Hoblitzelle Foundation was established by Karl and Esther Hoblitzelle in 1942 for charitable, scientific, literacy or educational purposes within the State of Texas. Since inception, the Directors have approved over 3,400 grants, investing over $252 million in the social service, cultural, educational, and medical organizations in Texas.
What We Fund
The Foundation supports capital projects (i.e., building construction, acquisition, renovation, equipment, vehicles, and technology) of nonprofit organizations in Texas, primarily in the Dallas area. When grants are made outside of this geographic preference, it is likely due to a historical interest exhibited by the founder, a current interest by a board member, or the large scope of impact the grant would have on that particular region of Texas.
Funding Categories
The foundation makes grants in the seven funding categories:
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Arts & Culture
- The foundation supports efforts to enhance the quality of, and access to, arts and culture.
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Civic
- Projects include neighborhood revitalization, support of philanthropy and volunteerism, civic education, museums and exhibits, parks, trails, and gardens.
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Disabled
- The foundation supports therapy facilities, assisted and independent living communities, sheltered workshops, adaptive resources, and educational projects.
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Education
- Projects include support for capital initiatives at independent and charter schools, higher education institutions, and at organizations that support public school students.
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Environment
- The foundation supports initiatives to conserve natural resources, capital aspects of education programs, as well as zoos and animal welfare.
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Medical
- Projects include support for capital initiatives at medical facilities, equipment for research or treatment, and a variety of health and welfare organizations.
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Social Services
- The foundation supports the capital needs of a variety of organizations that address food insecurity, access to shelters and housing, special needs of seniors, family planning, counseling, children and youth needs, and general social service agencies.
Arkansas and West Texas Grants
Carl B. and Florence E. King Foundation
Community Grants
Community Grants are awarded in Arkansas and West Texas in the following areas:
Aging Population
Meeting the physical and emotional needs of the elderly, especially efforts to preserve and promote the independence, health, and quality of life of seniors; to improve the quality and availability of both nursing home care and alternatives to nursing home care; and to protect seniors from abuse or financial exploitation.
Arts, Culture, And History
Supporting artistic, historical, or cultural experiences that enhance learning in school-age children, or extend the benefit of the arts to children, the elderly, and others who might not otherwise have access.
Children And Youth
Meeting the physical and emotional needs of young people, especially efforts to prevent child abuse or neglect or mitigate their effects; to provide healthcare; and to promote and to develop sound character and values in young people.
Economically Disadvantaged
Moving low-income people toward economic independence; providing emergency shelter and assistance; providing healthcare; offering transitional housing and supportive services to individuals and families who are homeless or at risk of homelessness; and promoting the creation of affordable housing.
Education
Preparing young children for school; supporting the educational process broadly through means such as parental involvement and teacher training; promoting adult literacy; improving English-language skills in both children and adults; and supporting student-focused programs at the college level that advance other areas of the Foundation’s mission.
Nonprofit Capacity
Building the infrastructure of agencies working in aging, arts, children, economically disadvantaged, or education.
Helen S. Boylan Foundation Grants
Helen S. Boylan Foundation
The Helen S Boylan Foundation
The mission of the Helen S. Boylan Foundation is to enhance the quality of life in our communities of Carthage, Missouri, the Greater Kansas City Area, and Lindale, Texas. We actively distribute quarterly grants to local non-profit organizations serving arts & education, women & children, health & wellness and the beautification of our communities.
Grant Guidelines
The Helen S. Boylan Foundation is a private family foundation established in 1982 to continue the family tradition of commitment to enhancing the quality of life of the community through grants to qualified charitable organizations. In carrying out its mission, the Foundation considers a wide range of proposals within the following areas: arts, education, health, human services, environment, and public interest.
TCA Texas Arts Respond Project Grant
Texas Commission On The Arts
Texas Commission on the Arts (TCA)
The mission of the Texas Commission on the Arts (TCA) is to advance our state economically and culturally by investing in a creative Texas. TCA supports a diverse and innovative arts community in Texas, throughout the nation and internationally by providing resources to enhance economic development, arts education, cultural tourism and artist sustainability initiatives.
Arts Respond Project
This competitive grant program provides project assistance grants on a short-term basis and may include administrative costs directly related to the project.
Projects must address ONE of the following priority areas:
EDUCATION
Intent: Projects that use art to promote innovations in K-12 public education.
Designed for projects that impact Pre-K-12 public school students during the school day. Projects must be aligned with the TEKS and conducted in conjunction with school officials. Projects may occur in a school setting or off-site (field trip). Before and after-school projects are not eligible.
HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES
Intent: Projects that use art to improve human health or functioning.
Designed for projects that focus on health related topics, serve specific populations, or occur in a health care or human service setting (hospital, clinic, senior activity center, women’s shelter, homeless shelter, etc).
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Intent: Projects that use art to diversify local economies, generate revenue, and attract visitors and investment.
Designed for projects that focus on job growth or cultural tourism (festivals, gallery walks, art fairs, etc).
PUBLIC SAFETY & CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Intent: Projects that use art to prevent delinquency and recidivism in youth and adults.
Designed for projects that focus on at-risk youth or incarcerated populations (after school program, juvenile detention center, adult prison, alternative learning center).
NATURAL RESOURCES & AGRICULTURE
Intent: Projects that use art to understand and/or improve the ecological and agricultural environment.
Designed for projects that occur in rural counties (festivals, fairs, exhibitions, performances) or focus on natural resources (oil, water, green art, ecological issues).
El Paso Community Foundation Grant
El Paso Community Foundation
About
Since its founding in 1977, the El Paso Community Foundation has awarded more than $167,606,198 in grants to nonprofit organizations and individuals in the greater El Paso region. We constantly look for innovative approaches to solve community problems and to meet our community’s ever evolving needs.
The El Paso Community Foundation and its supporting organizations respond to the needs of nonprofit organizations by providing grants in the greater El Paso region.
El Paso Community Foundation Grants
Provides funding for a variety of philanthropic projects in the El Paso region, far west Texas, southern New Mexico, and northern Chihuahua, Mexico
Granting Areas of Interest:
- Arts and Humanities
- Education
- Environment/Animals
- Health and Disabilities
- Human Services (basic human needs)
- Economic Development
Granting Priorities
- Projects that will result in more effective ways of doing things — ideas that require risk-taking
- Projects that can create an impact with a moderate amount of grant money
- Projects that show collaboration with other organizations
Holloway Family Foundation Grant
Graham and Carolyn Holloway Family Foundation
About the Holloway Family Foundation
Located in North Central Texas, the Holloway Family Foundation was founded onthe core values of its founders, Graham and Carolyn Holloway, and continues to be driven by these principles today. The personal experience of drastically altering their financial circumstances through a good job, elevating their sense of self-worth via the arts and benefitting from a transformative relationship with a mentor were all components that molded Graham and Carolyn’s lives. Today, the foundation carries on their unique story in an effort to provide similar opportunities to others.
Our Mission
To enhance the quality of life for people in our communities regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation or religion through:
- a comprehensive and holistic approach to financial security
- creative expression for children and youth from under resourced communities
- mentorship focused on individual development
General Funding Areas
- Pathways to financial stability through workforce development
- Creative expression for children from under resourced communities
- Mentorship for youth development
At the Holloway Family Foundation, we focus our philanthropic efforts in three intentional ways that speak to our family’s heritage.
Creative expression for children from under resourced communities
With Carolyn’s influence, the Holloway Family Foundation trusts in the transformative power of individual expression and acknowledges the multi-faceted developmental benefits for children who participate in artistic endeavors. Therefore, the foundation proudly supports non-profits that bring creative opportunities to families who are not in a position to provide them to their children on their own.
Pathways to financial stability through workforce development
Because of the founder’s strong work ethic and his intrinsic belief in the inherent value of work, the Holloway Family Foundation focuses on funding programs that provide career development training for individuals who otherwise would not have access to those prospects. The foundation recognizes that having a living-wage job not only provides economic stability to individuals and their families, but also gives people a sense of personal worth that comes from contributing to the greater good of society as a whole.
Youth mentorship
Readily admitting the powerful impact of a personal mentor during his youth, Graham actively sought opportunities to serve in this capacity for others throughout his life. For this reason, the foundation embraces one-on-one mentorship programs whose goals are to influence young people who are in need of guidance, often due to circumstances beyond their control.
Adeline & George McQueen Foundation Grant
Adeline & George McQueen Foundation
Adeline & George McQueen Foundation
Support of charitable, educational, religious, or hospital organizations or undertakings in the State of Texas.
Program Areas
- Education,
- Religious,
- Scientific,
- Arts and Culture
Leo Potishman Foundation Grant
Leo Potishman Foundation
Leo Potishman Foundation
For the support of charitable purposes with preference to Fort Worth, Texas.
Program Areas
Animal Welfare, Arts and Culture, Civic Activities, Community Development, Education, Environment, Health and Medical Research, Human and Social Services, Religious, Scientific
Intercultural Harmony Initiative Grant
Laura Jane Musser Fund
THE LAURA JANE MUSSER FUND was established by the estate of Laura Jane Musser of Little Falls, Minnesota to continue the personal philanthropy which she practiced in her lifetime.
Intercultural Harmony Grant
The LAURA JANE MUSSER FUND would like to promote mutual understanding and cooperation between groups and citizens of different cultural backgrounds within defined geographical areas through collaborative, cross-cultural exchange projects. Projects must be intercultural and demonstrate intercultural exchange, rather than focused on just one culture.
Priority is Placed on Projects that . . .
Include members of various cultural communities working together on projects with common goals
Build positive relationships across cultural lines
Engender intercultural harmony, tolerance, understanding, and respect
Enhance intercultural communication, rather than cultural isolation, while at the same time honoring the unique qualities of each culture
Projects must demonstrate:
- Need in the community for the intercultural exchange project
- Grassroots endorsement by participants across cultural lines, as well as their active participation in planning and implementation of the project
- The ability of the organization to address the challenges of working across the cultural barriers identified by the project
- Tangible benefits in the larger community
Available Funds
Planning (up to $5,000)
These funds may support costs like: consultant or staff time, meeting costs, mailings, secretarial support, refreshments, local travel, childcare, etc.
Implementation (up to $25,000)
These funds are available to implement collaborative cross-cultural exchange projects. The projects should result in a tangible outcome within at least the first 18 months. Projects will be eligible for either planning or implementation funds during any one grant period
Outcomes
Outcomes should include:
- A demonstration of intercultural exchange between cultures
- Increased comfort in interaction between the groups and individual citizens addressed by the project
- Harmonious shared use of public space and community facilities
- Continued cooperation by the participants or communities addressed by the project
Intercultural Harmony projects can be carried out in a number of areas, including (but not limited to):
- Community service
- Youth activities
- The arts
What the program will cover
- New programs or projects within their first three years
- The planning or implementation phase of a project
National Life Group Charitable Foundation Grant
National Life Group Charitable Foundation
National Life Group Foundation
At National Life, we believe strong connections are the ties of strong communities. We also believe being a good corporate citizen is about more than writing checks. It’s about listening to the needs of our community and offering to help however we can.
We offer grants to nonprofits, but we also empower our employees to give their time by making it possible for them to volunteer for and donate even more to the organizations they care about. We are proud to support nonprofits where our employees live and work (Vermont and Texas), and also of our work empowering educators and students nationwide through our LifeChanger of the Year program and the National Coalition of Safe Schools. We make a difference in many other ways too, including our Do Good Fest and our corporate cause: to help end childhood hunger in Vermont.
What We Fund
The Foundation’s annual budget is $2 million. While this is substantial, there is a lot of need in our communities, so our giving is focused. Our grants vary in size and we rarely fund an entire program.
We look for proposals that have:
- a well-planned approach to underlying issues or needs
- a base of support
- metrics to support success
We do not fund new programs. We instead focus on proven programs. We favor programs that focus on childhood hunger and children and families, but we also consider those in the health and human services, the environment, education, and the arts and recreation.
T. Patrick Carr Charitable Trust Grant
T. Patrick Carr Charitable Trust
T. Patrick Carr Charitable Trust
Charitable organizations which operate in Tarrant County, Texas.
Program Areas
- Animal Welfare,
- Arts and Culture,
- Civic Activities,
- Community Development,
- Education,
- Environment,
- Health and Medical Research,
- Human and Social Services,
- Religious,
- Scientific
Since 2004, through the collective power of women, Impact San Antonio has awarded over $2.6 Million to nonprofit organizations in greater San Antonio and the surrounding area.
Focus Areas
These applications are screened by committees that review and evaluate the applications to select finalists in five focus areas:
- Arts & Culture
- Programs and projects that cultivate, develop, educate and improve the cultural and artistic climate in the community.
- Education
- Programs and projects that advance learning opportunities, increase educational access and improve education.
- Environment, Recreation & Preservation
- Programs and projects that improve, restore, conserve, revitalize or enhance the natural environment, recreational facilities or preserve historic sites.
- Family
- Programs and projects that strengthen and enhance the lives of children and families.
- Health & Wellness
- Programs and projects that positively impact the mental or physical health and wellness of people.
WGPF: Legends & Lore Marker Grant Program
William G Pomeroy Foundation
Legends & Lore Marker Grant Program
This program commemorates folktales, legends and folklife as an important part of every community’s cultural heritage.
Does your community have a great piece of folklore that should be shared? Legends & Lore is designed to promote cultural tourism and commemorate legends and folklore as part of our heritage.
Generally speaking, folklore is the stories, customs, traditions, and expressive arts and crafts that are passed on from one person to another, often from generation to generation. Folklore is the knowledge that people share as members of a group or community. Our shared identities and sense of belonging are the result of shared traditions, stories, customs, and activities.
Legends & Folklore Guidelines
Successful Legends & Lore marker applications typically fall within three main categories:
Folktale- Fictional stories passed down about people or events not proven to have existed. (e.g. Thirteen Curves, Champy, Headless Horseman, Tramping Ground)
Legends- Stories passed down that are popularly regarded as historical although not verifiable. (e.g. John Henry, Grancer’s Ghost, Betsy’s Ride, Natty Bumppo, “Natty Bumppo”)
Folklife- Traditions such as music, skills, crafts, and events passed along within a community. Often involving real people that can be verified with primary sources. (e.g. “Goose Day,” The Arborglyphs, Dennis McGee, Herbs & Healing, Folk Singer)
Subjects which are not successful include:
- Historical events lacking a folkloric aspect
- Purely literary creations
- Personal/family folklore which does not extend to the greater community
John T. Shea Foundation Grant
John T. Shea Foundation
John T. Shea Foundation
The John T. Shea Foundation provides support for religious, charitable, scientific, public safety, literary, or educational purposes, or for the prevention of cruelty to children or animals.
Grants are made to charitable organizations in Houston, Texas, with preference given to organizations working to prevent cruelty to children or animals.
Program Areas
- Arts and Culture,
- Civic Activities,
- Scientific,
- Human and Social Services,
- Environment,
- Health and Medical Research
Charlotte B. Proehl Foundation Grant
Charlotte B. Proehl Foundation
Charlotte B. Proehl Foundation
For the support of charitable organizations in the Greater Houston, Texas area.
Program Areas
- Animal Welfare
- Arts and Culture
- Civic Activities
- Community Development
- Education
- Environment
- Human and Social Services
- Religious
- Health and Medical Research
- Scientific
Edith Winter Grace Trust Grant
Edith Winter Grace Trust
Edith Winter Grace Trust
Funds are to be given to charitable organizations located in Tarrant County, Texas
Program Areas
- Animal Welfare,
- Arts and Culture,
- Civic Activities,
- Community Development,
- Education,
- Environment,
- Human and Social Services,
- Religious,
- Health and Medical Research,
- Scientific
The Laura Jane Musser Fund wants to encourage collaborative and participatory efforts among citizens in rural communities that will help to strengthen their towns and regions in a number of civic areas including, but not limited to, economic development, business preservation, arts and humanities, public space improvements, and education.
Priority is placed on projects that:
- Bring together a broad range of community members and institutions
- Provide the opportunity for diverse community members to work together
- Contain measurable short term outcomes within the first 12 to 18 months
- Include community members actively in all phases of the process
- Work toward an outcome of positive change within their community
Projects must demonstrate:
- Support from a diverse cross-section of community members and institutions
- Matching financial and/or in-kind support from the local community
- Significant volunteer participation
- Reasonable plans to complete the project within 18 months or less
Funds will be available for:
- Planning (up to $5,000) - These funds may support costs like: consultant or staff time, meeting costs, mailings, secretarial support, refreshments, local travel, childcare, etc.
- Note - this stage is optional and not a required phase prior to applying for or receiving an implementation grant. If an organization receives a planning grant from the Musser Fund, this in no way implies a commitment on the part of the Musser Fund to provide the organization with any subsequent implementation grant.
- But organizations that receive a planning grant may apply for subsequent implementation support after their planning activities are completed.
- Implementation (Up to $25,000) - These funds are available to implement community based rural projects that originate in, have been planned by, and involve diverse people from the local community.
- Capital campaigns will not be supported.
- The projects should result in a tangible outcome within at least the first 18 months.
- Projects will be eligible for either planning or implementation funds during any one grant period.
What the Program will Cover:
- New programs or projects within their first three years
- A planning, and/or implementation phase
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Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Texas
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Texas?
Grants are most commonly $109,335.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Arts Grants for Nonprofits in Texas year over year?
In 2023, funders in Texas awarded a total of 128,136 grants.
2022 127,051
2023 128,136
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Arts Grants for Nonprofits in Texas given out in Texas, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Education, Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, and Human Services.
1. Education
2. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
3. Human Services
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Arts Grants for Nonprofits in Texas changing over time?
Funding has increased by -1.27%.
2022 $14,132,140,818
2023
$13,953,149,524
-1.27%
Texas Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Dallas County, Harris County, and Travis County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2023 |
|---|---|
| Dallas County | $3,452,050,279 |
| Harris County | $3,435,342,320 |
| Travis County | $1,885,449,537 |
| Bexar County | $1,450,048,182 |
| Tarrant County | $1,364,350,921 |