The 1213 Charitable Trust appears narrowly focused on directly helping individuals and families with adoption- and adoption-related medical expenses, often paying agency or legal fees. Nearly all grants are to named individuals or couples for adoption proceedings or associated medical costs, indicating a hands-on, family-centered philanthropic approach rather than institutional giving.
Concentrated, small-number giving: a handful of relatively large, one-off grants to individual families rather than many institutional grantees. Most grants explicitly fund adoption or related medical/legal costs, with no evidence of recurring institutional partnerships.
A repeated pattern defines 1213 Charitable Trust: it writes direct checks for adoption costs, often to individuals and couples rather than institutions. The largest recent award listed is $32,000 to Virginia and Kyle Evans in Millville, California for adoption agency fees, and the same theme continues across grants for adoption proceedings, adoption expenses, and medical costs tied to adopted children. The trust also shows continuity in its support: Winston Smith of Ripley, Mississippi received both a $20,000 grant in 2025 for adoption expenses and a separate $3,000 grant in the same year for the same purpose. That kind of case-level assistance is central to how the trust operates. The grant record points to a funder that responds to adoption-related financial pressure at multiple stages, including agency costs, court-related expenses, and medical bills. A notable feature of the portfolio is that the beneficiaries are named families or individuals, such as Laura and Thomas Starnes in Bartlett, Tennessee and Melia Corley in Cullman, Alabama, showing a highly personal grantmaking style.
Adoption-related support is the clearest thread in the trust’s portfolio. In 2024, it gave $21,000 to Melia Corley in Cullman, Alabama for assistance with medical expenses for an adopted child. In 2023, it awarded $10,000 to Lavonda D Russell in Delta Junction, Alaska for adoption proceedings, and in 2025 it provided $7,300 to Laura and Thomas Starnes in Bartlett, Tennessee for adoption expenses. Medical support also appears as a separate theme: Madison Turner in Covington, Georgia received $3,600 in 2023 for medical expenses, while Loren T Russell in Wilsonville, Alabama received $3,000 in 2024 for medical testing on an adopted child. The trust’s recent grants show that it covers both the costs of bringing children into a family and the related medical burdens that can follow.
Typical grants cluster in the low-to-mid thousands: the p25 is $2,500, the median is $6,650, and the p75 is $15,000. The portfolio also includes a few much larger awards, which lifts the annual total while leaving most grants below the largest checks. The same recipient can appear more than once, as shown by Winston Smith receiving two separate grants in 2025, suggesting recurring case-specific support rather than one-time-only giving. The trust’s recent grants are direct payments to individuals and couples, consistent with its stated family-level assistance model. The active program pages also accept unsolicited requests across multiple categories.
$112K
$159K
$13K
$24K
Most grants fall between $3K and $15K, with a median of $7K.
25th Percentile
$3K
Median
$7K
75th Percentile
$15K
About 9% of grants go to recipients in FL.
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Notable grantees: Virginia and Kyle Evans, Melia Corley, Winston Smith, Lavonda D Russell, Laura and Thomas Starnes
The trust gives across the United States, with 13 of 13 recent grants going to U.S. recipients. Florida is the top state by grant count, though it accounts for only a small share of the grants listed. Recent recipients are spread across places such as Millville, California; Cullman and Holly Pond, Alabama; Ripley, Mississippi; Bartlett, Tennessee; and Princeton, Texas. The distribution points to regional, family-centered support rather than a single-city focus.
Its recent grants center on adoption agency fees, adoption proceedings, adoption expenses, and medical costs for adopted children. The active program pages also include serious illness assistance, job loss assistance, disaster relief, and loss of spouse support for Christian families and individuals.
The recent grants are made directly to named individuals and couples, such as Virginia and Kyle Evans, Melia Corley, and Laura and Thomas Starnes. That pattern matches the trust’s case-level approach to adoption and family support.
The grant-size distribution is $2,500 at the 25th percentile, $6,650 at the median, and $15,000 at the 75th percentile. Recent awards range from $500 to $32,000, showing a mix of small support grants and larger adoption-related payments.
Yes. The active program pages for Adoption Support, Disaster Relief, Serious Illness Assistance, Job Loss Assistance, and Loss of Spouse Support all indicate that unsolicited requests are accepted.
Florida is the top state by grant count, but the recent grants are distributed across multiple states, including California, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, Alaska, and Texas.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WINSTON SMITH | RIPLEY, MS | $20,000 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES |
| LAURA AND THOMAS STARNES | BARTLETT, TN | $7,300 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES |
| WINSTON SMITH | RIPLEY, MS | $3,000 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES |
| JOSE AND JULINE ROSE | TEMPLE TERRACE, FL | $1,500 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES FOR JOSE AND JULINE ROSE |
| CHRISTOPHER R MYCOSKIE | PRINCETON, TX | $950 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED DAUGHTER |
| CHRISTOPHER R MYCOSKIE | PRINCETON, TX | $500 | 2025 | ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED DAUGHTER |
| MELIA CORLEY | CULLMAN, AL | $21,000 | 2024 | ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED CHILD |
| DAVID EMILY VAUGHN | HOLLY POND, AL | $6,650 | 2024 | ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES |
| LOREN T RUSSELL | WILSONVILLE, AL | $3,000 | 2024 | ASSISTANCE FOR MEDICAL TESTING ON ADOPTED CHILD |
| JORDAN KELLEY | CELINA, TX | $2,000 | 2024 | ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED CHILD. |
| VIRGINIA AND KYLE EVANS | MILVILLE, CA | $32,000 | 2023 | ADOPTION AGENCY FEES |
| LAVONDA D RUSSELL | DELTA JUNCTION, AK | $10,000 | 2023 | ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS. |
| MADISON TURNER | COVINGTON, GA | $3,600 | 2023 | MEDICAL EXPENSES |
WINSTON SMITH
$20,000ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES
LAURA AND THOMAS STARNES
$7,300ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES
WINSTON SMITH
$3,000ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES
JOSE AND JULINE ROSE
$1,500ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES FOR JOSE AND JULINE ROSE
CHRISTOPHER R MYCOSKIE
$950ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED DAUGHTER
CHRISTOPHER R MYCOSKIE
$500ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED DAUGHTER
MELIA CORLEY
$21,000ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED CHILD
DAVID EMILY VAUGHN
$6,650ASSISTANCE WITH ADOPTION EXPENSES
LOREN T RUSSELL
$3,000ASSISTANCE FOR MEDICAL TESTING ON ADOPTED CHILD
JORDAN KELLEY
$2,000ASSISTANCE WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES FOR ADOPTED CHILD.
VIRGINIA AND KYLE EVANS
$32,000ADOPTION AGENCY FEES
LAVONDA D RUSSELL
$10,000ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS.
MADISON TURNER
$3,600MEDICAL EXPENSES