The R H Crossland Foundation concentrates its giving on programs that benefit children—particularly children with disabilities or from disadvantaged backgrounds—and funds organizations developing assistive/rehabilitative solutions. Grants are few but sizable and are often repeat awards to the same recipients, indicating sustained support for a small set of priorities rather than broad, one‑off giving. The foundation appears regionally focused (based in Arkansas) and oriented toward practical, service‑oriented nonprofits and initiatives that directly aid disabled children.
R H Crossland Foundation C/o J Frost Merriott Cpa directs much of its giving to children with disabilities and to programs that support disadvantaged children, with several repeat awards to the same organizations. The largest recent grant in the file was $43,100 to Pujois Family Foundation in St Louis for benefit children and benefit disadvantaged and disabled children, followed by a $31,500 award to the same recipient for the same purpose. Another major line of support goes to Bridging Bionics Inc in Aspen, which received $24,100 and two additional grants of $20,000 each for benefit disabled. That pattern points to a funder that uses targeted grants to back a small set of service-oriented nonprofits rather than spreading support broadly. The recent record also includes funding for child trafficking prevention, indigent funeral assistance, and animal rescue, showing that the foundation’s work extends to urgent needs affecting vulnerable people and animals. Across the grants listed, the emphasis is on direct service delivery and practical help for specific populations.
Children with disabilities are a central priority. Bridging Bionics Inc in Aspen received $24,100 in 2024 and two later grants of $20,000 each for benefit disabled, indicating sustained support for rehabilitation or assistive services. The foundation also backed Delta Chi Alumni Association Foundation in Indianapolis with grants of $2,500 and $1,000 for benefit disabled, another sign of focus on disability-related support. For disadvantaged children, Pujois Family Foundation in St Louis received $43,100 and $31,500 in 2024, plus $8,500 in 2025, all tied to benefit children and benefit disadvantaged and disabled children. Beyond child-focused work, Our Rescue in Denver received $5,225 in 2025 and $3,617 in 2024 for stop child trafficking and benefit child trafficking. Keahey Funeral Home in Clio, Alabama, received $7,000 for funeral for indigent.
The grant-size spread is wide: p25 is $2,500, median grant size is $7,000, and p75 is $24,100. That profile matches a small number of relatively concentrated awards, with several repeat grants to the same recipients across 2024 and 2025. The foundation’s most recent record shows continued support for the same organizations rather than one-time gifts. It does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments. The data provided does not show an application process, so the visible pattern is grant selection through targeted charitable awards.
$168K
$6.8M
$281K
$145K
Most grants fall between $3K and $24K, with a median of $7K.
25th Percentile
$3K
Median
$7K
75th Percentile
$24K
About 0% of grants go to recipients in IN.
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Concentrated, mid‑sized grants with repeat funding to a small number of grantees rather than many small, one‑time grants.
Notable grantees: Pujois Family Foundation, Bridging Bionics Inc.
All recent grants in the file went to U.S. recipients. Giving is national, with the highest grant count in Indiana. Recipient locations in the recent list include St Louis, Aspen, Denver, Indianapolis, Clio, and Scottsdale. Although the foundation is headquartered in Bella Vista, Arkansas, none of the listed grants went to Arkansas recipients. The geographic pattern reflects a dispersed but U.S.-only grant portfolio.
The recent grants center on children with disabilities and disadvantaged children. The file also shows support for child trafficking prevention, funeral assistance for indigent families, and rescue of dogs, indicating a focus on direct help for vulnerable populations and practical service delivery.
Yes. Pujois Family Foundation appears three times in the recent grants list, Bridging Bionics Inc appears three times, Our Rescue appears twice, and Delta Chi Alumni Association Foundation appears twice. That pattern suggests ongoing support for a small set of recipients.
The grant-size distribution is $2,500 at the 25th percentile, $7,000 at the median, and $24,100 at the 75th percentile. Recent awards range from $1,000 to $43,100, with several larger repeat grants alongside smaller targeted gifts.
The foundation gives nationally, and all recent grants listed went to U.S. recipients. Indiana has the highest grant count among states in the file, while the recipient cities shown include St Louis, Aspen, Denver, Indianapolis, Clio, and Scottsdale.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BRIDGING BIONICS INC | ASPEN, CO | $20,000 | 2025 | BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED |
| PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION | ST LOUIS, MO | $8,500 | 2025 | BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN |
| OUR RESCUE | DENVER, CO | $5,225 | 2025 | STOP CHILD TRAFFICKINGBENEFIT CHILD TRAFFICKING |
| PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION | ST LOUIS, MO | $43,100 | 2024 | BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN |
| PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION | ST LOUIS, MO | $31,500 | 2024 | BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN |
| BRIDGING BIONICS INC | ASPEN, CO | $24,100 | 2024 | BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED |
| BRIDGING BIONICS INC | ASPEN, CO | $20,000 | 2024 | BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED |
| KEAHEY FUNERAL HOME | CLIO, AL | $7,000 | 2024 | FUNERAL FOR INDIGENTFUNERAL FOR INDIGENT |
| OUR RESCUE | DENVER, CO | $3,617 | 2024 | STOP CHILD TRAFFICKINGBENEFIT CHILD TRAFFICKING |
| DELTA CHI ALUMNI ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION | INDIANAPOLIS, IN | $2,500 | 2024 | BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED |
| QUAIL CROSSING ANIMAL HOSPITAL | SCOTTSDALE, AZ | $1,600 | 2024 | RESCUE DOGS |
| DELTA CHI ALUMNI ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION | INDIANAPOLIS, IN | $1,000 | 2024 | BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED |
BRIDGING BIONICS INC
$20,000BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED
PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION
$8,500BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN
OUR RESCUE
$5,225STOP CHILD TRAFFICKINGBENEFIT CHILD TRAFFICKING
PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION
$43,100BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN
PUJOIS FAMILY FOUNDATION
$31,500BENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT CHILDRENBENEFIT DISADVANTAGED CHILDRENBENEFIT DISABLED CHILDREN
BRIDGING BIONICS INC
$24,100BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED
BRIDGING BIONICS INC
$20,000BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED
KEAHEY FUNERAL HOME
$7,000FUNERAL FOR INDIGENTFUNERAL FOR INDIGENT
OUR RESCUE
$3,617STOP CHILD TRAFFICKINGBENEFIT CHILD TRAFFICKING
DELTA CHI ALUMNI ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION
$2,500BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED
QUAIL CROSSING ANIMAL HOSPITAL
$1,600RESCUE DOGS
DELTA CHI ALUMNI ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION
$1,000BENEFIT DISABLEDBENEFIT DISABLED