Philanthropy is the cornerstone of our work — supporting compassionate care, clinical excellence, research, and medical education to improve health in southeastern New England. Every gift, no matter the size, helps ensure vital services, research, and training continue for patients and the community.
Rhode Island Hospital Foundation’s largest recent grants have gone to Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, including $12,981,792 in 2025, $10,701,848 in 2024, and $9,402,851 in 2023. That pattern shows a funder built around hospital support rather than broad, dispersed philanthropy. The foundation says philanthropy is a cornerstone of work that supports compassionate care, clinical excellence, research, and medical education, with the stated aim of improving health in southeastern New England. Its recent grant record also reaches beyond the hospital itself. Brown University in Providence received $483,738 in 2025, $468,331 in 2024, and $445,950 in 2023, signaling sustained support for medical education and research in the local academic ecosystem. The foundation’s public profile places health, patient care, medical research, medical education, and community health at the center of its giving. A named program, the Frederick Henry Prince Memorial Fund, extends direct grants tied to Newport Hospital and local charitable supports in Rhode Island.
Health system support is the clearest theme in the foundation’s recent giving. Rhode Island Hospital in Providence received $12,981,792 in 2025, reflecting the scale of support directed to hospital operations and related priorities. Medical education and research are also part of the picture. Brown University in Providence received $483,738 in 2025, with the grant record showing similar awards in 2024 and 2023, which points to a repeated relationship. The foundation also supports community health through the Frederick Henry Prince Memorial Fund. That program is tied to Newport Hospital and is described as providing direct grants for local charitable supports in Newport and Rhode Island. Across these examples, the funder’s stated areas of interest—health, patient care, medical research, medical education, and community health—align closely with its named recipients and grant purposes.
The typical grant size is large: the 25th percentile is $472,183, the median is $4,943,294, and the 75th percentile is $10,377,099. That distribution is consistent with an institution that makes major operating and program-support grants rather than many small awards. The grant record also shows repetition across years: Rhode Island Hospital appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and Brown University appears in each of those same years. The foundation is not a donor-advised fund and does not make program-related investments. One active program, the Frederick Henry Prince Memorial Fund, accepts unsolicited direct-grant requests.
$34.5M
$76.1M
$18.2M
$16.7M
Most grants fall between $472K and $10.4M, with a median of $4.9M.
25th Percentile
$472K
Median
$4.9M
75th Percentile
$10.4M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in RI.
Robert K Vincent
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Grantmaking is local and fully in-state: 100% of grants in the recipient distribution went to Rhode Island organizations. Providence appears repeatedly as the main recipient city, with Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University both located there. Newport is also present through the Frederick Henry Prince Memorial Fund, which is tied to Newport Hospital and local charitable supports. The top state by grant count is Rhode Island, matching the foundation’s stated local scope of giving.
Its stated focus areas are health, patient care, medical research, medical education, and community health. The recent grant record shows support for Rhode Island Hospital in Providence and Brown University in Providence, plus a named fund tied to Newport Hospital and local charitable supports.
The grant-size distribution is substantial: the 25th percentile is $472,183, the median is $4,943,294, and the 75th percentile is $10,377,099. That suggests the foundation usually makes sizeable institutional grants.
No. The recent grants list shows repeat awards across multiple years to both Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University in Providence. Rhode Island Hospital appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and Brown University appears in those same three years.
Yes. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, and 100% of grants went to recipients in Rhode Island. Providence and Newport are both represented in the recent grant record.
Yes. The Frederick Henry Prince Memorial Fund is described as providing direct grants with direct-grants criteria and an application available, and it accepts unsolicited requests. It is associated with Newport Hospital and local charitable supports in Newport, Rhode Island.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhode Island Hospital | Providence, RI | $12,981,792 | 2025 | See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b |
| Brown University | Providence, RI | $483,738 | 2025 | See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c |
| Rhode Island Hospital | Providence, RI | $10,701,848 | 2024 | See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b |
| Brown University | Providence, RI | $468,331 | 2024 | See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c |
| Rhode Island Hospital | Providence, RI | $9,402,851 | 2023 | See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b |
| Brown University | Providence, RI | $445,950 | 2023 | See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c |
Rhode Island Hospital
$12,981,792See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b
Brown University
$483,738See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c
Rhode Island Hospital
$10,701,848See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b
Brown University
$468,331See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c
Rhode Island Hospital
$9,402,851See Form 990, Part III, Lines 4a-b
Brown University
$445,950See Form 990, Part III, Line 4c