The Boston Public Library Fund provides essential resources to help the Boston Public Library realize its mission and serve the common good.
Boston Public Library Fund Inc backs the Boston Public Library’s core work through a steady stream of large institutional grants, including $3,646,334 in 2025 for BPL programs and $3,222,326 in 2024 for the same purpose. Its giving also supports specific library assets and services, as shown by a 2023 grant that funded BPL programs alongside the Alker Endowment and the Leventhal Map and Education Center. The fund’s active programs point to a long-term library strategy: an endowed LGBTQ+ fund, a South End children’s programming endowment, and creative catalyst mini-grants tied to library programming. That mix suggests support for both ongoing operations and named funds that extend service capacity over time. The foundation’s focus areas center on public libraries, literacy and ESL, youth and teen services, digital access and connectivity, workforce development, entrepreneurship support, community social services, collections and archival preservation, and LGBTQ+ programs and resources. Its work is oriented to library patrons, students and learners, researchers and educators, with program support, endowment support, and institutional support as the main funding modes.
Public library programming is the clearest throughline in the recent grants record. The Boston Public Library received $3,646,334 in 2025 and $3,222,326 in 2024, both designated to support BPL programs. The funder also supports special collections and educational resources. In 2023, it gave $2,558,416 for BPL programs, the Alker Endowment, and the Leventhal Map and Education Center, linking general library support with map education and archival learning. Endowed funds are another important part of the portfolio. The Howard Cooper LGBTQ+ Endowment Fund was established with a $1,000,000 bequest to expand LGBTQ+ resources, collections, and programming, including the annual We Are Pride booklist, youth programming, teen resources, and historical research. Neighborhood-based children’s services appear as well through the Herb Hill Fund for South End Children’s Programming, which supports children’s programming and early literacy in the South End.
Recent grants cluster in a narrow range: p25 is $2,724,394, median is $2,890,371, and p75 is $3,056,348. The top three recent grants all went to Boston Public Library, which points to repeated support for the same institution across 2023, 2024, and 2025 rather than a one-off gift pattern. The foundation is a local funder, and its grants are institutional and program-oriented rather than individual-facing, with no program-related investments. The active program list also shows endowed funds, indicating a mix of ongoing endowment support and annual program support.
$3.6M
$14M
$7.5M
$5.8M
Most grants fall between $2.7M and $3.1M, with a median of $2.9M.
25th Percentile
$2.7M
Median
$2.9M
75th Percentile
$3.1M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in MA.
PAULA SAKEY
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Grantmaking is concentrated entirely in Massachusetts, with 100% of grants going to recipients in the HQ state. The recipient city that appears most often is Boston, including Boston Public Library and the Boston-based active programs tied to LGBTQ+ resources and creative programming. One named neighborhood focus is the South End, through the Herb Hill Fund for South End Children’s Programming. The available grant country distribution is fully domestic: all recent grants went to US recipients.
Its stated focus areas include public libraries, literacy and ESL, youth and teen services, workforce development, digital access and connectivity, entrepreneurship support, community social services, collections and archival preservation, and LGBTQ+ programs and resources. The recent grants also show support for map education, endowments, and children’s programming.
The recent grant-size distribution is tightly grouped: p25 is $2,724,394, median is $2,890,371, and p75 is $3,056,348. The three largest recent grants were $3,646,334 in 2025, $3,222,326 in 2024, and $2,558,416 in 2023.
Its giving is local, and the grant recipient distribution shows 100% of grants to recipients in Massachusetts. The recent grants and active programs listed are all connected to Boston, including the Boston Public Library and the South End neighborhood.
The active programs listed do not accept unsolicited requests. That is shown for The Howard Cooper LGBTQ+ Endowment Fund, the Institute of Museum and Library Services Grant, the Branching-Out Creative Catalyst Mini-Grant Program, and the Herb Hill Fund for South End Children’s Programming.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY | BOSTON, MA | $3,646,334 | 2025 | SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS |
| BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY | BOSTON, MA | $3,222,326 | 2024 | SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS |
| BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY | BOSTON, MA | $2,558,416 | 2023 | SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS, ALKER ENDOWMENT, AND LEVENTHAL MAP AND EDUCATION CENTER |
BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
$3,646,334SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS
BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
$3,222,326SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS
BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
$2,558,416SUPPORT BPL PROGRAMS, ALKER ENDOWMENT, AND LEVENTHAL MAP AND EDUCATION CENTER