The Memorial Foundation for Children appears to be a small, highly focused funder that provides large, general-purpose grants—almost exclusively designated simply as “general” support. Based in Richmond, VA, its name and giving pattern suggest an orientation toward children and child-focused nonprofits, though specific beneficiary names are not disclosed in the provided data. The foundation’s grants are concentrated (three grants totaling nearly $3M) and appear aimed at flexible operating support rather than project-restricted funding.
Concentrated, high-dollar giving in a small number of grants; favors large, unrestricted/general-purpose grants rather than many small or tightly restricted awards. Grantee identities are not disclosed in the summary provided, suggesting grants may be reported elsewhere or to a recurring set of beneficiaries.
Memorial Foundation for Children’s recent giving is defined by three unusually large general grants to one Richmond recipient listed as “See Attached Schedule,” including awards of $1,084,000 in 2023, $966,600 in 2024, and $927,072 in 2025. That pattern points to a funder using substantial, flexible support rather than many small project grants. The foundation’s grant record also includes smaller awards to Richmond-based organizations such as St Stephen's Church and Children’s Hospital, which shows that its giving extends beyond a single transaction while staying tightly local. The foundation’s active programs reinforce that picture: its multi-year grants are structured for strategic initiatives, new programs, or enhancements to existing programs with measurable objectives, and its general grants can include operating expenses. Across the file, the recurring thread is support for children and child-serving organizations, with a strong emphasis on education and health and wellness. The grantmaking cadence suggests selective funding, with a mix of large, concentrated awards and a few token-dollar grants to local recipients.
Education is one of the clearest program areas in the foundation’s active grant menu, and recent awards show that focus in practice. In 2024, Memorial Foundation for Children gave $100 to Steward School for education and $100 to Communities in Schools for education. Health and wellness is the other main theme. The foundation awarded $150 to Children’s Hospital in 2023 for health and $100 to Feed More in 2024 for health, indicating that its child-related giving can reach both direct care and broader community support. Its program descriptions also point to early childhood education, K-12 education, and physical and mental health services within its general-grant framework. The multi-year grant track is reserved for strategic initiatives and program enhancements for children, which suggests an interest in organizational improvement as well as direct service.
The typical grant size profile is sharply skewed: p25 is $100, median is $250, and p75 is $927,072, which shows that most awards are small while a few are exceptionally large. The recent record includes repeated support to the same Richmond recipient across 2023, 2024, and 2025, alongside small one-off awards to several local organizations. Memorial Foundation for Children is a private foundation and does not fund individuals. Its active programs include both unsolicited general grants and multi-year grants, with eligibility rules that limit some awards to organizations that have already received at least two prior grants.
$927K
$14.7M
$1.2M
$1M
Most grants fall between $100 and $927K, with a median of $250.
25th Percentile
$100
Median
$250
75th Percentile
$927K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in VA.
Sign up for a free Kindora account to access AI-generated insights into this funder's giving patterns, decision-makers, and fit signals.
Get Started FreeFree Kindora accounts unlock side-by-side comparisons with foundations that share this funder's focus areas and giving profile.
Get Started FreeRegístrate gratis para ver qué tan bien se adapta tu organización sin fines de lucro a este financiador, obtener un pitch generado por IA y descubrir fundaciones similares.
Notable grantees: Grantees not disclosed in summary data (listed as "SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE"), Undisclosed recipient #2 (grant reported as GENERAL), Undisclosed recipient #3 (grant reported as GENERAL)
Grantmaking is entirely local and entirely in Virginia: 100% of recorded grants go to recipients in the HQ state, and Virginia is also the top state by grant count. The recipient city most often named is Richmond, including awards to St Stephen's Church, Children’s Hospital, Feed More, Steward School, and Communities in Schools. Active program geography also extends to Chesterfield County and Goochland County, all within Virginia. The country distribution is all U.S. grants.
The foundation’s active programs focus on organizations serving children, especially in education and health and wellness. Its program descriptions name early childhood education, K-12 education, and physical and mental health services, and the multi-year track is for strategic initiatives, new programs, or enhancements with measurable objectives.
Yes, at least some programs do. The General Grants program accepts unsolicited applications, and the listed Multi-Year Grants program also accepts unsolicited applications. The multi-year track is limited to organizations that have already received at least two grants from the foundation.
The grant-size profile is uneven: the 25th percentile is $100, the median is $250, and the 75th percentile is $927,072. In the recent grants list, awards range from $100 and $150 up to more than $1 million.
Its giving is local and concentrated in Virginia. All recorded grants in the data go to recipients in the U.S., and 100% go to recipients in Virginia. Richmond appears most often among recipient cities, with additional active-program geography in Chesterfield County and Goochland County.
Yes. The recent grants list shows repeated awards to the same Richmond recipient in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and the General Grants program says organizations are eligible every other year. The Multi-Year Grants track also creates a two-year funding relationship.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE | RICHMOND, VA | $927,072 | 2025 | GENERAL |
| SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE | RICHMOND, VA | $966,600 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH | RICHMOND, VA | $250 | 2024 | GENERAL |
| STEWARD SCHOOL | RICHMOND, VA | $100 | 2024 | EDUCATION |
| COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS | RICHMOND, VA | $100 | 2024 | EDUCATION |
| FEED MORE | RICHMOND, VA | $100 | 2024 | HEALTH |
| SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE | RICHMOND, VA | $1,084,000 | 2023 | GENERAL |
| ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH | RICHMOND, VA | $250 | 2023 | GENERAL |
| CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL | RICHMOND, VA | $150 | 2023 | HEALTH |
SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE
$927,072GENERAL
SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE
$966,600GENERAL
ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH
$250GENERAL
STEWARD SCHOOL
$100EDUCATION
COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS
$100EDUCATION
FEED MORE
$100HEALTH
SEE ATTACHED SCHEDULE
GENERAL
ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH
$250GENERAL
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
$150HEALTH