The Old Ladies Home Association concentrates its giving on health care, long‑term care and community social services in its region, prioritizing institutions that provide nursing, medical rehabilitation, and housing/support for vulnerable adults. Grants are large and targeted — often funding facility projects, capital renovations, or operating support for organizations serving the elderly, disabled, homeless, or medically vulnerable. The foundation appears to favor established provider organizations and health systems over small grassroots groups.
Old Ladies Home Association’s largest recent grant went to Willard F Bond Home for a nursing home, a signal of how strongly the foundation supports long-term care and residential services. Across the recent grants list, it also backed Gateway Rescue Mission for aid to hungry, homeless, and addicted community members, and The Baddour Center for renovating an older home for disabled adults. Those awards sit within a larger pattern of health care, rehabilitation, housing support, and direct social services for vulnerable adults and families in Mississippi. The foundation’s giving is concentrated on established providers rather than small, one-off projects. Recent recipients include medical rehabilitation centers, hospital-related entities, food assistance organizations, and housing-oriented nonprofits. Several grants support facility or mission-based work, such as a campaign to renovate housing for disabled adults and aid for people who are homeless. Other awards support medical care delivery, primary care and gynecology for uninsured patients, and charitable food redistribution. The recent record shows a funder that favors practical service delivery and institutional support for community needs.
Medical rehabilitation is a core theme. In 2023, Old Ladies Home Association gave $400,000 to Methodist Rehabilitation Center for medical rehabilitation, and in 2025 it made additional rehabilitation grants of $50,000 and $35,000 to the same organization. Housing and shelter services are another clear area. Gateway Rescue Mission received $1,053,843 in 2025 for aid to hungry, homeless, and addicted members of the community, plus another $15,000 for the same purpose. The foundation also supports health access and basic needs. Mission Firstlantern Clinic received $22,500 to provide primary care and gynecology to uninsured members of the community, while The Gleaners Inc received $63,500 for food salvage for charitable redistribution. Operation Shoestring was awarded $22,500 for year-round afterschool and summer programs for children.
Typical grants cluster in the mid-five-figure range, with a p25 of $31,875, a median of $56,750, and a p75 of $340,818. The distribution includes both smaller operating-style awards and much larger capital or campaign gifts, such as the seven-figure nursing home grant and a renovation campaign award. The recent record shows repeat support to the same organizations across years, including multiple grants to Methodist Rehabilitation Center, Gateway Rescue Mission, and Wilson Research Foundation. The foundation is a private grantmaker; it does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments.
$3.2M
$48.2M
$2.1M
$2.2M
Most grants fall between $32K and $341K, with a median of $57K.
25th Percentile
$32K
Median
$57K
75th Percentile
$341K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in MS.
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Highly concentrated: a small number of large grants (seven total) dominate giving. Predominantly institutional grantees, occasional repeat funding (e.g., Wilson Research Foundation), and emphasis on capital/ facility support and programmatic support for health and social service providers.
Notable grantees: Willard F Bond Home (nursing home), Gateway Rescue Mission (homelessness and addiction services), The Baddour Center (accessible housing for disabled adults), Wilson Research Foundation (medical rehabilitation), Methodist Rehabilitation Center (medical rehabilitation)
Giving is entirely local and entirely in Mississippi: 100% of grants in the recent file went to recipients in the HQ state. Jackson is the main recipient city, with grants to Gateway Rescue Mission, Baptist Health Foundation, Wilson Research Foundation, Mission Firstlantern Clinic, Showerpower, The Gleaners Inc, Mississippi Food Network, Operation Shoestring, and others. Other Mississippi recipient cities include Madison, Senatobia, and Flowood. The pattern points to concentrated support for institutions in a single-state service area.
The recent grants point to health care, long-term care, rehabilitation, housing support, food assistance, and other direct services. Recipients include a nursing home, medical rehabilitation centers, a rescue mission, a food network, and a clinic serving uninsured patients.
Yes. Methodist Rehabilitation Center appears multiple times across 2023 and 2025, Gateway Rescue Mission received two 2025 grants, and Wilson Research Foundation also appears more than once in the recent list.
The typical grant size centers in the mid-five-figure range, with a p25 of $31,875, a median of $56,750, and a p75 of $340,818.
Its giving is local and confined to Mississippi. The recent grant file shows 100% of grants to recipients in MS, with Jackson appearing most often among recipient cities.
No. The foundation funds organizations rather than individuals, and it does not make program-related investments.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GATEWAY RESCUE MISSION | JACKSON, MS | $1,053,843 | 2025 | TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HUNGRY, HOMELESS, ADDICTED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY |
| THE BADDOUR CENTER | SENATOBIA, MS | $749,599 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT THE BUILDING THE BEST LIFE CAMPAIGN IN RENOVATING AN OLDER HOME FOR DISABLED ADULTS |
| BAPTIST HEALTH FOUNDATION | JACKSON, MS | $372,781 | 2025 | MEDICAL CARE |
| WILSON RESEARCH FOUNDATION | JACKSON, MS | $330,164 | 2025 | MEDICAL REHABILITATION |
| WILSON RESEARCH FOUNDATION | JACKSON, MS | $261,775 | 2025 | MEDICAL REHABILITATION |
| MISSION FIRSTPAYTON'S HOUSE | JACKSON, MS | $100,000 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF PAYTON'S HOUSE |
| SHOWERPOWER | JACKSON, MS | $70,787 | 2025 | TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HOMELESS |
| THE GLEANERS INC | JACKSON, MS | $63,500 | 2025 | FOOD SALVAGE FOR CHARITABLE REDISTRIBUTION |
| MAGNOLIA SPEECH SCHOOL | MADISON, MS | $35,000 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE SCHOOL |
| MISSISSIPPI FOOD NETWORK | JACKSON, MS | $35,000 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT FEEDING MISSISSIPPIANS |
| METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER | JACKSON, MS | $35,000 | 2025 | MEDICAL REHABILITATION |
| MISSISSIPPI BLOOD SERVICES | FLOWOOD, MS | $35,000 | 2025 | MEDICAL CARE |
| MISSION FIRSTLANTERN CLINIC | JACKSON, MS | $22,500 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT THE CLINIC IN PROVIDING PRIMARY CARE AND GYNECOLOGY TO UNINSURED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY |
| OPERATION SHOESTRING | JACKSON, MS | $22,500 | 2025 | TO SUPPORT YEAR ROUND AFTERSCHOOL AND SUMMER PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN |
| GATEWAY RESCUE MISSION | JACKSON, MS | $15,000 | 2025 | TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HUNGRY, HOMELESS, ADDICTED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY |
| WILLARD F BOND HOME | MADISON, MS | $2,250,100 | 2023 | NURSING HOME |
| METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER | JACKSON, MS | $400,000 | 2023 | MEDICAL REHABILITATION |
| METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER | JACKSON, MS | $50,000 | 2023 | MEDICAL REHABILITATION |
| FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH | JACKSON, MS | $50 | 2023 | TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE CHURCH |
| ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH | FLOWOOD, MS | $50 | 2023 | TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE CHURCH. |
GATEWAY RESCUE MISSION
$1,053,843TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HUNGRY, HOMELESS, ADDICTED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY
THE BADDOUR CENTER
$749,599TO SUPPORT THE BUILDING THE BEST LIFE CAMPAIGN IN RENOVATING AN OLDER HOME FOR DISABLED ADULTS
BAPTIST HEALTH FOUNDATION
$372,781MEDICAL CARE
WILSON RESEARCH FOUNDATION
$330,164MEDICAL REHABILITATION
WILSON RESEARCH FOUNDATION
$261,775MEDICAL REHABILITATION
MISSION FIRSTPAYTON'S HOUSE
$100,000TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF PAYTON'S HOUSE
SHOWERPOWER
$70,787TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HOMELESS
THE GLEANERS INC
$63,500FOOD SALVAGE FOR CHARITABLE REDISTRIBUTION
MAGNOLIA SPEECH SCHOOL
$35,000TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE SCHOOL
MISSISSIPPI FOOD NETWORK
$35,000TO SUPPORT FEEDING MISSISSIPPIANS
METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER
$35,000MEDICAL REHABILITATION
MISSISSIPPI BLOOD SERVICES
$35,000MEDICAL CARE
MISSION FIRSTLANTERN CLINIC
$22,500TO SUPPORT THE CLINIC IN PROVIDING PRIMARY CARE AND GYNECOLOGY TO UNINSURED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY
OPERATION SHOESTRING
$22,500TO SUPPORT YEAR ROUND AFTERSCHOOL AND SUMMER PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
GATEWAY RESCUE MISSION
$15,000TO PROVIDE AID TO THE HUNGRY, HOMELESS, ADDICTED MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY
WILLARD F BOND HOME
$2,250,100NURSING HOME
METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER
$400,000MEDICAL REHABILITATION
METHODIST REHABILITATION CENTER
$50,000MEDICAL REHABILITATION
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
$50TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE CHURCH
ST STEPHEN'S CHURCH
$50TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE CHURCH.