The Rosamary Foundation demonstrates highly concentrated giving: nearly all of its recorded $8.9M in grants were directed to a single listed recipient (noted as “SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT”) across three payments. The pattern suggests the foundation makes large, targeted awards—likely to a single institutional beneficiary in or connected to New Orleans—rather than distributing many smaller gifts across diverse causes. Due to the lack of a named grantee or stated purposes in the dataset, the specific issue areas supported are not documented and should be confirmed from the attached statement or the foundation’s filings.
Highly concentrated: very few grants (3) all to the same listed recipient, representing a single large beneficiary and large dollar amounts. Appears to favor sizeable, targeted awards over many small or dispersed grants.
Notable grantees: SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT
Rosamary Foundation’s recorded grantmaking is dominated by three seven-figure awards to a single listed recipient, “See Attached Statement,” all tied to Louisiana. That concentration stands out more than the foundation’s overall annual pace: in the latest 990 year on file, it reported $8,895,906 in grants, with the bulk of the activity captured in just a few payments. The pattern points to a funder that works through highly targeted, institutional support rather than a broad portfolio of many small awards. The largest listed grant was $3,057,990 in 2024, followed by $2,965,500 and $2,871,820 in 2025, each recorded to the same Louisiana recipient designation. Two much smaller entries, both labeled “From Passthrough K-1’s,” appear in the same grant list, reinforcing that the foundation’s public record is narrow and highly specific. For a researcher, Rosamary Foundation reads as a local grantmaker with a limited number of recorded recipients and a clear preference for large, concentrated disbursements.
The foundation’s documented activity is centered on a single institutional relationship rather than a wide spread of cause areas. Three major payments in the recent grants list — $3,057,990 in 2024, $2,965,500 in 2025, and $2,871,820 in 2025 — all went to “See Attached Statement” in Louisiana, suggesting sustained support for one recipient. Beyond that core pattern, the recent-grants table includes two entries labeled “From Passthrough K-1’s,” one at $450 in 2024 and one at $92 in 2025. Those entries indicate some ancillary pass-through activity in the record, but the provided data does not identify a separate programmatic focus, so the clearest read is concentrated institutional support with limited public detail on issue-area allocation.
Rosamary Foundation’s grant size profile is highly skewed: p25 is $360, median grant size is $1,482,975, and p75 is $2,988,622. That spread reflects a structure built around very large awards, with a few tiny passthrough entries pulling down the lower end. The latest 990 year on file is 2025, and the available record shows a small number of grants rather than a broad transaction stream. The pattern also looks recurring: the same Louisiana recipient designation appears across multiple years, including 2024 and 2025. The foundation does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments.
$8.9M
$37.7M
$1.3M
$3.3M
Most grants fall between $361 and $3M, with a median of $1.5M.
25th Percentile
$361
Median
$1.5M
75th Percentile
$3M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in LA.
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.
All recorded grants in the dataset went to U.S. recipients, and the foundation’s giving is local by scope. Louisiana is the top state by grant count, and 100% of grants were directed to recipients in the HQ state. The grant list itself points to a Louisiana recipient location, with entries tagged “VARIOUS, LA.” In other words, the public record shows an exclusively in-state pattern rather than a multistate or national footprint.
Its grant-size distribution is unusually polarized. The 25th percentile is $360, the median is $1,482,975, and the 75th percentile is $2,988,622, showing that most recorded dollars sit in a small number of very large awards.
No. The geographic record shows a local scope of giving, with Louisiana as the top state by grant count and 100% of grants directed to recipients in LA.
No. The foundation is marked as not funding individuals in the provided data.
The record suggests recurring support to the same recipient designation across multiple years. The top grants include awards in both 2024 and 2025 to “See Attached Statement,” alongside smaller passthrough entries in those years.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT | VARIOUS, LA | $2,965,500 | 2025 | SEE ATTACHED |
| SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT | VARIOUS, LA | $2,871,820 | 2025 | SEE ATTACHED |
| FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S | VARIOUS, LA | $92 | 2025 | SEE ATTACHED |
| FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S | VARIOUS, LA | $54 | 2025 | SEE ATTACHED |
| SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT | VARIOUS, LA | $3,057,990 | 2024 | SEE ATTACHED |
| FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S | VARIOUS, LA | $450 | 2024 | SEE ATTACHED |
SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT
$2,965,500SEE ATTACHED
SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT
$2,871,820SEE ATTACHED
FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S
$92SEE ATTACHED
FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S
$54SEE ATTACHED
SEE ATTACHED STATEMENT
$3,057,990SEE ATTACHED
FROM PASSTHROUGH K-1'S
$450SEE ATTACHED