About Blocker Foundation
A $500,000 unrestricted operating gift to Virginia Wesleyan University is the clearest signal in The Blocker Foundation’s recent record: it favors large, flexible support for institutions serving Hampton Roads and nearby Virginia communities. The foundation’s grant list is dominated by general operating awards rather than project-specific funding, with repeat support for organizations such as Forkids Inc, Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Road, and Nauticus. That pattern points to a funder that values organizational stability and long-term capacity over one-time, narrowly defined projects.
The Blocker Foundation also backs education at multiple levels. Its recent grants include support for Paul D. Camp Community College, Tidewater Community College Educational Foundation, Thomas Nelson Community College Educational Foundation, Virginia Foundation for Community College Education, Commonwealth Alliance for Rural Colleges, and Chesapeake Bay Academy. Alongside those education awards, the foundation has funded human services, housing, arts, and environmental organizations, but the common thread is consistent: core support for local nonprofits embedded in the region’s service network. The foundation’s giving is concentrated in Virginia, especially around Hampton Roads, and its awards tend to be meaningful in size rather than small seed grants.
What Blocker Foundation Funds
Education is one of the most visible themes in the foundation’s recent grants. It gave $250,000 to Paul D. Camp Community College for general operating support, and $140,000 to Tidewater Community College Educational Foundation for the same purpose. It also awarded $123,200 to Virginia Foundation for Community College Education, reinforcing a clear interest in community-college capacity.
Housing and basic needs are another recurring area. Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Road received $150,000 in both 2024 and 2025, while Judeo Christian Outreach Center received $125,000 in 2024 and $125,000 in 2023. In youth and family services, Forkids Inc received $260,250 in 2023 and $200,000 in 2024, and Child & Family Services of Eastern VA Inc Dba the Up Center received $187,500 in 2024.
The foundation also supports cultural and environmental institutions, including $125,000 to Suffolk Center for Cultural Arts and $125,000 to Chesapeake Bay Foundation.
How Blocker Foundation Gives
The Blocker Foundation’s typical grant size centers around mid-five-figure awards: the 25th percentile is $25,000, the median is $48,440, and the 75th percentile is $87,500. Recent grants show a much larger upper tier as well, including a $500,000 operating gift. The pattern is not one-off philanthropy; several recipients appear in multiple years, including Forkids Inc, Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Road, Judeo Christian Outreach Center, Nauticus, Commonwealth Alliance for Rural Colleges, Virginia Wesleyan University, and Norfolk Botanical Garden Inc. The foundation uses general operating support heavily, and its active grant rounds accept unsolicited applications.