Maxwell Hahn The Field Foundation has a long history with various social movements. It was originally directed by Maxwell Hahn, under which it supported racial integration in the South in the 1950s, leading larger foundations after it. It was also one of the first supporters of Black education campaigns, and focused heavily on child welfare and racial issues under Hahn.
Leslie W. Dunbar In 1965, Leslie W. Dunbar, director of the
Southern Regional Council, succeeded Hahn and moved the organization’s focus more on those struggling from poverty and minority groups. In 1967 its examination of the state of poor Southern communities led to an expansion of food stamp and school lunch programs. It also pushed for the recognition of black lung disease, being among the first to do so. It was the largest funder of the organization. It also helped to save the Food Research and Action Center when its federal funds were cut under President
Nixon in 1973. This led to disagreements within the organization over the government’s policies and affirmative action, eventually followed by Dunbar’s resignation in 1977. Boone also believed in government oversight through independent organization. Under him, the Field Foundation funded the Study Group on Social Security, an organization monitoring Government reductions of benefits to the elderly, disabled, widows, and orphans. The Foundation became one of the earliest supporters of the
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in 1981, offering $175,000 in its first year and $150,000 in the second. Boone’s policies led the organization to support black voter registration programs, U.S. resettlement of IndoChina refugees, funded the Communications Consortium Media Center, and researched hunger in the U.S. In 1984, the foundation gave $30,000 to
Nuclear Times, a magazine devoted to
nuclear disarmament. The organization purposefully spent itself out of existence in 1989, == References ==