Horace Rackham and his wife Mary supported the
University of Michigan by donating his law library, sponsoring anthropological expeditions, and underwriting creative arts fellowships. Most significantly, when he died in 1933, Rackham left $100,000 in his will expressly to support graduate student loans. The
Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies at the university is named after him, as is the Rackham Building, built in 1938, in which the school is housed. In addition, the
Horace H. Rackham Education Memorial Building in Detroit, intended for use by the Extension Service of the University of Michigan and the
Engineering Society of Detroit, was built in 1940 using money willed to the University. The Rackhams were also the patrons of the 1938 Rackham School of Special Education on
Eastern Michigan University campus in
Ypsilanti, Michigan. After the death of Mary Rackham in 1947, the Horace H. and Mary A. Rackham Fund was created. The fund was to be used expressly "for such benevolent, charitable, educational, scientific, religious and public purposes ... will promote the health, welfare, happiness, education, training and development of men, women and children, particularly the sick, aged, young, erring, poor, crippled, helpless, handicapped, unfortunate and underprivileged, regardless of race, color, religion or station." ==Gallery of Rackham's philanthropic gifts==