In 1938 McGraw bought of land near his new plant in
Elgin, Illinois and made it a protected wetland. The Elgin plant converted more than 1,000 loaves of bread into toast each day as part of its toastmaster testing process. The toast was delivered to the wetlands to feed the water fowl. The Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation managed crop fields in northcentral Illinois, and allowed dove shooting on a few days each year. In 1959 Max McGraw, the McGraw Foundation and the estate of Marion Randall Parsons funded publication of
This Is the American Earth by the
Sierra Club, which appeared in 1960. The beautifully prepared book had photographs of natural scenes in the US by
Ansel Adams and text by
Nancy Newhall. Max McGraw died suddenly on 26 October 1964 in Utah while on a hunting trip. He was aged 81, and was still chairman of the companies he had founded. The McGraw Foundation was established in
Northbrook, Illinois in 1948 with funding by Max McGraw and other friends and family members. It supports various causes, including higher education related to science and the environment, and provides significant funding to the Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation. The mission of the Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation is "Secure the future of hunting, fishing and land management through programs of science, education, demonstration and communication". The McGraw Foundation has provided a $1.2 million endowment to the
University of Michigan to fund the Max McGraw Professorship on Corporate Environmental Management. ==References==