1920s–1930s The New York Community Trust was established in the early 1920s as one of the nation’s first community foundations, modeled after the
Cleveland Foundation, to provide New Yorkers with a permanent and flexible vehicle for charitable giving. It was legally structured to allow donors to create permanent funds, with income distributed to support a range of nonprofits in New York City. In 1923, the Trust appointed Ralph Hayes as its first executive director. Hayes had previously been a key organizer at the Cleveland Foundation and brought to the Trust a vision for long-term civic stewardship through public-private partnerships. Under his leadership, the Trust professionalized its grant-making practices, expanded its donor base, and helped establish the national model for community foundations. When Hayes retired in the 1960s, the Trust had grown into a philanthropic institution with more than US$60 million in assets. In 1924, the Trust made its first grant from a fund that Rosebel G. Schiff, a New Yorker, created with a US$1,000 gift. Following Schiff’s wishes, the grant was made to honor a high-achieving student at P.S. 9, a girls’ public school in Manhattan. In 1931, the Trust established the first
donor-advised fund (DAF), a type of charitable fund that allows an individual, family, or corporation to set up a named fund sponsored by a 501(c)(3) public charity. The institution holding the fund makes the grants and invests the principal of the fund to grow over time. Donors use their funds to recommend grants to nonprofits during their lifetime. The couple who set up the first DAF left their fund’s remainder to the Trust after their death to be used in perpetuity for strategic grant-making. This model combines the flexibility of private foundations with the administrative ease of public charities and has become one of the most widely used charitable giving vehicles in the country. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the Trust received several substantial gifts from the estate plans of people who wanted to invest in the future of the region. One of these was
Laura Spelman Rockefeller. During this time, the Trust began making grants to address the hardships brought on by the
Great Depression. It supported relief efforts in New York City and helped stabilize social-service organizations facing increased demand. This period set the precedent for the Trust’s ongoing role responding to urgent civic and humanitarian needs.
1940s–1970s During the 1940s, the Trust began managing legacy gifts with geographically diverse mandates. One notable bequest from
Lucy Wortham James supported both New York City organizations and conservation efforts in rural
Missouri. James’ estate helped preserve
Maramec Spring Park, now owned and operated by the James Foundation, an affiliate of The New York Community Trust, in
St. James, Missouri. Beginning in 1957, the Trust funded the Heritage of New York Plaque Program in partnership with the
Municipal Art Society and the
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. Hundreds of historically significant buildings, including
Grand Central Terminal,
Bowery Savings Bank, and the
New York Stock Exchange, were marked with prominent plaques. In the mid-1960s, the Trust provided early funding to support the
Public Theater, originally founded as the Shakespeare Workshop in 1954 and later led by
Joseph Papp. The Trust’s seed grants funded capital improvements, including performance upgrades at the
Delacorte Theater, facilitating the growth of
Shakespeare in the Park and the emergence of community-centered arts programming. The Trust’s early grantmaking contributed to the founding of advocacy groups focused on urban development, environmental justice, and historic preservation. For instance, the Trust’s partnership with the Municipal Art Society of New York inspired collaborations that would later become organizations such as the
Natural Resources Defense Council and the
Historic Districts Council. By the 1970s, the Trust managed hundreds of charitable funds. Operating with the understanding that grantmaking is best done locally, the Trust expanded by establishing the
Westchester Community Foundation (1975) and the
Long Island Community Foundation (1978) to serve
Westchester,
Suffolk, and
Nassau counties. During this period, the Trust also provided early support for energy conservation in response to the
1970s energy crisis, as well as for mental health services, programs for older adults, and cultural revitalization efforts, all amid the twin pressures of fiscal austerity and social need in New York City.
1980s–1990s In the 1980s, the New York Community Trust was among the first philanthropies to respond to the
HIV/AIDS crisis. It made its first HIV research grant in 1983 and subsequently helped establish the New York City AIDS Fund (1989–2014). Fundraising efforts by the fashion industry, including
Seventh on Sale and
Fashion’s Night Out, drove visibility and contributions to the AIDS Fund. The 2003
New York Court of Appeals ruling led to the implementation of the Foundation Aid Formula, resulting in billions of additional dollars in state funding for city schools. The Trust provided grants to education advocacy organizations through the 2010s and 2020s to bolster transparency in state school aid budgeting, county-level impact analysis, and grassroots lobbying for full Foundation Aid compliance. Following the 1986 federal immigration reforms, the Trust formed the Fund for New Citizens, a collaborative fund that pooled contributions from several foundations. The fund supported legal services, organizing, and integration programs for immigrants. The Energy Conservation Fund at The Trust was established in 1979 and was originally funded with a US$15 million restitution from the
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority. It helped nonprofits implement energy-efficient projects in their facilities. Over time, it evolved into the Nonprofit Finance Fund, which has supported more than US$100 million in capital improvements across nonprofit facilities.
2000s: Disaster Relief, Legal Advocacy, and Systemic Reform In the aftermath of the
September 11 attacks, under the leadership of then-President Lorie Slutsky, The New York Community Trust co-founded The September 11th Fund with the
United Way of New York City. The effort distributed US$528 million in assistance to victims’ families, displaced workers, small businesses, and area nonprofits through more than 559 grants. It supported a wide range of recovery efforts, including cash assistance to victims’ families, mental-health counseling, support for displaced workers, rebuilding services for small businesses, and capacity grants to frontline nonprofits. The fund concluded in 2004. A notable highlight of the Trust’s work to reform criminal justice in New York City is its early support for the movement to close
Rikers Island, New York City’s main jail complex. Beginning in 2015, the Trust funded advocacy organizations that participated in the local campaign, such as JustLeadershipUSA, the Women’s Community Justice Association, and the Freedom Agenda. In 2019, the
New York City Council approved an US$8 billion plan to shutter Rikers and build four borough-based jails. The Trust sustained funding into 2023, including a multi-year grant supporting the Beyond Rosie’s Campaign, aimed at closing Rikers’ women’s jail, the Rose M. Singer Center, amid serious concerns about violence and inadequate conditions. The Trust also funded projects that addressed the school-to-prison pipeline, mental health, and alternatives to incarceration. It supported advocacy and community organizing efforts that helped pass New York’s “
Raise the Age” legislation in 2017, which ended the automatic prosecution of 16- and 17-year-olds as adults in criminal court. It also supported litigation that reshaped New York State’s foster-care system and co-launched collaborative efforts to build the nonprofit workforce.
2010s: Civic Resilience and Strategic Philanthropy In 2012, the Trust was selected by the
New York State Attorney General’s Office to administer US$45 million from philanthropist
Brooke Astor’s estate to improve literacy across the five boroughs. The Trust established the Brooke Astor Funds for New York City Education with the purpose of improving literacy in the early grades across the five boroughs by awarding grants to nonprofits serving public elementary schools in low-income neighborhoods. In 2015, the Trust launched the Leadership Fellows program in partnership with
Baruch College’s Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs. Geared toward mid-career nonprofit professionals, the program combines classroom learning, mentorship, project work, and an engaged alumni network. As of 2025, more than 600 fellows from over 250 New York-area nonprofits have participated, receiving leadership training and support to advance their organizations’ social-justice missions.
2020s: COVID-19, Migrant Response, and Centennial Milestone In March 2020, in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic, The New York Community Trust partnered with
Bloomberg Philanthropies, the
Ford Foundation, the
Carnegie Corporation of New York, and others to launch the NYC COVID-19 Response & Impact Fund. The initiative raised over US$110 million, drawing support from a coalition of more than 700 institutional funders and individual donors, including many New Yorkers who contributed through a dedicated giving platform. The fund disbursed more than 760 grants and 45 no-interest loans to support frontline nonprofits providing emergency food, health care, mental health services, remote-learning access, and cultural programming. It served as one of the largest philanthropic responses to the pandemic in New York City and helped stabilize organizations facing sharp increases in demand and major revenue losses. In 2022, Amy Freitag became the Trust’s fourth president, bringing experience in NYC government, conservation, philanthropy, and historic preservation. Under her leadership, the Trust celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2024. That same year, it partnered with the
Robin Hood Foundation to lead philanthropic efforts supporting more than 200,000 immigrants who had arrived in New York City during a housing and services crisis. To streamline operations and branding, the Trust consolidated its Westchester and Long Island divisions in 2024, bringing them under a single identity. On the programmatic side, it also celebrated environmental milestones, most notably funding partnerships that contributed to measurable improvements in Long Island Sound cleanup, including ecosystem monitoring and wastewater management efforts in collaboration with Save the Sound and other local groups. == Leadership ==