During her lifetime, Sarah Mellon Scaife donated tens of millions of dollars to a variety of humanitarian causes and the arts, including family planning, hospitals, disability and poverty issues, environmental conservation, and museums in the Pittsburgh region. Perhaps her most impactful gift was $35,000 to equip a virus research lab at the University of Pittsburgh during the late 1940s.
Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine in that lab in 1955. In 1974, the
Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh opened the
Sarah Scaife Gallery, named in her honor following a major donation from the
Sarah Scaife Foundation. Constructed at a cost of $12.5 million, the gallery more than doubled the exhibition space of the Museum of Art. Before her death, Scaife had collaborated with the museum to purchase a number of major works (especially
Impressionist and
Post-Impressionist art by
Claude Monet,
Edgar Degas, and other masters) for the museum's collection. Her son, Richard Mellon Scaife, chaired the museum's fine arts committee during the 1970s. After Scaife's death, her son shifted the Scaife Foundations' giving away from the art world toward conservative and anti-immigration causes. ==References==