Donor Profile: John and Elizabeth Armstrong Thoughtful Giving Back is an Obligation

 
Unknown.jpeg

John and Elizabeth Armstrong never planned on becoming philanthropists. They both grew up middle class in the shadow of the Great Depression. “Our upbringings were modest,” says Elizabeth, “There was nothing lavish.”

 

“In fact,” adds John, “we’re uncomfortable with anything lavish today.”

 

Still, they know they have done well especially compared to others, including their family. John’s grandfather served with the Union in the Civil War. His father migrated from the family farm to the city at the turn of the last century. Neither went to college, but John did well in school and earned scholarships to Harvard where he earned his BA, MS and PhD. He went on to become a vice president at IBM, starting as a researcher before moving into management.

“I never expected to find wealth. I never wanted fancy stuff,” says John. He simply liked school and work and he did well.

Elizabeth earned scholarships too, and she never took them for granted. “The scholarships were a help,” she says, “and since then I’ve had an obligation to give back.” She volunteered, including with United Way of Westchester, NY, where she eventually worked.

When John and Elizabeth retired in the mid-nineties they moved to Amherst. They loved the college town and Elizabeth had ties to the area. Her mother was born in Pelham and her grandmother had been the school principal in Leeds.

The couple jumped into retirement by giving back even more. They were founding members of the UMass/Amherst Foundation and the Emily Dickinson Museum. John become a trustee of UMass Amherst. Elizabeth went to the United Way office to see how she could help. She got involved with the Tocqueville Society and the community investment grant review process.

Giving to United Way is now a habit for them. “But it’s more,” says Elizabeth, “United Way provides agency oversight and accountability. So many fundraising appeals can be purely emotional, but United Way’s critical grant review process assures we are giving with our heads as well as with our hearts.”

 

United Way Named #1 Charity in US, and Growing Internationally

United Way Again Named “America’s Favorite Charity” by Chronicle of Philanthropy NonProfit. Times Shows United Way #1 in Public Support.
United Way Worldwide Revenue up 3%.

Two top philanthropy trade media publications released their annual rankings of America’s charities this week.

United Way was ranked #1 in The Chronicle of Philanthropy list of America's Favorite Charities and, The NonProfit Times’ NPT 2019 Top 100 shows that we held a ranking of #1 in public support (despite a slip from #3 to #5 in total revenue).

Both publications focus their rankings on U.S.-based donations, but by only considering revenue generated in the U.S they are only telling only part of United Way Worldwide’s story of global growth and impact.

As per the recent 2018-2019 Revenue Results report, United Way Worldwide revenue grew 3% year-over-year. Of the total $4.8 billion raised; $1.36 billion came from outside the U.S. -- a nearly 23% increase over the previous year and leading all other United Way increases.

United Way remains the mission of choice for people, organizations, and corporations across our county—and increasingly around the world.

Gazette’s ‘Person of the Year’: Honoring heroes in our own backyard

Gazette’s ‘Person of the Year’: Honoring heroes in our own backyard

On May 30, the Daily Hampshire Gazette and United Way of Hampshire County swivel the spotlight toward two local heroes: one well-known and the other less so. We do it because these people deserve it, and because the rest of us deserve real-life inspiration.