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News & Features

The 2006 Virginia 100 - The art of giving

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Virginia Business
June 2006

Virginia’s reputation for philanthropy is gaining national recognition. Donations from several business leaders have earned spots on national lists of the country’s top donors.

From 2001-2005, Landmark Communications founder Frank Batten Sr. and his wife, Jane, of Virginia Beach gave away or pledged $233 million, ranking them 30th on BusinessWeek’s 2005 list of 50 Most Generous Philanthropists. At No. 38 is the Richmond chairman of CCA Industries, William Goodwin Jr., and his wife, Alice, who the magazine says contributed $187 million during the same period.

Robert H. Smith, a Northern Virginia real estate executive, and Roger W. Sant, co-founder of AES Corp. in Arlington, made the 2005 list of most generous donors compiled by The Chronicle of Philanthropy, with Smith ranking 34th and Sant 57th.

The following list highlights some of their donations and gifts from others over the past year:

• $49 million: Roger and Victoria Sant have recently donated to four projects: $20 million for the preservation of the Amazon rain forest through their Summit Foundation; $9 million for a new building named in their honor at The Phillips Collection art museum in Washington; $10 million to the National Symphony Orchestra; and $10 million to the Smithsonian Institution, also in Washington.

• $32.5 million: Alice and Bill Goodwin of Richmond as a challenge gift to the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Engineering. Alice Goodwin graduated from VCU with a medical-technology degree.

• $30.2 million: Robert H. Smith of Crystal City to his alma mater, the University of Maryland College Park. The money will support academic programs at the business school, a performing arts center and a program that studies Israel.

• $10 million: Pledged by former Virginia Tech fraternity brothers A. Ross Myers of Pennsylvania and John R. Lawson II of Newport News to start the proposed Myers-Lawson School of Construction at Virginia Tech. Both are Virginia Tech graduates and CEOs of construction firms.

 


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