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The Hewlett Family - Medal of Philanthropy
webmedalofphilanthropy.org·medalofphilanthropy.org/the-hewlett-family/
The Hewlett Foundation is a notable funder of AI governance and policy research; this page provides background on the philanthropic family and institution behind it, though the content itself is not directly about AI safety.
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Summary
Profile of the Hewlett Family and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, recipients of the 2005 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy. The foundation, established in 1966, grew to over $6 billion in assets and focuses on education, environment, arts, and sustainable development. The Hewlett Foundation is a major funder of AI safety and related governance work.
Key Points
- •William and Flora Hewlett founded the Hewlett Foundation in 1966; it grew to one of the largest US private foundations with $6B+ in assets.
- •The Foundation focuses on education, environment, performing arts, conflict resolution, and population/sustainable development.
- •The Flora Family Foundation was created in 1998 to engage the next generation of Hewlett family members in philanthropy.
- •Eleanor Hewlett Gimon accepted the 2005 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy on behalf of the family.
- •The Hewlett Foundation is a significant institutional funder relevant to AI governance and policy research.
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| Page | Type | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| William and Flora Hewlett Foundation | Organization | 55.0 |
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# The Hewlett Family
#### Year
[2005](https://www.medalofphilanthropy.org/medalists/medalists-2005/)
#### Affiliation
[Hewlett Foundation](http://www.hewlett.org/)
#### Areas of Focus
Education \| Environment \| Arts \| Sustainable Development
Nearly forty years after Bill and Flora Hewlett started the Hewlett Foundation in the living room of their Palo Alto house, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation is one of the largest private foundations in the United States, with assets of more than $6 billion. The Foundation now makes hundreds of grants per year totaling hundreds of millions of dollars, but the principles that guide its grantmaking are the same as those that inspired them to begin the institution so many years ago—a sincere and heartfelt commitment to help build strong institutions that make a difference in the community and around the world.
#### [COMPLETE MEDAL CITATION](https://www.medalofphilanthropy.org/the-hewlett-family/\#1486495216507-5143a7a8-01f5f4be-fc310baa-5882)
Entrepreneur William R. Hewlett established the Hewlett Foundation in 1966 with his wife, Flora, and their eldest son, Walter B. Hewlett. For the first ten years, the Foundation, then known as the William R. Hewlett Foundation, made approximately $15.3 million in grants to organizations in education, population, the arts, and social services.
In 1977, Mrs. Hewlett died and the Foundation was renamed The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and her oldest daughter, Eleanor Hewlett Gimon, replaced her on the board. The bulk of Mrs. Hewlett’s fortune was transferred to the Foundation.
Highly respected for its work in the fields of conflict resolution, education, environment, performing arts, and population, the Foundation was a key source of funding to a host of institutions that provide vital services to disadvantaged Bay Area communities.
The Foundation’s assets increased to more than $2 billion, and annual grantmaking rose from $35 million in 1993 to $84 million in 1998. They focused at that time on environmental grantmaking on the Western United States and Canada, education funding, neighborhood improvement initiatives, and the U.S.-Latin American Relations Program.
Another foundation, the Flora Family Foundation was set up in 1998 and its grantmaking totaled $19.4 million in its first four years of operation. Perhaps as important is the fact that the Flora Family Foundation has given the next generation of Hewlett family members an opportunity to learn about philanthropy and to make a positive difference in the lives of others.
Representing the family at the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy is Eleanor Hewlett Gimon. In 1977 she joined the board of directors of the William
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