Endowment Foundation of Greene County
114 West Main Street
P.O. Box 1116
Paragould, AR 72451

Phone:  (870) 236-7718
Fax: (870) 236-8137
Email: efgcdirector@gmail.com
Marci Lincoln, Community Director

"Helping You Leave a Legacy"

The Endowment Foundation of Greene County (EFGC) is an umbrella organization under which charitable donations made are professionally invested by the Arkansas Community Foundation and the income earned is returned to Greene County in the form of grants or permanent endowments to address the need for financial assets to be built for planning process, social work, infrastructure and growth issues, education, literacy, preservation, and efforts to preserve community history.


Board members:
Joe Wessell, chair      Keith Legrid
Katherine Block Debbie Quinn
Shane Carter Karole Risker
Rhonda Davis Tori Thompson
Chip Dortch Hal Wyatt
Marilyn Jetton Bill Fisher, advisory


Click here to learn about Grants and News of the Endowment Foundation of Greene County.

Click here to learn about Endowments and Funds of the Endowment Foundation of Greene County.

                                                 
Who is a donor?

Who is a donor? It is anyone, young or old; of great means, or someone who just has an allowance to spend; it is a person who has spent a lifetime in Greene County, or someone we've just adopted into the community.

Give in memory of a loved one, give in honor of your mom to commemorate Mother's Day, give in honor of your daughter's birthday, give to support your dad's favorite charity or project. Give to teach your children philanthropy. Give to make your community greater than it is.


Traveling Posters

A little girl reads at the Greene County Library, close to the traveling poster created by the EFGC. Four posters, at the library, the Greene County Chamber of Commerce, Arkansas Methodist Medical Center, and First National Bank are on display. More will be added to other locations around Paragould. For information on having a poster placed at your business, contact Karole Risker at 236-7718, or Kelley Huffman at 335-2615.



Mary Esther Herget, Born Philanthropist

Talking to Mary Esther Herget is like reading a good history book. Not only can she tell you the history of her well-known family, she can also tell about Paragould and her family's place in it. When sitting down with Herget, one gets the sense of knowing her for years. While telling her story, she is likely to call you darlin' and then kiss you on the cheek when you leave.

Herget tells her histroy in a deep Southern accent. Born in Helena, Herget is often asked her background, which may have begun in the Delta, but is now firmly rooted in Paragould. Herget's father died when she was 11, and when she was just 14 her mother went to Washington, D.C. to work for Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 30's. It was there she did most of her growing up. She would later marry Phil Herget-a lawyer, engineer and colonel-and with him travel to Hawaii and Germany while he was in the service.

But it was Paragould that was always her home. Raised just 150 miles away, Herget said she never heard of Paragould until she was 17, but now she is as firmly planted both in Paragould and its history as much as any native Herget. Her four children feel the same way. "My children have been really raised in the service. Paragould was their home," she said.

Herget is as well known as the 1890 Jackson-Herget House in which she lives. Built by "Grandfather Jackson," the history of the two-story home is as vaired as its current occupant. The house has been home to four generations of Hergets, including some who have been born and others who have died within its walls. The home, placed on the National Register of Historic Places, has been an outlet for Herget's generosity, begun even before her time by the home's first owner. Grandfather Richard, Herget calls him, gave land to Griffin Memorial Church in Paragould. "I heard he did a lot of good people didn't know about," she said. "Some people remember their fathers. He wanted no recognition." This giving attitude would continue through the generations.  "No one ever left our home hungry," Herget said of her earliest experineces with philanthropy. "I was raised like that. Share and take, my Lord of mercy."

The Hergets seemed to get back a little of what they gave, too. Herget recalled a time a young military wife with three children and another on the way was invited to stay in the Jackson-Herget House. "We didn't make much money," Herget says fo the time. "People were so wonderful to us. We had the best time...All the time somebody was bringing us things."

And the Hergets have spent a lifetime giving right back. Her son, Richard Phillip Herget Jr. set up a scholarship endowment in honor of his parents' 50th wedding anniversary more than 14 years ago. Her other children, Joseph "Barlow" Herget, Nancy Jackson-Herget, Alfred Harry, and Rebecca Anne, are all philanthropists in their own rights and carry on a family tradition begun generations before them. "Every one of my children is all very giving," she said.

Herget herself is currently involved in the Greene County 21st Century Women's Charitable Endowment and also gives to the Greene County Scholarship Fund. She recently gave a gift of property, appraised at $167,000 to the Arkansas Methodist Medical Center in memory of her husband and in honor of herself. The proceeds will go into the Arkansas Hospital Endowment. Herget serves on the AMMC Foundation Board of Directors. Besides giving of her money, she is also generous with her time. Herget is involved with the 1888 Greene County Courthouse restoration effort and has logged 6,000 hours as a volunteer with the Arkansas Methodist Medical Center Auxiliary. "That's my love because that really saves me being there," she said of volunteering.

To Herget, philanthropy is more than about balancing accounts and drawing interest.
"It makes you feel good," she said. "I had lots rather give than receive. It gives me pleasure to see people happy."


Endowments Still Helping Local Causes Decades Later
S.S. Lipscomb: The Story of the Man Who Began EFGC's First Two Endowments


He certainly wasn’t born in this century. But he wasn’t born in the last one, either. And yet, what he established years ago will continue well into this century, and carry on even beyond that.

A name still familiar to many, Samuel Scott, "S.S." Lipscomb was born in 1890 in Virginia. He was the baby of the family, having two older brothers and two sisters. His family moved to Marmaduke when Sam was a child, and then he moved to Paragould as an adult.

He married Vada Allen when he was a young man and then married her aunt, Eva, when Vada died. Neither marriage produced children.

He always wore a bow tie, loved books, and "was very interested in community and agriculture," according to Bettye Busby, coordinator of the S.S. Lipscomb History and Genealogy Room of the Greene County Library.

She remembers him fondly, and it’s no wonder, as she recalls that he talked her father into getting her a 1950 Ford Convertible when she was a teenager. He even took her fishing. "He was like a great grandfather," Busby adds.

During his lifetime, he might well be remembered for his extensive community work. He was a farm operator and owner of Ford Motor Company, the director of the First National Bank of Commerce, and he was instrumental in raising funds to build the main exhibit building at the fairgrounds.

Mr. Lipscomb died on April 24, 1969, but today he is still very much involved in making his community a better place in which to live.

In 1982, 13 years after his death, the Arkansas Room was created in the Greene County Library, a room used by not only Greene County residents, but people from many other states, as well. More than $60,000 was provided by the Lipscomb-Kirsch Foundation and was used for the purchase of equipment, furnishings and research material. A gift of $50,000 was also given from an endowment that provided for the "maintenance, upkeep and development" of the room.

Much of what is still in the room today came from the original bequest, according to information regarding the Arkansas Room.

The two first endowments created under the umbrella of what is now the Endowment Foundation of Greene County (EFGC) were tied to Lipscomb. The first, the S.S. Lipscomb Library Endowment, has paid out $30,000 in grants and has a value of just over $147,000. From the second, more than $65,000 has been paid out in grants from the S.S. Lipscomb Arkansas Methodist Hospital Endowment, which provides nursing scholarships to hospital employees. Today, the endowment retains a value of more than $261,000.

So even though Mr. Lipscomb has been gone for more than three decades, many people have him to thank in tracing their roots and in attending nursing school.

Anyone can begin an endowment. A minimum of $10,000 is required to begin an endowment, payable over a three-year period, and can be accumulated through gifts of cash, real estate, bonds, or a variety of other means, according to Karole Risker, Executive Director for the EFGC.

Endowments can be created for any purpose, from the arts to the zoo. Endowments are a way many people are finding to help others after they are gone, including finding their roots, and getting an education. 


Family begins endowment to honor the late Evangeline Cothren
Evangeline Cothren's legacy began years ago, and will continue for many more. Her family started the Evangeline Cothren Scholarship Endowment with her passing Jan. 18. Since Evangeline helped begin the Endowment Foundation of Greene County and was instrumental in the success of the Greene County Scholarship Fund, it seemed more than fitting. She also served on the EFGC board from the time of its conception until her death.

According to Angela Cothren, Evangeline's daughter-in-law, the family decided to create the endowment to honor her. "She worked tirelessly with that fund and literally went many sleepless nights to make sure everything was done right," she said. "She (Evangeline) never said she wanted it (the endowment). When we were talking it seemed like the right thing to do."

Anyone who knew Evangeline would agree. "Evangeline's passion was education. She was the driving force of the establishment of the Greene County Scholarship program and she worked many hours each year on that program," said Mary Ann Allen, EFGC board member. " I am certain that there is no better way to memorialize her than to fund this endowment which will forever contribute to the education of Greene County youth."

The scholarship program itself began several years ago when Dale Coy, a local CPA and current EFGC board member, had a client who wanted to give a scholarship in such a way that would make it long term rather than a one time donation. He went to Evangeline. "Out of that it's grown to what it is now," said Angela.

"Because she's a teacher obviously she was interested in helping as many people as she could. It's been real important to her and a way to give back to the community." Endowed funds were very important to Evangeline because they provide for a gift for so much longer than a one-time gift, Angela said.

This endowment is not the first to bear the Cothren name. Jack and Angela, Evangeline's son and daughter-in-law, started the Evangeline and J.C. Cothren Charitable Endowment as a way to give to the community in perpetuity and to support the Endowment Foundation, Angela said. One of the wonderful things about this particular endowment is that it involved hte entire family, including Evangeline's 11-year-old granddaughter, Ellie. Evangeline would bring to her family opportunities they could support and "everyone had a say so," Angela said. "She loved that it involved Ellie." Last year the interest from the endowment went to a CPR program that helps sixth graders, which Ellie loved, as she is also in the sixth grade.

An endowment requires $10,000 to be considered fully funded. All donations may be sent to the Endowment Foundation of Greene County, P.O. Box 1116, Paragould, AR 72451. For more information, call Marci Lincoln, executive director, at 236-7718.




EFGC raising funds for ALPHA Initiative
In an effort to have even more money to grant to the community, the Endowment Foundation of Greene County is looking to first have money granted to it. The EFGC is raising funds to be eligible for the ALPHA Initiative Challenge Match, which is an incentive of the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation. The grant totals $7,100 this year. To receive these extra funds and be eligible, the organization must raise the final $7,000 of $20,000 for its operating endowment.

The operating endowment funds the daily operations of the Endowment Foundation. To fund this endowment in the past, the EFGC created a Founder's Circle, whose members give $1,000 a year for five years. There is still time to be in the Founder's Circle. However, donations of any size are accepted and tax deductible.

While the EFGC twice annually grants to various organizations, the ALPHA match is a separate incentive. Funds must be raised by June 30 for the EFGC to retain eligibility. Once the total $20,000 is raised, the Endowment Foundation will receive $7,100 from the ALPHA Initiative, which the board will then decide how to invest, possibly in community grants.
Donations can be sent to P.O. Box 1116, Paragould, AR 72451. For more information, call 236-7718 or visit the office at 114 W. Main.


EFGC searching for new Founder's Circle members

A few years ago, Jane Cochran decided to be a part of something that was helping other people. So she began giving money to the Endowment Foundation of Greene County. More specifically, she became a Founder’s Circle member, pledging $1,000 per year for five years. This fund helps the day-to-day operation of the foundation, and she was one of 30 such founders.

"I’m very interested in helping the community in any way I can," Cochran said of her reason for donating this money. Cochran has been a part of the Endowment Foundation since it’s beginning and is a charter member. "I have given at various times," she said. "I’ve been a part of that organization for a long time."

The Endowment Foundation of Greene County is searching for new Founder’s Circle members, but time is of the essence. In an effort to raise $20,000 a year for five years for the Operating Endowment, the EFGC is asking 20 new donors to join the widening circle. These donors, like Cochran, would pledge $1,000 per year for five years. Specific tax cuts are in store for those donating by December 31 each year.

"I think the idea of the whole thing is wonderful," Cochran said. "I like to be a part of anything that shows progress and anything that helps the community. We can all sit back and do nothing. I want to be a part of an organization that’s doing something. I have great faith in the Endowment Foundation."

Cochran said she was influenced to give by her niece Mary Ann Allen, who sits on the EFGC board, but made up her own mind and became a founder’s circle member. She said she wishes more people saw how beneficial this fund is, and that prospective circle members would see it as an investment in their community.

"It’s been very difficult for me to explain to my friends" the need to give to this fund, said Cochran. "To me, an endowment says enough. If you’re giving to, investing in an endowment, you’re helping someone."

Cochran also appreciates "how much good it does" and how the money stays in the area.

Anyone is eligible to be a founder, including individuals, families, businesses and organizations. Donors may also contribute untaxed dollars by donated to the EFGC through IRAs, whose proceeds can be rolled over to the EFGC. It is suggested that prospective donors check with their financial advisor as to how this can be done for tax credit.

For more information, visit the EFGC office at 114 W. Main or call 236-7718.


Mission Outreach uses grant to start medical clinic

In an effort to provide much needed medical care to residents, Mission Outreach has begun a medical clinic. Helped by a grant from the Endowment Foundation of Greene County, the clinic, already running, will provide basic care, according to Jamie Collins, executive director. The clinic is currently meant to address the immediate needs of the moment with no other alternative than the ER, Collins said.

The clinic is meeting a critical need in Greene County. Collins said the mission has seen an increase of the homeless with physical disabilities not always visible to the naked eye. Other residents simply have no other option. The clinic has been in existence since last September and will be going full force once supplies are bought and contracts are signed.

Mission Outreach has had outside help in running the mission. EMTs have offered glucose and blood pressure checks. Nursing students from Arkansas State University completed their practicum at the mission. They were able to make overall head to toe assessments and make referrals. A pediatrician and two nurse practitioners helped get the clinic going in January with the new school semester.

"The nurses provide a great service," Collins said. "They were able to see things we weren’t able to see... they opened doors we wouldn’t have known existed." this includes fund-raising and personal help they gave residents. But more than the help they gave, the clinic was an eye-opening experience for the nurses. "Many went to their professors crying, saying, "I can’t believe people suffer like this."

Just having had basic care is helping the residents feel better - physically and emotionally. "We saw a great increase in our residents, just by knowing that a trained individual... answered the questions they had," Collins said. "We saw a great improvement even without a doctor. We saw a huge reduction in complaints about needing to see a physician - a huge preventative" step.

Mission Outreach is looking to eventually build another facility. It will not only house residents as the current mission does, but also provide support facilities residents might need, such as the Greene County Literacy Council. "We’ll be serving other agencies that struggle, but corporately together we could do well," Collins said. "We have so many come to the mission already, we’d like to meet other needs as well.

"We appreciate the help of the Endowment Foundation and all those who help, because we do more than we can tell," Collins concluded, citing patient confidentiality. "We all have the right to heal in our own private way. Those with disabilities are most thankful because they know they couldn’t" afford medical care on their own.


 

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