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North Texas Community Foundation
Community Foundation of North Texas opened in 1981 as a 501(c)(3) grantmaking vehicle in Fort Worth, led today by President and CEO Rose Bradshaw.
North Texas Community Foundation
Community Foundation of North Texas opened in 1981 as a 501(c)(3) grantmaking vehicle in Fort Worth, led today by President and CEO Rose Bradshaw. Its endowment aggregates donor-advised funds, field-of-interest funds, and a supporting organization into a single investment pool that funds charitable activity across an 11-county North Texas footprint. The foundation allocates across an unusual mix for an endowment: commercial office at 777 Main Street, oil and gas mineral rights, cash-surrender-value life insurance policies, and physical collections including Leonard's Museum Collection at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History. Its overall pool is estimated at roughly $545 million (Altss estimate). Grantmaking flows through dedicated vehicles — the Fund to Advance Racial Equity, the Conservation and Environment Fund, and the Fund for Good — often in partnership with regionally anchored co-funders. Frequent collaborators include the Amon G. Carter Foundation on local housing projects and the Sid W. Richardson Foundation on regional philanthropic programs. The board couples philanthropic practitioners with investment-committee experience. Treasurer Joseph D. Taylor was named the foundation's 2023 Professional Advisor of the Year; former Texas Christian University CIO James Hille serves as a board member. The foundation maintains the North Texas Community Foundation Supporting Organization and the St. Augustine Trust as adjacent structures. It participates in CF Insights asset reporting through the Council on Foundations and holds memberships in Philanthropy Southwest and the National Center for Family Philanthropy. Unlike a typical private foundation bound to a single family's payout schedule, NTXCF aggregates multiple donor intents under one investment office — blending real assets, private-credit-style insurance instruments, and traditional endowment allocation into a single 11-county grantmaking engine. That multi-donor, balance-sheet-funded structure lets it co-deploy alongside both legacy Texas foundations and newer vehicles like the Rainwater Charitable Foundation without waiting for annual fundraising cycles.
General information
Firm type
Endowment / Foundation
Year founded
1981
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Fort Worth
Corporate office
777 Main Street, Suite 2850, Fort Worth, TX 76102
Principals
Rose Bradshaw
President and CEO
Daniel H. McCarthy
Board Chair
Joseph D. Taylor
Treasurer
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Community Foundation of North Texas?
The foundation's investment governance sits with its board, which includes former Texas Christian University CIO James Hille and current Treasurer Joseph D. Taylor, the 2023 Professional Advisor of the Year. Day-to-day management is overseen by President and CEO Rose Bradshaw. The specific internal investment-committee structure or any outsourced CIO relationship has not been publicly detailed in foundation materials.
What does the Community Foundation of North Texas actually own in its endowment?
The endowment holds a mix that goes well beyond stocks and bonds. Assets include a commercial office at 777 Main Street in Fort Worth, oil and gas mineral rights, cash-surrender-value life insurance policies, and physical collections. The overall pool is estimated at roughly $545 million (Altss estimate), and the foundation uses the balance sheet to fund grants directly rather than relying solely on periodic donor contributions.
How does NTXCF source its grants, and who co-funds them?
Grants originate primarily from the foundation's donor-advised and field-of-interest funds and are distributed across an 11-county North Texas region. The foundation frequently co-deploys with legacy Texas grantmakers: the Amon G. Carter Foundation has partnered on local housing initiatives, the Sid W. Richardson Foundation on regional philanthropic programs, and the Rainwater Charitable Foundation on the Fund to Advance Racial Equity.
Does Community Foundation of North Texas operate as a single-family office or multi-family office?
Neither. It is a 501(c)(3) community foundation — a public charity that houses multiple donor funds under one institutional roof. Its supporting organization and the St. Augustine Trust provide additional structuring options for donors, but the foundation does not function as a multi-family office managing discrete family wealth. It serves as a collective grantmaking vehicle for the North Texas region.
What philanthropic vehicles has NTXCF created, and how are they separated?
NTXCF has established several targeted funds: the Conservation and Environment Fund, the Fund for Good, the Fund to Advance Racial Equity, and the St. Augustine Trust. The North Texas Community Foundation Supporting Organization operates as a related but legally distinct entity. These vehicles are thematic grantmaking sleeves, not separately managed investment portfolios, but their programs are funded from the foundation's consolidated balance sheet.
Which sectors or asset classes does Community Foundation of North Texas avoid?
The foundation has not published an explicit exclusion list. However, its disclosed asset roster — commercial real estate, mineral interests, insurance instruments, and museum collections — indicates a tangible-asset-heavy posture. No venture capital, private equity fund commitments, or direct startup investments appear in its known holdings. The grantmaking focus skews toward housing, conservation, and community equity, with no disclosed program areas in for-profit technology or growth-stage company funding.
What is NTXCF's known posture on co-investments alongside external GPs or other foundations?
NTXCF does not co-invest in the private-funds sense alongside external general partners. Its co-deployment model is philanthropic: it frequently co-grants alongside other Texas foundations on specific initiatives. The Fund to Advance Racial Equity, for example, involves the Rainwater Charitable Foundation as a funding partner, and the Amon G. Carter Foundation has partnered on housing projects. These are grant-level collaborations, not pooled investment vehicles.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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