Updated:
The Lyndhurst Foundation
The Lyndhurst Foundation began in 1938 as the Memorial Welfare Foundation, the philanthropic vehicle of Coca-Cola bottling magnate Cartter Lupton.
The Lyndhurst Foundation
The Lyndhurst Foundation began in 1938 as the Memorial Welfare Foundation, the philanthropic vehicle of Coca-Cola bottling magnate Cartter Lupton. It was renamed Lyndhurst after his death, with his son John T. 'Jack' Lupton later chairing the foundation and driving its focus on Chattanooga's urban core — a multi-decade commitment that included the $45 million revival of the Tennessee Aquarium and a 22-mile riverfront redevelopment. Today, President Benic M. 'Bruz' Clark III runs the foundation alongside Trustee Dana B. Perry. The foundation divides its resources between traditional philanthropy and an active endowment investment strategy spanning venture capital, buyouts, distressed debt, natural resources, and real estate. Its portfolio stretches across stages from seed to expansion, and it commits to external funds while also pursuing direct investments. The foundation's headquarters at the historic Thomas McConnell House on East Fifth Street serves as the anchor for capital deployed into Chattanooga's missing-middle housing projects, which aim to add density to neighborhoods adjacent to the revitalized downtown core. The commercial and residential real estate portfolio operates alongside a diversified private equity book — a structure that makes Lyndhurst more than a passive grantmaking endowment. Jack Lupton's earlier membership in Augusta National Golf Club and the Mountain City Club reflected the network depth that helped catalyze Chattanooga's Public Education Foundation, a collaborative effort Lyndhurst helped found to improve outcomes in Hamilton County schools. The Lupton family's philanthropic architecture extends into separate sibling foundations: Footprint Foundation, Riverview Foundation, Pathfinder Foundation, and Tonya Foundation, each pursuing distinct local priorities under different family-member leadership. In May 2024, the foundation team maintained its active role in Chattanooga's housing policy discussions, continuing to advocate for zoning reforms that enable the missing-middle development pattern it has backed for years (per public record, 2024). The foundation's structural distinction lies in its dual character — a 501(c)(3) that deploys both grants and endowment capital in service of the same geography. Unlike most foundations that wall off their investment team from program officers, Lyndhurst's real estate and venture investments physically reshape the city its grants aim to improve. This embedded model, coupled with the Lupton family's multi-generational presence in Chattanooga, produces a foundation that acts more like a long-duration patient-capital platform than a conventional disbursement engine.
General information
Firm type
Endowment / Foundation
Year founded
1938
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Chattanooga
Corporate office
517 East Fifth Street, Chattanooga, TN, United States
Principals
Benic M. Clark III
President and Treasurer
Dana B. Perry
Trustee and Secretary
Cartter Lupton
Founder
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at The Lyndhurst Foundation?
President and Treasurer Benic M. 'Bruz' Clark III leads the foundation's operations and endowment strategy. He is supported by Dana B. Perry, who serves as Trustee and Secretary while practicing law at Chambliss, Bahner & Stophel in Chattanooga. The Lupton family maintains governance oversight through its board representation, though day-to-day investment and grantmaking authority rests with Clark and the professional staff.
Is The Lyndhurst Foundation purely philanthropic or does it invest for returns?
Lyndhurst operates as a hybrid — it makes conventional charitable grants while running an active endowment portfolio across venture capital, buyouts, distressed debt, natural resources, and real estate. Its direct real estate investments, including missing-middle housing projects in Chattanooga, function as both mission-aligned capital deployment and return-seeking investments. The foundation does not publish performance figures.
How does The Lyndhurst Foundation's real estate strategy intersect with its philanthropic mission?
The foundation has directly invested in residential development in Chattanooga's urban neighborhoods, particularly missing-middle housing — duplexes, triplexes, and small apartment buildings that add density without high-rises. These investments operate alongside grant-funded initiatives like the Chattanooga Public Education Foundation, which Lyndhurst helped found. The real estate portfolio and the grantmaking both target the same geography and population, making the foundation's balance sheet an active tool in its place-based strategy.
What is the relationship between The Lyndhurst Foundation and the other Lupton family foundations?
The Lupton family has established several distinct philanthropic vehicles beyond Lyndhurst. George Fontaine Sr., grandson of founder Cartter Lupton, leads Riverview Foundation. Alice Lupton Montague, daughter of Jack Lupton, is involved with Footprint Foundation. Pathfinder Foundation and Tonya Foundation round out the sibling entities, each operating independently with its own board and grant priorities.
Does The Lyndhurst Foundation co-invest alongside other Chattanooga institutions?
The foundation's geographic concentration and network ties through the Chattanooga Chamber of Commerce and the Public Education Foundation create natural co-investment and co-granting relationships with local stakeholders. Jack Lupton's historic role in catalyzing public-private partnerships for the Tennessee Aquarium and riverfront redevelopment established a pattern of collaborative capital deployment that the foundation continues, though specific co-investment partners are not publicly catalogued.
What investment stages does The Lyndhurst Foundation target in its venture portfolio?
The foundation's venture allocation spans early-stage seed and start-up investments through expansion and late-stage rounds. It also commits to venture capital funds and buyout funds as a limited partner, pursues secondaries, and evaluates distressed debt opportunities — a strategy breadth that reflects an endowment model rather than a thematic concentration, though current fund commitments and direct positions are not publicly detailed.
Where does The Lyndhurst Foundation's wealth come from?
The endowment originates from Cartter Lupton's Coca-Cola bottling fortune. Lupton was an early and significant Coca-Cola bottler who built substantial wealth through the franchise system. After his death in 1977, the foundation was renamed Lyndhurst, and the Lupton family's multi-generational oversight has preserved the capital base while directing it toward Chattanooga-focused philanthropy and investment.
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.
Need institutional-grade insight on endowments & foundations?
Altss delivers:
Prefer a guided tour?
We’ll walk you through: