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About the Bonners

Page history last edited by Robert Hackett 12 years, 2 months ago


 

 

 

Mr. Bertram and Mrs. Corella Bonner established the Bonner Foundation with the hope and, indeed the expectation, that the impact of their support would be far-reaching in the areas of hunger and education.

 

Drawing on their own personal experiences, as well as the knowledge of friends and visionaries in the philanthropic and educational communities, the Bonners created the Crisis Ministry and Bonner Scholar Programs. These programs promised that their expectations would be met.

 

The Crisis Ministry Program does more than give grants to food banks--it distributes the money through congregations of all faiths and asks that they become involved in feeding the hungry. Similarly, the Bonner Scholars Program does more than provide scholarships—it gives students the impetus to become involved in changing their communities.

 

Both Bertram and Corella Bonner's personal journeys played a significant role in the development and direction of the Foundation.

 

Bertram Bonner, describes his wife, was born "without a dime" in 1899 in Brooklyn, New York. At the early age of 22, after putting himself through college at night, Mr. Bonner was named Head Treasurer for Heda Green Banks. He had been working with Ms. Green since the beginning of his teenage years and had learned much from the eccentric and well-known woman. As Head Treasurer he made many loans to New York builders, which inspired him to become involved in the real estate business. He was successful from the beginning, but in the stock market crash of '29, like so many others, he lost everything.

 

But, unlike others, with hard work and a tremendous acumen for business, Mr. Bonner quickly made back his fortune. His career spanned six decades and can be credited with the building of more than 30,000 homes and apartments.

 

Corella Bonner, like her husband, was born into poverty. But she began her journey in the rural south—in the town of Eagen, TN. As a fourteen-year-old, after living in coal-mining towns in West Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky, Corella Allen, along with her mother, sought opportunity in the northern city of Detroit. Arriving penniless, the young Allen soon found work as a cashier at a cafeteria, attended Wayne State University at night, and made sure that her younger siblings went to school.

 

She worked her way up from cashier to manager and was eventually transferred to the Statler chain's New York hotel. It was there she met Bertram Bonner. They were married, four years later, in 1942.

 

The Bonners' involvement in community service emanated from their early work providing food for destitute families in Fort Lauderdale, where the Bonner family lived. When the Bonners moved in 1956 to Princeton, NJ they began a broad-based ecumenical crisis ministry program housed in the Nassau Presbyterian Church.

 

In 1990, after working with the late John B. Stephenson, President of Berea College, Bertram and Corella established the first Bonner Scholars Program at Berea College. It was designed to provide access to higher education and an opportunity for students to serve.

 

In the last 11 years, the Foundation has provided $9.5 million in grants to thousands of religious, community-based hunger relief programs across the country and has awarded more than $12 million in scholarship support to more than 2,500 students at 24 colleges. In addition, the Foundation has created a $5 million endowment at 7 schools to carry out the Bonner Scholars Program, which has become a nationally recognized service scholarship model.

 

Mr. Bonner passed away in May of 1993. Mrs. Bonner, however, continued to carry on their legacy of hope, service, and gratitude until her death in July 2002.

 

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