CURBCURB tagline  


Involvement imageInvolvement imageInvolvement imageInvolvement imageInvolvement imageInvolvement image
community leisure enrichment business
involvement on CURB:
A new definition of philanthropy
Innocence lost

Rural EMTs: Not your everyday reality show

A matter of trust
Editorial: Get out and explore
 
also on CURB:
You may not be infected, but you're surely affected
Bridging the gap: The American Indian Student Development Program
Young Professionals of Milwaukee

(Argosy Foundation, cont.)

Recent benefactors of Chris’s donations include UW-Milwaukee, which has received millions of dollars from Argosy specifically earmarked for its arts program. Chris would like to revive the theater department there, and even help develop a theater program at Marquette University as well. Argosy has also helped support the Milwaukee Art Museum with exhibition funding. “We have a good relationship with Chris Abele,” says Thompson.

Aside from the arts, Chris focuses on social and humanitarian causes. Last year, he awarded a $250,000 grant to WisconsinEye, a C-SPAN-like broadcast of action on the floors of the Wisconsin Senate and House of Representatives. Completely bi-partisan, the program will place 71 cameras throughout the Wisconsin Capitol building. According to WisconsinEye Vice President Jon Henkes, Chris chose to fund the project because of his love for politics. “He’s very civic-minded,” says Henkes. “He understands the challenges facing democracy today.” Another appealing aspect of the project is the fact that it is not commercially funded, meaning that the $15 million startup fee will be raised through private sources. Charter Communications and Time Warner have both donated airtime, allowing the program to be seen round-the-clock by residents all over the state of Wisconsin – a rarity for such a project. “Our ability to reach people right out of the gate is greater on day one than many programs that have been around for seven or eight years,” Henkes says, crediting Argosy’s donation as one that really pushed WisconsinEye ahead. “Chris Abele was one of our earliest champions in this project.”

Described by Henkes as delightful, intelligent and fun, Chris shies away from the press, but not the organizations he contributes to. “He’s a great cheerleader for the organizations he becomes involved with,” Henkes says. “He’s not a typical private, cloistered philanthropist.” In fact, Chris sits on the board of directors of these organizations he contributes to. Chris has described this involvement as “value-added giving,” allowing him to help Argosy-supported organizations distribute and use grants effectively. “Chris is one of those rare individuals who invests his time and money into his projects,” says Henkes.

In addition to issuing grants, Argosy sponsors and underwrites numerous annual events, including a gala for the Children’s Hospital Foundation of Wisconsin and a multi-city party for Camp Heartland, a camp for kids who are living with and affected by HIV-AIDS that was founded by a UW-Madison graduate.

Snell himself was drawn to the foundation because of its mission and relocation to Milwaukee. Formerly president of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Milwaukee, he is now able to help impact that organization on a different level, while sustaining other causes as well. “My job is to make it all a reality,” he says. “To flesh out the plans of the family and the foundation.”

Although Snell is the sole employee in the Milwaukee office, he stresses that the small scale of the operation is beneficial to its purpose. While the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, formerly the largest philanthropic organization in Milwaukee, employs a staff of 25, Snell says Argosy hopes to strike a greater balance and level of efficiency with a smaller staff – most likely hiring just five or six additional employees next year. “We run on a leaner scale,” he says. “And we’re in an infancy stage.”

Though many would think that Bradley and Argosy, along with other area organizations, such as the Richard and Ethel Herzfeld Foundation and the Milwaukee Foundation, would step on each other’s toes, Jim Marks, vice president of the Milwaukee Foundation, claims just the opposite is true. “We don’t see ourselves as competing with other organizations,” he says, adding that all of the foundations have a slightly different focus. While Argosy gives internationally to environmental, artistic and educational causes, the Milwaukee Foundation provides funding to all fields within a four-county area. But those differences aside, the high volume of philanthropic organizations in Milwaukee has the potential to make a phenomenal impact. In fact, Argosy and the Milwaukee Foundation are currently working together on an initiative for child welfare with several area organizations.

So as Argosy continues adjusting to its new location, it may also have to adjust to more attention than it’s used to. Buzz about the foundation is increasing and soon the Abele’s family secret may become common knowledge to residents of Milwaukee and the rest of the state. However, Snell knows that no matter what challenges come Argosy’s way, the core principle of the foundation will always prevail.

“Philanthropy is just wonderful,” Snell says. “It’s commendable, admirable and noble. And we’re just now coming alive.”

 

related information on CURB

related information on the Web

printer friendly format

Additional Argosy giving slideshow

art museum image
Chris Abele is a member-at-large of the Art Museum's Board of Directors, which enables him to guide the board in making decisions about where money contributed from the Argosy Foundation will be used. Photo by Patrick Osowski
theater image
A view inside the University of Wisconsin-
Milwaukee Theater. Chris Abele hopes that charitable contributions through the Argosy Foundation will bring the UWM theater program back to the days when it was ranked among the top ten in the country.
Photo by Patrick Osowski