| History
During the 1940s and 1950s, Jack and Jill of America raised large
sums of money for various charities involving children. Initially,
Jack and Jill of America national and its local chapters primarily
supported health issues affecting children. Jack and Jill gave
$85,000 to the Rheumatic Fever Foundation to find a cure for Infantile
Paralysis, what has since been re-named Poliomelitis; and underwrote
"A Parent's Guide: When a Child is Mentally Ill" for
the National Association of Mental Health.
However, as significant as the Jack and Jill of America contributions
had been, none of their officers were afforded representation
on the boards of these recipient foundations. Jack and Jill had
no input into the policy-making of the foundations, and rarely
received itemized accounts of the expenditure of its donations.
By the 1960s, with young African Americans protesting with sit-ins
and boycotts, and with a flickering light seen dimly at the end
of the tunnel, Jack and Jill of America paused to examine its
policies and their implementation. So evolved the idea of its
own charitable foundation--one which would come to grips with
and be relevant to the contemporary problems facing our children
today. And further, the foundation would be an organization that
would accept our input, both financially and service-wise, while
allowing us to utilize the wealth of expertise and knowledge throughout
Jack and Jill of America, Inc.
In 1968, Jack and Jill of America, Inc. became the first among
African-American organizations to create a philanthropic arm dedicated
to the betterment of children, especially African-American children. |
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