Endowment & Building Projects
Gifts to the endowment and capital projects are powerful expressions of paying it forward for multiple generations. Here’s an introduction to how they work.
What type of gifts are these?
Unlike annual gifts—which can be any size and are put to work immediately—gifts to the endowment or capital projects are typically larger in size and have long-term impact. All new buildings and major renovations at Dartmouth are designed and constructed to serve faculty and students for many, many decades, if not longer. And endowed funds will serve our campus community in perpetuity.
Major Capital Projects
Dartmouth’s Campus Services department provides a comprehensive overview of the ongoing major capital projects, with up-to-date information on what’s currently happening in each building phase.
Hop Renovation and Expansion
The Hopkins Center for the Arts is undergoing its first major renovation, and the focus now is on raising more than $1.5 million for a programming endowment. With so many challenges in the world, our investment in the Hop recognizes the power of the arts to build empathy and forge connections when words fall short.
How do these gifts work?
Endowed Gifts
When a donor makes a gift to create an endowed fund, that fund is invested along with more than 6,925 other funds established over the past two and a half centuries. This pool forms Dartmouth’s endowment. Dartmouth invests and manages these funds collectively and spends a portion of the income earned each year. The endowment will support all future generations of students and faculty—for as long as there is a Dartmouth.
Building Projects
Alumni, families, and friends—individually or in groups, such as in collaboration with classmates—can make gifts of various sizes in support of construction and renovation projects, and often they can direct their giving to a specific space within the building. Named classrooms, labs, atriums, and other spaces are a public expression of support for a capital project. All new buildings are completed with a designated endowment for ongoing operations and maintenance.
More about Endowed Funds
Do these funds really last forever?
Yes. Consider Dartmouth’s oldest endowed fund, the John Phillips 1777H Professorship in Theology Fund, created in 1789 and still going strong. Phillips, a Dartmouth trustee and an honorary member of the Class of 1777, established the fund with a gift of £37, 10 shillings, and various tracts of woodland. Today, with a market value of approximately $700,000, the fund supports a professorship in the Department of Religion. The annual distribution is currently more than $35,000.
1789
Year the endowment was established
$693,800
Market value of the fund
as of April 30, 2024
$35,000
Estimated annual distribution