Emma B. Howe was the sixth of thirteen children. She grew up in a log cabin, on a twenty-acre farm in Wisconsin that barely supported her family. In 1915, she hired on as a proofreader for W.R. Hotchkiss, founder of Deluxe Check Printers in the Twin Cities, and worked there for twenty-three years. Deluxe became a Fortune 500 company, and Emma became its largest individual shareholder.
 
When she died in 1984 in a nursing home, few suspected that she left an estate of $22 million. She directed that, upon her death, the company stock be used to create a foundation "to aid children, the poor and the handicapped and to support medical research, health services, education, and civic improvements." The Emma B. Howe Memorial Foundation was established in 1985 as a supporting organization of The Minneapolis Foundation.
 
In 2004, with assets of more than $45 million, it became a fund of The Minneapolis Foundation and continues today as a living testament to the compassion and vision of Emma Howe. The Fund supports organizations statewide serving children, the poor, and people with disabilities, in addition to medical research and civic improvement.
 
From its inception through May 2009, the Emma B. Howe Memorial Foundation has approved $42,823,500 in grants.
 
 
 
 
 
Emma B. Howe

 
 
The Minneapolis Foundation is Confirmed in Compliance with National Standards for U.S. Community Foundations.

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