Roy T Morgan Foundation Incorporated
The Roy T. Morgan Foundation is a private foundation dedicated to supporting programs and services for children with physical limitations and disabilities, specifically those aged infant through 21. Its mission emphasizes enhancing the quality of life for these children through various initiatives, including early intervention services, therapeutic programs, and educational support. The foundation primarily funds organizations that provide adaptive equipment, therapeutic activities, and community resources aimed at improving the well-being of children with disabilities. Its grantmaking reflects a strong commitment to disability advocacy, youth development, and health-related initiatives.
Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026
Ideal Applicant
A Rhode Island or nearby Massachusetts nonprofit serving children (infant through 21) with physical disabilities or developmental needs, requesting project-specific support for adaptive equipment, early intervention, therapeutic programs, or youth development services.
Good Fit
- • Program specifically serves children with physical disabilities or developmental delays.
- • Located in Rhode Island or nearby Massachusetts or demonstrates direct service to RI residents.
- • Request is for programmatic costs tied to adaptive equipment, early intervention, therapeutic services, or documented youth programs.
- • Can provide 501(c)(3) proof, clear program history, measurable outcomes, and a program-specific budget.
- • Has local credibility or existing relationship with the foundation or known local intermediaries.
Geography
Observed grants are concentrated in Rhode Island (roughly 62% of dollars) with additional grants in neighboring Massachusetts, showing a state/regional footprint rather than a broad national reach.
Recipient Variety
The latest year shows funding to about 11 distinct independent recipients and similar counts in prior years, indicating a moderate spread of grantees; however, financial concentration toward the top five recipients (73% of dollars) is notable.
New Applicants
Direct evidence of turnover is limited: most grantees are recurring across three years (10 repeat recipients) and only one new recipient appeared in the latest year, but the foundation publishes formal proposal instructions, a January 31 deadline, and a mailed contact route—so new entrants can apply but face low odds compared with recurring grantees.
Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026
