Acme-mccrary & Sapona Foundation Incorporated

Partially Accessible
Private Foundation
ASHEBORO, North CarolinaMicroEIN: 566047739
Community Service ClubsEducation NonprofitsHuman ServicesLibrariesYouth Development Organizations

The organization is a private foundation dedicated to supporting various charitable causes primarily in Randolph County, North Carolina. Its mission focuses on enhancing community services, education, and human services, with a commitment to supporting local organizations such as schools, crisis centers, and food kitchens. The foundation provides funding for annual funds, scholarships, and general operational support to nonprofits that serve vulnerable populations and promote youth development. Through its grants, it aims to foster community well-being and improve the quality of life for residents in its service area.

Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026

Ideal Applicant

A small-to-midsize Randolph County (Asheboro area) nonprofit focused on community service, education, youth development, or human services seeking operating or annual fund support and able to submit a mailed letter and demonstrate local impact.

Good Fit

  • Located in Randolph County or serving Asheboro-area residents
  • Request aligns with annual fund, operating support, scholarship, or general program needs
  • Can supply a clear one-page letter describing purpose and scope as requested
  • Has local credibility or relationships with other community nonprofits or United Way

Geography

Restrictive

Observed giving across three years is entirely in North Carolina and normally limited to Randolph County/Asheboro, with the latest year showing 100% in-state.

Recipient Variety

Broad

The foundation consistently made roughly 22–23 grants per year to many independent local nonprofits; dollar concentration exists (top five ~68%) but the count of distinct recipients is substantial.

New Applicants

Moderate

A public submission route exists (applicants are asked to mail a letter to a named contact and decisions are made annually), but behavioral evidence shows low turnover—no new grantees in the latest year and the same 22 recipients returning—so new entrants are possible but likely face a relationship-driven selection process.

Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026