Jc And Jewel Mcmullen Charitable
This organization is a private foundation dedicated to charitable giving, with a mission focused on supporting various social causes. It primarily funds initiatives related to religious charitable works, food assistance for the needy, and support for vulnerable populations such as homeless children, victims of domestic violence, and military veterans. The foundation demonstrates a commitment to improving community welfare through grants aimed at providing housing, medical care, and educational support. While its funding is concentrated in Georgia, it also supports organizations in other states, reflecting a broader commitment to charitable efforts beyond its immediate geographical area.
Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026
Ideal Applicant
Small or local charities—especially Georgia-based direct service organizations (homeless shelters, food banks, youth programs, faith-based groups)—with an existing relationship or local referral and a need for modest grants.
Good Fit
- • Located in Georgia or serving Georgia communities.
- • Provides direct services like homeless sheltering, food distribution, youth after-school programming, or similar local relief work.
- • Has an existing connection or referral to the foundation or to current grantees.
- • Seeks modest, one-time operational or program support rather than large multi-year funding.
Geography
Giving is heavily concentrated in the foundation's home state (about 82% of dollars) but grants in the latest year still reached recipients across seven states, indicating a state-focused but not strictly single-city footprint.
Recipient Variety
The latest year shows 18 distinct recipients and prior years show 27–34 distinct recipients, so the foundation funds many independent charities across a range of purposes, but the set appears to be a stable, repeating group rather than a very broad open portfolio.
New Applicants
The foundation's own materials indicate it only funds preselected applicants, and in the latest year no new recipients were added (all 18 were returning grantees); combined with no public website or contact route, this strongly suggests unsolicited new entrants have low likelihood of getting funded.
Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026
