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The Foster Foundation was established in 1984 by Albert O. Foster,
his wife Evelyn and son Michael to provide an ongoing avenue of
support for the people and communities of the Pacific Northwest.
The founders, who had participated in the economic and cultural
growth of the region, wanted to enable future generations to grow
and thrive here—to advance their education, to become self-reliant
and to share their happiness and hope with their children and their
children’s children.
The Foster family’s success story dates back to 1938 when
Albert Foster co-founded Foster & Marshall Inc., a stock brokerage
firm. At the time, the country was making great strides to recover
from the Great Depression. Albert, a 1928 graduate of the School
of Business at the University of Washington, envisioned great business
opportunities in the Northwest. He set out to make his mark by “peddling
municipal bonds out of a saddle bag.” The financial framework
of the city of Seattle was being rewritten and Albert knew his
signature would be on it.
At the same time, the arts and cultural scene in Seattle was beginning
to develop into the rich tapestry it is today. Albert and Evelyn
Foster were among those pioneering spirits who created and contributed
to several cultural institutions in the city. Albert was the founding
president of the Seattle Opera Association. Evelyn was for seven
years the personal secretary to Seattle Art Museum founder, Dr.
Richard Fuller. It was an association with the museum that began
in the 1920s and continued until her death in 2002.
Michael Foster inherited his father’s savvy business sense
and took it to the next level. In 1972, when Albert stepped down
as chief executive of the brokerage business, Michael took over
the company. He orchestrated an ambitious plan to expand the business
by opening offices in numerous locations throughout the Pacific
Northwest—the geographic area now embraced by The Foster
Foundation. Under Michael’s leadership, in the space of ten
years, the company grew to become the largest regional brokerage
firm in the Pacific Northwest. In 1982, the company was sold to
American Express.
Although the founding members have all passed away—Albert
in 1986, Evelyn in 2002 and Michael in 2003, their spirit of involvement
in the well-being and future of the Pacific Northwest lives on
in the philanthropic work of the Foundation.
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