About Our Donors

125,699

Individual Donors

86,013

First-time Donors

56K | 44.6%
Alumni

20.5K | 16.4%
Parents

44.5K | 35.4%
Friends

4.5K | 3.6%
Organizations

Unprecedented Growth

Total Campaign Dollars

1986-1991
1993-2000
2005-2012
2015-2024

Doubled the Annual Fund

$4.3M to $10.8M

Hilltop Society Membership

FY
2018
FY
2024

Group Fundraising
That Elevates

When an anonymous donor family pledged $1 million to Hendricks Chapel and issued a challenge to inspire other donors to match it, no one anticipated the extraordinary response for what is widely known as the spiritual heart of Syracuse University. The family promised an additional $1 million if the challenge could be met. By the end of the 2023-24 academic year, more than 2,500 donors had answered and raised more than $1.7 million. The challenge’s combined total exceeded $3.7 million for Hendricks Chapel.

Read about the Hendricks gift challenge
Hendricks Chapel in the winter

This outpouring of support is the direct result of the good work Hendricks Chapel does every day to foster belonging, friendship and acceptance within our campus community. It is truly in the spirit of Hendricks Chapel that so many who benefited from its programs made gifts to support a strong interfaith community for the next generation of students.”

— Chancellor Kent Syverud

Members of Delta Sigma Theta in front of the Hall of Languages

In September 2023, the Kappa Lambda chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. celebrated its 50th anniversary—and the culmination of a 10-year endowment campaign that raised a historic $1.2 million for the Our Time Has Come program.

The women of DST make a deep commitment to sisterhood, scholarship, service and social action. Their fundraising effort drew more than 300 donors from the historically Black Greek letter organization, 40 percent of whom gave to Syracuse for the first time.

Read about DST’s fundraising
Howard G. “Howie” Phanstiel ’70, G’71, H’22 and his wife, Louise Phanstiel

Philanthropy That Inspires

Syracuse University Life Trustee Howard G. “Howie” Phanstiel ’70, G’71, H’22 is a strong believer in giving back and creating opportunities for others. Phanstiel and his wife, Louise Phanstiel, a voting member of the Board of Trustees, established the Phanstiel Scholars program more than a decade ago to create opportunities for Syracuse students in their pursuit of academic excellence and community engagement. To date, more than 120 Phanstiel Scholars have been inspired to give back, be involved, and have a positive influence on others.

Read about the Phanstiels
Howard G. “Howie” Phanstiel ’70, G’71, H’22 and his wife, Louise Phanstiel
Jenna Poma ’25

Jenna Poma ’25, a policy studies and citizenship and civic engagement major in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, appreciates the Phanstiels’ belief in her and investment in her future. In turn, she’s been inspired to move outside her comfort zone—participating in clubs and organizations, taking on leadership roles and dedicating herself to her studies. As a member of Alpha Xi Delta sorority, Poma has been involved in numerous philanthropic activities which serve those in need in the local community. “Being a Phanstiel Scholar means accepting gifts graciously and committing to pay them forward. It means leaving the people and places you engage with better off with you having been there,” she says.

Our Donors:
Forever Inspired

Forever Orange was a campaign for everyone. From first-time donors and students making class gifts, to groups supporting favorite organizations and affinities, to transformational giving that changed the fabric of campus—we rallied around common goals like never before.

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A Legacy That Continues

The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications welcomed Donald E. Newhouse ’51 and his family back to Syracuse University in August 2024 to mark the school’s 60th anniversary with celebratory events highlighted by the renaming of the plaza between the school’s three buildings in the family’s honor. The owner of Advance Publications, Donald Newhouse is the patriarch of one of the first families of American publishing. Advance was founded by his father, Samuel I. Newhouse, in 1922.

On what is now the Newhouse Family Plaza, Donald Newhouse recounted how he observed a meeting in the late 1950s between his father and then-University Chancellor William P. Tolley during which the idea for the Newhouse School was conceived.

The Newhouse family is one of the University’s largest donors, including the $75 million pledge by the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation to the school in 2020. That pledge was the single largest gift in the University’s history, intended to ensure that Newhouse would remain the leading communications school in the world for another generation.

Read about the Newhouse legacy
Donald Newhouse delivers remarks during the 60th anniversary ceremony

I am fortunate to have the chance, in the same month that I celebrate my 95th birthday, to look back with overwhelming pride at the record of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. It is one of the great joys of my life.

— Donald Newhouse

Newhouse exterior during the 60th anniversary ceremony

Donald Newhouse delivers remarks during the 60th anniversary ceremony. (Photo by Malcolm Taylor ’26)

Generosity That Endures

Milton Hall with Chancellor Kent Syverud in the center

Generosity That Endures

Milton Hall with Chancellor Kent Syverud in the center

From meeting at new student convocation, to marrying after junior year and graduating together in 1951, Jack and Laura Milton were devoted to each other and to Syracuse throughout their lives. They supported many institutional priorities, giving to the Life Sciences Complex and Whitman School of Management. More recently, the Jack and Laura H. Milton Endowed Professorship in Arts and Sciences was established to recognize teaching and research excellence, and in 2024 chemistry professor Robert Doyle was named the inaugural endowed chair.

The Miltons devoted their time to Syracuse University as well, serving on the advisory boards at their respective schools and colleges. Jack was also a member of the Board of Trustees and a Life Trustee for many years.

After Laura’s passing in 2023 (Jack passed in 2015), a transformational gift from their estate conveyed a final act of love for their alma mater and commitment to its students. One of the largest unrestricted gifts in the university’s history, Jack and Laura’s legacy is forever connected to Syracuse and reflects their belief in our mission. In tribute to their enduring impact, the former apartment complex at 727 South Crouse Ave., a fully modernized space primarily home to second-year students, was renamed Milton Hall and dedicated on Sept. 28, 2024. Pictured above are Chancellor Kent Syverud and Dr. Ruth Chen with members of the Milton family.

Impact of
Planned Giving

Donors with the foresight to establish planned gifts weave their legacy into ours, supporting scholarships, faculty and research funds, athletics, capital projects, graduate fellowships and more.

1,260

donors made planned
gifts during the campaign

$393M

committed in planned gifts

You don’t have to be a megamillionaire to support a cause, to advance education and to support young people. You just have to decide what your priorities are—and then take action.

— Henrietta “Etta” Fielek ’70, G’77, donor and 1870 Society member