2008/2009
Charities
 
How to Use
This Catalogue

1998/1999 Charities
  1. Alliance for Animals
  2. Amherst Writers & Artists Press
  3. Artists For Humanity
  4. Arts in Progress
  5. Arts Worcester
  6. Association to Preserve Cape Cod
  7. BELL Foundation
  8. Boston Living Center
  9. Boston Natural Areas Network
  10. Boston Preservation Alliance
  11. Boston Urban Youth Foundation
  12. Bostonian Society
  13. Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro West
  14. Brain Injury Association of Massachusetts (formerly Massachusetts Brain Injury Association
  15. The Bridge Center (formerly Handi-Kids)
  16. Cambridge Community Services
  17. Care Center
  18. CASA Project, Inc.
  19. Center for Coastal Studies
  20. Center for Living & Working (CLW)
  21. Center for Teen Empowerment
  22. Charles River Watershed Association
  23. Children's Health Program
  24. Children's Legal Services
  25. Community Servings
  26. Community Survival Center
  27. Council For Responsible Genetics
  28. Enchanted Circle Theater
  29. Environmental League of Massachusetts
  30. Family Service
  31. Family-to-Family Project
  32. Firehouse Center for the Arts
  33. Greenwood Music Camp
  34. Haley House
  35. Hitchcock Center for the Environment
  36. Hospice & Palliative Care Federation of Massachusetts
  37. House of Seven Gables Settlement Association
  38. Impact
  39. International Medical Equipment Collaborative
  40. Jane Doe Inc.
  41. Kenneth B. Schwartz Center
  42. Lighthouse Preservation Society
  43. Literacy Volunteers of Massachusetts
  44. Lloyd Center for the Environment
  45. Lowell Parks & Conservation Trust
  46. Lower Cape Outreach Council
  47. Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences
  48. Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions
  49. Massachusetts Immigrant & Refugee Advocacy Coalition
  50. Massachusetts Recycling Coalition
  51. Merrimack Valley Food Bank
  52. Mobius
  53. Museum of African American History
  54. My Turn
  55. National Center on Family Homelessness
  56. National Voting Rights Institute
  57. The Nature Connection (Formerly Animals as Intermediaries)
  58. Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship
  59. New Bedford Oceanarium
  60. New England Steamship Foundation
  61. New England Wild Flower Society
  62. New England Wildlife Center
  63. New Repertory Theatre
  64. NTSAD Association
  65. Opera Boston
  66. Outdoor Explorations
  67. Parents Helping Parents
  68. Pilgrim Hall Museum
  69. Preservation Massachusetts (formerly Historic Massachusetts)
  70. Project Place
  71. Provincetown Art Association and Museum
  72. Quabbin Mediation
  73. Reach Out and Read
  74. Regional Environmental Council
  75. Salem Sound Coastwatch
  76. SATELLIFE: Communicating To Save Lives
  77. Second Nature
  78. Teens Against Gang Violence
  79. Thoreau Farm Trust
  80. Underground Railway Theater
  81. Verité
  82. Vilna Shul, Boston's Center for Jewish Culture
  83. Visiting Nurse Association of Cape Cod Foundation
  84. Wellspring House
  85. Why Me & Sherry's House
  86. Woman's Friend Society
  87. Worcester Women's History Project
  88. YouthNet
  89. YWCA of Cambridge

All Charities
 

New England Wild Flower Society

CONTACT:

180 Hemenway Rd.
Framingham, MA 01701-2699
508-877-7630
www.newenglandWILD.org

Debbi Edelstein, Executive Director

Donate Now to New England Wild Flower Society

DESCRIPTION:

Plant conservation is basic for biodiversity, because all food chains begin with plants.

NEWFS is the oldest plant conservation organization in the United States, founded in 1900, and is today the leading steward of New England's 3,000 native plants, including 500 rare species. Its Framingham headquarters, "Garden in the Woods," is the largest landscaped collection of wildflowers in the Northeast; it was founded in 1931, the first botanic garden dedicated to native plant research for conservation purposes. You can see more rare plants there than most botanists see in the wild in a lifetime.

In 1990 it created the New England Plant Conservation Program (NEPCoP), an alliance of 68 government agencies and private conservation organizations, working to end the plant endangerment crisis in New England. NEPCoP is a leading model for cost-effective plant conservation nationwide. In one of the largest native plant education programs in the country, NEWFS promotes and teaches plant conservation to many thousands of people each year throughout New England in courses, field trips, garden tours, teacher training, and family programs. Massachusetts has 250 rare and endangered plant species, and about 30 professional botanists to care for them part-time. NEWFS has trained plant conservation volunteers — to help protect our plants. Donations are needed to increase and enhance this innovative model Program.

(1998: NATURE: Biodiversity)

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