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Associated Black Charities





The William H. and Camille O. Cosby
Philanthropic Award


William H.  CosbyCamille O. Cosby With the agreement of William H. and Camille O. Cosby, Associated Black Charities has established The William H. and Camille O. Cosby Philanthropic Award to recognize philanthropic participation by an African American or, in selected instances, a non-African American, who, in any given year, most exemplifies the Cosby's philosophy or notion of philanthropy in service of improved education and health and human services to less fortunate African Americans.

The purpose of The William H. and Camille O. Cosby Philanthropic Award is expected to help focus the need of financially capable African Americans, in addition to their traditional giving to religious institutions, to engage in planned, endowment and other forms of tax advantageous giving.

Associated with The William H. and Camille O. Cosby Philanthropic Award will be a cash grant to finance a leading-edge, innovative study or project designed to advance educational progress and understanding of health and human service issues affecting African American participation in American society.

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The first recipient of The William H. and Camille O. Cosby Philanthropic Award is Willie Gary.

Willie GaryWillie Gary's life is truly an authentic American Horatio Alger story -- a rags to riches drama, underpinned by the unshakable notion of the indispensability of education as the key to personal progress -- that unfolded onto a national stage from which took place Mr. Gary's transformation from migrant to multi-millionaire and philanthropist.

One of 11 children born to Turner and Mary Gary in Eastman, Georgia he was raised in migrant farm communities in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. Mr. Gary leveraged an unwavering desire to be educated and his all-state caliber football skills to become a legal "Giant Killer" after graduation from Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina and North Carolina Central University in Durham where he earned a Juris Doctorate in 1974.

Returning to his migrant roots in Stuart, Florida, Mr. Gary gained admittance to the Florida Bar and, with his wife Gloria, opened the first black law firm in Martin County which is now the national legal services firm of Gary, Williams, Parenti, Finney, Lewis, McManus, Watson & Sperando.
With the same focused determination and steadfastness of purpose that stoked his fire for education, Mr. Gary plied his legal skills in representing little known clients against major corporations to win some of the biggest jury awards in U.S. legal history. The financial rewards from his professional work provided Mr. Gary the means to pursue his deeper humanitarian interests in a more direct fashion.

With an ingrained sense of the value of education in transforming one's life for the better, Mr. Gary, recalling his own humble beginnings and observing the deprivation and the wasting away of the fertile but undeveloped talent of African American youth, became committed to enhancing the lives of young children through education.

In pursuit of the goal of providing educational opportunity to African American youth, Willie and Gloria Gary, with the theme "Education is Power," contributed $10 million to Shaw University, his undergraduate alma mater. Additional gifts of $100,000 each to Bethune Cookman College, Edward Waters College, Florida Memorial College and Seminary School at Lynchburg followed.

While continuing to build his law practice and businesses that today include MBC, the Atlanta-based national cable network that is the first ever 24-hour cable channel devoted to wholesome programming focused on America's urban viewers, Mr. Gary also expanded his humanitarian interests and philanthropy with the creation of the Gary Foundation.

In addition to drug prevention, the Gary Foundation provides scholarships and other assistance to stimulate and promote educational achievement among African American youth. Mr. Gary has assured the continuation of interest in philanthropic activity through the active involvement of his wife, Gloria, and sons Kenneth, Sekou, Ali, and Kobie, in the Gary Foundation.

 

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