This is STAGING. For front-end user testing and QA.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy logo

News

Chronicle of Philanthropy Founder Has Died

July 29, 2019 | Read Time: 5 minutes

Corbin Gwaltney founded the Chronicle of Higher Education and the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

Chronicle archive photo
Corbin Gwaltney founded the Chronicle of Higher Education and the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

Dear Reader,

People who make the Chronicle of Philanthropy part of their day often want to know more about how we do our work. Beyond the talent and dedication of my colleagues, the secret of our excellence comes from the backing of Corbin Gwaltney, an insightful editor and entrepreneurial leader. For more than three decades, he offered our editorial team freedom and resources to do what we thought served our readers best and gave our business colleagues a mandate to respect our editorial independence.

Corbin died Monday at age 97. He always kept a low profile so few people know that Corbin’s creation of the organization that publishes the Chronicle is a story of how philanthropy works at its best.

As an alumni-magazine editor at the Johns Hopkins University in the 1960s, Corbin realized that people on the campuses knew little about what was happening beyond their institutions, an especially worrisome void given the tumult the nation’s colleges and universities were facing. That led him to seek foundation grants to create a newspaper, and over the years the Carnegie Corporation of New York and Ford Foundation and a handful of other grant makers became substantial backers of the Chronicle of Higher Education.


ADVERTISEMENT

COP front page

Chronicle photo by Erica Lusk

Corbin was fiercely independent, rejecting any meddling in the content of what the Chronicle published and several times sent money back to foundations that sought to influence the newspaper’s coverage. (Carnegie’s then-president, Alan Pifer, was so impressed with Corbin’s unwillingness to bend that he sent the money back with instructions to use it however the Chronicle thought best.)

Soon the Chronicle was able to find ways to earn enough revenue to leave nonprofit status. As the Chronicle of Higher Education Inc. was more than able to support one newspaper, Corbin decided the company should start another publication, so in the late 1980s he asked Phil Semas, then his managing editor, to take a leave of absence to explore whether the nonprofit world needed the same kind of journalistic coverage as higher education. Philanthropy had long fascinated him, and its importance had been reinforced by those early Carnegie and Ford grants that nurtured the Chronicle of Higher Education.

Today, people in philanthropy would call this a case study in social entrepreneurship. But back then, Ford and Carnegie probably didn’t expect that their grants would provide the seeds for the two most important publications on higher education and the nonprofit world.

Corbin urged us to provide fair and accurate journalism, and he never held us back from publishing pieces about abuses at foundations and nonprofits. But he took most pleasure from our articles and tools that helped organizations do more to advance the common good.


ADVERTISEMENT

He also wanted the Chronicle to offer inspiration. That’s why he created a column we have published from our very first issue — the “Face of Philanthropy,” which always features a striking photo depicting an innovative nonprofit. For many years, it was splashed across two tabloid-size pages; today it often stretches across our website’s home page.

Many of our readers today face similarly daunting challenges, and it is your motivation to make the world better every day that persuaded Corbin to found the Chronicle. He was a change-maker, just like all of you.

Corbin believed this feature would remind readers about the power of philanthropy to change lives. He changed all of ours at the Chronicle — and in turn yours. In his memory, we have posted some of our favorite “Face of Philanthropy” features for you to view as we pause to mark the contributions to the nonprofit world of a remarkable man, Corbin Gwaltney.

Stacy Palmer, Editor

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.