Benj and Jessica launched a nonprofit. Follow our journey as we built a 501(c)(3) and a web site, and now usher in an endless stream of worthy charity nominees and monthly grant winners!
We have good news about May winner Sea Change OBX, right after this quick update...
Give me a holler
I don't get a chance to hear from my "customers" very often. We're 100% online with all transactions taking place over a web site. There's no real opportunities for face-to-face personal banter, which would be helpful to know what I'm doing right and what I could do better. If you have ideas for improving Charitocracy and/or recruiting more donors, whether they hit you today or months from now, don't be shy! Get in touch and let's chat about it. Thanks!
May 2021 winner Sea Change OBX
Yesterday we named Charitocracy OBX's 8th monthly winner! Congratulations to Sea Change OBX, nominated by donor jennagwaltney. This is their second win! Sea Change dominated the national vote back in February 2020. They work directly with the Outer Banks Latino community to promote education and encourage cross-cultural understanding. You can find their website here.
Now you have a few more days to sweeten the pot with a special one-time donation of any amount, which we'll add straight to the check we write to Sea Change OBX.
So finally check out this short video. It's in Spanish, but you can turn on English captions. It's a call for recipes for the bilingual Latino cookbook they're working on, and which Charitocracy's grants will help fund. Then take a moment to feel good about your part in our collective $500+ grant to help with their ongoing work!
Have a great June and be sure to log into Charitocracy OBX to update your votes or nominate a new cause!
Next in our series of posts about new Charitocracy OBX nominees, we have nominee Pea Island Preservation Society, nominated by donor boldpath. They preserve and interpret the history of The Pea Island Life Saving Station and the only African American keeper in the USLSS, Richard Etheridge and African Americans of Roanoke Island. You can find their web site here.
A few words on Charitocracy
Firstly, for newcomers: here's how it works. Donors pool their monthly contributions, as little as $1. The cause with the most votes each month wins the pot. No matter how much or how little you contribute, each donor at Charitocracy gets one vote. This is where charity meets democracy. So please share this post (see social sharing icons at top of post) and ask your friends to join us and vote! That's how we spread the word and, as a result, grow the monthly pot. The bigger the pot, the bigger our positive impact on the world!
About nominee Pea Island Preservation Society
The Pea Island Cookhouse Museum is located in the town of Manteo on Roanoke Island in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Commonly called the Cookhouse Museum, the museum is housed in the original cookhouse building that was part of the Pea Island Lifesaving Station. In 2006, the cookhouse was moved to Sir Walter Raleigh Street at Collins Park, a small park a few blocks opposite downtown Manteo. After renovating the cookhouse, in 2008 the Cookhouse Museum was opened to commemorate and remember the dedication and service that the black lifesavers of the Pea Island Lifesaving Station contributed to the history of America.
In 1880, Richard Etheridge, a former slave born on Roanoke Island who was taught to read and write and who had also served with Colored Troops during the Civil War, was named the Keeper of the Station. Under Etheridge’s leadership the crew of the Pea Island Lifesaving Station performed hundreds of rescues in some of the most treacherous of seas along the coastal United States, an area referred to as the “Graveyard of the Atlantic” for the many ships that sank there. The station is most known for the October 11, 1896, rescue of the entire nine member crew of the three-masted schooner the E.S. Newman when the vessel caught in a terrifying storm was blown 100 miles south off course and came ashore two miles south of the Pea Island station. Albeit some one hundred years later, in 1996 Richard Etheridge and his crew were posthumously awarded the Gold Lifesaving Medal for this rescue, a rescue that has been documented as one of the most heroic rescues in U.S. Coast Guard history.
Following the death of Richard Etheridge in 1900, the Pea Island station was continually manned by African American Keepers and crew members until the station was decommissioned in 1947. Besides the legacy of Richard Etheridge and his crew, the museum also honors the service of other blacks who followed in their footsteps and served at the station until it closed. These additional men, including Keepers Benjamin Bowser, Lewis Wescott, William Irving, George Pruden, Maxie Berry, Sr., and Surfman Herbert Collins, the last Surfman to remain at the station before it closed, helped Pea Island to continually earn the reputation as one of the best stations along the coastal Outer Banks for the duration of its existence.
So check out this video about the Pea Island Cookhouse Museum and the brave African American men it commemorates, then please visit the page of Pea Island Preservation Society to vote for, like, or discuss this cause!
We have good news about April winner Hatteras Island Wildlife Rehabilitation, right after this quick update...
Over $75,000 granted
It's still early days over here at Charitocracy OBX. But on the national Charitocracy USA site, we've been nominating, voting, and granting awards for 56 months now! It all adds up, and we just crossed a nice big milestone.
If ever you wonder how a contribution of just $1 can have an impact, remember that we're multiplying it both across time and across our now over 300 active donors. While most donations are $1 per month, there are enough Charitocracy donors among us fortunate enough to be able to donate more that we average about $4 per month per donor. If you'd like to help increase our monthly pot size, and get us to the $100,000 mark sooner, it's really easy to increase your donation amount! But the best way to get there is always inviting more donors (and thus more voters!) into the mix.
April 2021 winner Hatteras Island Wildlife Rehabilitation
Yesterday we named Charitocracy OBX's 7th monthly winner! Congratulations to Hatteras Island Wildlife Rehabilitation, nominated by donor John Towler. They are an all-volunteer 501c3 dedicated to the treatment and care of the island's ill and injured wildlife. You can find their website here.
Now you have a few more days to sweeten the pot with a special one-time donation of any amount, which we'll add straight to the check we write to HIWR. We've already received one pot sweetener, thanks!
So finally check out this video showing a rescued Bald Eagle in Camden County. Then take a moment to feel good about your part in our collective $510+ grant to help with their ongoing work!