Langdale Trust
Grant for UK-registered charitable organisations carrying out medical, social welfare or youth projects.
Grant for UK-registered charitable organisations carrying out medical, social welfare or youth projects.
Grants are available to not-for-profit organisations that are working for the benefit of London inhabitants and which make London's communities stronger, more resilient and thriving.
Grant support for general charitable needs, ranging from disadvantaged in society and general welfare to culture and the arts.
Grants are available for registered charities undertaking education, arts or social welfare projects in the UK and/or Israel.
Grants are available to UK registered charities for a wide range of charitable purposes in Great Britain.
The Calmcott Trust offers grants to charitable organisations active in the UK, particularly Yorkshire.
The scheme is intended to support organisations undertaking projects in the following areas:
Applicants should note that the Trust does not maintain a website or an email address. The value of funding is at the discretion of the Trustees.
Applications must be made in writing to:
The George John and Sheilah Livanos Charitable Trust provides grants to chosen beneficiaries to support general charitable purposes.
Applications can be made at any time.
The Trust does not have a website or an email address.
Grants are available to registered charities in the UK for projects relating to education, the visual and performing arts, the relief of disability and severe illness, the preservation of buildings of architectural or historical significance and the accomodation of those in need.
This grants programme is intended to help the Arts Council achieve its mission of ‘Great art and culture for everyone’. It also provides a means to support a broad range of not-for-profit projects that create and sustain quality work and help people across England to engage with arts and culture.
The programme supports development by allowing artists, cultural practitioners and organisations to work in new ways and to get their work out to new audiences.
All organisations need to have a bank account in the organisation’s name, with two signatories.
The John Ellerman Foundation was set up in 1971 as a generalist grant-making trust. It is a 'responsive funder'.
The Foundation aims to advance the wellbeing of people, society and the natural world. Support is available for charitable work in the arts, environment and social action. The Foundation is keenly aware of the connections between these areas and their effects on each other and on people’s health and happiness.