| When
Floyd and Delores Jones met in 1951, Delores had already graduated
from the UW. Floyd, back from serving in the military, had just
enrolled. But when they decided to make a major gift to the University
years later, they did so as they do most things: together.
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Floyd
and Delores Jones. Photo by Nancy Joseph. |
The Joneses are establishing
the College’s first chair in the arts with a $1 million gift.
The chair will rotate among the College’s academic arts units
—art, dance, drama, DXARTS, and music—on a three- year
basis.
Why give to the arts when their majors were in sociology and economics?
“We think the arts enhance the community and the world,”
explains Floyd. “And we felt the arts really needed the support.”
That the Joneses can make such a gift
is a story in itself. Floyd’s parents were poor sharecroppers
in Missouri, and he was the eleventh of twelve kids. Not exactly
a silver spoon situation. He was the first in his family to finish
high school and the first to graduate college. He became an investment
broker and discovered he was a natural, making millions for himself
and his clients through the years. After 51 years, he still loves
the work and heads into the office each day.
“Going into the army got me the G.I. Bill, and that made all
things possible—my education, my career,” says Floyd.
“I owe a lot to the G.I. Bill.”
The Joneses met at an engagement party—Floyd’s friend
was marrying Delores’s roommate—and never looked back.
“Delores came with a date,” Floyd recalls. “I
asked her to dance anyway, and she obliged. We just fit on that
dance floor. It was amazing. I proposed we go on a date, and she
agreed.”
Floyd’s friend could see that Floyd was smitten and let everyone
know it. “Out at the army base, his friend was telling everyone
I was in love with Floyd and just didn’t know it yet,”
says Delores with a laugh.
That same year, Floyd was released from the military and arrived
at the UW to complete his last two years of college. (He had finished
two years at Humboldt State University in California before joining
the army.) He juggled classes, a job at Boeing—building production
tools in the woodshop on the graveyard shift—and, of course,
romancing Delores.
“I lost an awful lot of sleep working the graveyard shift
and courting this lady on weekends, while I was going to the University,”
he says. The couple married in 1953, and Floyd graduated the following
year.
While Floyd was in school, Delores began working for the King County
welfare department as a social worker, a job that weighed heavily
on her. “I found out that I really hated not being able to
help people,” she says. “To be effective, I needed to
leave those cases at the office. But I couldn’t. It was difficult
for me.”
Delores’s compassion may have been a problem at work, but
it has led to a life filled with philanthropy. Delores and Floyd,
always generous supporters of non-profits, set up the Floyd and
Delores Jones Foundation in 1986 to increase their giving. To date,
the foundation has donated in excess of $4 million, including major
gifts to KCTS-TV, Virginia Mason Medical Center, and, of course,
the University of Washington.
“Supporting what we consider good causes in our community
is important to us,” says Floyd. “We’d been giving
to the University of Washington every year for years. We decided
it was time to make a larger gift.”
The Joneses considered giving through a planned annuity, which provides
income to them during their lifetime, but then decided they didn’t
need the income and are giving an outright gift instead. “I
was just a little cautious at first,” says Floyd.
It was Floyd’s idea—borrowed from New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg—
to make the chair a rotating position, which moves to a different
department every three years. “I read that Michael Bloomberg
had given Harvard a rotating gift and thought it was a great idea,”
says Floyd. “We like the idea of supporting all of the arts.”
Thanks to the University’s matching gift fund, the University
was able to
provide a 50 percent match to the Jones’s $1 million gift,
netting an additional $500,000 for the endowment.
The Joneses are thrilled to support the UW, and the arts, in this
way. “We are very thankful for our ability to do this,”
says Floyd. “It is a dream come true for us."
[Winter-Spring 2005 - Table of Contents]
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