The Annenberg Foundation was established in 1989 by Walter H. Annenberg, publisher and owner of major media outlets including Philadelphia Inquirer, TV Guide, Seventeen magazine, and several radio and television stations. The proceeds from the sale of these media holdings formed the Foundation’s endowment.
Walter Annenberg — who served as U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1969 to 1974 — began the family’s long tradition of philanthropy decades earlier with the founding of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania (1958) and what would become the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism (1971). His visionary giving included an exceptional collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art valued at $1 billion that he donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art; a landmark $500 million investment to improve public education across the United States; a $150 million gift to public broadcasting to create free college-level programming; and a $50 million grant to UNCF (formerly the United Negro College Fund) to support Historically Black Colleges and Universities.
Through the Annenberg Foundation, Ambassador Annenberg supported a wide range of cultural and civic causes, from presidential libraries and museums to orchestras, hospitals, and universities. Per the Ambassador’s wishes in the organization’s trust, the Foundation would continue in perpetuity as a family enterprise. After the Ambassador’s passing in 2002, his wife, Leonore, became Chairman while his daughter, Wallis Annenberg, and his grandchildren — Lauren Bon, Gregory Annenberg Weingarten, and Charles Annenberg Weingarten — joined the Board of Directors.
In 2009, following Leonore’s death, Wallis assumed the role of Chairman and the Foundation moved its headquarters from Philadelphia to Los Angeles. Under this new guidance, the Foundation deepened its focus on community-centered and inclusive philanthropy, investing in innovative projects that bring people together.
Wallis’ influence on the arts, education, animal welfare, environmental stewardship, and civic life — concentrated in the Los Angeles area — was profound. Her transformative initiatives included the Annenberg Space for Photography, a first-of-its-kind cultural destination celebrating the power of visual storytelling, and the Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica, a free cultural and recreational space open to the public. Her projects reflected a belief that philanthropy should be not only generous but generative. In 2024, President Joe Biden awarded the National Humanities Medal to Wallis in recognition of her vital contributions across arts, education, conservation, and civic life.
Following Wallis Annenberg’s passing in 2025, Lauren Bon, Gregory Annenberg Weingarten, and Charles Annenberg Weingarten assumed chairmanship of the Board of Directors of the Annenberg Foundation. Guiding this family foundation into a new era of creativity and purpose, they also remain committed to their own philanthropic initiatives. Together, they are reimagining what philanthropy can be — a force for healing, connection, and transformation.










































