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Engineers Build The Future.
Help Us Build Theirs.

The ASME Foundation supports next generation engineers through proven and powerful programs that address every stage of an engineer’s journey, from early inspiration and learning to career engagement and the development of life-changing innovations that improve quality of life.

By joining one of the ASME Foundation’s Giving Societies, you build an enduring legacy and empower the next generation of engineers. Your gift supports ASME Foundation programs that inspire ideas, ignite passion, and develop future engineering leaders.

Change Makers Circle

Established in 2024, the Change Makers Circle is a giving society named for donors who are committed to supporting change through monthly sustainer giving.

Robert Appleby
William Bobco
David Bradfield
Susan Ipri Brown
Gretchen Crutchfield
Jamie Gonzalez
Nicole Dyess
Dorothy Keskitalo
Richard Kovacs
A.J. McPhate
Keith Miles
James Peterson
Ryan Reardon
Karen Russo
Anand Sethupathy
Mary Grace Stefanchik
James Strunk
David Wright

The Thomas Edison Society ($250–$999)

Established in 2019, The Edison Society is named in honor of America’s greatest inventor, pioneer of innovation, and member of ASME, Thomas Alva Edison. Comprised of ASME members who provide unrestricted gifts of $250 or more during a single fiscal year to the ASME Foundation.

James Amy
Javid Bayandor
Kenneth Bean
Tamara Reid Bush
Brittany Coats
Stephanie Cone
Eugene Farrell
E. Burrell Fisher
Jacques Giovanola
Michele J. Grimm
Rebecca Heise
Matthew Mallet
Sanford Nobel
J David Powell
Robert Skaggs
Shannon Stott
Jennifer Wayne
Carla Winsor

The Alexander Holley Society ($1,000)

The Alexander Holley Society was established in 2011 in honor of Alexander Lyman Holley (1832–1882), a mechanical engineer who helped found ASME and revolutionized steel production in the United States. It recognizes the leadership of individuals who make an annual commitment of $1,000 or more to the ASME Foundation.

Jason Feldman
Roger Heeden
Regina Hoffmann
Catherine Klapperich
Roxanne Laney
Grace O’Connell
Rick Swayne
Justin Young

The Lewis Howard Latimer Society ($10,000–$24,999)

Inventor and engineer Lewis Howard Latimer was born to parents who had fled slavery. Latimer learned the art of mechanical drawing while working at a patent firm. Over the course of his career as a draftsman, Latimer worked closely with Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell, in addition to designing his own inventions.

Sasha Stone
Sheldon Sheps
Summer Biomechanics, Bioengineering, and Biotransport Conference

The Lillian Moller Gilbreth Society ($25,000–$99,999)

One of the first female engineers, Lillian Moller Gilbreth worked with her husband, Frank, to invent ‘time and motion study,’ analyzing ways to make industrial processes, office tasks, and housework more efficient, reduce human error, and enhance the safety and satisfaction of workers. Gilbreth became the first female engineering professor at Purdue University. In 1965, Gilbreth was the first woman elected to the National Academy of Engineering.

Susan Ipri-Brown
Balwant Khurana
Melissa & Jeffrey Patterson

The James Watt Society ($100,000–$499,999)

James Watt was a Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer, and chemist who improved on Thomas Newcomen’s 1712 Newcomen steam engine in 1776, which was fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both his native Great Britain and the rest of the world.

Zdenek Bazant
Richard Goldstein
Edward Grood
Keith & Elizabeth Roe

The Kate Gleason Society ($500,000–$999,999)

Known for several engineering and business firsts including: first female member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, first female president of a national bank, first woman appointed as the receiver of a bankrupt company and first female member of the American Concrete Institute. She was the first woman to be admitted to study engineering at Cornell University.

The George Westinghouse Society ($1m+)

George Westinghouse is best known for inventing an air brake system that made railroads safer and promoting alternating current technology, which revolutionized the world’s light and power industries. George Westinghouse was one of the most prolific inventors and businessmen of the Industrial Revolution. After serving in the Union Army and Navy, he patented several devices, particularly for railroads. He would eventually start the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company to improve alternating current (AC) power generators.

John Swanson

Thank You!

Your support of the ASME Foundation helps build a better future for all of us. Together, we are empowering the innovative problem-solvers of tomorrow.

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