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Thursday, August 22, 2013

The Christian Herald

The Christian Herald Newspaper is part of the Bowery Mission...offices on Madison Avenue in Manhattan...

 Here is their report on the internet:

Christian Herald Housing Development Fund Corporation

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Also Known As: The Bowery Mission Transitional Center, related to The Bowery Mission (Christian Herald Association)
132 Madison Avenue 
New York,  NY  10016

GENERAL INFORMATION

  • This organization is a 501(c)(3) Public Charity.
  • This organization is required to file an IRS Form 990 or 990-EZ.
  • Financial information in this report is derived from the organization's June 30, 2011 Form 990.

Web Site

www.bowery.org

Chief Executive Profile

Ed Morgan is President of Christian Herald Association, which operates New York's Bowery Mission and Kids With A Promise. Christian Herald was founded in 1879 as a weekly New York newspaper and has had a major role in faith-based New York charity for 129 years. Appointed to his present post in 1993, Mr. Morgan spent 20 years as a General Electric communications executive serving many of its top officers in New York, Washington and Stamford (CT) before coming to Christian Herald. He holds degrees from Rutgers University and the University of Illinois (MS, Journalism) and served as a U.S. Air Force officer during Vietnam. During his tenure, the organization has focused on a results-oriented purpose statement, tripled donations in the last ten years, raised its visibility in New York, operated a top-performing Department of Homeless Services contract, and launched After-School Centers in the boroughs as a supplement to its 114-year old Mont Lawn summer camp program. Recently the organization opened a new Women's Center on Manhattan?s Upper East Side. During its 129 years, the Bowery Mission has served more than 21 million meals to New York's homeless, offered hundreds of thousands of nights of shelter and seen thousands of lives transformed through its highly-regarded residential programs.

MISSION AND PROGRAMS

Mission

Christian Herald Housing Development Fund Corporation is related to The Bowery Mission & Kids With A Promise (Christian Herald Association), whose mission is to minister in New York City to men, women, and children caught in the cycles of poverty, hopelessness and dependencies of many kinds, and to see their lives transformed to hope, joy, lasting productivity and spiritual wholeness.

Programs

Program:
Budget: NaN
Category:
Population Served:

Program Description:

Christian Herald Housing Development Fund Corporation operates The Bowery Mission Transitional Center, a residential recovery program for 77 homeless men, under a contract with the City of New York's Department of Homeless Services.


For more about the Bowery Mission...

 

Our History in Brief


Skip ahead to:
1890s-1950s:  A Global Reach
1940s-1990s:  Years of Change 
1994 - present:  A Renewed Focus 
1878-1895:  The Early Years

The red doors of The Bowery Mission
Christian Herald traces its roots back to 1878 when Joseph Spurgeon, cousin of the great British preacher Charles H. Spurgeon, sailed to New York City to establish an American version of the British weekly, Christian Herald and Signs of Our Times.

The newspaper slowly but steadily increased in circulation, thanks primarily to the heavy doses of topnotch preachers such as Spurgeon and T. DeWitt Talmadge, thorough reporting and the application of scriptural principles to current events.

In 1890, Dr. Louis Klopsch, a German-born entrepreneur with a vision for the power of the printed page, bought the magazine. With Klopsch at the helm, Christian Herald sharpened its reputation as exceptional Christian family reading and developed into a large charitable enterprise, meeting the needs of suffering humanity in every corner of the world.

The focus of this widespread charitable effort, however, started here at home.  In 1894, the Christian Herald began publishing regular reports of the suffering among New York City's poor.  A winter "Food Fund" was launched to help the destitute survive the winter.  Many of these poor souls had just immigrated to New York City and had not yet found adequate means of making a living.
Children gather for a trip to Mont Lawn Camp
When spring arrived, Klopsch faced a problem --  What would he do with the several thousand dollars left over from the food drive?  It was suggested the money be used to give a summertime outing to the children of the families that had been helped through the Food Fund.

Klopsch enthusiastically embraced the idea and within a month arranged to bring children to an estate in Nyack, New York belonging to his friend, the Reverend Lawrence Jewett.  The first children arrived at Mont Lawn Camp by horse-drawn carriage on June 14, 1894.

Klopsch started out renting the sprawling estate with steep wooded hills for $1 a month.  After Jewett's death several years later, Christian Herald bought the property.
In 1895, another pressing need caught Klopsch's attention.  It seemed The Bowery Mission, established in 1879 by the Rev. and Mrs. A. G. Ruliffson, was in serious financial difficulty after its original superintendent died.
Klopsch had already learned of The Bowery Mission during a visit to Smyrna on his return from a trip to the Holy Land with Talmadge.  An English-speaking mission there was run by a former seaman, John Parkinson, who had been converted at The Bowery Mission.

Christian Herald purchased The Bowery Mission, then at 14 Bowery, to prevent it from falling under secular control.  Since then, The Bowery Mission has remained within 10 blocks of its original location, demonstrating Christian Herald's deep commitment to heal shattered lives in New York City.  It was written in Christian Herald at the time The Bowery Mission was purchased: “There is probably not a country under the sun, to which the Gospel of Jesus Christ has come, where the name of The Bowery Mission of New York is not known.  It is a Mission that stands for 15 years of earnest, consecrated Gospel work, and its converts are scattered all over the world... and found in many states, holding steadfastly to the truth as they accepted it in the grand old Mission that has stood these many years like a Christian Gibraltar, amid the swelling tides of sin that dash against it on every side."

1890s-1950s:  A Global Reach
After the work of The Bowery Mission was stabilized, Klopsch extended the ministry of Christian Herald overseas, continuing to use the magazine's growing influence as a force for social change.  The publication always strived to achieve a balance between preaching the need for personal salvation and translating faith into action via the social Gospel.A meal being served to hundreds at The Bowery Mission
Through the years, mercy fleets carried food and other relief items collected by Christian Herald from its loyal and generous readers to India, Armenia, Cuba, Finland, Sweden, Norway, China, Japan, Italy, Mexico and Palestine.

The Christian Herald organization also began establishing orphanages in parts of Asia ravaged by war and famine. At one point, the organization was responsible for 11 orphanages, housing 1,400 children throughout China, Hong Kong and Korea. These orphanages prepared children for useful citizenship by teaching general academic courses and providing training in crafts and trades such as wood-working and printing.

In 1953, a pamphlet commemorating Christian Herald's "Diamond Jubilee" stated that more than ten thousand graduates of the organization's overseas missions are to be found throughout the Far East.  The pamphlet described these graduates:

"They reflect the love, education, the spiritual training that has been given them.  Many are in business, the law, medicine and the ministry.  Others occupy high seats in the Nationalist Government or are skilled as artisans, scientists and artists . . .  They are a solid influence on Asia today and they are destined to play a brave part in the moral, political and spiritual recovery of China and Korea."
Of course, needs at home were met swiftly as well.  Through the pages of Christian Herald, Klopsch and his successors issued appeals for readers to come to the relief of victims of the San Francisco earthquake, the Galveston hurricane and the Kansas City flood. Readers responded with overwhelming generosity. Christian Herald had earned a reputation not only as the leading Christian family magazine, but also as a clearinghouse for charitable contributions.  Time after time, readers responded overwhelmingly to an appeal for aid. Klopsch alone was estimated to have raised $3,365,000 in his day.

1940s-1990s:  Years of Change
The organization continued the tradition of spreading the Gospel and practicing in deed what was preached in the pages of Christian Herald. Over the years, many talented writers, editors and leaders left their unique marks on the publication, including Charles Sheldon, J. C. Penney, Daniel Poling and Dr. Robert Cook.
Coffee being served at The Bowery Mission
Its legacy of strong leadership continued as well, into the post World War II years right through the 1960s through the efforts of the internationally-known author, lecturer and humanitarian Daniel Poling.  Poling was a special wartime emissary of Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Eisenhower and was the first clergyman to receive the nation's highest civilian award, The Medal for Merit.

Poling's successor as editor of Christian Herald, Ford Stewart, initiated a new venture for the organization - a book club that would grow to become Family Bookshelf.  The club fit well with the Christian Herald philosophy of not just preaching against evil but doing something about it. In the December 1948 issue of Christian Herald, the establishment of Family Bookshelf as "a club you can trust" was announced.
The book club was seen as a way to combat the increasing amount of profanity, sex and secular values being promoted in the day's books.  Family Bookshelf also produced a healthy revenue stream that helped keep the magazine afloat.

Meanwhile, Mont Lawn Camp continued as an integral component of Christian Herald's multifaceted ministry.  Increasing suburbanization, however, began to encroach on the Nyack location.  To ensure that needy inner city children would have a refreshing, rural retreat, Christian Herald purchased a 190-acre camp high on a hill above the Delaware River in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains.  Mont Lawn was moved there in 1963.

As the turbulent decade of the 1960s came to a close, Christian Herald felt the first winds of what would become a growing financial pinch.  Radio and television were attracting a larger share of advertising dollars, secular charities were crowding the nonprofit market, production costs for the magazine had soared and, to top it off, circulation was dwindling.

One strategy applied to stem the growing financial loss was the movement of Christian Herald's administrative offices out of New York City and into the less-expensive Westchester suburb of Chappaqua during the fall of 1973.

At the same time, the Christian book industry was enjoying healthy growth nationwide. Christian Herald capitalized on the trend by launching a second book club offering exclusively Christian literature.  Increasingly, the book clubs - led by Family Bookshelf - set the financial pace for the organization.

The magazine's financial struggle grew more severe during the late 1970s and early 1980s.  Part of the difficulty may have been the result of quieter, less public leadership.  From Poling's tenure on back to the founding of the magazine, Christian Herald leaders had been very public figures for whom the magazine was basically an extension.

But the major factor in the magazine's decline was the proliferation of competing Christian publications, each aimed at a specialty audience.  The same trend had earlier occurred in the secular market.  After some 3,300 issues, Christian Herald ceased publication with the May-June 1992 issue.  The magazine was America's oldest continuously published religious magazine.

1994-present:  A Renewed Focus
In 1994, led by a Board Task Force and new President, Ed Morgan, the Christian Herald organization turned to the ministry where the need was growing and the organization had demonstrated success in the past.  Efforts quickly became concentrated on rebuilding lives shattered by addictions, broken relationships and homelessness in the inner city.

A new purpose statement and sharper vision were developed and the task for building a solid structure of private support from donations began.

The Bowery Mission Women's Center and discipleship program, modeled after The Bowery Mission, was established in 1990.  The program moved to 218 West 15th Street in early 1992, with dedication ceremonies attended by city officials including the wife of Mayor David Dinkins.

In January 1994, The Bowery Mission Transitional Center opened its doors with an innovative 77-bed program, funded by New York's Department of Homeless Services.  The program quickly gained a reputation as one of the most effective substance abuse programs in New York City.

In May 1995, Christian Herald became one combined nonprofit corporation, focused on its purpose statement.  In 1995 a new strategic plan, Project 2100, sharpened the focus of the organization and laid out a course of action. In late 1995, Family Bookshelf, Christian Herald's last strictly communications business, was sold to Eagle Publishing of Washington, D.C.

A child from the Kids With A Promise program using a computer
In 1996, Christian Herald Children became a focused new ministry called Kids With A Promise, offering year-round services in addition to Mont Lawn Camp. After school programs were planned to teach inner city children skills for the prevention of academic failure and focused spiritual development.

As the organization re-focused on building the city's most effective compassionate care and life transformation organization for people in need, resources began to build and the organization brought in new talent. The Chappaqua headquarters property was sold and leadership and headquarters returned to the great City we serve, headquartered at a multi-purpose ministry building at 132 Madison Avenue. By 2000, Christian Herald's ministries were positioned to be self supporting, supported by over 40,000 individuals, 200 major donors, 40 foundations, a dozen corporations and two government agencies.

The ministries have become increasingly visible in the City through effective publicity and events such as our Gala at New York's famed Rainbow Room. The ministries played a leadership role in the Charitable Choice initiatives of the first Bush administration, garnered a grant from the Justice Department and were featured at the August 2004 Republican National Convention.  
In 2002, a $1.1 million capital campaign resulted in the renovation of the flagship ministry, The Bowery Mission, drawing favorable press. The Bowery Mission also added free medical services for its clients and community.

In 2004, the ministry celebrated its 125th Anniversary with special events and the re-opening of a 20-bed women's residential program on the Upper East Side, supported by many influential women in New York and housed in a beautifully renovated townhouse.
In 2005, The Bowery Mission's Gala event earned a record $1.6 million and the ministry strated services to alumni of its recovery programs, including a jobs network.  By 2005 all of its adult locations had computer-based career learning centers.

In 2006, Christian Herald's total funding, all sources, exceeded $10 million for the first time, three times what it was a decade ago.

In 2007, the Mission began partnering with New York City Relief for street outreach.
In 2008, the ministry acquired Heartsease Home Inc. through a Board-based merger and gained permanent access to our Women's Center townhouse.
In 2009, Christian Herald confronted a very significant economic downturn with faith and trust in God's providence, launching a new initiative called Rescue Alliance, which brought together other faith-based partners to conduct a five-week street outreach to the homeless on every block in Manhattan.  We also established Young Scholars, a pilot program that measurably changes the life direction of children by providing educational opportunity to New York's most at-risk elementary schoolers.  We celebrated the 100th Anniversary of The Bowery Mission's signature Chapel with a five-week arts series, a commemorative ceremony hosted by Paula Zahn and attended by a number of New York's prominent leaders, and the publication of a history of the Chapel.

In 2010, we graduated a recent record of 170 men and women to a new life of faith, sobriety, productivity and hope.  Transformed lives remains the central focus and we are grateful for nearly 2,500 lives transformed since 1995.

 

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