East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives

The Community Fund for the town of East Windsor, CT.

Committee Spotlight

The East Windsor Community Fund invites you to learn more about their 2025 grantees. See below for more information.

Grant Opportunities

The East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives is not currently accepting grant proposals. Please check back for future opportunities or refer to the grant opportunities page. 

Upcoming Events

The East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives invites you to the following: 

There are no upcoming events, please check back for future opportunities.

Volunteer Opportunities

The East Windsor Community Fund committee is seeking new voices!

Applications to volunteer as a committee member are being accepted now! 

Requirements to Apply: 

  • East Windsor Resident 
  • Age 14 or Older
  • Agree to adhere to Foundation-wide policies and the Community Funds Handbook 

Candidates for elected office, elected officials, and their immediate family members may not serve on a committee. 

Click here for more information about volunteering. 

Please complete the online application to become an East Windsor Community Fund committee member. 

Grant Awards

Through its 2025 grant cycles, the East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives proudly supported 19 organizations making a difference in the lives of East Windsor residents.

The 2025 grants recommended for funding and awarded includes:

Connecticut Antique Fire Apparatus Association, Inc.:  $2,000 To support the Lobby Improvement project

Connecticut Electric Railway Association, Inc.:  $5,000 To purchase and install safety gates

East Windsor Ambulance Association, Inc:  $2,000 To support the SafeLift Initiative

East Windsor Athletic Club:  $4,000 To support the picnic table project

East Windsor Lions Charities Inc.:  $1,000 To support the Lions Club Special Education Children’s Holiday Party

East Windsor Public Schools:  $5,000 To support the purchase of a new set of timpani drums for the High School

East Windsor Public Schools:  $5,000 To replace the High School High Jump landing system (mats)

East Windsor Senior Center:  $3,000 To support the Senior Center Creative Workshop

Feral Cats of East Windsor Inc.:  $3,500 To support the catio project

Five Corner Cupboard Food Pantry:  $3,000 To support the purchase and installation of a box lift

Generation Power CT:  $2,000 Emergency Energy Assistance for East Windsor Residents

Housing Corporation of East Windsor:  $2,400 To support the Community Engagement program

Library Association of Warehouse Point, Inc.:  $2,000 East Windsor Garden for Learning and Discovery

Special Olympics Connecticut, Inc.:  $3,500 To support East Windsor residents in the Windsor Locks and South Windsor local programs

Town of East Windsor:  $3,472 For the Agricultural Commission’s Community Garden Shed project

Town of East Windsor:  $3,100 To support the CERT Uniform program

Town of East Windsor:  $2,738 To purchase Police Cadet uniforms

Town of East Windsor:  $1,500 To support Veterans Cemetery Improvements

Warehouse Point Fire Department Incorporated:  $2,200 To support Operation Safe Water Operations

Past Grant Recipients

In past years, the East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives supported the following organizations: 

American Legion Post 40 Barry Poulter – $1,800 for repair and maintenance

Broad Brook Elementary School STEM Program – $2,250 for Sphero Coding Robots

Connecticut Antique Fire Apparatus Association – $3,000 for Main display improvement project

East Windsor Arts and Culture Committee – $4,000 Adirondack chairs, bench, and ADA compliant picnic tables, painted by local artists

East Windsor Housing Authority – $1,870 Fitness and personal well-being technology

East Windsor Parks and Recreation – $2,000 for after-school Enrichment Scholarships

East Windsor Public Schools $1,800 for movable tables for high school library

East Windsor Social Services – $1,000 for emergency food and clothing gift cards during a housing emergency a resident is experiencing

First Congregational Church of East Windsor – $5,000 to restore and preserve the historical tower clock

Nutmeg Senior Rides, Inc – $1,810.62 for a volunteer recruitment project

Operation Fuel, Inc – $2,000 for emergency energy assistance for East Windsor residents

Shag Bark Hickory Farm – $2,000 for a run-in shed

$5,000 to the EW Soccer Club to assist in the execution of an Eagle Scout Service Project which is to construct bench shelters for use at the Abbe Road soccer fields. 

$5,000 was awarded to the Library Association of Warehouse Point, Inc to build an educational garden that will highlight the dinosaur history of East Windsor through sculpture, historical information and a prehistoric plant garden.

$5,000 was granted to the EW Middle School Math Ramp class to assist with a winning design to create an outdoor lunch area.

$5,000 to the EW BMX & Skatepark Committee for the purchase of equipment to expand the current park located on Reservoir Road. This park offers a safe, approved facility for youth whose sports of choice are BMX biking and skateboarding.

$5,000 to the American Legion, which welcomes all veterans of the town, to replace the roof of their building located in the Warehouse Point section. Currently there are approximately 1,000 veterans living in East Windsor.

$4,570 to the Broad Brook Library Association, Inc to replace the deteriorating tile flooring of their building located in Broad Brook. 

$4,250 to the East Windsor Garden Club to restore the Memorial Garden located in the triangle of the Windsorville town green.

$2,776 to East Windsor Parks & Recreation. This will allow them to offer free swimming lessons at the park during the months of June through August to EW youth in an effort to increase water competency among the community and promote water safety.

$2,100 to the Connecticut Trolley Museum to replace car cards on two operating trolleys. These advertising cards will be designed by East Windsor youths to reflect current businesses and organizations in a vintage 1900’s manner.

$2,000 to the EW American Heritage River Commission for a sensory project. This project will increase the ability of sensory-impaired individuals to learn about and enjoy the Scantic River.

$500 to the East Windsor Housing Authority to be used to help meet the immediate food needs of Park Hill residents in an acute emergency situation.

Abby’s Helping Hand received a $7,000 grant to provide music therapy to special education students at Broad Brook Elementary School. Music therapy has been proven to improve fine motor skills, communication skills, and overall confidence for autistic children.

The Town of East Windsor Social Services Division received a grant of $5,600 to work with ride share programs such as UBER and LYFT to provide transportation to residents lacking transport to critical appointments for healthcare, Section 8, and Social Security, among other services. The ride share project also noted transport to grocery stores for eligible residents, expanding these individuals’ access to nutritious foods.

Museums on the Green, East Windsor Historical Society received a $7,000 grant to retrofit a red metal barn to display large farm equipment and showcase different aspects of farming and industry in early East Windsor. It would include antique tools, tobacco farming, potato farming, dairy farming, and cider making.

East Windsor Housing Authority received a $700 grant to have a licensed nutritionist provide informational presentations on the benefits of eating healthy and nutritional foods/meals. This would enable East Windsor residents to learn more about the role of one’s diet in disease prevention and mitigation.

East Windsor Diversity Council received a $1,500 pilot grant to organize, coordinate, and convene a community forum to explore the implications of diversity and inclusion in the community. This program aims to encourage civic engagement and involvement to ensure all East Windsor residents are represented.

Shag Bark Hickory Farm received $5,250 to repair a fence used for the riding arena and pasture areas. Shag Bark Hickory Farms provides equine-assisted activities to local youth, regardless of their ability to pay.

Contribute to the Community Fund that supports projects that are improving the lives of residents in East Windsor.

Donate to the East Windsor Community Fund

Get to Know East Windsor

As you learn about your community, here are two resources the Foundation uses to find information about East Windsor:

Advance/CTData Town Profile Search

DataHaven Equity Profile Search

For additional information about the East Windsor Community Fund at Greater Hartford Gives, please contact the committee at EastWindsor@greaterhartfordgivescf.org

For media inquiries, please contact Chris Senecal at CSenecal@greaterhartfordgives.org.