Board
As CEO of the Bullitt Foundation, Denis leads an effort to mold the major cities of Pacific Northwest and British Columbia into models of sustainability for a rapidly urbanizing planet. The Foundation applies ecological principles to the design of healthy, resilient human ecosystems. Under his leadership, the Foundation designed and constructed the Bullitt Center—the world’s greenest office building—which it operates as a successful commercial enterprise.
Denis was the principal national organizer of the first Earth Day in , and he took the event international in It is now the most-widely-observed secular holiday in the world. He is now board chair emeritus of the international Earth Day Network. During the Carter Administration, Hayes was the director of the federal Solar Energy Research Institute—since renamed the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Over his career, Hayes has been special assistant to the Governor of Illinois for natural resources and the environment; senior fellow at the Worldwatch Institute; adjunct professor of energy engineering and human biology at Stanford University; Regents’ Professor of Natural Resources at the University of California at Sa
History
The Bullitt Foundation was founded in by Dorothy Bullitt, a prominent Seattle businesswoman and philanthropist. Dorothys family set an example of civic and cultural leadership by helping to found many of the city’s most significant institutions, including Children’s Hospital, the Seattle Symphony, and Cornish School of the Arts.
Alexander Scott Bullitt, a Southern attorney, won Dorothys heart with his charm, intellect, and progressive leanings. They married in , and had three children Stimson, Priscilla, and Harriet.
At the age of 40, in the midst of the Great Depression and devastated by the loss of her husband, father, and brother in one year, Dorothy assumed a new role as manager of the family’s real estate holdings. She had an instinctive business sense and was a careful, but gutsy, entrepreneur.
By the ’s, she turned her attention and resources to broadcasting. With meticulous research and an ability to summon the right people at the right time, she turned an unprofitable radio venture into a critically acclaimed success. Then, already well into her 50’s, Dorothy Bullitt took the riskiest, and ultimately the most profitable, step of her career. She bro
Stimson Bullitt climbed mountains and rock faces, helped transform Seattle's rundown 1st Avenue, served a decade as King Broadcasting Co. president, was a skilled appellate lawyer, championed civil liberties and environmental causes, was awarded a Purple Heart in the World War II Leyte landing, and earned a place on Richard Nixon's enemies list. None of these achievements, taken alone, tell his story, and the whole of his year life manages to exceed even the sum of its parts.
Achieving Heights
As he watched Stimson Bullitt, then in his late 70s, on a climb of Jabberwocky Tower in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, renowned mountaineer (and first American atop K-2) Jim Wickwire was awed at the skill and stamina shown by his friend. "It was marvelous for me, being 21 years his junior, to watch -- and he was doing all the leading," joked Wickwire. "He would, of course, make light of it. He was always understating or downplaying, talking about self-perceived shortcomings, which were not shortcomings. He was a high achiever" (Wickwire, April 7, ).
Charles Stimson Bullitt, scion of a notable Seattle family -- his mother started the King Broadcasting Co. -- spent a life of 89 years in a
Our Founder
Harriet Bullitt was an iconic philanthropist and the founder of many mission-driven businesses and non-profits. Her love of the arts and her passion for conservation and cultural heritage guided her many philanthropic activities.
Our world lost a passionate, caring, and visionary leader when Ms. Bullitt passed away in at Her legacy will live on as she inspired others and lived her life by the Parable of the Long Spoons, giving in ways to create meaningful impact.
Christine Morgan, Executive Director of the Icicle Fund, said “Harriet challenged and empowered others to develop and discover their personal sense of place and to become stewards for those things we hold dear. She understood and advocated for the importance of all art forms as well as our cultural heritage to strengthen our connection to the place we call home.”
Ms. Bullitt’s generosity and vision connected regions of Washington State through the arts and shared heritage. As an example, she donated her complete collection of Edward S. Curtis’ photographs to the Seattle Public Library and enabled a partnership between Eastside and Westside organizations to showcase the photographer’s work and spark conv
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