Hillsboro Community Foundation

Grants

Grant T. Johnson & Peggy Pipes-Johnson Memorial Grants Program

HCF manages this endowed fund and administers the grant-making process. Through annual grant(s), the Fund supports non-profit arts and culture organizations in the greater Hillsboro area.

ABOUT GRANT T. JOHNSON

February 6, 1920 – December 1, 2012
Grant T. Johnson moved his family to Hillsboro in l944. For the next 68 years, Grant T. Johnson was a Hillsboro community leader dedicated to promoting and supporting arts and culture as assets for a vital, prosperous, and livable community. Throughout his life, Grant was deeply involved in service and was passionate about the Hillsboro community. He was not as concerned about the causes he supported as he was in a straightforward criterion. If it was good for the future of Hillsboro and its citizens, Grant was “for it.” He was a tireless fundraiser and was well-known for raising support and funds for numerous causes.

Grant T. Johnson’s influence is evident in the establishment of key community institutions. He played a pivotal role in the creation of Noble Woods Park, the Hillsboro Boys and Girls Club, and the Glenn and Viola Walters Cultural Arts Center. His early and vital support for the Hillsboro Actors Regional Theatre (HART) is also noteworthy. His work led to the eventual establishment of The Venetian, further cementing his legacy in the Hillsboro community.

In 1996, The Hillsboro Argus announced that Grant would be the Grand Marshal of Rotary’s annual Fourth of July Parade by stating, “Grand Marshal Grant Johnson has raised more money for local causes than many parade goers will earn. Because of him, the Boys & Girls Club has a remodeled building, and Hillsboro has a 40-acre nature preserve in Noble Woods.” Grant was one of the longest-standing members of The Greater Hillsboro Area Chamber of Commerce. He chaired the Chamber’s long-range planning committee for over 30 years and served as the organization’s president in 1974. In these positions, he made a personal commitment to promote quality of life in the city. His efforts included inviting the Regional Urban Design Assistance Team (R/UDAT) to survey the town and make recommendations for maintaining the community’s vitality. Out of this work came a long-range plan for Hillsboro, which became a blueprint for government and citizen cooperation and was a forerunner to the city’s current 2020 Visioning Plan.

Through his involvement with R/UDAT, Grant saw the need to expand arts and culture to sustain and enhance the quality of life in Hillsboro. For years, he continued his strong advocacy to promote arts and culture in the city he loved.

As Grant’s energy waned, he found satisfaction in witnessing others take up the mantle and continue the momentum. His belief in the power of community involvement was unwavering, and he took greater pleasure in what citizens could achieve together than in any personal accomplishment or recognition. The Argus captured this sentiment in 1995, stating, “A Hillsboro resident and former chamber president, Johnson believes that if the people of a community believe in the project strongly enough and will get solidly behind it, anything can be accomplished. And for the past 50 years in Hillsboro, Grant Johnson has turned that belief into action for the community.” Pat Ribellia, a city planner with the Citizen Involvement Advisory Committee, echoed this sentiment, calling Grant “the ultimate spokesperson and advocate for improving the city’s quality of life and assuring citizen involvement in city affairs.”

Grant was also active at Hillsboro First Baptist Church, where he was a member for more than 60 years. Through the years, among other activities, he taught Sunday School, sang in the choir and in music groups (he loved to sing), served on the board, spearheaded the effort to raise funds for a new furnace, and initiated digging out a new basement for the old church by hand (he loved to dig). Later, he served on the board of trustees for Western Conservative Baptist Seminary.

Through the years, Grant received many awards for his service, among them the Robert R. Herb Award for Leadership and Vision, the Hillsboro Jaycee’s Distinguished Citizen Award, the Chamber’s Emma C. McKinney Distinguished Citizen Award, the Chamber Chairman’s Award, and Senior Man of the Year. To honor him on his 90th birthday, Hillsboro Mayor Jerry Willey issued a proclamation naming Feb. 6, 2010, Grant Johnson Day.

ABOUT PEGGY L. PIPES-JOHNSON

June 16, 1930 - January 5, 2024
Peggy L. Pipes-Johnson was a distinguished professional in the field of nutrition throughout her roughly 40-year career. Her specialty was childhood nutrition, and she lectured, wrote, and contributed to multiple books on the subject. She was well-known as a mentor, and several mentees pursued long careers in the field, having been influenced by Peggy.

At age 67, Peggy uprooted from her long-time home in Seattle and moved to Hillsboro, Oregon, to marry Grant T. Johnson (at his urgent request) and, for the first time, become a wife and an instant mother to four children and their spouses! Living with Grant, she couldn’t help but be exposed to his passion for Hillsboro and the arts. Peggy, too, had a passion for the arts, especially theater and jazz, and had a good eye for quality.

Peggy had a zest for living and never lost her desire to be exposed to and learn new things. In addition to being a distinguished professional in her field and holding two Master’s degrees, Peggy enjoyed watching over and being involved in managing her financial resources. Even at 93, you knew she knew what the Dow Jones Average was doing on any particular day. Her insights as an investor, combined with her careful oversight of expenditures (she was, after all, a child of the Depression), allowed her to demonstrate her quiet, charitable nature on several occasions.

After Grant’s passing in 2012, Peggy initiated the Grant T. Johnson Memorial Fund to honor his passion for the arts and commitment to Hillsboro but, more importantly, to recognize the importance of investing in the arts in a community. She desired to continue enhancing the arts and culture in Hillsboro to build a strong community for the future. While others have contributed to the Grant T. Johnson Memorial Fund, Peggy contributed the most.

Over the past few years, to recognize Peggy’s substantial contributions to the Hillsboro community, the board of the Hillsboro Community Foundation changed the name of the fund to The Grant T. Johnson and Peggy Pipes-Johnson Memorial Fund. The foundation desires to remember Grant and Peggy’s spirit and passion. They were essential to creating a structural foundation for the arts in Hillsboro that the community can build on well into the future.