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Patten Family Foundation Expands Support for UNH ECenter

Published Wednesday Jun 6, 2018

Patten

Harry Patten, founder of the Patten Family Foundation and a 1958 graduate of UNH; and Ian Grant, director of UNH’s Entrepreneurship Center.


The University of New Hampshire’s Entrepreneurship Center (ECenter) has received a $360,000 gift from the Patten Family Foundation to expand several programs that provide financial support for entrepreneurial students. 

“The ECenter is nationally recognized for the work it does to engage students and I am so honored we are able to help support the ECenter’s work and specifically the i2 Passport and Paid Student Internship at Start-ups programs,” says Harry Patten, founder of the Patten Family Foundation and a 1958 graduate of UNH. “I have met so many students who never dreamed they could launch their ideas into reality until they took part in programs at the ECenter. To me, success is measured by outcomes and the ECenter has certainly proven it can deliver significant outcomes for students. I encourage all entrepreneurs to consider ‘giving back’ to support the ECenter.”

Patten’s prior gifts helped to launch a paid summer internship program for students to work with the founder or co-founder of a start-up company and the ECenter’s i2 Passport program, which rewards students with credit for every activity or event they participate in on campus that focuses on ideas, innovation, or entrepreneurship. The program offers more than $25,000 in cash prizes to help student entrepreneurs pay loans or tuition.

“Harry’s original funding to pilot the two programs was essential when we opened the ECenter,” says Ian Grant, director of the ECenter. “This new commitment will allow us to offer more internships each summer and increase the number and engagement of students in the i2 Passport Program. The short and long-term impact on students will be amazing and exciting to watch.”

The donation will also provide funding to the student-run Entrepreneurship Club that has more than 100 members and the newly created student idea seed fund to help students cover limited launch expenses, as well as provide materials and supplies to the student-managed Makerspace, allowing students to build prototypes of their ideas and products without incurring any material costs.

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