From its founding until his death in 1964, the Foundation was led by William Myron Keck. From 1964 to 1995, it was led by W. M. Keck's son, Howard B. Keck.[1]Robert Addison Day, W. M. Keck's grandson, became its president and chairman in 1995. He continued to serve as its chairman until his death in 2023.
The foundation is led by Joseph Day and Stephen M. Keck.[2]
The Foundation provides grants in five broad areas: science and engineering research, undergraduate science and engineering, medical research, liberal arts, in Southern California. Some of the more notable projects that have received funding from the Keck Foundation include:
2017: The Keck Center for Science and Engineering,[3] at Chapman University, $21 million
The W.M. Keck Center for Interdisciplinary Bioscience Training at Rice University in Houston, Texas (training arm of the Gulf Coast Consortia (GCC))[5]
Research that would result in general information and new methodologies that can be of benefit to the field, even if the project were to go awry[10]
Research projects that are not funded by any other foundation, and research projects that could not move along without Keck funding[10]
Though this is not a requirement, the W.M. Keck Foundation prefers projects that involve some kind of collaboration over single investigator research[10]