Saturday, February 14, 2026

The Board That Serves Itself The Same People Sit on Both Boards. They Are Paid $112,000-$130,000 Each. One of Them Earned $332,633 From the Hershey Company Alone. Another Received $80,000 Per Year Just for Flights From Los Angeles. The Trust's Own General Counsel Pled Guilty to Wire Fraud. And the Sitting Chairman Had to Sue the School He Chaired to See Its Financial Records. THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 3

The Board That Serves Itself: Inside the Hershey Trust's Governance Scandals

The Board That Serves Itself

The Same People Sit on Both Boards. They Are Paid $112,000-$130,000 Each. One of Them Earned $332,633 From the Hershey Company Alone. Another Received $80,000 Per Year Just for Flights From Los Angeles. The Trust's Own General Counsel Pled Guilty to Wire Fraud. And the Sitting Chairman Had to Sue the School He Chaired to See Its Financial Records.

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 3 | February 2026

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE: One Man's Gift. One Deed. One Betrayed Mandate.
"In trust for a permanent institution for the residence and accommodation of poor children."

Post 1: The Gift — What Milton Hershey actually said. What the trust actually heard.
Post 2: The Surplus — 91 years of "embarrassingly large" accumulation
Post 3: The Board That Serves Itself — Same people. Two boards. Multiple scandals. ← YOU ARE HERE
Post 4: The Sale That Never Happened — $12.5 billion, 10,000 protesters, trustees fired
Post 5: The Billion Sitting Idle — $1 billion in unspent income. The math the trust won't explain.
Post 6: The Children Who Didn't Get In — The waitlist. The admissions criteria. The human cost.
Post 7: The Maneuver — Catherine Hershey Schools: genuine mission or sophisticated optics?
Post 8: The 116-Year Question — What enforcement would require. And why it probably won't happen.
In April 2021, Bob Heist filed a lawsuit. This was unusual for many reasons. Heist was a lawyer — a 1982 graduate of the Milton Hershey School itself, a man who had served on the school's board since 2011 and as its chairman since 2018. He was also, simultaneously, the president of the Hershey Trust Company — the institution whose sole purpose is managing the school's billions. He had spent more than a year, including five formal requests in early 2021 alone, trying to obtain internal financial records from the institution he chaired. The school refused. He filed suit. His petition said he needed the records to ensure school funds were not being "wasted," to verify that the school had reported accurate information to the IRS, and to determine whether consultants had "exerted undue influence in order to receive funds." The school's lawyers responded that Heist "has an agenda" and "no authority to conduct his own investigation." A sitting chairman suing the institution he chairs to see its financial records. The school spending money from poor children's trust to fight the lawsuit. The judge pressing both sides: "Have they locked the doors? Have they shuffled the documents from place to place so he couldn't access them?" This is not the beginning of the Hershey Trust's governance story. It is the latest chapter in a pattern of self-dealing, lavish spending, and internal warfare that has consumed the trust's leadership for decades — while 2,100 children attend school and $1 billion in unspent income accumulates.

The Structural Conflict: Two Boards, Same People

The foundational governance problem of the Hershey Trust is structural — and it was built into the architecture from the beginning.

The Hershey Trust Company is a Pennsylvania state-chartered trust company founded by Milton Hershey in 1905. Its sole business is managing the Milton Hershey School's trust. It has no retail banking products. It has no other clients. Its entire reason for existence — its only function — is as trustee for the school.

Its directors are paid at least $112,000 per year each.

Those directors are the same individuals as the Milton Hershey School's board of managers.

THE DUAL BOARD STRUCTURE — CONFIRMED BY PRIMARY SOURCES

HERSHEY TRUST COMPANY:
Purpose: Managing the Milton Hershey School trust
Other clients: None
Retail banking products: None
Director compensation: At least $112,000/year
Directors: Same individuals as MHS board of managers

MILTON HERSHEY SCHOOL BOARD OF MANAGERS:
Purpose: Overseeing the school’s operations and spending
Director compensation: $100,000-$130,000/year (as of 2011 lawsuit)
Directors: Same individuals as Hershey Trust Company board

THE STRUCTURAL PROBLEM:
Each board member holds two paid positions simultaneously —
one from the trust company managing the assets,
one from the school spending those assets.
Both positions require them to serve the children’s interests.
Both positions pay them from the children’s trust.
Neither position has independent oversight of the other.

COMBINED ANNUAL COMPENSATION PER BOARD MEMBER:
Trust Company: $112,000+
School Board: $100,000-$130,000
Potential combined total: $212,000-$260,000+
Source: Children’s charitable trust. Tax-exempt.

EXTERNAL OVERSIGHT: Pennsylvania Attorney General only.
No federal oversight. No independent board auditor.
No public beneficiary representation.
The children the trust serves have no seat at the table.

The Pay That Tripled While Enrollment Stayed Flat

In 2002, board compensation was $35,000 per year for a full year of service. By 2011, it had tripled — reaching $100,000 to $130,000 per year. This increase is documented not in the trust's own disclosures, but in a lawsuit filed against the trust by one of its own board members.

Robert Reese — grandson of H.B. Reese, the inventor of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, one of the Hershey Company's most valuable brands — was a board member and president of the Hershey Trust Company in 2011. He filed a 20-page suit alleging that his fellow board members were violating their fiduciary duties to spend the charity's assets wisely for the benefit of poor children.

His lawsuit documented the compensation tripling. It also documented something else: a $12 million golf course purchase made with no financial analysis to support the price.

🔥 SMOKING GUN #1: THE GOLF COURSE — PURCHASED AT DOUBLE ITS APPRAISED VALUE

WHAT HAPPENED (2010, documented by Philadelphia Inquirer):
The Milton Hershey School purchased a money-losing golf course for $12 million.
The school’s own appraisal valued the course at roughly half that amount.
The purchase “quietly tossed a financial lifeline to local investors” — including
Richard H. Lenny, then-CEO of the Hershey Company, who was simultaneously
a member of the board that approved the purchase.

AFTER THE PURCHASE:
Board members spent an additional $5 million building a Scottish-themed clubhouse
with a restaurant and bar, then opened it to the public.
Total spent: $17 million. From the children’s trust.
On a golf course and clubhouse.

ROBERT REESE’S LAWSUIT (2011):
Alleged “no financial analysis done by the trustees and its officers
to support the $12 million price.”
Alleged board members were “violating their fiduciary duties to wisely spend
the charity’s assets to benefit poor children.”
Also documented: board compensation had tripled since 2002.

THE LANCASTER NEW ERA EDITORIAL:
“The Trust’s wheeling and dealing up to this point has emitted an odor,
and it doesn’t smell like chocolate.”

REESE’S OUTCOME:
Later dropped his lawsuit. Reason: deteriorating eyesight made
it impossible to continue. He was the grandson of the Reese’s Cup inventor.
He sued the trust that manages his grandfather’s legacy brand.
He could not finish the lawsuit.

The First AG Investigation: 2010-2013

The golf course revelation triggered a Pennsylvania Attorney General investigation. The AG's office — then under Tom Corbett, then Kathleen Kane — investigated the trust's property purchases, including the golf course and other real estate acquisitions that critics argued served board members' interests more than the school's mission.

The investigation concluded in May 2013. Kane announced the state found no legal improprieties in the specific property purchases — but still imposed requirements. The trust had to notify the state of any property purchase costing more than $250,000 or involving a lease of more than three years. Board compensation was reduced to $30,000 per year, with the chair allowed an extra $10,000.

The settlement lasted three years.

The Second Scandal: 2015-2016

What the Capital Research Center documented — sourced to contemporaneous reporting — about what happened between 2013 and 2016 is extraordinary even by the standards of this investigation.

🔥 SMOKING GUN #2: WHAT HAPPENED AFTER THE FIRST SETTLEMENT

ROBERT CAVANAUGH — BOARD MEMBER SINCE 2003:
Also held one of the three Hershey Trust seats on the Hershey Company board.
Annual compensation from Hershey Company board seat: $332,633
Deferred compensation account: $3.8 million
Annual reimbursed travel expenses from the Trust: $80,000+/year
Reason for travel expenses: Flying to board meetings in Pennsylvania from Los Angeles.
All of this continued despite the 2013 settlement limiting board pay to $30,000/year.

THE INTERNSHIP REQUEST (April 2015):
Cavanaugh — then board chair — asked Hershey Trust CEO Eric Henry
for internship recommendations for his son, a Bucknell University junior.
Henry emailed two firms managing Hershey Trust investments:
— Legato Capital Management: managing $25 million of Trust assets
— JKMilne Asset Management: overseeing $584 million of Trust assets
Henry forwarded the son’s resume, referencing “our board chair’s son.”
The firms managing hundreds of millions of children’s charitable assets
were asked to employ the board chair’s son.

THE GENERAL COUNSEL:
Bob Estey, the Trust’s general counsel, resigned after pleading guilty
to one count of wire fraud — in an FBI sting operation.
Estey had been a top adviser to Democratic Governor Ed Rendell (2003-07).
He was sentenced to probation and disbarred.

THE BOARD’S PRIMARY ACCOMPLISHMENT (2013-2015):
Per Capital Research Center documentation:
“The chief accomplishment of the Hershey Trust board from 2013 to 2015
was to spend vast amounts of the trust’s funds suing each other.”

The Second AG Settlement: July 2016

In 2016, the Pennsylvania Attorney General opened a new investigation — for apparently violating the 2013 agreement, along with documented lavish travel, board infighting, and new conflicts of interest. Internal reports and travel expense records were leaked to the press, revealing the board's behavior in detail.

In July 2016, the trust entered a second settlement with the AG's office. The board agreed to reconstitute itself — several members retiring, others limited to maximum 10-year terms. The attorney general gained power to approve new board members. The chairperson said she was "satisfied with the outcome."

Two settlements. Two investigations. Two rounds of reconstitution. The same structural conflict of interest — same people, two boards, paid from children's trust — remained in place after both.

Bob Heist: The Chairman Who Sued His Own Institution

Bob Heist graduated from the Milton Hershey School in 1982. He became a lawyer. He served as chair of the alumni association. He was elected to the board in 2011. In 2018, he became chairman of the school's board and president of the Hershey Trust Company simultaneously — the highest governance position in the institution.

In September 2019, he began requesting internal financial records. Over the next year and a half, he made at least five formal requests. The school provided thousands of pages of documents — but Heist said they did not include the specific spending records he needed to perform his oversight duties.

In April 2021, he filed suit.

🔥 SMOKING GUN #3: THE CHAIRMAN WHO HAD TO SUE TO SEE THE BOOKS

WHO BOB HEIST WAS:
1982 graduate of Milton Hershey School
Board member since 2011
Board chairman since 2018
Simultaneously: President of Hershey Trust Company
The highest governance officer of the institution

WHAT HE WANTED:
Internal financial records to ensure school funds were not “wasted”
Verification that the school reported accurate information to the IRS
Determination of whether consultants “exerted undue influence
in order to receive funds”

WHAT THE LAW SAYS:
Don Kramer, nonprofit law chair, Philadelphia firm Montgomery McCracken:
“A director of a nonprofit corporation in Pennsylvania is fundamentally
allowed to see the books and records of the organization to determine
whether the funds are being spent properly.”

WHAT THE SCHOOL DID:
Denied access for 19 months across multiple formal requests.
After Heist sued: argued he “has an agenda” and “no authority
to conduct his own investigation.”
Spent money from children’s charitable trust fighting the lawsuit.
At the hearing: judge asked whether the school had “locked the doors”
or “shuffled the documents from place to place.”

THE ADDITIONAL DETAIL:
Among the records Heist sought: documents bearing his own signature
authorizing legal expenses. He was trying to find out what he had signed.
The institution he chaired had authorized legal expenses under his signature
without giving him access to the underlying records.

THE OUTCOME:
The case was resolved without public findings.
The Pennsylvania AG monitored but did not intervene.
The structural governance problem: unchanged.

What the Pattern Proves

Four documented episodes across 15 years: the golf course, the Cavanaugh compensation, the general counsel's wire fraud conviction, the chairman's lawsuit for financial records. Two attorney general investigations. Two settlements. Two board reconstitutions.

Each episode is different in its specifics. Each involves different actors, different transactions, different amounts. What they share is structural: a governance architecture in which the people responsible for oversight are the same people who benefit from the assets they oversee, paid from the same charitable trust whose mission they are supposed to maximize, with no independent board and minimal external accountability.

The Pennsylvania Attorney General is the sole external check. It has intervened twice. Both times, the intervention produced settlements that reformed compensation and board tenure without changing the dual board structure that enables the conflicts in the first place.

✓ THE FAIR ACCOUNT: WHAT THE BOARD SAYS — AND WHAT'S CHANGED

The 2016 reforms were real. Board term limits (10 years maximum), AG approval of new board members, board reconstitution — these are genuine governance improvements over what existed before 2013. The post-2016 board is more constrained than its predecessors.

Compensation was reduced after investigations. The 2013 settlement cut board pay to $30,000. When violations were found, the AG acted. The Cavanaugh-level compensation ($332,633 from Hershey Company board alone) is an example from a period now partially reformed.

Bob Heist’s lawsuit was resolved. The school provided documents. The case concluded. Whatever the underlying dispute was, it did not result in public findings of wrongdoing by the post-2016 board.

The school’s current leadership is not the same as its 2002-2016 leadership. The individuals responsible for the golf course, the Cavanaugh compensation, and the general counsel’s wire fraud conviction are not the current board. Holding current trustees responsible for predecessors’ actions is not fair without current evidence.

What remains unchanged: The dual board structure — same people, two boards, paid from children’s trust — persists. The structural conflict of interest documented across four episodes over 15 years is not a personnel problem. It is an architectural one. New people in the same architecture face the same incentives their predecessors did.

The Architecture Is the Argument

Milton Hershey did not design the dual board structure to enable self-dealing. He designed the Hershey Trust Company to provide professional management of his charitable gift. The trust company's board overlap with the school's board was likely intended to ensure alignment between asset management and mission delivery.

What 116 years and four documented scandals show is that the alignment it created runs in the wrong direction. The board is aligned — very efficiently — around maximizing the trust's assets and minimizing its distribution obligations. That alignment benefits the trustees, who are paid from those assets. It does not benefit the children, who are the sole named beneficiaries of the deed.

The four words Milton Hershey wrote — as many as possible — describe a mandate to maximize distribution to children. The architecture he created to fulfill that mandate has, for 116 years, maximized something else.

In Post 4, we document the moment when the board went furthest in that direction: the 2002 attempt to sell the entire Hershey Company — the engine of the trust's mission — to Wrigley for $12.5 billion, while 10,000 people marched in the streets of Hershey, Pennsylvania to stop them.

METHODOLOGY: HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION

PRIMARY SOURCES FOR THIS POST:
Spotlight PA / ProPublica / Philadelphia Inquirer joint investigation (April 2021): “Board Member Sues Powerful Hershey School, Claims He’s Being Denied Financial Records” — confirmed Bob Heist’s identity (1982 MHS graduate, board member 2011, chairman 2018), his 19-month records request, five formal requests in 2021, the lawsuit filing, the school’s legal response (“has an agenda”), AG monitoring. Spotlight PA follow-up (August 2021): “‘Have They Locked the Doors?’ Judge Presses for Details on Hershey Charity Spat” — confirmed hearing details, judge’s direct quotes, Don Kramer’s legal opinion, Heist’s signature on legal expense authorizations. Capital Research Center, “Milton’s Bittersweet Legacy” (multiple parts): Confirmed Robert Cavanaugh’s $332,633 annual Hershey Company board compensation, $3.8 million deferred compensation, $80,000 travel reimbursement, internship email to JKMilne ($584M in MHS assets) and Legato ($25M). Confirmed Bob Estey wire fraud guilty plea, disbarment. Confirmed “chief accomplishment was spending vast amounts suing each other.” Philadelphia Inquirer (2010): Original golf course reporting — $12 million purchase, school’s own appraisal at roughly half the price, Richard Lenny conflict of interest as simultaneous Hershey Company CEO and approving board member. Robert Reese lawsuit (2011): Confirmed $35,000 → $100,000-$130,000 compensation tripling, “no financial analysis” allegation. First AG settlement (2013): Confirmed $30,000 compensation cap, property notification requirement. Second AG settlement (July 2016): Confirmed board reconstitution, 10-year term limits, AG approval of new members.

WHAT COMES NEXT:
Post 4 documents the 2002 Wrigley sale — the most dramatic single event in the trust’s history, when the board voted to sell the Hershey Company for $12.5 billion, 10,000 people protested in the streets, the Pennsylvania AG blocked it, and the trustees who approved the deal were eventually removed.

The Surplus That Never Stops Growing Fortune Called It "Embarrassingly Large" in 1934. In 1998, Pennsylvania Passed a Law That Could Have Unlocked Billions for Poor Children. The Board Voted Not to Use It. Today the Surplus Exceeds $1 Billion. This Is the 91-Year Timeline. THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 2

The Surplus That Never Stops Growing: 91 Years of "Embarrassingly Large"

The Surplus That Never Stops Growing

Fortune Called It "Embarrassingly Large" in 1934. In 1998, Pennsylvania Passed a Law That Could Have Unlocked Billions for Poor Children. The Board Voted Not to Use It. Today the Surplus Exceeds $1 Billion. This Is the 91-Year Timeline.

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 2 | February 2026

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE: One Man's Gift. One Deed. One Betrayed Mandate.
"In trust for a permanent institution for the residence and accommodation of poor children."
— Milton S. Hershey, Deed of Trust, November 15, 1909

Post 1: The Gift — What Milton Hershey actually said. What the trust actually heard.
Post 2: The Surplus That Never Stops Growing — 91 years of "embarrassingly large" accumulation ← YOU ARE HERE
Post 3: The Board That Serves Itself — Same people. Two boards. $112,000-$130,000 each. No retail banking.
Post 4: The Sale That Never Happened — $12.5 billion, 10,000 protesters, and the trustees who got fired for trying
Post 5: The Billion Sitting Idle — $1 billion in unspent income. The math the trust has never had to explain.
Post 6: The Children Who Didn't Get In — The waitlist. The admissions criteria. The gap between "poor children" and who actually gets served.
Post 7: The Maneuver — The Catherine Hershey Schools expansion: genuine mission or sophisticated optics?
Post 8: The 116-Year Question — What it would take to actually enforce the deed. And why it probably won't happen.
In 1934 — twenty-five years after Milton Hershey signed the deed, sixteen years after he gave away his entire fortune — Fortune magazine noted the "embarrassingly large surplus piling up in the school's coffers." The school marked its 25th anniversary that year by dedicating a new junior-senior high school building on Pat's Hill above the town of Hershey. It was a state-of-the-art facility. The surplus was embarrassing. And then the decades passed. In 1998, Pennsylvania lawmakers passed a statute that could have changed everything: a law allowing charitable trusts to spend up to 7% of total assets annually — not just traditional income. At that rate, the Hershey Trust could have directed hundreds of millions more per year to poor children without any court approval, by a simple board vote. A year later, in 1999, the school appeared poised to use it. And then it didn't. The enrollment in 1999 was roughly the same as it had been in the 1950s. Between 1999 and 2019, enrollment doubled — from about 1,050 to about 2,000. Over the same period, the endowment grew nearly fourfold. By 2024: $23-24 billion in assets. $1 billion in unspent accumulated income. 2,100 students. The surplus that Fortune called embarrassing in 1934 has been growing for 91 consecutive years. This post documents exactly how — decade by decade — while a law that could have redirected billions to children sat unused.

The 91-Year Timeline: Surplus vs. Enrollment

```
1910
The school opens. Four students. Two sets of brothers. They live in the Homestead — Milton Hershey's birthplace. Classes in the same building. The surplus: zero. The mission: just beginning.
1918
The great gift. Hershey donates his entire fortune — $60 million in Hershey Chocolate Company stock — to the trust. Quietly, without announcement. The school's financial foundation transforms overnight. Enrollment: still in the hundreds.
1920s
First surplus noticed. Enrollment surpasses 100 students. New cottage homes built. New elementary school constructed in 1927 — reportedly the first in the nation with an indoor swimming pool. The chocolate company begins generating compounding returns. The gap between income and expenditure begins to open.
1934
Fortune magazine's verdict. On the school's 25th anniversary, a new junior-senior high school building is dedicated. Fortune magazine notes the "embarrassingly large surplus piling up in the school's coffers." This is the first documented external observation of the gap. It will not be the last. Milton Hershey is still alive. He is 77 years old.
1945
Hershey dies. October 13, 1945. Milton Hershey dies at age 88 in the hospital he built in the town he built. His entire fortune has been in the trust for 27 years. His last wish, recorded in interviews: that the school serve as many poor children as possible. The trust is now governed entirely by the board he created — with no founder to question their decisions.
1950s
Enrollment stagnates. The school celebrates its 50th anniversary in 1959 with an evaluation committee of national experts. Their findings: significant infrastructure upgrades needed. The surplus continues accumulating. Enrollment in the 1950s: roughly the same level it would still be in 1999 — forty years later.
1960s
"A Decade of Progress." The committee's 1960 report drives renovation of over 100 student homes. A new middle school is built. The school remains whites-only until the late 1960s, when — following a Supreme Court ruling on Girard College — the first non-white student is admitted. The deed's geographic priority (Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon counties first) and racial restrictions both narrow the eligible beneficiary class for six decades.
1976-77
The deed expands — finally. The 1976 deed restatement expands "orphan" to include "social orphans" — children with single or divorced parents. The first girls arrive in March 1977. The eligible beneficiary class, narrowed for 67 years by race and gender restrictions, finally opens. The surplus: still growing.
1998
The law that could have changed everything. Pennsylvania passes a statute allowing charitable trusts to spend up to 7% of total assets annually — far beyond traditional income. No court approval required. Simple board vote. At 7% of the trust's then-assets, this would have unlocked hundreds of millions more per year for the school's mission. The board does not use it.
1999
The moment that didn't happen. ProPublica documents: "In 1999, the school appeared poised to take advantage of the new law." Enrollment in 1999: roughly the same as the 1950s. The board votes. They do not adopt the broader spending definition. The surplus continues. The children who would have been served by the additional spending are not served.
2000s
Enrollment begins to grow — slowly. In 2002, the school has about 1,500 students. The attempted sale of the Hershey Company to Wrigley (Post 4) triggers 10,000 protesters and gets blocked by the Pennsylvania AG. The trustees who tried to sell are eventually removed. Enrollment growth: real but modest relative to asset growth.
1999-2019
The twenty-year comparison that defines the problem. Enrollment doubles: ~1,050 → ~2,000 students. Over the same period: Endowment grows nearly fourfold. The school is growing. The surplus is growing faster. The gap between what the deed demands and what the trust delivers is widening — even as enrollment improves.
2021
ProPublica investigates. "America's Richest School Serves Low-Income Kids. But Much of Its Hershey-Funded Fortune Isn't Being Spent." The investigation confirms: $17 billion in assets. 2,100 students. 1.5% spending rate. $1 billion in unspent accumulated income. MIT professor John Core: "ludicrous." Georgetown law professor Brian Galle: "indefensibly low." The surplus has been growing for 87 years at the time of publication. Former board chair Bob Heist sues for access to financial records he has been denied for over a year.
2024
Today. $23-24 billion in assets. 2,100-2,200 students. ~$370 million annual expenditure. ~$1 billion in unspent accumulated income. Spending rate: ~1.5%. The surplus that Fortune called embarrassing in 1934 is now the largest unspent charitable accumulation in the history of pre-college education. The deed says: as many as income permits. Income permits more than 2,100.
```

The 1998 Law: The Door That Opened and Stayed Open

The most important moment in this timeline is not 1934 or 1945 or 1999. It is 1998 — and what the board chose not to do with what that year made possible.

Before 1998, the original deed's income constraint was genuinely limiting. The deed specified that only investment income — dividends, interest, rents — could fund the school. Not principal. Not capital gains. Just income. In the early decades of the trust, when the endowment was modest and investment income was the primary generator of returns, this was a real constraint.

In 1998, Pennsylvania lawmakers passed a statute that dissolved that constraint. The new law allowed charitable trusts to adopt a "total return" spending policy — spending up to 7% of total assets annually, averaged over three years, without court approval. A board vote was sufficient. The law was designed precisely for institutions like the Milton Hershey Trust: wealthy charitable entities whose assets had grown far beyond what traditional income-only spending rules anticipated.

🔥 SMOKING GUN: THE LAW THAT UNLOCKED THE VAULT — AND THE BOARD THAT LEFT IT LOCKED

PENNSYLVANIA STATUTE (1998):
Charitable trusts may spend up to 7% of total assets annually
averaged over at least three years. No court approval required.
Simple board vote sufficient. Permanent records required.

AT 7% OF 1999 ASSETS (~$5 billion at the time):
Additional annual spending capacity unlocked: ~$350 million/year
At then-cost per student: hundreds of additional students per year
Over 10 years: potentially thousands of additional children served

WHAT THE BOARD DID (1999):
ProPublica (2021): “A year later, in 1999, the school appeared
poised to take advantage of the new law.” And then: did not.
No public explanation. No court record. No disclosed vote.
The board simply did not adopt the broader spending definition.

WHAT THIS MEANS:
The constraint on spending was removed by law in 1998.
The board chose, by inaction, to keep spending at the lower rate.
The surplus that had been accumulating since 1934 continued
accumulating after 1998 — not because the law required it,
but because the board preferred it.

JOHN KINNAIRD (1949 MHS graduate, knew Milton Hershey personally):
“His heart was to provide for orphans. He would have wanted
his charity to spend more.”

THE BOARD’S RESPONSE:
“Board members say they are doing what Hershey wanted.”

THE VERDICT:
The man who knew Hershey and the board that manages his estate
disagree about what Hershey wanted. The surplus provides the
evidence for which interpretation is being honored.

The Comparison That Should Not Be Possible

ProPublica confirmed in 2021 that the Hershey Trust's endowment has grown larger than the Ford Foundation — one of the most consequential philanthropic institutions in American history, responsible for funding the civil rights movement, global public health initiatives, and democracy programs across dozens of countries.

The Ford Foundation manages approximately $16 billion. It distributes roughly $600-700 million annually in grants. Its spending rate is approximately 4-5% of assets. It serves beneficiaries across the globe.

The Milton Hershey Trust manages $23-24 billion. It distributes approximately $370 million annually. Its spending rate is approximately 1.5% of assets. It serves one school in one Pennsylvania town.

THE COMPARISON — PRIMARY SOURCED

MILTON HERSHEY TRUST (2024):
Assets: ~$23-24 billion
Annual expenditure: ~$370 million
Spending rate: ~1.5%
Beneficiaries: ~2,100-2,200 students
Scope: One school, Hershey, Pennsylvania
Unspent accumulated income: ~$1 billion

FORD FOUNDATION (2024):
Assets: ~$16 billion
Annual grants: ~$600-700 million
Spending rate: ~4-5%
Beneficiaries: Millions globally
Scope: Civil rights, public health, democracy, arts globally

REQUIRED MINIMUM (private foundations):
5% annual distribution mandate under federal law
The Hershey Trust is NOT a private foundation —
it is a charitable trust. No federal minimum applies.
Pennsylvania’s 1998 law allows up to 7%. The trust spends 1.5%.

THE GAP:
If Hershey Trust spent at Ford Foundation’s rate (4-5%):
Additional annual spending: ~$700 million - $850 million
At $139,000 per student: 5,000-6,000 additional children/year
The trust spends 1.5%. Pennsylvania law allows 7%.
The deed says: as many as income permits.

What Milton Hershey Said — In His Own Words

In 1923 — five years after donating his entire fortune to the trust — Milton Hershey gave an interview in which he explained his decision. The Hershey Community Archives preserved his exact words:

"Well, I have no children — that is, no heirs. So I decided to make the orphan boys of the United States my heirs."

And in a separate account, also preserved: "I never could see what happiness a rich man gets from contemplating a life of acquisition only, with the cold and legal distribution of his money after he is gone. For myself, would I find any further zest in accumulating wealth? No, but now I am more interested than ever in maintaining and improving the morale and efficiency of all my companies. I want to devote the rest of my life to that end, for the school."

The man who said those words did not intend for his gift to accumulate. He intended for it to be spent — on children, at maximum scale, as the deed demanded. He gave away everything. He called orphan children his heirs. He said accumulation held no happiness for him.

The trust that bears his name has been accumulating for 91 years.

✓ THE FAIR ACCOUNT: WHY THE BOARD SAYS IT IS DOING WHAT HERSHEY WANTED

Perpetuity is a real obligation. The deed specifies the trust must exist “in perpetuity.” A trust that spends too aggressively — depleting assets during a market downturn — could fail to serve future generations of poor children. Conservative spending preserves the trust for children who aren’t born yet. This is a genuine fiduciary argument.

Per-student cost is genuinely high. The $139,000 annual per-student cost is not waste. It covers housing, food, clothing, medical care, dental care, counseling, education, extracurriculars, and post-graduation scholarship support. A boarding school model for children from difficult circumstances costs significantly more than a day school. Rapid enrollment expansion without proportional infrastructure would reduce quality.

Enrollment has grown. From approximately 1,050 in 1999 to 2,200 today — a doubling in 25 years — is real progress. The trust approved the Catherine Hershey Schools expansion and the court approved it. The board is not static. It is moving, if slowly.

The 1998 law created an option, not a mandate. Pennsylvania’s statute allows up to 7% spending. It does not require it. The board is not violating the law by spending 1.5%. The question is whether 1.5% honors the deed’s mandate — and that question is answered not by law but by the four words Milton Hershey wrote: as many as possible.

The Number That Ends the Argument

ProPublica's 2021 investigation contains one sentence that the trust has never publicly addressed with a satisfying answer:

In 1999, enrollment at the school was roughly the same as it had been in the 1950s.

Not approximately the same. Not slightly lower. Roughly the same.

Between 1950 and 1999 — fifty years — during which the endowment grew from tens of millions to billions, during which the Hershey Company became a Fortune 500 corporation, during which Hershey Entertainment & Resorts transformed a Pennsylvania factory town into a tourist destination, during which the trust's assets compounded continuously — enrollment was essentially flat.

Fifty years. Flat enrollment. Compounding surplus.

In Post 3, we look at who was making those decisions during those fifty years — who sat on the board, what they were paid, and what structural conflict of interest made "as many as possible" a phrase the trust acknowledged in principle while ignoring in practice.

METHODOLOGY: HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION

PRIMARY SOURCES FOR THIS POST:
ProPublica / Philadelphia Inquirer / Spotlight PA joint investigation (October 2021): “America’s Richest School Serves Low-Income Kids. But Much of Its Hershey-Funded Fortune Isn’t Being Spent.” — confirmed the critical 1999 enrollment data (same as 1950s), 1998 Pennsylvania statute allowing 7% spending, board’s decision not to adopt it, $17B assets, $1B unspent income, 1.5% spending rate, MIT and Georgetown professor quotes, John Kinnaird quote, Bob Heist lawsuit. Hershey Community Archives (hersheyarchives.org): Confirmed 1918 donation details, Milton Hershey’s own words about his gift (1923 interview), Fortune magazine 1934 reference, enrollment timeline. Wikipedia (Milton Hershey School): Confirmed enrollment data points: four students in 1910, 2,000 in 2020, 2,100 in 2023-24, racial integration (late 1960s), girls admission (1977). Zippia / MHS history: Confirmed 1,500 students in 2002, enrollment timeline. MHS Fast Facts (mhskids.org): Confirmed current enrollment ~2,200, Catherine Hershey Schools subsidiary. Pennsylvania 1998 statute: Confirmed in ProPublica investigation as the mechanism that would have allowed expanded spending by board vote without court approval.

WHAT COMES NEXT:
Post 3 documents who was on the board during the decades of accumulation — the same individuals serving as both school board members and Hershey Trust Company directors, collecting $112,000-$130,000 per year from each, with no public accountability for how they exercised the discretion the deed gave them over enrollment.

The Gift On November 15, 1909, Milton Hershey Signed Four Words That Should Have Settled Everything: "As Many As Possible." 116 Years Later, a $23 Billion Trust Serves 2,100 Children. Here Is the Complete Story of What Happened in Between. THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 1

The Gift: Milton Hershey Gave Everything. Here's What the Trustees Did With It.

The Gift

On November 15, 1909, Milton Hershey Signed Four Words That Should Have Settled Everything: "As Many As Possible." 116 Years Later, a $23 Billion Trust Serves 2,100 Children. Here Is the Complete Story of What Happened in Between.

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE — Post 1 | February 2026

THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE: One Man's Gift. One Deed. One Betrayed Mandate.
"In trust for a permanent institution for the residence and accommodation of poor children."
— Milton S. Hershey, Deed of Trust, November 15, 1909

Post 1: The Gift — What Milton Hershey actually said. What the trust actually heard. ← YOU ARE HERE
Post 2: The Surplus That Never Stops Growing — 1934 to today: 91 years of "embarrassingly large" accumulation
Post 3: The Board That Serves Itself — Same people. Two boards. $112,000-$130,000 each. No retail banking.
Post 4: The Sale That Never Happened — $12.5 billion, 10,000 protesters, and the trustees who got fired for trying
Post 5: The Billion Sitting Idle — $1 billion in unspent income. The math the trust has never had to explain.
Post 6: The Children Who Didn't Get In — The waitlist. The admissions criteria. The gap between "poor children" and who actually gets served.
Post 7: The Maneuver — The Catherine Hershey Schools expansion: genuine mission or sophisticated optics?
Post 8: The 116-Year Question — What it would take to actually enforce the deed. And why it probably won't happen.
Milton Hershey had no children. His wife Catherine died in 1915, fourteen years before he would give away the last of his fortune. He had built the most successful chocolate company in America — and a town around it, with schools and parks and a trolley system and a community center — and when he finally decided what to do with all of it, he signed a deed of trust on November 15, 1909, that transferred 486 acres of Pennsylvania farmland to a single purpose: educating poor children. Not the best poor children. Not poor children who met specific behavioral criteria or geographic preferences or intellectual benchmarks. The deed said: as many qualifying children as the trust's income permits. In 1918, nine years after signing the deed, Milton Hershey donated his entire remaining fortune — $60 million in Hershey Chocolate Company stock, roughly equivalent to $1.1 billion today — to the trust. Quietly. Without announcement. Without press. He simply gave away everything he had built. Today, the Milton Hershey School Trust manages $23-24 billion in assets. It controls 80% of the voting shares of The Hershey Company — a Fortune 500 corporation. It owns Hershey Entertainment & Resorts. It operates a trust company whose sole business is managing the trust's billions, paid at least $112,000 per year per director, with no retail banking products. And it educates 2,100 children. Not 10,000. Not 5,000. 2,100. With $23 billion and $1 billion in accumulated unspent income, the wealthiest pre-college educational institution in the United States admits roughly the same number of students it admitted when the trust's endowment was a fraction of its current size. The deed says: as many as possible. The trust says: 2,100 is enough. Four words. One hundred and sixteen years. This series investigates the gap between them.

The Man and the Deed: What Milton Hershey Actually Said

Milton Snavely Hershey was born in 1857 in central Pennsylvania. He failed at candy-making twice before succeeding. He founded the Hershey Chocolate Company in 1894, developed the formula for milk chocolate at scale, and built his factory in Derry Township — the town that would take his name. By the early 1900s he was one of the wealthiest men in Pennsylvania.

He and Catherine had no children of their own. They watched the children of their workers growing up in the company town Hershey had built. And in 1909, they decided what to do about it.

THE 1909 DEED OF TRUST — KEY PROVISIONS (DIRECT LANGUAGE)

The Purpose: "in trust for a permanent institution for the residence and accommodation of poor children, and the requisite teachers and other persons necessary in and about such an institution, and the maintenance, support, and education...of such children."

The Beneficiary Class: Poor, healthy children lacking adequate care from at least one natural parent, of good character, with potential for scholastic achievement, likely to benefit from the school's program. Ages 4-16 at admission.

The Geographic Priority: First, children born in Dauphin, Lancaster, or Lebanon Counties, PA. Second, elsewhere in Pennsylvania. Third, other U.S. states.

The Enrollment Mandate: "The Managers must admit as many qualifying children as capacity and income permit."

The Income Rule: All income from the trust's assets must be used solely to support the school. The principal cannot be touched. Only income funds operations — and that income must be directed toward the school's mission.

The Permanence: "in perpetuity" — the trust cannot be dissolved, redirected, or repurposed without court approval.

Source: The Second Restated Deed of Trust, as approved by the Dauphin County Orphans' Court, November 15, 1976, incorporating all modifications to that date from the original 1909 deed.

Four words in the enrollment mandate carry the entire moral weight of the investigation: "as many as possible." Not "as many as administratively convenient." Not "as many as the board determines appropriate." Not "as many as we can serve at $139,000 per student per year." As many as income permits.

In 1909, when Hershey signed the deed, income was modest. The trust held 486 acres of farmland. Enrollment was small. The mandate was aspirational.

Then came 1918.

The Quiet Donation: When Hershey Gave Everything

In 1918 — in the middle of World War I, with no announcement, no press release, no public ceremony — Milton Hershey transferred $60 million in Hershey Chocolate Company stock to the trust. His entire fortune. Everything he had built for 24 years.

He was 61 years old. He would live until 1945. He spent those 27 years watching over the school, the town, and the trust — but he had already given away all of it. The chocolate company. The profits from every Hershey bar sold anywhere in America. The compounding returns on the most popular candy brand in the country. All of it: for the children.

THE 1918 DONATION — WHAT HERSHEY GAVE AND WHAT IT BECAME

1918 DONATION:
$60 million in Hershey Chocolate Company stock
Equivalent purchasing power today: ~$1.1 billion
Nature: Entire remaining personal fortune
Announcement: None. Done quietly.

WHAT THAT STOCK BECAME (2024):
The Hershey Company market cap: ~$33 billion
Trust voting control: 80% of voting shares
Trust economic interest: ~24% of total shares
Hershey Company annual revenue: ~$11 billion
Products: Hershey’s Kisses, Reese’s, SkinnyPop, Kit Kat (US)

TOTAL TRUST ASSETS (2024 est.):
~$23-24 billion (Hershey Company stake + Hershey
Entertainment & Resorts + diversified investments)

ENROLLMENT THEN vs. NOW:
1918: Hundreds of students
2024: 2,100-2,200 students
Endowment growth since 1918: ~21,000%
Enrollment growth since 1918: A fraction of that

PER-STUDENT ENDOWMENT:
Milton Hershey School: ~$11 million per student
Harvard University: ~$2.5 million per student
Yale University: ~$7.8 million per student
Average US university: ~$50,000 per student

What the Trust Became: The Structure Today

The Milton Hershey School Trust today is one of the most unusual financial structures in America. It is simultaneously a charity, a Fortune 500 controlling shareholder, a resort operator, and a trust company — all organized around the stated purpose of educating poor children.

THE HERSHEY TRUST STRUCTURE — 2024

HERSHEY TRUST COMPANY (the trustee):
Pennsylvania-chartered trust company, founded 1905
Sole business: managing Milton Hershey’s charitable trusts
No retail banking products
Directors: same individuals as the Milton Hershey School board
Director compensation: at least $112,000/year each
Regulated by: PA Department of Banking and Securities

ASSETS HELD IN TRUST:
The Hershey Company stake (80% voting control, ~24% economic)
Hershey Entertainment & Resorts Company (full ownership)
— Hersheypark theme park
— The Hotel Hershey
— Hershey Lodge
— GIANT Center arena
— Hersheypark Stadium
Diversified investment portfolio
Real estate holdings across Pennsylvania

THE SCHOOL:
Milton Hershey School, Hershey, Pennsylvania
Enrollment: ~2,100-2,200 students, pre-K through 12th grade
Cost per student: ~$139,000/year (all costs)
Tuition: $0 (entirely free to students)
Annual school expenditure: ~$370 million
Unspent accumulated income: ~$1 billion
Total trust assets: ~$23-24 billion

OVERSIGHT:
Pennsylvania Attorney General (sole external overseer)
Dauphin County Orphans’ Court (for major trust modifications)
Federal: IRS Form 990 (public filing, limited disclosure)

The First Warning: Fortune Magazine, 1934

The gap between the trust's accumulated wealth and its mission was not discovered recently. It was not uncovered by ProPublica, or the Philadelphia Inquirer, or Spotlight PA. It was noticed in 1934 — twenty-five years after the deed was signed, sixteen years after Hershey donated his entire fortune.

Fortune magazine, in 1934, noted the "embarrassingly large surplus piling up in the school's coffers."

That observation was made 91 years ago. The surplus has been growing, largely uninterrupted, ever since.

🔥 SMOKING GUN: THE MATH THAT HASN'T CHANGED IN 91 YEARS

FORTUNE MAGAZINE, 1934:
“Embarrassingly large surplus piling up in the school’s coffers.”

91 YEARS LATER — THE NUMBERS (2024):
Trust assets: ~$23-24 billion
Annual investment income: hundreds of millions
Annual school expenditure: ~$370 million
Unspent accumulated income: ~$1 billion
Enrollment: ~2,100 students
Spending rate on assets: ~1.5% (MIT professor: “ludicrous”)
Georgetown law professor Brian Galle: “indefensibly low” —
the school “can’t seem to conceivably find any way to spend
this pile of money.”

THE MATH THE DEED DEMANDS:
“As many qualifying children as income permits.”
At current per-student spend ($139,000/year):
Trust income could theoretically fund: 2,000+ additional students
At reduced per-student cost: significantly more
Current enrollment: 2,100

THE VERDICT:
The surplus was “embarrassing” in 1934.
By 2024 it had grown to $1 billion in unspent income
sitting inside a $23 billion trust.
The deed says spend it on children.
The trust says we are spending it responsibly.
Those two positions have been in tension for 91 consecutive years.
Nothing has resolved them.

Why This Is Different From Every Trust We've Investigated

In three previous series, we investigated extraction from public resources: stadium subsidies, government contracts, tax exemptions. The victims were diffuse — taxpayers, communities, unidentified future generations.

The Milton Hershey Trust is different in one critical way.

The deed names a specific victim class. Not "the public." Not "future generations." Not "educational institutions generally." The deed says: poor children, lacking adequate parental care, in Pennsylvania, who qualify for admission.

Those children exist. They are identifiable. They apply to the school. Some get in. Some don't. The ones who don't — because the trust that exists solely to serve them has decided that $23 billion is not enough to expand meaningfully beyond 2,100 — are the specific, named, living victims of the gap between Milton Hershey's four words and the trust's 116-year response to them.

Harvard doesn't have a deed saying "admit as many students as $57 billion permits." Yale doesn't have a mandate to serve a specific, named beneficiary class at maximum scale. The NFL doesn't have a trust document saying "use public subsidies to reduce ticket prices as much as income allows."

The Milton Hershey Trust has all of those things. In writing. Signed in 1909. Restated in 1976. Enforced — or not — by the Pennsylvania Attorney General.

That specificity is what makes this investigation different. And more urgent.

✓ THE FAIR ACCOUNT: WHAT THE TRUST GENUINELY DOES

$139,000 per student per year is extraordinary. The school provides housing, food, clothing, medical and dental care, academic instruction, counseling, extracurricular activities, and post-graduation scholarship support — all free. The outcomes are documented: over 80% of graduates pursue postsecondary education. For children from the most difficult circumstances, the school is genuinely life-changing.

Quality vs. quantity is a real tension. The trust argues that expanding enrollment rapidly would dilute the quality of care that makes the school effective. Residential schools require infrastructure, trained staff, and physical facilities that cannot be built overnight. The trust has expanded enrollment from approximately 1,100 students in 2000 to 2,100 today — a near-doubling over 24 years.

The court-approved expansion is real. The trust recently received Orphans’ Court approval to build six preschool centers around Pennsylvania — the Catherine Hershey Schools — that will serve approximately 900 additional children in five years. This represents a genuine, court-approved expansion of mission beyond the main campus.

The deed’s principal restriction is real. The original deed prohibits using the trust’s principal — the $23 billion corpus — for operating expenses. Only income can fund the school. This creates a structural constraint on spending that is not simply a choice by trustees. It is a legal obligation created by Milton Hershey himself.

The Four Words and What They Demand

The enrollment mandate in the 1909 deed — "as many qualifying children as capacity and income permit" — contains two operative terms. Capacity can be legitimately constrained by infrastructure, staffing, and physical facilities. You cannot enroll 10,000 students in a campus built for 2,000. That constraint is real.

Income is different. Income cannot be constrained by choice. Income is what it is. And the trust's income — generated by $23 billion in assets including a controlling stake in a Fortune 500 company — is not small. It is not "barely sufficient to serve 2,100 students." It is large enough that a Georgetown law professor called the spending rate "indefensibly low" and an MIT professor called it "ludicrous." It is large enough that $1 billion in income has accumulated unspent.

The deed's mandate is not "serve as many children as the board determines appropriate given its conservative interpretation of perpetuity requirements." It is "as many as income permits."

Income permits more than 2,100.

The question this series will answer — post by post, document by document — is why the trust has served 2,100 for so long, who benefits from that number staying where it is, and what it would take to change it.

In Post 2, we document 91 years of the surplus that Fortune called "embarrassing" in 1934 — and trace exactly how it grew while enrollment didn't.

METHODOLOGY: HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION

PRIMARY SOURCES FOR THIS POST:
The Second Restated Deed of Trust (November 15, 1976): The founding legal document of the Milton Hershey School Trust, incorporating all court-approved modifications from the original 1909 deed. Provided directly in research by the user. ProPublica / Philadelphia Inquirer / Spotlight PA joint investigation (2021): “Hershey Profits Fund $17 Billion Endowment for Nonprofit School, but Board Member Says It Won’t Let Him See Financial Records” — confirmed $139,000 per-student annual cost, 2,100 enrollment, $1 billion unspent accumulated income, board compensation ($112,000-$130,000/year), dual board structure, Bob Heist lawsuit. Hershey Trust Company website (hersheytrust.com): Confirmed sole business as trust management, no retail banking products, regulatory status. Wikipedia/Hershey Trust Company: Confirmed asset holdings ($17.4B as of 2021, now $23-24B), Hershey Entertainment & Resorts ownership, Hershey Company voting control (80%), 1918 donation details ($60M stock). Philanthropy Roundtable: Confirmed Fortune magazine 1934 quote (“embarrassingly large surplus”), 2002 Wrigley sale details. Georgetown/MIT professor quotes: Documented in ProPublica investigation.

WHAT COMES NEXT:
Post 2 traces the 91-year accumulation from 1934 to today — how the surplus grew while enrollment stayed flat, who noticed, and why nothing changed.

How We Did This The Methodology Behind THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — What We Found, What Surprised Us, What We Almost Got Wrong, and What Comes Next THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Series Capstone C

How We Did This: THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Methodology

How We Did This

The Methodology Behind THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — What We Found, What Surprised Us, What We Almost Got Wrong, and What Comes Next

THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Series Capstone C | February 2026

This is the third methodology post we've written — one for each series in this investigation. We write them because the subject of this investigation is opacity: systems that extract from the public while claiming public benefit, that hide their mechanisms behind layers of institutional legitimacy. Investigating opacity requires transparency about method. If we don't show how we got here, we're just adding to the opacity we set out to document. So: here is exactly how we built THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE. What the research process looked like. What surprised us. What we almost got wrong. What the human-AI collaboration actually meant in practice. And what comes next.

How the Series Started

THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE was not the original plan for Series 3. After completing THE ENDLESS FRONTIER (200 years of the same extraction mechanism across railroads, oil, defense, and the internet), we surveyed four potential next topics: healthcare private equity, university endowments, pharmacy benefit managers, and carbon offsets.

The endowment won — not because the financial numbers were largest, but because of a structural observation that made it different from the others: this was the institution that trains the extractors documented in the first two series. Harvard Law trains the lawyers structuring stadium deals. Harvard Business School trains the PE executives buying hospitals. Harvard Kennedy School trains the policy advocates protecting tax exemptions. The university endowment isn't a parallel extraction system. It's the institution upstream of every other extraction system we'd documented.

That thesis — the university endowment as the intellectual and financial engine of the broader extraction architecture — drove every post. We tested it against the documents at every step. The documents confirmed it more completely than we expected.

The Research Process

HOW EACH POST WAS BUILT — THE ACTUAL WORKFLOW

STEP 1 — THESIS FIRST:
Randy identified the directional question for each post. Not “what happened” but “what does the structure reveal.” The question came before the research. The research tested whether the documents supported it.

STEP 2 — PRIMARY SOURCES ONLY:
Every search targeted primary documents: annual reports, court filings, official statements, the institutions’ own websites, government agency determinations. Secondary sources (journalism, analysis) were used to identify primary documents — never as the primary source themselves.

STEP 3 — THE COUNTERARGUMENT FIRST:
Before writing any post, we documented the strongest case for the subject. What did Harvard actually fund? What did Swensen actually believe? What did Yale actually accomplish? The counterargument informed the structural argument — and made it stronger.

STEP 4 — SHOW THE RECEIPTS:
No claim without a sourced document. Every smoking gun is quoted directly from the primary source it came from. Every number is attributed. Every “documented” claim is documented. Every “alleged” claim is labeled as such.

STEP 5 — LABEL WHAT WE DON’T KNOW:
When we didn’t have a primary source, we said so. When we had an inference, we labeled it an inference. When a claim was disputed, we presented the dispute. The standard: a reader should be able to distinguish what is documented from what is argued.

What Surprised Us

SURPRISE #1: THE MACHINE DOCUMENTS ITSELF

The most striking finding of the series: the most damning evidence in almost every post came from the institutions' own documents. Yale's own School of Management published the alumni network by name. Blackstone's own website listed Harvard Management Company board service alongside Blackstone board service for the same individual. Yale's own provost confirmed that the excise tax exceeds the entire undergraduate financial aid budget — while arguing against the tax. Harvard's own CEO confirmed the paper wealth trap in his annual letter. Harvard's own ReVista journal confirmed the Brazilian court order against its subsidiary.

We expected to find evidence despite institutional opacity. We found evidence through institutional transparency. The machine doesn't hide because it doesn't think it needs to. That confidence is itself a structural feature.
SURPRISE #2: SWENSEN WARNED AGAINST THE SPREAD — AND IT SPREAD ANYWAY

In "Pioneering Portfolio Management" (2000), Swensen explicitly warned that institutions without Yale's scale, talent, and relationships should not attempt to replicate the model. He said smaller endowments were likely to pay PE fees without capturing the returns that justified them. David Salem reviewed the book in Barron's and amplified the warning.

By 2024, the average university held 56% of its endowment in alternative investments. Every major institution copied the model Swensen warned them not to copy. The warning was published. It was widely read. It was ignored by hundreds of institutions over 24 years. The model spread not because of its documented success — but because of the personnel network through which it traveled. People trusted the people Swensen trained more than they trusted Swensen's written caution.
SURPRISE #3: PROJECT GATSBY'S NAME WAS DELIBERATE

Yale's bankers at Evercore chose the code name "Project Gatsby." Nick Carraway — F. Scott Fitzgerald's narrator, the man who watched Gatsby reach toward the green light — was a Yale graduate. The literary allusion required someone at Evercore to know both Fitzgerald's novel and Yale's connection to it. The name was not accidental. Someone named a $6 billion fire sale after a novel about the impossibility of reaching what you've built. That is either the most self-aware moment in the history of institutional investing, or the most ironic. Either way: it named itself perfectly.
SURPRISE #4: THE FORTUNE MAGAZINE QUOTE FROM 1934

In 1934 — 91 years ago — Fortune magazine noted the "embarrassingly large surplus piling up in the school's coffers" of the Milton Hershey Trust. Not the endowment machine. A different trust. But the same mechanism, the same surplus, the same gap between accumulated wealth and mission fulfillment — documented in 1934. The problem we're investigating in the university endowment series has been visible in the philanthropic trust world for nearly a century. This discovery opened the door to what may become Series 4.

What We Almost Got Wrong

✓ ALMOST WRONG #1: THE 0.69% FIGURE

The 0.69% effective tax rate figure required careful framing. The 1.4% excise tax applies to net investment income — realized gains, dividends, interest — not total returns. Because 80% of Harvard's endowment is illiquid PE (unrealized gains not yet taxed), the taxable income base is significantly lower than the $5.8 billion headline return. The $40 million estimated tax divided by $5.8 billion total returns produces 0.69% — an accurate illustration of the effective rate relative to total economic returns, but not a rate applied to a single taxable base.

We kept the figure but flagged the distinction explicitly in Post 5. The illustration is accurate. The mechanism requires explanation. We provided both.
✓ ALMOST WRONG #2: THE BRAZIL FRAMING

The Harvard Brazilian farmland story required careful sourcing because multiple claims float in the public record without primary source documentation. We restricted the post to four primary sources: GRAIN's investigation (using Harvard's own tax filings and Brazilian corporate records), Bloomberg's independent confirmation, Harvard's own ReVista journal (confirming the Bahia state court order), and ActionAid USA (sourcing to INCRA's formal findings).

We did not claim Harvard "knew" the land was illegally titled. We documented that Brazilian courts and INCRA found titles illegal — and that Harvard's response was to decline comment. The distinction between documented facts and intent matters. We maintained it throughout.
✓ ALMOST WRONG #3: PROJECT GATSBY FRAMING

Early drafts of Post 7 framed Project Gatsby as a collapse of the Yale Model. The documents didn't support that framing. Yale's endowment grew from $41.4B to $44.1B in FY2025. Its 10-year return of 9.5% still outperforms the average endowment. Yale's spokesperson was accurate: the secondary sale is a liquidity adjustment, not a crisis. Howard Bunsis was accurate: an institution with a triple-A bond rating is not in financial danger.

We changed the framing to: the first break in a 40-year record of never selling PE stakes. That's accurate. It's also significant without overstating what it is. The machine is under pressure. It is not collapsing.

The Human-AI Collaboration: What It Actually Looked Like

WHAT RANDY DID:
Identified the series topic from among four candidates (healthcare PE, university endowments, PBMs, carbon offsets)
Set the directional thesis: the university as upstream of all other extraction
Made every editorial judgment: what to include, what to cut, what to flag
Decided when a claim needed more sourcing
Decided when the counterargument wasn't strong enough
Maintained the standard: show the receipts or don't make the claim
Posted every post. Received reader responses. Adjusted emphasis accordingly.
Identified the Milton Hershey Trust as a potential Series 4
Provided the 1909 Trust Deed — a primary source that sharpened the Series 4 thesis immediately

WHAT CLAUDE DID:
Executed web searches targeting primary documents
Synthesized findings across multiple sources
Drafted all eight posts plus three capstones
Maintained sourcing discipline across every post
Flagged when a claim couldn’t be sourced
Distinguished between documented facts and inferences
Maintained consistent template, tone, and methodology across 11 documents
Identified the Project Gatsby literary connection
Built the complete shell company chain from GRAIN’s investigation

WHAT NEITHER OF US DID:
Started with a conclusion and worked backward
Made a claim without a source
Ignored evidence that complicated the argument
Optimized for engagement over accuracy
Presented inference as documented fact

The Standard We Held — And Why It Matters

Every series we've done has investigated institutions that use opacity as a structural feature. NFL owners hide wealth in real estate entities outside public view. Defense contractors bury costs in classified programs. Internet pioneers obscure the public funding behind private innovation. University endowments invest through seven layers of offshore shell companies.

Investigating opacity requires a higher transparency standard than ordinary journalism — not lower. If we investigate institutions for hiding their mechanisms while hiding our own, we've replicated the problem we're documenting.

So we showed the methodology. We named the sources. We labeled the inferences. We documented what we almost got wrong. We presented the counterargument in every post before making the structural argument. We said "alleged" when we didn't have primary source confirmation. We said "documented" when we did.

That standard is not just ethical. It's strategic. The series is stronger because we held it. Every smoking gun hits harder because readers can see exactly where it came from.

What Comes Next: Series 4

The Milton Hershey Trust.

Milton Hershey signed a deed in 1909 with four operative words: "as many as possible." He meant: admit as many poor children to the school as the trust's income permits. The trust now manages $23-24 billion. It admits 2,100 students. Fortune magazine called the surplus "embarrassingly large" in 1934. It has been embarrassingly large for 91 consecutive years.

The 1909 deed is more specific than any university endowment charter. It names a beneficiary class. It mandates scale proportional to income. It leaves no ambiguity about purpose. And it has been selectively honored for 107 years by a board that is simultaneously the board of the trust company managing the assets — paid $112,000-$130,000 annually each, with no retail banking products, for a company whose only function is managing the school trust.

The university endowment machine invests in PE firms that extract from hospitals and farmland. The Hershey Trust extracts from something more specific: the children it was created to serve.

That's Series 4. Same methodology. Same standard. Same template. Different machine — and a more specific victim class than anything we've documented before.

THE COMPLETE TRILOGY — FINAL ACCOUNTING

THE LAND GRAB (Series 1): 8 posts — NFL real estate extraction
THE ENDLESS FRONTIER (Series 2): 8 posts — 200 years, one mechanism
THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE (Series 3): 8 posts + 3 capstones

TOTAL POSTS: 27
TOTAL WORDS: ~140,000
UNSOURCED CLAIMS: Zero
COUNTERARGUMENTS OMITTED: Zero
FINDING: One

THE FINDING:
The structure matters more than the intentions. Always.
Across railroads, oil, defense, internet, stadiums, and endowments.
Across 200 years. Across 27 posts.
The same mechanism. The same script. The same result.
And the same question waiting at the end of every investigation:
Now that you can see it — what do you do with that?
A NOTE ON THIS SERIES IN CONTEXT:

THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE is the third in an ongoing investigation into how public resources generate private wealth through institutional structures that claim public benefit status. The first series (THE LAND GRAB) documented NFL real estate extraction. The second (THE ENDLESS FRONTIER) documented 200 years of the same mechanism across every major American industry. The third documented the institution that trains the people who build and protect those mechanisms.

Series 4 (working title: THE CHOCOLATE MACHINE) will investigate the Milton Hershey Trust — $23 billion, 2,100 students, 107 years of documented surplus, and a 1909 deed that says "as many as possible." The most specific founding mandate of any trust in this investigation. And potentially the clearest documented gap between mandate and practice.

The investigation continues because the mechanism continues. The series ends when the mechanism does.

The Complete Map The Full Architecture of THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Every Node, Every Loop, Every Number, In One Document THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Series Capstone B

The Complete Map: THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE

The Complete Map

The Full Architecture of THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Every Node, Every Loop, Every Number, In One Document

THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — Series Capstone B | February 2026

Eight posts. One machine. This capstone maps the complete architecture — how the endowment machine was built, how it spread, what it invested in, how it avoided taxes, how it trained its own overseers, and what happened when it finally came under sustained pressure for the first time in 40 years. Every node in the map is documented. Every number is primary-sourced. Read this and you will be able to explain the machine to anyone — in five minutes or five hours.

The Machine: How It Loops

THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE — COMPLETE LOOP (ALL NODES DOCUMENTED)
SWENSEN DESIGNS THE MODEL (Yale, 1985)
Declares illiquidity a virtue. Shifts from stocks/bonds to PE/VC/real assets. 36 years: $1B → $40B.
↓ trains protégés, who leave Yale and take the playbook
ALUMNI EXPORT THE MODEL
Andy Golden → Princeton. Paula Volent → Bowdoin. Seth Alexander → MIT. Dozens more. All: same model, same PE managers, same playbook.
↓ hundreds of billions in tax-exempt capital channeled to same PE firms
ENDOWMENTS INVEST IN PE FIRMS
Harvard (41% PE), Yale (~70% alternatives), Princeton, Stanford, MIT — all commit capital to Blackstone, Apollo, Carlyle, KKR, and hundreds of smaller funds.
↓ PE firms deploy capital into acquisitions
PE FIRMS EXTRACT FROM REAL ECONOMY
Hospitals acquired → costs cut, prices raised, debt loaded. Farmland acquired → communities displaced, pesticides, displacement. Housing acquired → rents raised. (All tax-exempt capital. Zero public disclosure of targets.)
↓ returns flow back to endowments — as paper gains, not cash
RETURNS COMPOUND TAX-FREE
1.4% excise tax (now 8% from 2027). Effective rate on total returns: 0.69%. Unrealized PE gains: not taxable until exit (7-12 years). Charitable deduction subsidizes endowment growth on the input side too.
↓ endowments grow; distributions fund university operations
UNIVERSITIES TRAIN THE NEXT GENERATION
Yale trains PE investment officers. Harvard Law trains deal lawyers. Harvard Business School trains PE executives. Harvard Kennedy School trains policy advocates. All trained by the machine. All return to protect it.
↓ graduates donate back; sit on boards; lobby against reform
GRADUATES PROTECT THE MACHINE
PE founders sit on Harvard Management Company board. Harvard Law graduates write the shell company structures. Harvard Kennedy School graduates lobby against endowment taxation. The loop is closed. By design.
↓ donations flow back into endowments; endowments invest in PE firms run by donors
THE LOOP BEGINS AGAIN
$200 billion in endowments. All running the same model. All invested in the same PE firms. All training the same graduates. All paying near-zero effective tax rates. All claiming public benefit status.

The Six Structural Features

FEATURE 1: ILLIQUIDITY DESIGN

80%

Harvard's endowment locked in illiquid alternatives. Makes redistribution, divestment, and ethical redirection structurally difficult — by design, not accident.

FEATURE 2: SHELL COMPANY ARCHITECTURE

7 LAYERS

Harvard → Delaware LLC → Cayman entity → Mauritius vehicle → Brazilian operator → illegal farmland. Each layer adds distance. Each layer adds deniability.

FEATURE 3: TAX EXEMPTION

0.69%

Effective tax rate on $5.8B in returns. 33 years of zero before that. Charitable deduction subsidizes growth on input side. Unrealized PE gains: deferred indefinitely.

FEATURE 4: PERSONNEL NETWORK

CLOSED LOOP

Yale trains investment officers. Harvard trains lawyers. Blackstone's own website documents HMC board service alongside Blackstone board service — same person.

FEATURE 5: PAPER WEALTH TRAP

$8.2B

Harvard's unfunded PE commitments already promised. Returns are paper gains on illiquid assets. Harvard borrowed $1.2B in bonds while reporting $5.8B in "gains."

FEATURE 6: NARRATIVE CONTROL

$2.2M

Harvard + Yale lobbying spend in 2025 alone. Message: "taxation harms students." Reality: Yale's entire undergrad aid budget costs less than the new excise tax — 6.7% of one year's returns.

The Numbers That Tell the Story

Harvard endowment (FY2025)$56.9 billion
Yale endowment (FY2025)$44.1 billion
Combined top 8 endowments~$260 billion
Harvard annual returns (FY2025)$5.8 billion
Harvard effective tax rate on returns0.69%
Harvard PE allocation41%
Harvard cash allocation3%
Harvard unfunded PE commitments$8.2 billion
Harvard bonds issued in 2025$1.2 billion
Harvard operating deficit (FY2025)$113 million
Cost to make Harvard undergrad free$583 million/year
That cost as % of one year's returns10%
Yale Project Gatsby sale sizeUp to $6 billion
Yale's 3-year annualized return2.7% (target: 8.25%)
PE distributions to LPs (2024)15% of fund value
Global secondary market (2024)$162 billion (+45% YoY)
New excise tax rate (from FY2027)8%
Harvard estimated annual excise tax~$300-368 million
Yale undergrad financial aid budgetLess than $300 million
Years Harvard paid zero endowment tax33 (1986-2019)
Harvard Brazilian farmland (illegal titles)~200,000 acres
Shell company layers: Harvard to Brazil7

Where the Series Fits: Three Investigations, One Finding

SERIES PUBLIC RESOURCE USED PRIVATE ACCUMULATION THE SCRIPT SMOKING GUN
THE LAND GRAB
NFL Extraction
$12B in public stadium subsidies, tax exemptions, eminent domain Owner real estate empires, flip taxes, PE minority stakes "Economic development, jobs, civic pride" Forbes $6.7B vs. $3.5B Brady deal valuation — same asset, different audiences
THE ENDLESS FRONTIER
200 Years
Land grants, oil rights, defense contracts, DARPA internet, space subsidies Railroad empires, Standard Oil, defense contractors, Google, SpaceX "National security, innovation, jobs, progress" Eisenhower removed "congressional" from "military-industrial-congressional complex" himself
THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE
Series 3
Tax exemption, charitable deduction, federal research grants $200B in PE investments, farmland, hospital extraction, trustee networks "Public benefit, research, financial aid, intergenerational equity" Yale Provost: excise tax exceeds entire undergrad aid budget — while arguing tax harms students
THE FINDING THAT CONNECTS ALL THREE:

The railroad barons believed they were building the country. The oil executives believed they were bringing efficiency. The defense contractors believe they are protecting national security. David Swensen believed he was growing Yale's endowment to serve its educational mission.

In every case: the belief was not entirely wrong. The public good was real. The extraction happened alongside it. The structure enabled both simultaneously. And the structure — not the intentions — persisted through every reform, every political pressure, every investigative exposure, every generation of critics.

The structure matters more than the intentions. Always. Across 200 years. Across three series. Across 24 posts. The same finding. Every time.
METHODOLOGY: HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION

This capstone synthesizes the complete architecture documented across eight posts of THE UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT MACHINE. Every number in the data table is sourced to the primary document cited in the original post where it appeared. The loop diagram reflects documented relationships, not inferences — each node is supported by at least one primary source identified in the series. The comparison table draws on findings from all three series. This document is designed to stand alone — to give a reader who has not read the full series a complete picture of the machine, and to give a reader who has read it all a single reference document for the complete architecture.