Blue circle with white graduation cap and the word 'Education' around it
Group of people wearing green shirts in a classroom setting, one shirt labeled 'Coach'

MENTOR

52% Led by BIPOC Leaders

448,401 Received Technical Assistance (through OJJDP’s National Mentoring Resource Center)

25 Affiliates in 23 States & D.C.

2.2M Young People Engaged

Gray geometric logo above the word "MENTOR."

St. Mary’s Center for Women and Children (SMC) was founded in 1874, when an abandoned baby was left on the doorstep of a Boston church. This event led to the establishment of St. Mary's Infant Asylum, which remains at its current Dorchester location. By 1902, the center was already providing shelter and care to over 1,000 infants and 300 single mothers, many of whom had been abandoned or cast out by their families.

Today, SMC has grown and adapted to meet the evolving needs of the community, serving approximately 500 women, children, and families each year. It is now one of the largest family shelter programs in Massachusetts. The center has recently sharpened its focus on residential, educational, and employment services, all paired with case management to help women and families achieve long-term stability.

The families arriving at SMC often lack access to essential services like healthcare, education, and community support, which significantly impacts their physical and mental well-being, as well as their social and economic mobility. Many of these families come from Boston's most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, and a significant portion of young mothers are immigrants or refugees who have fled violence in their home countries.

Since Partnering with The Lynch Foundation

Since 1990, The Lynch Foundation made our initial investment in this powerful idea and supported the creation of MENTOR through modest seed funding. We were inspired by the mission that aims to guarantee young people who care about them, assure them they are not alone in dealing with day-to-day challenges, and make them feel like they matter. 

We followed up with a unanimously approved expansion grant in 1998 to launch MENTOR sites across the country. This also allowed for the creation of a Mass Mentoring program to support our local community. Mass Mentoring has established a network of over 370 mentoring and youth-serving organizations representing over 50,000 young people statewide.

The Lynch Foundation has continued this partnership for more than three decades. Thanks to this partnership, we’ve helped MENTOR:

  • Increase the number of at-risk youth in structured mentoring relationships from 300,000 to 4.5 million; growing 15 fold

  • Become the only national advocate for mentorship

  • Create and maintain the only national database connecting volunteers to opportunities in their local communities

Visit the MENTOR site for more information.

A man and boy on a football field in a ready-to-play stance, with an American football on the ground.