Richard A. Busemeyer

ABOUT / OUR FUNDER

Richard A. Busemeyer (1924 to 2006)

Born in 1924 in Cincinnati, Ohio, Richard A. Busemeyer established this foundation in 1992. He intentionally included “Atheist” in the name to push back against the assumption that non-believers cannot be humanitarian. In his autobiography he wrote: “I did so only to show that atheists don’t have horns, and that they can be humanitarian.”

On his death in 2006, the foundation inherited his entire estate. It continues to deploy capital into organizations and ideas he believed in.

A LIFE OF QUESTIONING

Richard was the eldest of ten children in a devout Catholic family. His parents sent every child to Catholic schools through the Depression, sacrifices the family could barely afford but made anyway.

He served as an officer in the Army during World War II, returned home in 1946, and shortly after met Marjorie at a dance at Xavier University. They married in 1948 and raised ten children of their own, all baptized and educated in the same Catholic tradition Richard had been raised in.

Sometime in the late 1950s or early 1960s, his belief began to give way. As his children moved through school, he proposed pulling them out of Catholic schools and sending them to public school. Marjorie resisted; they compromised. The younger children moved to public school but were required to attend CCD and Sunday Mass.

By the early 1970s, Richard had broken with the church entirely. In 1971, he published a letter to the editor titled "Stop Praying," a public declaration that reverberated through his family, his community, and his church.

ESTABLISHING THE FOUNDATION

In 1992, Richard established the Richard A. Busemeyer Atheist Foundation. The name was deliberate. He believed estates should not pass intact from generation to generation, and he wanted his capital to do work in the world rather than sit in family hands. On his death in 2006, the foundation inherited his estate and began deploying it.

IN HIS OWN WORDS

A FAMILY LEGACY

Since Richard's passing, his youngest son Dan has carried forward the foundation's work. He served as President from 2006 to 2022, and now chairs the Board. The third generation of the family now leads day-to-day operations.