Elizabeth Noyce\u27s development activities in Portland have coined the phrase economic philanthropy, the art of making investments no one else will touch. In 1990, with the banking industry in chaos, she bought Maine Bank & Trust, and it was profitable within 18 months. She acquired Crown Life, and simulataneously moved Maine Bank & Trust to a neighboring building on Congress Street. Her success with those buildings led her to an adjoining venture, the proposed fresh produce market on Cumberland Avenue. Details
Cover Story piece on the Portland Public Market (PPM), which has made some changes in the way it do...
The Talk of Maine piece with a profile of Roxanne Quimby, founder of Burt\u27s Bees, owner of thous...
City piece on the Portland Public Market\u27s director, Ted Spitzer, who also runs Farm to Market I...
Continuum piece on farmers\u27 markets. Elizabeth Noyce has discussed a year-round, covered farmer...
Views of newly the constructed Portland Public Market, 19 Preble Street, shortly after its grand ope...
North by East piece on Elizabeth Betty Noyce, who died in September at the age of sixty-five, not...
Editorial praising Betty Noyce\u27s plan for an expanded farmers market in Portland. The writer com...
Step Ahead. The Portland Museum of Art will show the needlework of Maine\u27s premier philanthropi...
The Portland real estate boom of the 1980s began to collapse by 1988, as businesses fled overpriced ...
Philanthropist Elizabeth B. Noyce has contributed $220,000 to the Committee for Governmental Reform,...
Philanthropist Elizabeth B. Noyce has donated $600,000 to the Damariscotta River Association to help...
Feature Story piece on Owen Wells and the late Elizabeth Noyce\u27s Libra Foundation, of which Well...
A recent offer by October Corp., a company founded by late philanthropist Elizabeth Noyce, to donate...
The Elizabeth B. Noyce Trust of Medomak has contributed another $60,000 to the organizers of the ref...
Focus on Building & Real Estate piece on Stanford Management of Portland, owned by Rosa Scarcelli, ...
Cover Story piece on the Portland Public Market (PPM), which has made some changes in the way it do...
The Talk of Maine piece with a profile of Roxanne Quimby, founder of Burt\u27s Bees, owner of thous...
City piece on the Portland Public Market\u27s director, Ted Spitzer, who also runs Farm to Market I...
Continuum piece on farmers\u27 markets. Elizabeth Noyce has discussed a year-round, covered farmer...
Views of newly the constructed Portland Public Market, 19 Preble Street, shortly after its grand ope...
North by East piece on Elizabeth Betty Noyce, who died in September at the age of sixty-five, not...
Editorial praising Betty Noyce\u27s plan for an expanded farmers market in Portland. The writer com...
Step Ahead. The Portland Museum of Art will show the needlework of Maine\u27s premier philanthropi...
The Portland real estate boom of the 1980s began to collapse by 1988, as businesses fled overpriced ...
Philanthropist Elizabeth B. Noyce has contributed $220,000 to the Committee for Governmental Reform,...
Philanthropist Elizabeth B. Noyce has donated $600,000 to the Damariscotta River Association to help...
Feature Story piece on Owen Wells and the late Elizabeth Noyce\u27s Libra Foundation, of which Well...
A recent offer by October Corp., a company founded by late philanthropist Elizabeth Noyce, to donate...
The Elizabeth B. Noyce Trust of Medomak has contributed another $60,000 to the organizers of the ref...
Focus on Building & Real Estate piece on Stanford Management of Portland, owned by Rosa Scarcelli, ...
Cover Story piece on the Portland Public Market (PPM), which has made some changes in the way it do...
The Talk of Maine piece with a profile of Roxanne Quimby, founder of Burt\u27s Bees, owner of thous...
City piece on the Portland Public Market\u27s director, Ted Spitzer, who also runs Farm to Market I...