06/30/2026
If only everyone that wealthy gave back what a nation we would be…
Very Good Short read..
A young woman named MacKenzie Tuttle graduated from Princeton in 1992 with a degree in English literature.
Toni Morrison had been her professor. Morrison later said she was one of the best creative writing students she had ever taught.
MacKenzie took a job at a hedge fund in New York called D.E. Shaw. It was a practical choice. She was good at language and she was good at numbers and she needed to earn a living.
Then she met a man named Jeff Bezos who had an idea about selling books on the internet.
She did not dismiss it.
In 1993, they married. In 1994, they drove across the country to the Seattle area with their belongings in a car. They rented a garage. They set up computers. They had no large budget, no team, no investors confirmed, and no guarantee that anyone would buy a single book.
MacKenzie handled the accounting. She wrote business materials. She answered customer calls. She packed boxes.
Amazon's first year of revenue was $511,000.
She was there for all of it.
As Amazon grew, MacKenzie stepped back. They had four children. She focused on raising them and on her own writing. In 2006, her debut novel The Testing of Luther Albright won the American Book Award. She published a second novel in 2013. She taught writing.
For the next two decades, the story of Amazon was told without her in it.
Jeff Bezos became one of the most recognized names on earth. The garage became a founding myth. MacKenzie's name appeared in that myth occasionally, briefly, and usually in a subordinate clause.
She did not correct this publicly.
She did not correct it at all.
What most people do not know is that MacKenzie Scott did not grow up wealthy.
Her family filed for bankruptcy during her final year at Hotchkiss boarding school. At Princeton, she struggled to pay tuition. A roommate once loaned her $1,000 when she was close to dropping out. A local dentist gave her free dental work after seeing her use denture glue on a broken tooth because she could not afford to fix it properly.
She has said she never forgot either of those people.
In January 2019, Jeff Bezos announced their divorce.
The settlement gave her approximately 4% of Amazon's shares worth roughly $36 to $38 billion.
She was forty-eight years old.
Within months, she signed the Giving Pledge a commitment to donate the majority of her wealth during her lifetime.
Then she built a small team and created a philanthropic initiative called Yield Giving. The model was unlike anything at that scale. No lengthy applications. No required progress reports. No conditions attached. No press releases in her name. Her team identified organizations doing serious work in overlooked communities and called them.
Many recipients thought it was a scam.
Some asked the caller to repeat the number.
Others wept.
She gave $436 million to Habitat for Humanity. She sent the largest single gifts in the institutional histories of multiple Historically Black Colleges and Universities. She directed hundreds of millions to food banks, climate organizations, rural communities, tribal colleges, women's health initiatives, prison reform programs — causes that larger, more image-conscious donors had considered too unglamorous or too complicated.
In 2025 alone, she donated $7.17 billion to 186 organizations.
By most public accounts, that single year exceeded her former husband's entire lifetime giving.
Her total since 2019: $26.3 billion. More than 2,700 organizations. No named buildings. No branded foundation. No galas held in her honor.
Forbes now ranks her third among all living philanthropists behind only Warren Buffett and Bill Gates. She reached that position in six years.
Her net worth remains approximately $38 to $40 billion. Amazon's stock keeps rising faster than she can give it away.
She packed the first boxes. She ran the first numbers. She answered the first calls.
The company that came out of that garage is now worth more than $2 trillion.
The garage itself still stands in the Seattle area. It is a documented address.
Her name is not on it.
What she did with the money that came from it is now a matter of public record $26.3 billion distributed quietly, without transaction, without expectation, the same way a dentist once fixed a broken tooth for a college student who couldn't pay.
She described herself, in a 2025 essay, as one small part of a much larger story.
The number says otherwise.