Philanthropist, arts education advocate, schoolteacher, businesswoman
Beverley Taylor Sorenson (April 13, 1924 – May 27, 2013) was an American education philanthropist and advocate for the promotion of arts in elementary schools.[1]
There, she met James LeVoy Sorenson and they were married the next summer on July 23, 1946 at the Logan Utah Temple.[1] They had eight children and settled in Salt Lake City.[1] At the time of her passing they had 49 grandchildren and 65 great-grandchildren.[1] Sorenson died on May 27, 2013.[1]
Career
From 1945 to 1946, Sorenson was a schoolteacher at a Quaker school in New York.[3][4] In 1975, Sorenson became the owner and manager of ExCelCis Cosmetics/LeVoys Fashions.[4] From 1989 to 1995 she was the owner and manager of the Continental Beauty College.[4]
Sorenson became the founder of Art Works for Kids in 1995 and the co-founder of the Sorenson Legacy Foundation in 2005.[4]
In 2008, the Utah State Legislature adapted Sorenson's arts-focused teaching model to integrate arts into elementary education.[5] In her honor, they named it the Beverley Taylor Sorenson Arts Learning Program.[1]
Sorenson Legacy Foundation
Sorenson was a philanthropist and supported many causes through the Sorenson Legacy Foundation.[1] Among those causes, the foundation donated 45 million dollars to support fine arts instruction for children and teachers.[6] She established endowments for elementary arts education at seven universities:
Additionally, the Sorenson family's gift to the David O. McKay School of Education supports the BYU ARTS Partnership to increase the quality and quantity of arts education in local elementary schools.[7]