CDP Non-Profit Tax ID
#65-0970090
Our Tax ID is, 65-0970090 and we are a charitable program of the Congressional District Programs, Inc., a 501(c)3 non-profit public charity. Our CDP Program Manager, monitors your donations and in-kind donations to make sure that your contributions satisfy the Internal Revenue Service requirements and are used in accordance with our charitable mission. The CDP is part of the National Heritage Foundation family.
Since 1968, the National Heritage Foundation has received a distinguished FOUR STAR RATING by the Charity Navigator. The Charity Navigator is a premier independent charity evaluator and is considered the most reliable watchdog sources of public foundations.
About Us
Questions or Comments, Please Email Us At, savvyhorse@earthlink.net
Alton Allen helped fund and teach children about roping and riding horses. In order to keep children interested in attending and finishing High School, he and some concerned community members created the first Texas High School Rodeo Association.
It wasn't long before other states joined in and created what we know as the National High School Rodeo Assoication. Over fifty years ago, it was all about helping children through horses. Today, this same legacy continues with Alton Allen's nephew Bob Allen.
For more than 25 years, Bob Allen has been using horse whispering techniques and philosophies to teach children. It is with this same dedicated spirit, that Bob, his wife Tammie and son, Lyn decided to create the Horse Whispering Violence Prevention Fund.
We plan to continue to improve and expand this program by teaching horse whispering techniques and philosophies, so that ALL children will have the opportunity to change their lives through horses..
We believe that horses can change people's lives. Our founder, Bob Allen's uncle believed that too. Over fifty ears ago, Bob's uncle Alton Allen thought that roping, horses and children were a good mix. Raised in south Texas, Alton was a rancher, lawyer, calf roper and inventor of the modern day "Roping Box Barrier," which is still used today in rodeo events.