/Directory/Ohio/

Newtown

The Nonprofit Ecosystem in Newtown

Newtown is home to 5 nonprofit organizations. In aggregate, these organizations account for $0 in revenue and employ 0 individuals.

How Large Are Newtown, OH Nonprofits?

Organizations By Employee Count

0

1-5

0

6-10

0

11-25

0

26-50

0

51-100

0

101-250

0

250-1000

0

1000+

Employee Count Buckets

Number of Organizations

Organizations By Revenue Level

0

$50k-250k

0

$250k-1M

0

$1M-5M

0

$5M-10M

0

$10M-25M

0

$25M-100M

0

$100M+

Org Revenue Buckets

Number of Organizations

Where Do Newtown, OH Nonprofits Focus?

The IRS classifies nonprofits along 25 different categories or NTEE classifications.

*Remaining NTEE categories account for 0 organizations.

Explore Nonprofits in Newtown, OH

1

Learning Nest Cincinnati

Newtown, OH

MISSION:

The goal of this organization is to provide foundation-level learning for children (usually age two through five and four and one half or five respectively) prior to entering the formal school setting.

Village Of Newtown Veterans Association

Newtown, OH

MISSION:

The goal of this organization is to promote awareness of and appreciation for history and historical artifacts.

Vessel United Church Inc

Newtown, OH

MISSION:

The goal of this organization is to provide services relating to religion where a more specific code cannot be accurately assigned. Examples may include Unitarianism, Taoism, Sikhs, Zoroastrism, Atheism, Actualism, Theosophy, Bahaism and reference to miracles.

New Rock Baptist Church

Newtown, OH

MISSION:

The goal of this organization are the religious organizations whose form of Christian faith and practice originated with the principles of the Reformation. Use this code for Protestant churches as well as their ministries, missions or missionary activities; bible camps and schools; and bible distribution programs.

International Association Oftouchers

Newtown, OH

MISSION:

The goal of this organization is to provide support services to patients and their families. Programs can include social and recreational activities for people who are recovering from surgery or a serious illnesses; supportive services for children who are ill and for their families which enable family members to remain with a child who is hospitalized; family and sibling support groups, and programs which attempt to make a gravely or terminally ill child’s final days, weeks and months more pleasant. (rev. 9/2005)

1