Boyd and Sheila Morris spent nearly two decades doing humanitarian work across North Africa, Central Asia, and the Himalayas, co-founding charitable organizations and building infrastructure in communities that had none. Everywhere they went, they noticed the same pattern: people with energy and willingness, locked out of wealth-building by systems they had no part in designing.
When the 2008 crash hit, the Morris’ saw that pattern at home. Families who had saved, invested, and followed the conventional advice lost years of progress overnight. Boyd and Sheila were among them. In the aftermath, Boyd began studying the mechanics of how wealth is actually created at scale: not the retail version sold to consumers, but the wholesale side of the financial system that institutions use to build permanent capital. Real estate-backed assets, structured reserves, the compounding effect of pooled participation over time. The insight was uncomfortable: these mechanisms exist, they work, and they are almost entirely unavailable to ordinary people because the institutions that control them have no reason to share.
Boyd and Sheila brought that insight to their kitchen table and started talking to families they trusted, to entrepreneurs who had built and lost and rebuilt, to people with the stubbornness to spend years getting a new model right. Two networks of families and friends converged. Boyd and Sheila’s circle brought the humanitarian and philosophical foundation. A second group brought entrepreneurial experience and financial alternatives they had been exploring independently. Together, they formed the core of what would become CoSpark.
On February 1, 2020, after nearly six years of development, the company was formally incorporated as The Community Corp, since evolved into CoSpark. The founding premise has never changed: build a commonwealth that gives ordinary people access to the wealth-creation mechanics that have always existed at the top of the financial system, and let participation be the engine that drives it.

Boyd and Sheila brought that insight to their kitchen table and started talking to families they trusted, to entrepreneurs who had built and lost and rebuilt, to people with the stubbornness to spend years getting a new model right. Two networks of families and friends converged. Boyd and Sheila’s circle (John and Michelle Brennan, Nathan LeBlanc, Gary and Joanne Geveshausen, Mackenzie Tamayo) brought the humanitarian and philosophical foundation. A second group brought entrepreneurial experience and financial alternatives they had been exploring independently. Together, they formed the core of what would become CoSpark.
On February 1, 2020, after nearly six years of development, the company was formally incorporated as The Community Corp, since evolved into CoSpark. The founding premise has never changed: build a commonwealth that gives ordinary people access to the wealth-creation mechanics that have always existed at the top of the financial system, and let participation be the engine that drives it.