2018年8月10日 星期五

Gerry Lenfest

Gerry Lenfest
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蓋瑞·藍菲斯特(英語:Gerry Lenfest)(英語:Gerry Lenfest),88歲,美國媒體大亨。[17]20180805逝世名人。

Harold FitzGerald "Gerry" Lenfest(May 29, 1930 – August 5, 2018) was an American lawyer, media executive and philanthropist.

Quick facts: Born, Died …

Gerry LenfestBornHarold FitzGerald Lenfest
May 29, 1930
Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.DiedAugust 5, 2018(aged 88)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.Alma materWashington and Lee University
Columbia UniversityOccupationEntrepreneur, PhilanthropistPolitical partyDemocratic 

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Early life and career

Lenfest was born in Jacksonville, Florida, then later grew up in Scarsdale, New York, and Hunterdon County, New Jersey. After attending Flemington High School, and graduating from Mercersburg Academy,Lenfest went on to receive his BA from Washington and Lee University in 1953 and his LLB from Columbia Law School in 1958.He served in the Navy between college and law school. Lenfest worked at the firm of Davis Polk & Wardwellbefore becoming, in 1965, associate counsel to Triangle Publications, Inc., the media company controlled by Walter Annenberg. In 1970, he was named head of the Communications Division at Triangle. He formed Lenfest Communications in 1974 and sold it to AT&T in 1999, who then sold it to Comcast in 2000 for $6.7 billion. Lenfest was the Chairman of the Board of Directors and majority shareholder of the TelVueCorporation.

Later Life and Philanthropy

Lenfest's wife, Marguerite B. Lenfest has also played an active role in the Lenfest Group, and Suburban Cable TV Co., Inc. She serves on the board of several cultural institutions including the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.
In or around 2002, Lenfest and his wife donated $5.5 million to help build the five-story "Lenfest Pavilion" addition to Abington Memorial Hospital in Abington Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania 
Lenfest planned to donate all of his wealth to worthy causes before his death. On March 21, 2007, Lenfest announced a donation of $33 million to be spent solely on faculty compensation at his alma mater, Washington and Lee University, where he served as a trustee, and an unpublished amount to Wilson College, his wife's alma mater. In recent years, Lenfest has given over $100 million to Columbia University, where his donations include a $48 million challenge gift toward the endowment of 32 new professorships, $15 million toward construction of a Law School residence hall which bears his name, $15 million to support the programs of the Earth Institute, $12 million to endow awards for outstanding teaching, and most recently a $30 million pledge to help build an Arts Center venue on the Manhattanville campus.
'Gerry' and Marguerite Lenfest gave the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia $63.6 million in endowment, annual giving, underwriting of faculty chairs and student fellowships, bricks and mortar. Lenfest is Curtis' board chairman. Lenfest Hall, designed by Venturi, Scott-Brown & Associates, opened in summer 2011. The Lenfests created a challenge program to endow faculty chairs. Student tuition at Curtis is free. (Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, Dec. 5, 2011, p. A1, A10-11.)
Lenfest was elected a trustee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, in 1993, and became Chairman of the Museum's board in 2001. From 2005 until his death, he was Chairman of The Museum of the American Revolution. In 2006, he became Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Curtis Institute of Music.
Lenfest endowed the Lenfest College Scholars program, a $12,000 per year scholarship awarded to high school juniors from the south central Pennsylvania area. Until 2007, he also endowed the Lenfest College Prep Scholarship, which was given to teenagers from eighth to tenth grade from certain areas of rural Pennsylvania to attend one of four private schools, Mercersburg Academy, The Perkiomen School, Westtown School, or Wyoming Seminary. [citation needed]
In July 2010, Lenfest donated $5.8 million to the SS United States Conservancy: $3 million to buy the cruise ship SS United Statesfrom Norwegian Cruise Lines and the rest to outfit the ship for its next use.
In June 2012, Lenfest made a $40,000,000 challenge grant to the Museum of the American Revolution to be located in Philadelphia, PA.
Although Lenfest was not Jewish, he made several significant donations to Jewish causes including $500,000 to the National Museum of American Jewish History, $650,000 in donations to the American Friends of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the American Jewish Committee, and the JCC Macabbi games.
In January 2016, Lenfest donated Philadelphia Media Network—a holding company that owns the Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia Daily News, and the newspapers' joint website, Philly.com—to The Philadelphia Foundation, a nonprofit organization, so that the two newspapers, a community asset, would stay in Philadelphia.
Lenfest died on August 5, 2018, at the age of 88.

References

More information: Tap to expand…

http://www.philly.com/philly/business/20120403__Gerry__Lenfest_worked_for_previous_Inquirer_owner.html

Musser 2006 | About the award

The Cable Center

Office of the Secretary of The University: The Trustees of Columbia University

http://www.telvue.com/about/investor-relations/

Washington and Lee University, About Gerry and Marguerite Lenfest

The Philanthropy 50: Americans Who Gave the Most in 2007

Philadelphia Business Journal, Sept. 22, 2005.

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Malone, Elizabeth (Fall 2010). "The Flagship Donor". Philanthropy. Retrieved 20 June 2012.

Gammage, Jeff (July 10, 2010). "Lenfest gives millions to save SS United States". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 20 June 2012.

Salisbury, Stephan (12 June 2012). "Lenfest issues $40 million challenge for American Revolution museum". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 30 March 2013.

Jewish Exponent: "Philanthropist Is Co-Owner of Papers" April 4, 2012

 January 11, 2016

"H.F. "Gerry" Lenfest Obituary". Philadelphia Inquirer. 2018-08-05.

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