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Evelyn Danzig Haas

Evelyn Danzig Haas
Born Evelyn Danzig
1917
Died February 3, 2010 (age 93)
Nationality United States
Education B.A. Wheaton College
Occupation philanthropist
Spouse(s) Walter A. Haas, Jr.
Children 3 (including Bob Haas)

Evelyn D. Haas (1917 – February 3, 2010) was a prominent San Francisco Bay Area civic leader and philanthropist. She was the co-founder of the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund. Under the leadership of Evelyn and her husband, Walter A. Haas, Jr., the Fund contributed more than $364 million to hundreds of Bay Area cultural, civic, and social service organizations.

Born Evelyn Danzig in 1917, she grew up in New York City and graduated from Wheaton College in Massachusetts, where she developed her love of art. She met her future husband, Walter A. Haas, Jr., while he was attending Harvard Business School. They married and moved to San Francisco in 1940, where they raised their three children: Robert D. Haas, Betsy Haas Eisenhardt, and Walter J. Haas.

Evelyn's brother Jerome Alan Danzig was married to tennis star Sarah Palfrey.

Haas served on the board of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. She and her husband helped raise the $95 million needed to build the museum’s facility in San Francisco’s South of Market (SoMa) area; it opened in 1995.

Haas was involved in the San Francisco Symphony for more than 40 years and ultimately became a Life Governor of the institution. The Haas, Jr. Fund provided the symphony with a $10 million lead challenge grant for the creation of Keeping Score, an initiative anchored by a PBS television series aimed at “bringing the power and joy of classical music” to millions of Americans’ homes and schools.

Haas was a great lover of the outdoors. She and her family spearheaded the restoration of Crissy Field, a former military base, into a 100-acre urban national park.

Haas also was an avid fly fisher—a hobby she picked up from her husband. She co-authored a book with Gwen Cooper, Wade a Little Deeper, Dear: A Woman's Guide to Fly Fishing in 1979, which became a classic among fly fishers. It was one of the first books to encourage women to take up the sport.


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