*** Welcome to piglix ***

George Blumenthal (banker)

George Blumenthal
Born 1858
Frankfurt am Main
Died June 26, 1941(1941-06-26) (aged 83)
Nationality United States
Occupation Banker
Net worth $54 million (1937)
Spouse(s) Florence Meyer Blumenthal (m. 1898; d. 1930)
Mary Clews (m. 1935)

George Blumenthal (1858 – June 26, 1941) was a German-born banker who served as the head of the U.S branch of Lazard Frères.

Born to a German Jewish family in Frankfurt am Main, George Blumenthal a foreign-exchange banker who had been sent to the United States by Speyer & Co., rose to prominence as the head of the U.S branch of Lazard Frères and was a partner of Lazard Frères in France. Blumenthal was president of the Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, where he donated $2mil and where the Blumenthal auditorium is named after him. He was a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art for many years as well as president of the American Hospital of Paris. He served as the seventh president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1934 until his death in 1941, where he gave $1mil and to which he bequeathed the Patio from the Castle of Vélez Blanco, a colonnaded Spanish Renaissance patio. He retired from Lazard in 1901, giving up his seat on the stock exchange, and returned as a partner in 1906. He returned to the stock exchange in 1916, purchasing a seat for $63,000. With J. P. Morgan the elder, he was one of five bankers who saved Grover Cleveland from giving up specie payments in 1896, with their $65,000,000 gold loans.

His niece, Katharine Graham, in her memoir Personal History, described her uncle as a "difficult man with a big ego." He and Florence also named the Blumenthal Rare Book and Manuscript Library, which contains rare and illustrated books, manuscripts, Haggadot, as a resource for scholarly research.


...
Wikipedia

...