Roxanne Quimby | |
---|---|
Born |
Cambridge, Massachusetts |
July 11, 1950
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | San Francisco Art Institute (B.F.A.) |
Occupation | Businesswoman, Conservationist |
Known for | Burt's Bees |
Roxanne Quimby (born July 11, 1950) is an American artist and businesswoman notable for founding the Burt's Bees personal care products company with the eponymous beekeeper Burt Shavitz.
Quimby was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts and raised in Lexington, Massachusetts, a daughter of an engineer and salesman father and a homemaker mother. Although her family was business oriented, she initially took a different path, attending San Francisco Art Institute, where she was influenced by the "back to the land" homesteading ideas of Helen and Scott Nearing.
In 1975 she and her boyfriend, George St. Clair, moved to Maine, bought a tract of land near Guilford, built a cabin and outhouse, and lived a rustic lifestyle. In 1978, the couple had twins; a little later, St. Clair left the family. Eventually, she met Burt Shavitz and in 1984 began selling candles made of his beeswax at local fairs. After achieving a $20,000 profit the first year, the business grew steadily; in 1991 it introduced its best received product, a lip balm. In the 1990s, Quimby acquired Shavitz's stake in the company; in 2007 Quimby sold the company to Clorox.
After turning Burt's Bees over to outside investors, she used her new fortune to deepen her long running conservation advocacy. The most visible action was the purchase of over 120,000 acres of Maine forest, which she then placed off limits to hunters, loggers, and other users. She has since proposed a donation of 70,000 acres of her land towards a new National Park located in Maine. An additional donation of 30,000 acres would be managed like a state park and would allow activities such as hunting and snowmobiling. This plan is controversial to some Mainers, including Maine Governor Paul LePage and Maine senators Angus King and Susan Collins.