177 75 11MB
English Pages 358 [378] Year 2007
Lots of Lehmans *-
^.~
• r«»»i
-V vV
*-
^.i^-.^-'-
The Family of Mayer Lehman of Lehman Brothers Remembered by
His Descendants
Lots of Lehmans What
was
it like to
rights, responsibilities,
grow up with and
of the
all
privileges accorded
one of America's most outstanding
families
Lehmans of Lehman Brothers? In
—
addition to
New
the creme de la creme of Wall Street are
York Governor
Lehman, United
for
(and, later.
whom Lehman
States Secretary
Morgenthau
Senator)
CoUege
is
Herbert
named;
of the Treasury Henry
Chief Judge of
Jr.;
the
New York
State
Court of Appeals Irving Lehman; Manhattan District
Attorney Robert Morgenthau;
New York
Congressman Jonathan Bingham; Ambassador John
L.
Loeb
Jr.;
Arthur Goodhart, the
iirst
American master of an Oxford University lege; plus philanthropists arts
col-
and supporters of the
too numerous to mention.
What
it
was Hke
—
Jewish world
to live in a rarified
the world of
vividly portrayed here in the
German
"Our Crowd"
—
^is
words and pictures
of the descendants of Mayer Lehman, the youngest of three
came
to
German Jewish
America from Bavaria and
formed Lehman Brothers,
company ing
brothers
in
in
a mercantile
who 1850
goods
Montgomery, Alabama. After mov-
New York, Lehman Brothers helped the New York Cotton Exchange and went
to
found
(continued on hackjlap)
Lots of Lehmans
The Family of Mayer Lehman of Lehman Brothers
Remembered by
His Descendants
f
% %
§
^
-r-%
"^ ^^^\ ^
A
1
^1
»
The Mayer Lehman family secotid
row seated
Howard Goodhart, (left to right):
Lehman
in
Tarrytown,
(left to right):
Hattie
NewYork,
1888. Front
Lehman Goodhart
Babette with grandson Allan
Philip f. Goodhart, Harriet
c.
Lehman
Lehman,
row,
kneeUng: Herbert
holding daughter Helen,
Settle
Lehman Fatman
(Sigmund's wife), Sigmund
Limburg), Morris Fatman, Arthur Lehman.
(Herbert
H. Lehman
^.
Vr,i^
next
to Irving.
In the
Mayer Lehman with grandson
with daughter Margaret. Back row
M. Lehman, Suite
(left)
^
Clara
& Papers,
Lehman
(later
Clara
Columbia University)
Lots of Lehmans
The Family of Mayer Lehman of Lehman Brothers Remembered by Edited with Introduction
His Descendants
& Notes by Kenneth Libo
Foreword William
L.
Bernhard and John
L.
Loeb Jr.
Afterword June Rossbach Bingham Birge
CENTEH gJB>01SH
HISIORT
CS.1I ,
© William
AH
rights reserved.
No
L.
Copyright 2007
C~wW
Bernhard, June Rossbach Bingham Birge, John L. Loeb Jr.
part of this
book may be reproduced
or utilized in any form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or retrieval system,
by any information storage and
without permission in writing from the publisher.
Published by Center for Jewish History
Editor and Compiler
Kenneth Libo
Editorial Consultant
Kathy Plotkin
Editorial, Design, and
Production Services by President
Editorial Coordinator
Design and Layout
MTM Publishing, Inc.
Valerie TomaseUi
Tim Anderson Annemarie Redmond
Copyediting
Janine Stanley-Dunham
Proofreading
Zach Gajewski; Paul Scaramazza
Genealogy and Family Trees by President
Genealogist
Designer
Our Living Tree
Bob Breakstone David Kleiman Scott Citron
'.
Distributed by Syracuse University Press
ISBN # 978-0-9792336-0-9 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data in progress.
Manufacturing supervised by Active Concepts,
Printed in Canada
mi
Inc.,
N.Y.
'
Yi
Table of Contents Foreword
vii
Acknowledgements ix Introduction:
The Lehmans, A Family and
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
& Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
Chapter
Five:
Chapter
Six:
Settie
Clara
Lehman Fatman
Lehman Limburg
Arthur Lehman
2
& Babette Neugass Lehman
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
Chapter Four:
Firm
a
& Adele
Chapter Seven: Irving Lehman
Philip
& Morris
J.
Goodhart
Fatman
69 89 115
Lewisohn Lehman
137
Straus
Lehman
& Edith Altschul Lehman Afterword 283
Contributors
Appendix One: Reader's Guide
49
& Richard Limburg
& Sissie
Chapter Eight: Herbert Lehman
&
27
Wlw'sWIio 299
to the
World of the Mayer Lehman Family 313
Appendix Two: Descendants of Mayer and Babette Lehman 329 Index 351
185
219
Lots of Lehmans:
The Family of Mayer Lehman of Lehman Remembered by
Brothers
His Descendants
Edited with Introduction & Notes Kenneth Libo FOREWORX) William L. Bernhard and John L. Loeb Jr. Afterword June Rossbach Bingham Birge
Contributors Dorothy L. Bernhard Robert A. Bernhard William
L.
Bernhai'd
Jonathan B. Bingham
June Rossbach Bingham Birge Stephen Birmingham
Ann Loeb Bronfman Helen L. Buttenwieser Lawrence B. Buttenwieser Paul A. Buttenwieser Peter L. Buttenwieser
Judith Loeb Chiara Julius Edelstein
Carolin Flexner Gabrielle Forbush
Peter Friedman
Hans Gerst Straus Gerder
Ann
(in alphabetical order)
Sir Philip
Goodhart
Lord William Howard Goodhart
John D. Gordan III Goodhart Gordan Joan Morgenthau Hirschhorn Phyllis
Peter Josten
Wendy Lehman Lash Adele Lewisohn Lehman Arthur Lehman Babette Neugass Lehman Edith Altschul Lehman Herbert Lehman Irving Lehman Mayer Lehman Grin Lehman Penelope Lehman Wendy Vanderbilt Lehman Marjorie Lewisohn A. Myles Limburg
Limburg L. Loeb Frances L. Loeb John L. Loeb Jr. John L. Loeb Sr. Peter
Arthur
Eileen Josten
Lowe
William Mayer
Henry Morgenthau III Robert M. Morgenthau Franklin Delano Roosevelt Camilla Master Rosenfeld Isadore Rosenfeld
Mabel Limburg Rossbach Deborah Jane Wise Sheridan Irving
Lehman
Straus
Louise Blumenthal Sulzberger
Duane Tananbaum Lehman Wise
Peter
—
Forew^ord By William
L.
Great-grandsons of
Bernhard and John L. Loeb
Jr.
Mayer Lehntan and Babette Neiigass Lehman
Grandsons ofArthur Lehman and Adele Lewisohn Lehman
The ries
Lehman family memoHyde Park, New York, in
genesis of these
took place in
October 2004.
A
State
was being held
at
New
the Franklin and
Eleanor Roosevelt Institute under the auspices of
Lehman College with
the help of
The
previous evening, our cousin June
Rossbach Bingham Birge female
June's
—now
the ranking
member of the Mayer Lehman
clan
first
memory
was when she was about
as a
of her Uncle Herbert four: "I
was in
his
arms
we hobbled up and down at the shallow end of his swimming pool. Men's bathing suits in
as
those days had a top, but even
how
William Bernhard.
Lehman not
great governor but as a great uncle.
one-day seminar on Herbert
Lehman's four-term governorship of York
gave a talk describing Herbert
furry he was.
more told
hair
me
on
asked
his chest
he didn't
would not
I
know
so,
I
could see
why he had
so
much
than on his head.
He
but he was sure that
inherit this distinction."
I
Lots of Lehmans
John was
by June's speech
so taken
said to her afterward,
family history!" to
that
he
"You've got to write
which she repUed,"Not
a
own
ects,
but the idea of
a
writing proj-
book about
the
Lehman
family stayed alive and evolved. In 2005 the three of us (June,
Bill,
and John) met to
an important hallmark of our family.
Meetings of the four of us followed for the
in a
thousand years."
June was busy with her
continuation in America. PubHc service remains
discuss
next year, along with countless phone
calls
among us and the rest of our Lehman family, soliciting their interest
far-flung
e-mails
memories. We have used
their
member of the
every
Lehman,
mitted any
recalled
by
was
also
known
book,
Book Award
of history
we
chose
recipient
and
Hunter College. Ken
at
to us as the researcher, editor,
and writer of John
and Frances Lehman
L.
Loeb's oral memoir. All
sins
in a Lifetime.
One
of
to
make
this
as
we
to contact
have
com-
of omission or commission,
please forgive us, for
edit such a
Libo, a National
a professor
as
their descendants.
To compile and
Ken
and their spouses
his six siblings,
family. If
well
as
the sources
all
and resources we could think of
producing an anecdotal history of Herbert
and
book
we
have done our utmost
all-inclusive.
To those who
have responded to our requests for participation,
we
are truly grateful.
Over became hope
a
several
months the family responses
will provide
now
a
book we
both pleasure and
insights,
manuscript;
they are
Ken's ideas was to include letters from the
not only for a wide-ranging number of Lehman
Herbert Lehman Archives
family
as
Columbia,
as
well
members but
articles
recognizing Herbert
who
his siblings for their
enormous contribu-
lections of
Neu> York Times
and
at
tions to
pubhc
service, a
back several generations
Lehman in
tradition
Germany
going
before
its
also for other readers
find fascinating the anecdotes and recol-
well-known
readers enjoy
what
families.
May
all
our
follows.
— WLBaudjLL
Acknowledeements In compiling and editing Lots of Lehmans,
I
at
Columbia
enjoyed working closely with June Rossbach
assistance
Bingham Birgejohn
wealth of
L.
Loeb Jr., and William
—with whom
L.
University. There, with the able
of Tamar Dougherty,
I
discovered a
photographs, and oral and
letters,
the idea for this
book
written accounts. These materials, together
originated. This project could not have
been
with others from the family archives of Henry
Bernhard
undertaken wthout
Lehman memories
a
rich
assortment
of
they shared, along with
other contributors who, cumulatively, naake up the heart and soul of this book.
enormous debt of gratitude
to
I
also
owe an
Wendy Lehman
Lash, president of the Edith and Herbert H.
Lehman Foundation, both
for her invaluable
Morgenthau
IH,
Dorothy Treisman, Frances
Dinkelspiel, and John D. perfect
complement
Gordan
III,
provided a
to the family recollections
of Mayer and Babette Lehman's three dozen and more living descendants to the
who
take us back
world of "Our Crowd."
At John Loeb
Jr.'s
office,
Kathy Plotkin
genealogical contributions and for her
commit-
contributed not only a meticulous line-by-
Herbert H. Lehman Suite
& Papers
line reading
ment
to the
of the text but
also
an uncanny
Lots of Lehmans
ability for
problem
solving, often after raising
the right questions.
To Valerie Tomaselli of
MTM Publishing, MTM's editorial coordinator Tim Anderson, and MTM copy editor Janine Stanley-Dunham
a
very special thank you for
produce
this
of
archivists Phyllis
New York Times and Joan
AP/Wide World
Carroll
Photos, and researchers
Daniel Scott, Dennis Raverty, and Michael Skakun.
Finally,
thank you to the University of
Syracuse Press for permission to quote from
Bob Breakstone of Our much praise for making the
Stephen Binningham's "Our Crowd" :The Great
book.
Living Tree deserves
Collazo of the
photo
and care in helping
exercising impeccable taste to
Special thanks also to
genealogical charts both attractive and functional.
Jewish Families of New York.
—KL
Lots of Lehmans
;
TrSHBSHES-iSi
Riinpar, Bavaria, where the pliolo hi
Lehmans hvcd
The Lehmans: From Rimpar
hi
1845, fwe years
to the
before
New World, A
Mayer Lehman
Family
iiiiniigrated to the
Histoi-y, Maiiifrdiikisdies
United
Museum
States, (cover
M^iirzburfi)
INTRODUCTION
The Lehmans:
A Family and a Firm By Kenneth Libo
By 1950 Lehman Brothers, ment banking house
the sixth largest invest-
in the country,
had become to
investment banking what Levi Strauss, by then, had long
been
to blue jeans
—
quite an achievement for a family
enterprise organized in 1850 by three
immigrant brothers with
little
German Jewish
more going
for
them
— Lots of Lehmans
than determination, family
ground in the
cattle trade.
loyalty,
and
a
back-
Their economic
rise
began in the antebellum South. The exhaustion of the
soil in
the Atlantic seaboard states coupled
with the removal of the indigenous Indians precipitated
sizable
a
migration into
western
18th- and 19th-century
—
Rimpar
the historic backdrop of Jewish
as
non-Jews began immigrating to America,
The
younger brothers, heard the
soil
was
quick profits
a
—
new
staple crop that
cotton.
ing communities
promised
Almost overnight thriv-
came
into being along the
Yazoo, Alabama, and Mississippi
Word of this reached the family of Eva and Abraham Lehman. Abraham was a prosperous Jewish
cattle dealer living in
at
Landing
twenty-one, the eldest of the three
in Mobile,
"call
of cotton."
Alabama, in 1844, Henry
member of his extended family named Goldschmidt, who provided him with contacted
a
peddlers' supplies, probably
rivers.
to the
New World, A Family History by Roland Flade.) Just when many young German Jews as well Henry,
black
in Bavaria
life
can be found in The Lehmans: From Rimpar
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. chief attraction to this vast area of rich
set against
set
on
credit, before
out with a wagonload of merchandise for
to farmers, plantation owners,
Rimpar, Bavaria
and
he sale
their families.
Peddling was the Harvard Business School
Moving north along
Alabama
(Germany). At the time the Catholic prince-
of that
bishops of Bavaria permitted only one male
River, Henry, within a year, had his
child of a Jewish fainily to receive a license to
had accumulated enough savings to open
marry and work
small store
in his place
of birth. Because
was the tradition that the receive
such
a
license,
eldest son
Abraham and
it
would Eva's
younger sons Henry, Emanuel, and Mayer were encouraged to move, and the stayed.
eldest,
SeUgmann,
(A detailed account of the Lehmans in
ing
day.
on Commerce
the
start.
Street in the
He
boom-
town of Montgomery. Beginning with
modest stock of
a
foodstuffs, kitchenware,
a
and
general merchandise, he lived alone in the
back of the
store,
working long and tedious
hours, frequently deep into the night. In 1846
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
Henry
^vas
one of sixteen German Jewish
he may have already met
left,
his future wife,
founders of Hevra Mavaker Holim, a society
Babette Neugass, the daughter of a weaver from
for visiting the sick. Three years later the
nearby Rieneck
voted to form
on April
itself into a
12, 1852,
was
group
congregation, which
legally incorporated as
and 2,000
for 4,000 whites
Montgomery was Mobile and
New
linked to Atlanta by
rail
his arrival in
and
changed
point for cotton. In 1847
Emanuel, joined Henry.
A
younger brother,
a
story general store
A
Mayer had
memoir
youngest
son,
become
a
New York
Lehman
&
"He
felt it
life
who would
this distrust
and the German ruling
Lehman
main
slave
Brothers.
auctioning block, their store was well stocked
with everything from sheeting,
was
by
classes."
"The farmers would come and trade
Bro."
a
his
later
governor and U.S. senator,
"and he never got over
to
shirting,
and
ball thread. "It
was
largely a barter arrangement," recalled Herbert.
dictated late in
Herbert,
name
new two-
completely undemocratic country," according to an oral
Bro.
built a
strong poHtical rea-
sons for leaving Germany.
&
Montgomery, H. Lehman
yarn to cotton rope and
third brother, twenty-year-old Mayer,
arrived in 1850.
after
with sav-
on Montgomery's Court
Square bearing the legend "H.
Soon
later,
year
had stowed away, they
its
New York.
of
Hamburg
in
Directly opposite Montgomery's
Orleans by watei-way.The city
was already an important storage and trading
ings they
1850 Mayer boarded the Admiral
slaves,
to
he would marry in
several years later. In the spring
and on July 17 reached
Kahl ("Congregation") Montgomery.
Home
NeAV Orleans
whom
of Germany
When Mayer
such
and
it
for shirts
little as all
in
with their cotton
and shoes and
fertilizer,
was used in those days, and seed,
the necessities. That's
how
started in the cotton business."
they got
By 1852
the
brothers were also buying and selling real estate
and extending long-range credit to settling accounts in bales lars.
ry,
more
planters,
often than dol-
For some 40 years to the end of the centu-
foUowng
in 1855
the unexpected death of
from yellow
fever,
Henry
Emanuel and Mayer
Lots of Lehmans
were the firm. vative,
Mayer adventurous. According
tradition,
made
Emanuel was considered conser-
Mayer made
the money, and
sure they didn't lose
Early on,
Lehman
when
In 1858,
permanent
the brothers decided to
New York
City
open
Emanuel
to family
a
Emanuel
headed north for good and established Lehman
office,
Brothers, a cotton brokerage, at 119 Liberty
it.
Brothers established an
Street, center
of the
largest
market for cotton in
Montgomery
the country and just a few blocks from the bro-
based on loans to cotton growers secured by
kerage and banking operations of the Kuhns,
informal banking operation in
crop
liens.
They
bought cotton outright
also
and before long became cotton ing their store
Emanuel went supplies turers
as
to
dealers,
City to replenish
and negotiate with cotton manufac-
and exporters while Henry headed the
Lehman
operation in
New
Besides heading operations in Montgomery,
keep-
an adjunct. Every year
New York
Loebs, Goldmans, Sachses, and Seligmans.
Orleans, the major
Mayer made frequent
relatives.
In
born
store, dealt
Montgomery
with planters and farmers in the
surrounding
area.
Mayer became
the cotton
few days before
Montgomery
Henry's death, Babette's brother Benjamin
Mayer, in addition to managing the
A
his
Orleans,
living with
twenty-eighth
birthday, he married twenty-year-old Babette.
idence,
New Orleans. Meanwhile,
New
where Babette Neugass was then
receiving point for the cotton crops. After
Neugass took over in
trips to
where
their first four children
—Sigmund
(Lisette) in
they occupied a substantial res-
in 1859, Hattie in 1861, Settle
1863, and Benjamin (who died in
infancy) in 1865. slaves
—four
helped
at
Mayer by now owned seven
women
and three men. Some
the residence, while others
One,
the firm.
and nuance of the trade with the same
panied the Lehmans to
patience and persistence his ancestors had
War and took
applied to the Talmud.
Clara,
a
worked
in
nursemaid, voluntarily accom-
expert in the family, mastering every intricacy
who
were
New York after the
Civil
care of not only Settle but also
was born
in
New York
in 1870.
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
A>-^.V_,^^
Home
of Mayer and Babette c.
Lehman
at
South Court Street
1855. (Robert
M. Morgenthau)
in
Montgomery, Alabama,
1/
Lots of Lehmans
A
staunch supporter of Alabama's leading
Democratic
politicians,
Mayer was
mem-
also a
Babette's brother-in-law
belonged to
a
ber in good standing of Montgomery's Masonic
that
lodge, as well as a leading contributor to a
New York
building fund for Montgomery's
factories were.
house of worship
first
Jewish
built expressly for that
pur-
pose. The synagogue building was completed in
Stern
group that bought the cotton
was shipped either from to Liverpool,
New
where the
Orleans or
great cotton
As for the descendants of the
Sterns, a great-grandson of
John Loeb Jr.,
Abraham
Mayer Lehman,
recalls:
1862, one year after Jefferson Davis was sw^orn in as president
of the Confederacy on the bal-
cony of the Montgomery statehouse
just a
few
blocks away.
Lehman
One
has recently retired as head of the
Liverpool Cotton Exchange, and another one, totally Anglican, has for
many
years
Brothers suffered huge costs follow-
been the
sheriff of Cheshire County. The
ing the outbreak of the Civil War, which virtually
relations
with the Lehmans get even
cut off relations between
York." Alles
ist
Montgomery and
beendetl" ("Everything
is
New
over!")
more complicated when Abraham younger brother moves
to
New
Stern's
Orleans
New York to his
and becomes partners with Babette's
wife's relatives in Liverpool.Yet the firm's business
younger brother, Benjamin Neugass, and
went on. While Mayer remained
the
Emanuel wrote
Emanuel, with
desperately
his family,
where he oversaw the ton from
in
Montgomery,
returned to Europe,
arrival
of shiploads of cot-
New Orleans to Liverpool, London, and
other European ports. All ers did
from
through various
this
the
Lehman
alliances,
Babette's kinfolk, the Neugasses
and
in
was originally
With
New
called
Orleans.
The firm
Lehman, Neugass.
the arrival of young Mr. Stern, the
name was changed
to
Meanwhile, back
in
Lehman,
Stern.
broth-
mostly with Sterns.
Lehmans
formed
a
Montgomery, Mayer
partnership with John Wesley Durr,
Introduction: The Lehmans,
Lehman,
Dun &
Co. in Montgomery, Alabama,
and operated one of Montgomery's
c.
A
Family and a Firm
1865. Mayer Lehman and John Wesley Dnrr owned
biggest storage centers for cotton. (Robert
M. Morgenthau)
.
Lots of Lehmans
the
director of Montgomery's princi-
managing
pal cotton center, the
Lehman money,
Wesley Durr,
Alabama Warehouse. With
tions
elicited the following recollec-
from John Loeb Jr.:
Mayer's know-how, and Durr's
background and connections, the Alabama
Virginia
Warehouse soon became Montgomery's leading
were two leading white members of
storage center for cotton probably shipped by
Montgomery's
New
gunrunners to Liverpool via
Lehman and Durr remained out
the
war.
In
the
Orleans.
Civil Rights
Rosa Parks was
After
months of the
to the police station
Alabama governor, Thomas
got her released. They
$500,000 from
owned cotton Alabama
in
Mayer wrote
of non-Lehman
sales
New York
soldiers in
nego-
for the relief
mission to pass through the
I
His request,
operations of
while
Brothers in
in
New York
Montgomery
We
had
a
among
movement and her support of
Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks. For
Montgomery.
In the Nen> York Times obituary of
Parks
in
she was quite elderly.
Rights
continuing the partnership between
Lehman and Durr
done some seamstress work
other things of her activity in the Civil
Mayer and Emanuel resumed
Lehman
and
her person-
lovely dinner together, talking
however, went unanswered. After the war,
knew
met Virginia Durr
when
Grant for per-
lines.
NAACP
for Virginia.
Northern prison camps.
directly to General
branch of the
she had
ally;
of
local
went
with the president
of the
tiate
community.
arrested for sitting
Confederacy, Mayer was authorized by the Hill Watts, to
Clifford
in the front of a city bus, the Durrs
partners through-
final
Durr and her husband
Rosa
many
years Virginia
was ostracized for her
stand
on
by the top
civU rights
ures of Montgomery.
(October 25, 2005), the mention of
ried to
Virginia Durr, granddaughter-in-law of John
the
10
Hugo
Her
sister
social fig-
was mar-
Black, an associate justice of
Supreme Court
fi-om
1937
to 1971
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
Mayer Lehman on to the
United
a visit to his family in Bavaria, States.
He
came back
1867. Seventeen years
as a successful businessman.
earlier
he had immigrated
(Henry Morgenthau
111)
Lots of Lehmans
Toward the end of the
Civil War, the
firm was widely regarded
Lehman—Durr Warehouse was burned
futures
by the owners to keep the cotton supply
cotton trade was in no small
from being confiscated by Union
the
but even
diers,
managed
so,
somehow
they
me
troops
sum of
hidden was in Mrs. John Wesley Durr's
East
Union
troops
the gold was divided equally
left,
the
months before the
his
family.
A
New York, Mayer
—
and
Clara born in
1873, Irving in
1876, and
62nd
brownstone residence
The Lehman
Street.
Herbert, to an apartment
family's arrival in
Lehman Brothers moved
to
built at 5
family occupied
when
widowed Babette moved with her youngest
Mayer moved from Montgomery
York City with
moved
a five-floor
where her
New
eldest
son
at
175 West 58th
Sig, his
Street,
two boys AUan and
Harold, and their faiTuHes also lived.
Many
few
New York,
years later
when Herbert was
a U.S.
senator, his secretary took the following notes
to Pearl Street, close to
do
um
Though Lehman
a sizable business
exchanges,
on the
the
core
as
Brothers would
he recalled the house on East 62nd
Front door in middle
coffee and petrole-
of the
a
son,
Street:
Hanover Square, the heart of the flourishing cotton trade.
by
revenue earned) from 1859 to 1899.
the house until the turn of the century,
between the two famihes.
In 1868
facilitated
Herbert in 1878. The year Irving was born Mayer
had
after
(in
1870, Arthur in
the only safe place for their gold to be
that
success in the
way
Babette had four more children
that
and
Its
American cotton crop having more than
After they
parlayed
petticoats,
and spot cotton house.
doubled
when the occupied Montgomery
into gold.Virginia told
Union
sol-
the co-owners had
to save a considerable
money which
to
the country's largest
as
—Enter
hall
—
at
right long parlor furnished in light
gold satin
business
remained cotton. By the turn of the century the
—
late
Victorian furniture.
(Children never were in
12
this
room).
"
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
"My father-in-law Arthur Lehman^ [right], senior partner
—
his broth-
Herbert [middle], governor ofNewYork,
ers
and
of Lehman Brothers, with
Irving, justice
of the
NapYork
ofAppeals, the highest court
December 31, i934,
the
State
in the state
Court
—
on
day Irving swore in
Herbert for another term as governor. They are three
of the most
different
men
I've ever
known.
Arthur was a hardheaded banker Herbert was a great humanitarian. Irving
and a deeply
religious
was a leading jurist
man. Tltey were
standing in their particularfields.
Loeb Sr,
Tlie three youngest all
students at
Lehman
Dr
—
boys
Herbert, Irving,
Sachs's school,
c.
—
and Arthur
1885. (John L. Loeb ft)
13
AH
in a Lifetime
all
out-
—fohn
L.
Qohn L. Loebjr.)
Lots of Lehmans
Children used library on second
Bay window seat).
ture in
Furnished in
—
stiff
late
window
(no
front
in
their day,
brought up themselves. Mayer had received, in
On
addition to
to small
room
Governor Lehman's
Irving,
writing, and speaking
in
New York room was
ing
and Judge
German
Hebrew,
written in
as
Hebrew
well
to Jewish girls.
script.
Although the couple remained
Court of Appeals] bed-
non-kosher food, observing Jewish holidays,
back of the house in which
attending religious services regularly, and using
furniture. This
room was very hot
summer and very
Hebrew and Judeo-German
roof, however,
if
A
second
home-based Bible
was
built over
it
classes.
Instead, their daughters
to try to
nursemaids,
relieve this situation.
who
were
inculcated
raised
tional
World
its
taking
full
that
who
advantage of educa-
after years
New
of
a totally secular
Sachs's School,
went on
to Ivy
League schools: Sigmund
had not existed for Jews in Europe.
14
education
and
folk
taught
them German and French. The Lehman
of this remarkable
and economic opportunities in the
by black
them with
wisdom, and European governesses, to the flourishing
little
any formal Jewish education beyond weekly
as there
it.
expressions as a
matter of course, their children received
in
cold in winter
was no upper story above
family lay in
Babette
true to their Jewish heritage by eschewing
as
there was a double bed.Very plain, simple
The key
learn-
as
chief judge of the
served
State at
education, a traditional
had received an equivalent education given
[the future governor's brother
who
a secular
Jewish upbringing, which included reading,
which the bookcases were.
Lehman's
reared their chil-
—upholstered
the right ^vas a mantel (dark wood).
door
Mayer and Babette
America of
dren differently from the way they had been
mixed green and black brocade.
a
in the
Victorian furni-
walnut frames
Opposite was
German Jews
Like most
floor.
boys, at
Dr.
"Little Ivy"
to Cornell,
Arthur to
— Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
Harvard, Irving to Columbia, and Herbert to Williams.
Had
into the
American
scene, not religiously but in
most other ways. When young Herbert heard
Babette and Mayer remained in
Hebrew
Europe, in the face of limited social and eco-
his father
nomic opportunities, they might not have
family Passover seder, he had to leave the
stressed secular studies for their boys as
much
for giggling uncontrollably at
as
they did in America, where, instead of Hebrew, the boys studied
A
Homer,
strong emphasis
education
made
sense to
as a totally
Cicero, and SchUler.
on
a
well.
Governesses and Ivy League schools were,
house
my
Mayer and Babette as
over a
room
what struck him
foreign language.
Herbert nonetheless recalled growing up in
secular culture and
and other "Our Crowd" families
intoning a prayer in
in
which "both
parents' family
and
Uncle Emanuel's family would always meet
at Passover,
on January
as
my
on 1."
the Jewish high holy days, and
Herbert adds, "They didn't cele-
they well knew, a trade-off for the Jewish reli-
brate Christmas in those days, but celebrated
gious learning they would have received in the
Chanukah.
Old Country. Here
1,
was
a fellow
in America,
American,
little
where everyone
when
Settle
Lehman
grandson Henry Morgenthau
III
what he should they asked replied, "Tell
All
tell
him what them
his
to
when
York
Judaism, which urged
its
members
Babette and Mayer
in 1868, they
may
ed to continue their
religion was, she
to the dictates
Christmas tree in
Christmas presents on Christmas Day.
When
Jr.),
free
moved
to
New
very well have expect-
and easy
relations
with
the gentile elite they had enjoyed in the South,
you're an American."
conformed
first
turn of the century, the green light was given
asked his
the kids at school
never on Christmas Day"; however, once
the family of her daughter Clara, around the
Fatman's
mother, Elinor (Mrs. Henry Morgenthau
were always given on January
Babette accepted the
time remained for
learning even the rudiments of Judaism. Thus, in the 1920s,
Gifts
of Reform
where by and
large Jews
people sharing
to assimilate
15
a
were weU received
common European
as a
origin.
Lots of Lehmans
Mayer
Lcliiiiaii after iiioving to
NewYork
(Henry Morgenthau
City,
c.
Babette Neugass
1870.
Lehman
in
Neu'Yorl< City,
(Henry Morgenthau
III)
l6
III)
c.
1870.
— Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
Jews were accepted ery.
as
allies
on the
side
grew up and
of slav-
as a
matter of course did not
girl at
accept Jewish partners or directors. What resulted, in an
German Jewish
lated there wasn't
New York
Although
famihes of wealth inhabiting a
and education
largely self-contained
"Our Crowd"
universe parallel to that from
world,
Crowd"
a
which they had
elite
been excluded.
hardly surprising that every one of
Babette's seven children
who
Their family names
Mayer and
—
Once
Fatman,
Altschul,
as are,
a
with very
their children's spouses
resulted, in the
—
the
is
the
us."
demeanor,
were nonetheless excluded
firoin
simply because they were
circles
way
it
was
Lehman Loeb,
when my
home," Frances Lehman Loeb
at
sorts
my
recalled,
of terms were used
the dinner table the
name of the
instead.
wife of
well-known personality came up and someone
loud voice,
'Why do you
when you
say Jewish?
They looked
at
me
We
as if
I
all
And
I
said in a
lower your voices
are
were
all
Jewish
here.'
crazy."
Perhaps to compensate for providing their children with so
"was socializing entirely with other Jew^ish famThis
assiini-
"Our
said in a whisper, 'She's Jewish.'
words of Arthur and
Adele's daughter Frances (Peter)
ilies.
WASP
a
counterparts,
to their
word Jeim/;. All
forebears of this book's principal contributors.
What
about
in
"one lowered one's voice when one used the
reached adulthood
of "Our Crowd,"
few exceptions,
much Jewish
similar in appearance,
families
WASP
parents'
Goodhart, Lehman, Lewisohn, Limburg, Straus are right out
we were brought up
comfort over their religious heritage. "In
it
married fellow Jewish Americans of German origin.
I
Jewish. Invariably, this encouraged feelings of dis-
Living in an inherently exclusionary world, is
was for me.
Jewish society even though Ave were so
experienced in Montgomery, was the forma-
few hundred
it
the dancing classes at Grandpa Lewisohn 's.
Unquestionably,
atmosphere of anti-Semitism not
tion of an elite of a
way
the
is
don't think there was one non-Jewish boy or
In the North, by contrast, banks, law firms,
and hospitals
this
little
learning, Babette and
parents
17
in the
way of Jewish
Mayer encouraged them
Lots of Lehmans
to
look upon Jewish philanthropy
their religion, as
which
Irving,
and Herbert
their oldest child, Sig, did
Mount
Sinai Hospital to see for themselves
founder of Montefiore Hospital,
a
—through the wards of
{tsedaka) as
now
Montefiore Medical Center, in the Bronx. As
both the
fruits
and the challenges of Jewish
became major
philanthropy. All three boys
a
—Arthur
major supporter for many years of the Jewsh
philanthropists
Home
Federation of Jewish Philanthropies and the
at
and Hospital
West 106th
as
daughter, Hattie,
at
at
the
Mount
replaced
Aged
who
carried
Sinai Hospital, as a
member of the in
on her mother's
Street Settlement
(Modeled
Goodhart, served
Emanu-El
in
1919 and
three
fail,
charitable causes.
as a
a
founder of the
well
as a
to a
frequent and
wide range of
Through example, Mayer
and Babette passed on to their children and grandchildren the rich Jewish tradition of tsedaka.
as a
Another
tradition passed
was dedication to and
it
family.
offered love,
—Arthur,
on
no choice
a
to the family
The Lehman
their wives established a set
tern of behavior,
Mayer would
youngest children
as
anonymous contributor
window facing Fifth Avenue Mayer Lehman family.)
Every Sunday without take his
House and
Temple Emanu-El
1897 and where
after a cathedral in Marseilles,
donated by the
a
longtime president of the 92nd Street Y and
building committee was active
features a rose
Herbert
where Babette had
formulating the design of the present edi-
fice.
New York,
Joint Distribution Committee, and Irving a
a trustee
member from 1907 to 1933. In addition interest in Mount Sinai, Philip became a
trustee of Temple
of the City of
staunch supporter of Lillian Wald's Henry
member of the board of
Hattie's husband, Philip
to his
Museum
co-founder of the
and
trustees after Mayer's death in
board
located
an example to her eldest
Home for the Aged as
Mayer
(still
and Columbus Avenue),
Street
Babette served
work
for the
a
of rules,
a pat-
hierarchy of values that
for their offspring but to
honor, and obey "Papa" and "Mama."
Especially "obey." Especially Babette.
i8
brothers
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
"Our Crowd" Lehman,
at
Max
play
in Elberon,
New Jersey,
c.
1923.
(Left to right):
unknown
(far left),
Edith Limburg, Adele
Rossbach, Arthur Lehman, Franz Lewisolin, Mabel Rossbach. (June Rossbach Bingham Birge)
19
Lots of Lehmans
and happy. We just
Babette s youngest son, Herbert, recalled his
mother
"as near a matriarch as
anyone
water
I've ever
known." She exercised enormous authority over
well,
her family All of her children were expected
did
regimen conforming
to maintain a daily
Babette's needs and
house
at 5
East
62nd
summer home
ed
a
as
a part
of
Street,
in Elberon,
elite, a
camp
.
Dear Papa looks
excellent stew-
can assure you that
I
More
I
didn't
once
than likely she would
have been seasick. Meyersohn's maid was
New Jersey, and, among
.
him good. Had an
miss EUen.
to the
.
touch wood, and the ocean voyage
ardess.
her domain includ-
prevaihng pattern
a
German Jewish
whims. In addition
to
magnificent.
is
Queenstown. The
left
sick three or four days.
I'm surprised Mrs.
my
Borg's wasn't. Sorry that
the
in the Adirondacks.
my
especially
children,
good and
boys, aren't as
Am glad
Babette's children and their families were
smart in everything
expected to
Friday so that dear Irving wiU be finished
least
or
visit regularly,
or
at
write to Babette w^herever she might be.
There were in
live nearby,
also visits
with
every few years to relatives
you dear Clara
Germany, with an entourage of children and
grandchildren in tow. To those letters
them
in everything, to take care
to
be
first
themselves and, "everything."
lest
from
Mama
only solace were
they forget, to
everything.
sundown
reminding
tell
of
cool.
Mama
Co.'s
HMS
.
.
.
Be
let
Dear Children, Only
you know
that thank
I'm anxious to hear
.
are in
if
Long Branch with
how you
Hke
it;
tell
me
careful in the evening after
now when
let
him go out
it is
at
possible. Kiss the dear children
stiU
night
from
a if
me
and remind them frequently of us, what
Campania:
few
lines to
get us.
God we
are well
and
a
it is
Should Irving come to you for
you must do
My
.
especially
few days don't
On June 22, 1895, she wrote home
from Cunard Steamship
.
the children and
behind the
left
exams.
his
as hers.
20
.
.
.
that the
little
ones don't for-
Have you decided dear Hattie
Settle
where you
are
going and
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
Hope you have a very pleasant summer and that you Dear Sigi don't
w^hen?
always
worry
[Sig's
wife],
[Emanuel]
unnecessarily.
your
give
many
tell
thank her for her dear Arthur and
mother
Daddy
cordial greetings.
Please dear Settle
After graduating, he lived with his
Dear Harriet dear
.
.
Mrs. Einstein that
I
fruit basket.
.
Has
until 1910,
into the
Lehman
my
after Babette's
at
of Babette's children
families. Hattie
and
growing
their
Settle lived just across the
park in adjoining houses on West 81st Street built for
them by
their father. Clara,
husband Richard Limburg and resided with Babette and
a
Mayer
at 5
Street until Mayer's death in 1897.
Adele were not
far off,
on
a plot
copper and
also
62nd
Arthur and
east
a
of Sixth Avenue, father,
tycoon Adolph Lewisohn.
home while going to college. hved at home until 1895, when he
Irving lived at
Herbert
East
of land provided by Adele's
real estate
family,
having been given
house on West 56th Street built
with her
growing
Edith
married Hattie
death in 1920,
members of
the
family stayed in close proximity to one another.
hand with
remained close
He
family.
Until her death in 1932, Clara resided
Ambassador Hotel all
when he married
Lehman Goodhart's daughter Helen. Even
ten their grandmother?
In Manhattan
widowed
Altschul. Edith's brother Frank also married
EUa not yet forgot-
Httle
for Williams College in Massachusetts.
left
Street, just blocks
at
at
the
Park Avenue and 51st
away from the Savoy-Plaza
at
59th Street and Fifth Avenue where Settle resided,
and The Sherry-Netherland
also at
59th Street and Fifth Avenue, where Harriet lived.
This was within walking distance of the
Herbert Lehmans,
Avenue
who
at
who
resided at 820 Park
75th Street, and the Irving Lehmans,
lived in the
West
Sixties before
moving
to
the East Seventies. Living in close proximity to
one another was
a significant factor in
taining strong family
main-
ties.
With Mayer's death
in
1897
at
the age of
sixty-seven and Emanuel's death ten years
later,
the firm passed into the hands of a second
Lots of Lehmans
numerous department
generation of Lehmans. These included Henry's
Meyer
H.; Emanuel's son, Philip; and
turers, clothing
Mayer's sons, Sigmund, Arthur, and Herbert, the
cent operations
son,
latter
joining the firm after Sig retired in 1908.
Lehman. Even
if
all
The
you were
couldn't join the firm
Lehman. John
L.
Loeb
"couldn't get a job
at
if
other than
Lehman
its
had hith-
were extremely of
crest
a burst
profitable.
of technological
Lehmans were destined
innovation, the
to take
that his father
the ranks of America's foremost banking insti-
when
Brothers
Street. They
tutions.
from
would-
fact for years
Lehman who
During much of
that private bankers
the high road that led the firm inexorably into
think there was even a descendant
name
—
your name wasn't
Lehman
any in-laws, and in
manufacturers, and five-and-ten
results
Riding the
descendant, you
a
Jr. recalls
he wanted to work on Wall n't hire
named
the partners -were
manufac-
erto passed by.
Until 1924, nearly seventy-five years after the firm was founded,
stores, textile
I
cotton, petroleum, and coffee.
wasn't until the
It
meeting over
Goldman,
backyard fence
a
son, Philip,
and
his
counter-
Sachs.
and Mayer Lehman and
Lehman
Brothers had been occupied with tradas sugar, grain,
step in that direction resulted
Robert Bernhard, great-grandson of Babette
prominence,
ing in basic commodities such
a fateful
part at
a
got a job."
rise to
major
between Emanuel's
don't
who had
A
a
former partner of
Brothers, was told about that
tous event,
which occurred
momen-
in 1903:
second generation took over that the character
Lehman
of Lehman Brothers was altered from "mer-
ment banking
chant" to "investment" bankers. This was done
the century.
through the financing by Lehman Brothers of
then in the commercial paper business,
Jewish-owned and Jewish-run businesses as Philip
Morris and Sears, Roebuck
as
Brothers got into the investbusiness at the turn of
Goldman, Sachs
—such
and Lehman Brothers was
well as
ton-trading business.
22
&
Co. was
in the cot-
A senior partner of
Introduction: The Lehmans,
Babette and
Mayer Lehman, progenitors of the
A
seven sihUngs
Family and a Firm
who
are the subjects of this book. (Portraits by
C. Volkman, photographed by Richard Valencia, London; courtesy of Lord and Lady William Goodhart)
23
— Lots of Lehmans
Goldman, Sachs and
summer
his family
place in Elberon,
They
Department Stores and
a
New Jersey,
and so did Philip Lehman and ly.
had
his
friends of the
In 1926 a
fami-
commercial paper, the fellows
Goldman, Sachs ran emerging
retail
company
Roebuck. They wanted offering.
to
n't
Goldman
called Sears,
do
ter
a public
Philip
So
Sears, but did
to bring in the clients.
four
into
would be
parts
So
need a let-
— Goldman
the principal partner.
A generation separates
business, with
Goldman
born
dren. Sig was
almost twenty years
the money.
Between 1903 and 1926 they did deals,
some brought
in
a
by
Goldman and some by Lehman. Their included
garment and
many
Jewish origin, such the Lazaruses,
as
and Herbert
They
divide coven-
later.
older group
an
iently
into
Settle,
and Clara
The groups
of German
fer radically
— and
a
—
Sig,
Hattie,
younger group
—
including their spouses
from one another. The
—
dif-
women
of
the older group (Harriet, Hattie, Settle, and
the Gimbels and
who formed
in 1859,
Arthur, Irving, and Herbert.
leaders in the
retail industries
the oldest from the
youngest of Mayer and Babette's seven chil-
main partner and Lehman supplying
clients
didn't
Lehman clients, and clients in which either Goldman or Lehman
was asked to go into the invest-
number of
to supply
across the fence in Elberon,
ment banking the
Lehman
did-
clients,
not have the capital to do the underwriting.
Goldman
of agreement was signed dividing the
business
Goldman had been doing
commercial paper with
generation of partners
need Lehman any longer
the capital and
at
new and
into a
new
also
family.
in both firms decided that
^vere back-to-back neighbors.
In the course of looking for clients for
Lehman
who were
Federated
Clara),
24
with the exception of philanthropic
,
Introduction: The Lehmans, A Family and a Firm
work, confined their
home; however, the
activities
women
of the younger
—Adele, and Edith—widened
their horizons
ing the pubhc arena
as
group
in their
of the
own
older
children and their spouses. this
by developing public images
private ing;
differences also existed
sisters
—
Hattie, Settle,
between the
and Clara
—Arthur,
The women
remembered almost
difficult
brothers
as
are
Irving,
—and
friendly,
a
Some were
written for
few were quoted froin published were taken from
oral histories
many more were
based on taped interviews.
the world of "Our Crowd." When the
the
and Herbert.
and
memoirs of family members no longer liv-
Collectively they constitute a major
Hnk
last
to
of our
contributors goes, a vital connection with the past
goes with them. All the
invariably
more reason
to benefit
from what the Mayer Lehman family has
and demanding, their younger
warm,
book,
sources, others
and patrons
younger brothers
as
by enter-
arts.
Major
and grand-
nephews of Mayer and Babette Lehman's seven
staunch supporters ot
right as philanthropists
of the recollections that follow come
froin the grandchildren, grandnieces,
of Irving Lehman)
Sissie (wife
their husbands or
Many
mostly to the
and funny.
about a rich and vibrant world that
25
is
to say
no more.
CHAPTER ONE
Mayer Lehman Babette Neusass
In 1850
Mayer Lehman traveled
&
Lehman as a
twenty-year-
old from Rinipar, Bavaria, to Montgoinery, Alabama, to join his brothers trade.
On
a
Henry and Emanuel
courted Babette Neugass,
United
New
business trip to
States
in the cotton
Orleans,
Mayer
who had immigrated
from Rieneck,
a
neighboring town of
Rimpar. Mayer and Babette were married in
27
to the
New
Lots of Lehmans
Orleans in 1858. The Lehmans became prosperous within
short time.
a
Their four eldest children
named Sigismund always
known
lived in a large
the
(1863), and Benjamin,
—were born to
(1870), Arthur (1873),
(1878) were born. his
New York
Montgomery and
City,
where Clara
Irvmg (1876), and Herbert
Mayer was
a brilliant
businessman:
New York Cotton Exchange. As philan-
Mayer and Babette
children, with El,
died
many accomplishments, he was one of the
founders of the thropists,
in
who
house in the best part of town. In 1868
Lehmans moved
Among
originally
(1859), Hattie (1861), Lisette, but
as Settle
in infancy (1865)
— Sigmund,
Mount
and the Jewish
high on their
list
set
an example for their
Sinai Hospital,
Home
Temple Emanu-
and Hospital for the Aged
of priorities.
28
Mayer Lehman
& Babette Neugass Lehman
Mayer
Lehman 1830
Sigmund
Harriet
Lehman -— Lehman 1859
-
1930
1861
-
1944
Hattie
Lehman -— 1861
-
1948
Philip
Goodhart 1857
-
1944
Settle
Morris
Lehman —- Fatman 1863
-
1936
1858
-
1930
-
1897
Benjamin
Lehman 1865
-
1865
Babette
Neugass
1838-1919
Clara
Lehman
—
1870-1932
Richard
Arthur
Limburg
Lehman
1857-1916
1873-1936
—
Adele
Lewisohn
1882-1965
Irving
Lehman -— 1876-1945
Sissie
Herbert
Straus
Lehman
1879-1950
1878-1963
Edith
—
Altschul
1889-1976
Mayer
Lchinaii: husband, father, busiiiessiiian, philaiitliropist,
32
c.
1890. (John D. Gordan
III)
Mayer Lehman 1830-1897
NewYork
Times,
June 22, 1897
Mayer Lehman Was Taken
111
Is
Last Friday and
Dead Succumbs
to an
Operation Performed on Sunday. prominent merchant of this city and a member of the firm of Lehman Brothers, 22 William Street, died yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock after an illness of only four days, at his residence, 5 East SLxty-second Street. He was taken iU last Friday, and
Mayer Lehman,
a
Sunday Dr. Gerster performed an operation on him for gangrene. He sank rapidly and death followed. Mr. Lehman was born Jan. 9, 1830, at Rimpa[r], nearWiirzburg, Bavaria, and was educated in the pubUc schools of Wiirzburg. At the age of [twenty] he came to this country and settled with his brothers in
Montgomery,
Ala.,
where
33
[they] started the firm
of
Lots of Lehmans
Lehman joined
Brothers.
.
.
.[
He went
his brothers in 1863.]
into business for himself but again
The
following year Mr.
appointed by the Governor of Alabama
Lehman was
Commissioner to visit the Confederate soldiers confined in the Northern prisons. In 1867 Mr. Lehman came to New York, and has lived here ever since, for the past twenty years in the house where he died. Aside from his active interest in the firm of which he was a member, he has been largely identified with railroad, mining, and industrial enterprises, and was one of the twenty men who established the
first
a
iron furnace in the South before the war.
Mr. Lehman was
a
member of
the
Harmonic Club and
a
number of charitable
organizations, taking especial interest in the
Mount
and Training School, to which he frequent-
ly
Sinai Hospital
He was also a Director N. K. Fairbank Company.
contributed large sums.
Bank and
in the
In 1858 Mr.
Newgoff
[sic]
Lehman married Miss
New
of
in the
Hamilton
Babett[e], daughter of Isaac
Orleans. She survives him,
as
do four
sons— Sigismund M., Arthur, Irving, and Herbert— and three daughters—Mrs. Hattie Goodhart, Mrs.
S.
Fatman, and Mrs. Clara Limburger.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday morning ing.
at 9:30,
Interment will be
NewYork
Times,
at
at
Temple Emanu-El next
the Rev. Dr. Gustav Gottheil officiat-
Cypress
Hills.
June 25, 1897
Mayer Lehman Buried ....
Funeral Services for Mayer Lehman,
held yesterday morning
who
died Monday, were
at Temple Emanu-El, Forty-third Street and Fifth Avenue, the Rev. Dr. Gustav Gottheil officiating.
34
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
&
Babette Neugass Lehman
Shortly before the time appointed for the pubhc services, Gottheil held a special service
second
at
the family
Dr
home, 5 East Sixty-
Street.
After music had been rendered by the
upon
full choir.
Dr. Gottheil
and achievements of Mr. Lehman, choosing for his text the verse, "As the whirlwind passeth by the wicked, but the righteous are the foundation of the world." delivered a eulogy
"Our
the
life
brother here," said Dr. Gottheil, "easily saw that the
righteous are the foundation of the world, for he and his broth-
by the work of their hands and by using their natural abilities with economy and foresight, and especially with justice, secured the fortune which they deserved. The crown of a good name shineth forth from this casket. 'Tis a heritage of which his sorrowing relatives and friends may well be proud. ". How many hearts he has made glad! How many sufferers send their mute appeal to God for him to-day! He toiled and labored in the field of charity with all the zeal that he did elsewhere. He was also a pious man. He leaned on his people's God and on his God's people. His death leaves a painful void that can never be filled." Prayer was then offered, and the casket was carried out, the twenty pallbearers preceding it and standing with uncovered heads as it was placed in the hearse. The casket, as well as the altar, was covered with flowers. Among the floral pieces were wreaths from the Cotton Exchange, Mount Sinai Hospital, and the Whitney National Bank of New Orleans. The Temple was crowded with the many friends and relatives of the Lehman family. Delegations were present from the Cotton Exchange and other institutions with which Mr. Lehman was connected. The Cotton Exchange closed at 10 o'clock A. M. as a mark of respect to his memory. ers
.
.
35
— Lots of Lehmans
The
burial
simple services
was in the cemetery
at
Cypress
There were
Hills.
the grave. Five carriage loads of flowers and
at
more than a score of carriages filled with mourners accompanied the body to its last resting place.
Shortly after
Mayer Lehman's
youngest son Irving (1876-1945) wrote Esther's husband, Isaias
er-in-law and a close
founded
the first
Hellman,
to his
pains and though
Aunt
both assured us
member of the family. (Hellman
bank
in
Los Angeles and
on Friday night of
we
it
who
in
a specialist, they
was only
Sunday they decided
later
both Dr.
called in
Adler and Dr. Kauffman,
his mother's brotJt-
became president of the Wells Fargo— Nevada Bank
San
days and particularly
death, his riext-to-
colic. ...
on
surgeon
to call in a
told us 2 hours later that there
was no
hope and on Monday he died peacefully
Francisco.)
and in
his sleep.
Our
only comfort
&
that
is
he
Elberon, N.J.
died without pain
June 30, 1897
approaching end and before sorrow had
My dear Uncle We received your
darkened kind
letter yesterday
though with heavy heart it.
I
am
M^eek,
I
felt
is
able to write to
of the
you more
He had
absolutely
no warning
Catskills.
He complained
for a
is
leave her, so
few
Mama
Dear
I
down
here with
and
Babette's
& will shortly go
perfectly
well and of course
there was anything serious the matter until
about the end.
She
is
Mayer
[Limburg,
youngest daughter]
that
life.
his
of course heart broken but bears up
Clara
last
than the bare facts of our beloved father's death.
almost perfect
bravely for our sake. She
hasten to ans'wer
afraid that in the v/orry
no one
and
his
unconscious of
my
composed and
dear
am much
to the
sisters
obliged
do not at
your
kind offer to have dear Auntie [Esther
36
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
Neugass Hellman] come but is
not needed
really
I
hope you
traught lines but
I
is
Babette Neugass Lehman
Father got a lot of pleasure out of driving
feel that she
now by Mama. Arthur
[Irving's older brother]
Friday.
I
&
this thing.
expected next
He would
drop us off
hardly feel able to write.
Your loving nephew, Irving
stable
and then go downtown.
called
him Dad
"Papa" and
or Father.
we
called
school,
groom from
turn over the horses to the
will excuse these dis-
at
We
We
the
never
called
him
mother "Mama."
Always.
Mayer's youngest son, Herbert (i878-i963), ed an oral history his father taking
Shortly after Herbert entered Williams
which he remembered
late in life in
him and
dictat-
Mayer wrote
his brothers out for a ride
every morning after breakfast.
My
September 27, 1895
and he'd take us
My
kids out. We'd have breakfast pretty early, at
at
McGrath's
Streets.
East
My father stabled the
horses
I
dear Herbert,
wanted
you
between 59th and 60th
my
to write
you
a
long
Arthur has more
to 5
things; however, dear
my
take
experience and promised
62nd
Street,
and
father
We
had what was
would
to drive
instead; only
with
a
to
do
it
urge you to do:
come
Don't do anything of which you have
a seat in
back where two or three people could
I
years pass quickly and don't
driver's seat,
another seat next to the driver, and
one thing
me
use your time advantageously, the four
called a T-Cart, a
very heavy vehicle with
letter to give
advice and ideas about different
They would be brought over
one of his sons each morning him.
his yoimgest son the following letter of
practical advice.
father loved driving
half past seven.
College,
back. to
be
ashamed. Should you, however, with or
sit.
37
Lots of Lehmans
without your
me
as
fault,
get into trouble, call
on
have
your best intimate friend and don't
hide anything from me.
We
less
good manners. I'm
from dear Mother.
well again. Lots of love
Your
have great
feeling quite
faithful father
Mayer
hopes for your advancement and won't spare anything to
promote your
your part towards
it.
career.
Write often.You
good company who,
Do
Dear Arthur
anything wrong. Stay a'way from chaps
sending you
a
check. I'm
going to give you $1,000. Should you
are in
like you, don't
is
need more next year
do
who
somew^hat.
38
I
shall increase
it
Babctte Ncttgass Lehman, remembered by her youngest son, Gouernor Herbert as
anyone
I've ever
known. " (Herbert H. Lehman Suite
40
& Papers,
Lehman,
"as near a matriarcli
Columbia University)
Babette Neugass
Lehman
1838-1919
NewYork
Times,
August 26, 1919
Lehman. On Monday, Aug. 25, at Port Chester, N.Y., Babette Lehman, widow of Mayer Lehman, in her 83d year. Funeral services will
be held
morning, Aug. 27,
at
the chapel of Salem Fields
at 1 1
on Wednesday
o'clock. Kindly omit flowers.
41
Lots of Lehmans
In
written to her youngest son, Herbert, at
letters
Williams College, Babette Neugass
Lehman
kiss. It
because
as a dispenser of motherly advice.
do
I
every day. If
this
favorable hearing to
New York, October,
My dear Herbert,
a ripe old age.
hope you're wearing your heavy under-
I
wishes,
you won't catch
cold.
.
.
But there
is
11,
it
and
if
.
.
it's still
1897
too early for goose chiblings.
They'll only be available next month.
me know what
you. until
.
.
.
else.
.
.
.
we
you
and
blessed.
How
you.
May God
Would
to
will
and then
act
undoubtedly be lucky
often
fulfill
my good
we made
them.
.
.
plans for
.
have liked to have sent you
a
box,
dear Herbert. But one can't get half a goose
any more and due to Pesech Easter
miss
Time hangs heavy on my hands
pack along
n't
I
could-
a sugar cake.
you come.
New York, March I
my
Herbert H. Lehman
26, 1899
My dear good Herbert, How would love to convey to ly
still
accordingly,
I
can send you plenty of sugar cookies, and let
life
dear Herbert you ask yourself in
your deeds and actions, would
.
My dear good Herbert, .
you dear
much which we
father approve or advise this
New York, October
grants a
ourselves can and must contribute towards
wear, don't be careless about your shoes, and take care that
my
all
God
Herbert will lead a joyful and happy
1897
me
wish you everything good imaginable
to
excelled
does not need your birthday for
son of
very heartfelt congratulations
your 21st birthday and give you
a
Mayer and Babette Lehman -
mother
you verbal-
my
upon
warm
(1878-1963),
as a
father.
much more
I
youngest
remember my
positive character than
She was very kindly but very firm.
All the disciplining of the children was left to
42
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
Babette Neugass
Lehman
in
NewYork City
& Babette Neugass Lehman
early in her career as a
43
German Jewish
matriarch.
(Henry Morgenthau
III)
Lots of Lehmans
my
mother.
My
My moth-
punish, or even to scold us too hard. er
was
with the children
maid
to a
as w^ell as
who had been
don't think
left
my mother
delinquent, but
my
I
daughter ofArthur and Adele
er
I
gave don't
excused.
nobody
son, just a
my
a very,
very keen and prac-
few weeks
mind, and she was
in the family
life,
very, very
during and
a factor
n't like it
my
father's
on
anyone
seeined pretty
after
every
known.
I
as
on my
family failed to caU
boys used to stop in business and
know
late in the
her
all
that
woman
head of the family
went
right
down
as
we But
us, let
ited her.
We
we
We
had
to
and we did-
us embroider
weren't religious, I
don't
a
it
remember not
everybody around.
when we
vis-
go every Sunday, and then
got our peppermint.2
afternoon from
our troubles.
of any case where a
nitely the
And
tell
daily in the park.
She used to spend
She used to give us peppermints
mother, until her death in 1919. Her daughters
went driving with her
actually a likeable per-
liking her; she just bossed
don't think a day passed that
member of the
father liked her, but
because she wouldn't
silly.
and ask to be
call
summer with
Saturday. Since
was snowing
day. If it
bit snappy.
in the
much
Ufetime. She was as near a matriarch I've ever
little
my
She was
else did.
without consultation with
tical
think
I
tant step in business
mother. She had
her every
visit
he would have to
terribly,
ever took an impor-
My grandmothtyrant. My father was
Lehman -
really like a little
required to
mother.
my father
was
(1905-
granddaughter of Mayer and Babette Lehman;
1989)5
fair
the household.
the scolding
at
think anyone ever I
but always absolutely
a disciplinarian,
used to writhe
Helen Lehman Buttenwieser
father hated like the deuce to
was
I
was so
my
don't
Frances Lehman Loeb (1906-1996),
defi-
mother.
granddaughter of Mayer and Babette Lehman; daughter of
Arthur and Adele Lehman -
not only to her chil-
dren but also to her grandchildren and great-
was
grandchildren.'
I
44
a
was
shadowy ten.
I
figure to
Grandma Lewisohn
me who
died before
knew my Grandmother Lehman
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
much
better.
and Seventh Avenue.
Aunt Harriet had apartment house,
My
Uncle Sig and
home
their
Grandma Lehman came
hated all
and we were
and
visit
town,
in
was
I
as if
place,
terribly
about
she were
purple pin similar to what you would use to
visit
was thin and
hair
in the back. She
wore
At the dining
Grandma Lehman used
and she was not
but to
pretty,
me
arch.
Each of her children
including Daddy,
a
she had
family.
office to tell her everything that
Lehman
Brothers.
he didn't want to
By
talk
from
Grandma Lehman would
members of say
all
on
the family
scared to death
when
a
as to
she saw the tree
So she came
in,
exclaimed, "Oh,
isn't
breathed a sigh of
relief,
she looked it
lovely."
at
it,
and
Everyone
and from then on her
children always had Christmas trees.
visited her every day,
straight
various
tree.
in the family to
because they never had a Christmas tree in the
demanding matri-
who went
a
what she would
the pin to
sweet face.
Grandma Lehman was
was bring-
III, great-grandson of
one
first
Sunday, and they were
attach a napkin to her blouse. She was quite short,
moved
Mayer and Babette Lehman; grandnephew of Clara Lehman
Christmas
table.
how Mother
Henry MORGENTHAU
have
room
always
over
a lit-
wound up
Grandma
the fiirniture around. In the second place, she'd
- Clara was the
Her
attach an orchid to your shoulder.
at
first
Limburg
gray and
Mother
for about three weeks.
a little
we would walk
but she dressed
ninety, always in black.
a
In the
to visit us in Elberon
ing up both Dorothy and Helen.^
with Grandma Lehman. She was in
late seventies,
it.
complain
their families.
girl
tle
my
did their sons Allan and
as
summer
every
same
in the
Every Sunday morning w^hen
her
Babette Neugass Lehman
She Hved quite near us in an
apartment house on the corner of 58th Street
Harold and
&
his
had happened
the time he got
June RoSSBACH Bingham BiRGE,
home,
about business anymore.
great-
granddaughter of Mayer and Babette Lehman; granddaughter
45
Lots of Lehmans
Babette Neugass Lehman, both loved wid feared by her family, (Herbert
H. Lehman Suite
& Papers,
46
NewYork,
Columbia University)
c.
1900.
Chapter One: Mayer Lehman
of Clara I
Lehman
Limfcwr^
was born, but
Lehman came on
little
cal
my
boy,
make
still
alive
when my second
it."
mother, took one look
and announced, "That one
why
I
burst out laughing,
but there, in front of me, was an embodiment
of
my
mother, Mabel Rossbach,
my
grand-
mother Clara Limburg, and my great-grand-
pay the requisite new-baby
to
Neugass Lehman
don't think she kne'w
Dick Rossbach, appeared. Grandma
brother,
call
- Babette was dead before
& Babette
mother Babette Lehman.
at a sickly
will never
This kind of brutal honesty was typi-
of Jewish matriarchs,
as
I
1.
was reminded of
Herbert H. Lehman Suite
& Papers. Columbia
University. last
week when
I
ran into ninety-four-year-old 2.
Kitty CarHsle Hart
on
Fifth
Archives of Henry Morgenthau IIL
Avenue.We stopped 3. John
to chat.
"Your
glasses are dirty," she said.
"Your
teeth are clean, but your glasses are dirty."
Langeloth Loeb and Frances
Kenneth Libo. All
in a Lifetime:
York: John L. Loeb
I
47
Jr.,
1996.
A
Lehman Loeb, with
Personal
Memoir
New
CHAPTER TWO
&
Sigmund M. Lehman Harriet
M. Lehman Lehman
Mayer and born later
in
Babette's oldest child Sigmund was
Montgomery, Alabama,
in 1859.
Mayer and Babette moved with
Nine
years
their family to
New York. A
graduate of Cornell University, Sig
he was called
— subsequently married
his first
—
as
cousin
Harriet, the daughter of Emanuel, Mayer's sole part-
ner
at
Lehman
Brothers for over
49
a
generation. Sig
Lots of Lehmans
remained active
in the firm until his retirement in
1908.
much
Sig and Harriet spent
at their
weekend home
York, or on regular family offs in
They
rest
sumptuous West 58th
lives either in their
dence,
of the
London and
Paris
in
visits to
of their
Street resi-
Tarrytown,
New
Bavaria with stop-
(where Sig died in 1930).
also spent a great deal
of time
at
Runnymede,
a
family
camp bordering Quebec where
Sig enjoyed
fishing,
and Kildare
camp owned
by Harriet and her
in the Adirondacks, a sister
Evelyn, which they bought
in the late 19th century.
Sig and Harriet's older son Harold married into the socially
prominent Seligman
family,
whose
Joe Seligman was asked by President Ulysses to
be
his treasury secretary,
patriarch S.
Grant
an offer that he declined.
Sig and Harriet's grandchild Orin, born to their son
Allan and his wife Evelyn Schiffer,
is
the
last
of Mayer
and Babette's male descendants to bear the Lehman family name. The name, however,
50
is
carried
on through
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
&
Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
the male descendants of Emanuel, Mayer's brother.
They include Robert Lehman's son Robin and three sons Philip, Jason, and Rolf.
51
his
& Harriet Lehman Lehman
Sigmund Lehman
^ 1
Evelyn Schiffer
—
1894
Allan
Anne
Lehman
Roche
1885
1
1
1
Richard
Ellen
Preston
Jane
Orin
Wendy
McCluskey
Lehman
Long
Bagley
Lehman
Vanderbilt
1914
1913
1932
1920
1944
1
1
Maureen McCluskey 1943
1
1
^
Robert
James
Oxenberg
Hammond
1949
—
Sharon,
Countess
Sondes
1
—
Henry
Orin
Vje Earl Sondes
McCluskey
1939
1951
1
1
1
Trent
Brooke
Sage
Carmichael
Lehman
Lehman
J965
1972
1975
1
—
Ellen
Susan
Regan
Lehman
1952
1964
1946
^
1
1
1
1
1
Avery
Haley
Ryan
Whitney
Carmichael
Carmichael
Carmichael
Carmichael
1995
1996
1999
2002
Sigmund
Lehman
Harriet =
=
1859
Lehman 1861
Harold
Cecile
Lehman
Seligman
1889
^ ^H
^^H^^^^^^V ^^H
V
Betty
Nelson
Lehman
Asiel
1918
1917
_
r
1
1
1
Harold
Patricia
Terri
John
Christensen
Asiel
Gagne
Asiel
Asiel
1949
1944
1943
1946
1949
Cynthia
1
1
1
Carrie
Dennis
Scott
Maureen
Asiel
Grammas
Asiel
Flynn
1973
1974
1971
1
Maya
Jordana
Alexandria
Kathryn
Treisman
Treisman
Grammas
Asiel
1999
2006
1999
2006
Sigmund M. Lehman, Mayer and and devoted
the rest of his
Bahette's eldest child, retired from
life to
leisurely pursuits.
54
Lehman
Brothers in
(Dorothy Treisnian;Joel Treisman)
1908
Sigmund M. Lehman 1859-1930
Neu'York Times, April
S.M.
8,
1930
Lehman
Dies Suddenly in Paris
Retired International Banker and Brother of Lieutenant
Governor Was
A
71.
Graduate of Cornell
Entered Family Business in 1879 and Remained Until
1908
—Traveled Much Since Then.
Special Cable to
PARIS, April
who
7.
The New York Times.
—Sigmund M. Lehman,
New York banker,
retired
arrived at the Hotel Ritz here with his wife from
four days ago, died suddenly of heart disease
71 years old.
55
this
morning.
Cannes
He
was
Lots of Lehmans
Mr. and Mrs. Lehman had intended to sail for New York from Cherbourg on Wednesday. Their son [Harold] who was in Berlin, was promptly notified this morning by his mother of his father's death and he arrived in Paris late tonight. The body will be taken to America for burial, probably on a boat leaving on Wednesday. Special to
Albany, April
7. Lieut.
The NewYork Times.
Gov. Herbert H.
Lehman
received
word
today of the death of his brother, S.M. Lehman, in Paris. Mr.
Lehman was
a
member of the
firm of
tional bankers, for about thirty years.
spent
much
Lehman
He
sons,
is
survived by his widow,
two brothers. Judge Irving Lehman of the Court of
Appeals and Arthur three
1908 and has
time traveling since then.
Besides the Lieutenant Governor, he
two
Brothers, interna-
retired in
Lehman of the
firm of Lehman Brothers, and
sisters.
Mr. Lehman was graduated from Cornell University in the class of 1878 and later went into the firm of Lehman Brothers, which wzs founded by his father and uncle. Sigmund M. Lehman was born in Montgomery, Ala., but was brought up in NewYork as a child and received his early education in this city. After his graduation from Cornell he went to Germany, where he studied for a year before entering business. He was one of the earliest members of the New York Stock Exchange. He was also one of the founders and a director of Montefiore Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Lehman left their NewYork home, 270 Park Avenue, in February for Europe. Mr. Lehman's death was unexpected, his son, Harold, said yesterday, as last communications reported that he was enjoying good health.
56
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
New York Times, November
Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
One Hundred Years
1931
3,
&
[condensed and abridged]
Privately printed by
ofLelinian Brothers
Lehman
Brothers,
1950.
[condensed and abridged]
Sigmund M. Lehman
left
an
estate
at
Lehman
interest in his real
gave
a life
Sigmund M. Lehman,
$4,088,060. Mr.
appraised yesterday
the first-born child of
Mayer and Babette,joined Lehman Brothers
M. Lehman of Hotel Sherry Netherlands. The real
on
estate to his wife Harriet
in 1878,
the
on record was the then princely sum of $25
estate
included the
country place in
South Broadway, Tarrytown, and interest in the Kildare St.
Club
a
tors to
left
the
received
S.
gave $100,000 for
life
at their
New York
Philip,
week
and Harold
Lehman
a partner,
as a starter.
1,
A seat
on
Stock Exchange was bought
name
in 1887. His cousin
in 1882, the year
follows.
salary
with a 5 per
Emanuel's only son, began
partner, the
to four grandchil-
first
on September
$20
a
Sigmund was made
a
was made
a
partner. In 1885, the year Philip
a life interest
of $1,139,717 in the residue. Mr.
made
in Sigmund's
$100,000 to the execu-
discretion. His sons, Allan
later,
cent share in earnings
at Piercefield,
be distributed to charities
M. Lehman, each
week. Four years
1882, he was
a half
Lawrence County.
Mr. Lehman
leaving Cornell. His
New York
The founding
at
earnings were
split as
partners took 65 per
dren. The estate owes $20,000 to Kensico
cent. Henry's son,
Cemetery
received 12 per cent and Philip 10 per cent.
for a plot
and $33,540 for
a
Arthur became
mausoleum.
Meyer H., and Sigmund
a
partner in
Herbert in 1908, the year Sig
retired.
To avoid distortion of the panorama,
57
it
1898 and
historical
should be borne in mind that
Lots of Lehmans
"Here
are
my grandfather and grandmother,
New Brunswick,
The
lodge at
where
my grandfather
Sig and Harriet Lehman, sitting in a boat at
apparently enjoyed fishing in a
Ruunymede. (Orin Lehman)
tie.
"
Rimnymede Lodge
— Orin Lehman
"Sig and Harriet relaxing with
Runny me de Lodge."
58
in
(Orin Lehman)
my
father,
— Orin Lehman
Allan, at
(Orin Lclmiaii)
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
Lehman its
as
Brothers in 1908 devoted most of
time to the commodities markets. As 191
1,
when Herbert
and Paris
vi^ere
ing
late
end
London
to their
Sigmund
monopoly.
retired in 1908. In
1918 the firm
mend com-
Sigmund's sons, Harold and Allan. Besides the family partners, there was a staff of
Sigmund Lehman's
approximately twelve,
partici-
Goldman, Sachs
pation in the launching of the Electric
Company
in
new
&
its
small size due to
Co. shouldering most of
the mechanical and sales aspects of the
1897 was indicative
of the firm's interest in
advances in
securities issues
from 1906
to 1916,
Lehman
Brothers,
technology. They, with John Jacob Astor,
together
P.A.B.Widener and others, became direc-
underwrote and publicly issued
tors
all
consisted of Philip, Arthur, Herbert, and
modities fences.
Vehicle
collected a royalty from
incidental and secondary.
His main assignment was to
Philip and
boom,
of the automotive pioneer-
manufacturers until Henry Ford put an
his visits to
investment bank correspondents in
Harriet M. Lehivian Lehman
fifteen years
inade a business tour
of England and the Continent,
&
of the coinpany which, in the
with
for seventeen companies.
initial
59
when, they
securities
Harriet
Lehman and
her daughter-in-law, Cecile Seligman
Emanuel Lehman, married Sigmund,
Lehman.
the son of her father's brother
Harriet, the daughter of
Mayer The marriage of first
was not unusual at the time. (Dorotliy Trcisman;focl Treisman)
60
cousins
Harriet
M. Lehman Lehman 1861-1944
NewYork
Times, July 13,
1944
Mrs. Sigmund Lehman, Widow of Banker, 83 Special
to
Tlie
New York Times.
—
Tarrytown, N.Y.,July 13. Mrs. Harriet M. Lehman of 461 South Broadway, widow of Sigmund Lehman, once a member of the NewYork banking firm of Lehman Brothers and a brother of former Gov. Herbert H. Lehman and Chief Justice Irving Lehman of the Court of Appeals, died today in the Tarrytown Hospital. Her age was 83. Mrs. Lehman was a daughter of Emanuel Lehman, a founder of Lehman Brothers, and Mrs. Pauline Sondheim Lehman. She was born in Germany during a visit there of her mother, a United States citizen, and was also a first cousin of Governor Lehman and
61
Lots of Lehmans
of her husband, through her
father,
whose
brother, Mayer, was the
Governor's father.
She had hved chiefly in Tarrytown for the last twenty-eight and had a city home at the Sherry-Netherlands Hotel,
years,
New York. Sigmund Lehman died
in Paris in 1930, leaving a gross estate
of more than $4,000,000. Surviving are a son, Allan Philip
Lehman of New York,
S.
Lehman of Tarrytown,
a brother,
four grandchildren and three great-
grandchildren.
A
funeral service will be held at her residence here at 11 A.M.
on Sunday.
William Mayer, ter,
gmudson of Harriet Lehman's
-
Evelyn Lehman Ehricb
of Aunt Harriet, the
I
spoiled lapdog called Sunny. Unlike
sis-
Sunny
have vivid recollections
sister
of
my
grandmother
believe
it
came
in the Adirondacks]
.
to
it
was
a great
event
Aunt Harriet came
I
when
child a kind of royal quality
Harriet had. She seemed
Kildare with a huge steamer
would be around
had very strong
glasses
bigger than any
1
—
for a long time.
at least
than
my
which
She
was
wearing
to
me
62
less
as a
thought Aunt of
a
matriarch
brought to mind images of
associated with her
a
I
me
a
grandmother. She loved to gamble,
machines in Arizona. Her
her eyes were
had ever seen. She had
to dinner
very large emerald ring, representing to
trunk. You got the feeling (which was wrong) that she
1
favor of tenderloin.
was bought around 1896. She wasn't
there that often, so
she
camp
of meat.
quite sure that the sirloin was pushed aside in
Evelyn Ehrich and co-owner with her of Kildare [the family
ate only the very top cuts
most dogs.
name
suite at Kildare
—
a
bay
slot
is still
window and
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
&
Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
Sig and Harriet in August 1925. (Dorothy Treisinan ; Joel Treisman)
63
Lots of Lehmans
handsome bedroom
small
had
a conversation, often involving rivalries,
adjoining one for her attendant, Miss
Borman.
I've
been
more
a host at
Harriet seemed
Kildare, although she
There was
a
for
like a guest
her
Evelyn
than
very long dining
Aunt Harriet would
sister
at
a
looked
was co-owner.
which could accommodate guests.
with
her,
sit
at
room
table,
it
When
seems
at his
everyone
or her plate. They both had
of the place; however, in retrospect,
me
incongruous to
slightly
that
Harriet parked herself in the midst of
as thirty
one end and
the other end.
down
a fierce love
many
as
told, all table talk ceased as
-wilderness every
they
descendants are
summer; but she
still
did,
a
Aunt dense
and her
doing the same.
Kildare
Kildare ivas originally formed in
1892
Emanuel
as a hunting
and fishing club by William Seward Webb and Frederick before
it
W
Lehman and
her
sister,
later to
Harriet
and
their descendants. Its
spread was remarkable enough
Vanderbilt, along with several others,
was sold a few years
clan
three pages in
Lehman
Harvey
have commanded
Kaiser's classic
oi the Kdirond^idss, first published
Great
in
Camps
1982.
Evelyn Lehman Ehrich.
Harriet and Evelyn were the daughters of
Emanuel
Lehman, and Harriet had married her first cousin
Peter Friedman,
Sigmund Lehman. Kildare became
Ehrich; son of Ralph and
and
to
10,000-acre
a major focus
center of enjoyment for the entire
grandson of Evelyn Lehman
Ruth Friedman -
My
grand-
mother Evelyn Lehman Ehrich and her
Mayer and
64
sister
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
Harriet
Lehman Lehman were joint owners of
Kildare, a family
camp
in the
Adirondacks
my
and Harriet's son], Jules Ehrich [husband of
grandfather and a lawyer repre-
My
summer. The
parents
Harriet's sister Evelyn]
band of Sigmund and
went up there every
w^ere not there together as a rule, but
to Kildare before they a little bigger than
"It's
but
I
took
When my mother first brought my
turns.
think you'U like
The big
think
it
ought
up
to be,
dow^n in 1906 or so and was rebuilt
somewhat along
was
the
living
—one
the same lines
room,
in the
in the dining
a
few years
—
logs
with
its
Room
on
came from Jordan Lake,
also a
summer
a
wooden
base.
cowshed and a
a
they would
a
a hayloft. There
workshop.
cow. There was
we could
house
with ice cut from the
filled
set
The camp had
coop, where
in buckets
from
house
around
built
The
decor. Kildare was originally a fishing and fish in the
the
like
I
a
can
recall
chicken
gather eggs, and an icelake.
Water
dishwashing. For drinking, water was hauled up
Room; and one
called that because of
hunting club. The mounted
of the family,
was pumped from the lake for bathing and
room; one in the
called the Billiard
Red Room,
tents
helping to milk
bark outside and a shingle roof. There are three fireplaces
friends.
barn that housed the horses and
Clubhouse. The original building had burned
later
Harriet's granddaughter
In the overflow of the
said,
as
[hus-
Cullman-Asiel cottage and the Mayer cottage.
it."
building was referred to
Cullman
various times cottages for
at
branches
different
father
were married, she I
There were
or Joe
,
Sue Lehman] and their
of Emanuel and Mayer
families
Some were brought back from Florida by Allan Lehman [Sigmund
Canada or
that,
senting the owners, they bought from the Vanderbilts.
Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
Jordan River.
according to an exchange of letters in the 1890s
between
&
Red
wife,
right outside
and their
65
of
relatives.
and lived
called the Guides'
with
a small
it.
staff consisted
fishing parties
the house, or from a nearby creek called the
a natural spring,
a superintendent, his
They
led hunting
and
in a separate building
House.
Some of them were
— Lots of Lehmans
also excellent
mechanics and plumbers.
much meat on
axe. "Well, there warn't his response,
according to what
remember
on Sunday I
a tradition
in a big
was
I
it,"
ice
helped to turn. Other
activities
his
They would do
—and
w^as singing informally.
as
well
Ferdie the
Hermit
on nearby
built
land,
lived in a shack he
owned by
the
by adverse possession ("squatters is
that
The
love a
affair.
He
a
hermit
after a
wasn't a hermit
genuine hermit, so
we
in a
Ferdie's mail
box he had
met
rights").
tion.
were
The
on
parade.
didn't see
much
He
the
at a
left
them
up where the
trail
which you could it.
get to by
There was always
The superintendent
did the grilling, aided
Steak would be
staff.
and corn on the cob put into embers of
fire.
There were home-fried potatoes and
on
They made
66
we
generation to genera-
sardines
of him.
and some gro-
Lake;
set
Once
place called Pirate's Point,
home-fried onions. The
was
hanging on
menu from
grilled
disappointed
is
a big thing at Kildare.
by some of the male
title
good green
the Kildare road.
picnics
the same set
Ovalwood
Walter Scott,
poem
him from Tupper
across the lake,
had
Sir
in the
is
of the
rest
They were held
he was from Denmark or Sweden
and had become
it
canoe or walk around to
Dish Company, on which he had estabUshed
story
poem by
week we brought him
than
an adaptation of the
a
as
piano with music roUs.
state land, rather
plaque on one wall of the dining room.
to his cabin
player
as a
."The
which he
a
for
There was an out-of-
tune piano off to the side
.
.
ceries to
"masquerade
night" sometimes. Charades were very big,
.
trout,
did the carving over the dining
fireplace containing
wood
salt,
lake, picnics
a
He
beginning "Merrie
father enjoyed bird-watching with
friends.
land.
stanza of a
first
includ-
an old tradition that went way back
My
room
was
cream
churn packed with rock
ed swimming, canoeing on the
tennis.
on our
told.
of making
sometimes brought us some
claimed to have caught on
while chopping something with an
lost a toe
which
He
of
John Watson, once
the early superintendents,
I
One
toast,
first
course was always
and pancakes were the
their
own maple
dessert.
sugar and maple
Chapter Two: Sigmund M. Lehman
&
Harriet M. Lehman Lehman
Tlie
main house
at Kildare, with a porch
overlooking the lake. (Dorothy Treisman; Joel
Treisman)
Aerial shot of Kildare. (Dorothy Treisman; Joel Treisman)
The porch
of the
main
lionse, a
of many pleasant Adirondack
venue
activities.
(Dorothy Treisman; Joel Treisman)
An
interior shot,
showing the main dining area and one of the
home's three fireplaces. (Dorothy Treisman; Joel Treisman)
67
Lots of Lehmans
syrup.
As
a kid
sugar
on
cereal.
I
remember having dark maple
Today
I
can't find
it
is
Dorothy Treisman, the only daughter of Joe
CuUman and Sue Lehman, one
anywhere
of two daughters
of Harriet's younger son Harold. The Asiels
but one place in Quebec.
have an interest through Sue's younger Betty.
John Harriet
L.
LOEB
Jr., grandnephew
Harriet
still
owned by the family. On the Lehman side, one of the primary owners is
for Evelyn's side, her daughter
sister
Ruth
married Ralph Friedman and their children are
of Sigmund and
Lehman; grandson of Arthur and Adele Lehman —
Kildare
As
also
involved with Kildare. Coincidentally, our
caretaker
still
Don
Sanford, at the
Loeb camp
Bay on Saranac Lake, was brought up
68
at
Gull
at Kildare.
CHAPTER THREE
Lehman Goodhart
Hattie
Philip
The year
Philip
J.
Goodhart
J.
Goodhart married Mayer
Babette's oldest daughter Hattie was 1882.
the year
P. J.
Goodhart
&
was
established the Wall Street firm of
Co. As
his father-in-law
pered on Wall Street, so did decades was
It
a
member
Exchange. The son of
a
P. J.,
of the
P.
J.
for three
York Stock
Cincinnati grain dealer,
69
also
Mayer pros-
who
New
and
P. J.
&
Lots of Lehmans
shared a
who
common background
with
his father-in-laAv
started out in the cotton business.
dedicated philanthropists, with
Mount
Both were
Sinai Hospital
and Temple Emanu-El benefiting most from their generosity.
As
for Hattie, she
was
a
model of social propriety
who
prided herself in distinguishing "people
visit"
from "people we wouldn't
visit."
we
Hattie had rea-
son to take special pride in her progeny. Her daughter
Helen married Frank Altschul,
whose
a
senior partner of
Edith would marry
Lazard
Freres,
Hattie's
younger brother Herbert. Her son Arthur,
who
settled in
English family
sister
England and married into
when he wed
became the
good
Cecily Carter, was a dis-
tinguished professor of jurisprudence University and
a
first
at
American
Cambridge to serve as
head of an Oxford college. Arthur and Cecily produced three sons:
Goodhart,
a
Conservative
70
member
Sir Philip
of the British
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
Parliament;
Goodhart,
the a
Lord
future
member
who
Philip
William
J.
Goodhart
Howard
of the House of Lords; and
Professor Charles Goodhart of the
Economics,
&
has served
London School of
on the
Committee of the Bank of England.
71
Interest
Rate
_
Hattie
Philip
Lehman
Goodhart
1861
1S57 1
1
Marjorie
Howard
Helen
Frank
Walter
Goodhart
Goodhart
Altschul
1887
ISS7
——
1884
\
__
John Gordari
~
/r.
1907
PhyUis
Charles
Daniel
Margaret
Edith
Robert
Goodhart
Altschul
Lang
Altschul
Altschul
Graham
1913
1913
1913
1915
1917
1913 I
I
I
Christine
Robert
Julia
Michael
Kathryn
Denny
Graham
Moran
Graham
Graham
1941
1953
1943
1947
I
1
Adrian
Marjorie
Bowden
Gordan
1938
1942
John
Gordan
111
1945
Catherine
Lucy
Luciano
Virginia
Ehzabeth
Adam
Kathryn
James
Morot-Sir
Gordan
Rastelli
Gordan
Graham
Lindemann
Graham
Graham
1946
1948
1939
1950
1964
1961
1966
1993
L
^_
,
Elizabeth
Stewart
Robin
John
Veronica
Rebecca
Emilio
Helen
Charlotte
Frances
Gordan
Ellis
Allan
Gordan IV
Rastelli
Rastelli
Oliveti
Lindemann
Lindemann
Lindemann
1978
1975
1980
1991
1992
1997
1975
I
—
Alexander
Nicholas
Stephanie
Richard
Robert
Frances
Helen
Eric
Bowden
Reynolds
Bowden
Bowden
Labaree
Lang
Lang
Kooijman
Lang
1976
1979
1944
1947
1949
1961
1953
1972
Cecily
u Daniel
Aaron
Hannah
Sophie
Isaiah
Dinorah
Daniel
Joaquin
Nicholas
Olivia
Reynolds
Labaree
Labaree
Labaree
Lang
Matias
Lang
Lang
Kooijman
Kooijman
2006
1978
1981
1987
1974
1998
2000
1991
1994
Stephanie
Diana
Patricia a
Wagner
Landrelh
Fleming 'S
1932
1946
=
Arthur
Siri
von Reis
=r:
Altschul
1920
i93i
1, Stephen Altschul
^
1957
1
1
Caroline
Charles
Charlotte
Arthur
Emily
lames
Altschul
Dixon
Altschul
Altschul
1956
1958
1966
1964
1966
1
=
:
John
Serena
Miller
Altschul
I95S
1970
—\ 1 I
1
James
William
Stephanie
Caroline
Rex
Altschul
Altschul
Altschul
Miller
Miller
1996
1998
2006
2003
2006
I
Lehman Goodhart & Philip
Hattie
J.
Goodhart
Margaret Smith
1938
__
]ames
William
Laura
Benjamin
Goodhart
Dallas
WatU
Goodhart
Goodhart
1967
1968
1969
1970
1972
Annabel
Josephine
Beatrice
Katharine
Matthew
Kenneth
Fletcher
Dallas
Dallas
Dallas
Watts
Watts
Watts
1997
2000
2004
2000
2002
2005
Lucy
Gordon
William
Kate
Alice
James
Sophie
Goodhart
Bennett
Goodhart
Hill
Goodhart
Snelling
Goodhart
1962
1961
1964
1970
1968
1964
1970
I
Arthur
Jacqueline
George
Goodhart
Lewis
Kershaw
1952
I
"
I
Theodore
Eli
Eve
George
Sarah
Bennett
Bennett
Goodhart
Goodhart
Goodhart
2001
2004
1998
2000
2000
Sarah
David
Lucy
Rachel
Adrian
Richard
Harriet
Daniel
Amanda
Goodhart
Goodhart
Kellaway
Goodhart
Richardson
Roberts
Goodhart
Goodhart
Moonie
1953
1956
1959
1957
1943
1964
1961
1966
1952
^J I
\
\
I
Rosamond
Matilda
Arthur
Stanley
Richard
Peter
Matthew
Goodhart
Goodhart
Goodhart
Goodhart
Goodhart
Roherts
Roberts
Roberts
1999
1991
1992
1994
1997
1989
1992
1993
Grace
John Kershaw
Harry
Thomas
Victoria
Edward
David
Rebecca
Kershaw
Kershaw
Richardson
Richardson
Richardson
Billings
Goodhart
1982
1986
1988
1981
1983
1987
1962
1964
Samuel
I
\
n
I
Jacob
Daniel
Simon
Thomas
Billings
Billings
Billings
Billings
1998
2000
2002
2005
—
1967
-^
Hattie
Florence
Wilfred
Goodhart
Goodhart
Goodhart
1996
1999
1998
Hattie Lehiiwii Goodliati, "people
we
known
i>isit"froni "people
in
"Our Cnnt'd"
we wouldn't
74
visit. "
circles for
distinguishing
0ohn D. Gordan
III)
Hattie
Lehman Goodhart 1861-1948
Neil' York Times, July 14,
1948
Mrs. Goodhart, Sister of Ex-Gov. Lehman, 88 Mrs. Hattie Goodhart, died yesterday
at
a sister
of former Gov. Herbert Lehman,
her home, 550 Park Avenue, after
the age of 88. She was the
a
long iUness
widow of Philip J. Goodhart,
at
a broker
and philanthropist, who died four years ago. Mrs. Goodhart was born in Montgomery, Ala., and came to New York when she was 8 years old. ... In 1928 Mrs. Goodhart was elected a trustee of the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews at 120 West 105th Street. Surviving besides the former Governor and her son, Howard, who resides in New York, are a daughter, Mrs. Frank Altschul of
75
— Lots of Lehmans
Stamford, Conn.; another son, Prof. Arthur Goodhart of Oxford University, seven grandchildren,
A Salem
Fields
Stephen Birmingham, The Great Jewish opening paragraph
Mrs. Philip
Families of
— By
J.
a
Cemetery, Brooklyn.
author of
"OmCmwd":
New York,
//'om the book's
world of heavily encrusted
and invitations
weddings
—
—but
the people Mrs.
all
stretched
versation, Mrs. "Is
it
es. ..
[like
a
person smelling of wool and
who
greeted
them
at
the
her mother, Babette] with out-
peppermint
and
arms
little
visit?
Sir Philip
into the con-
Goodhart would want
someone we would
.
Granny was admired
candies
and "people we wouldn't
new name came
She had an odd
society.
clutched in both hands.
with-
visited, a city
one of the grandes dames
in Paris
among
we
a
Evening
within the group,
"people
When
little
door
There were two kinds of people visit"
round
It
parties,
Goodhart
Still, as
by her friends. To her grandchildren she was
coming-out
to teas,
turned out Granny was an
of German Jewish
calling cards
in a city.
visit."
anti-Semite.
Goodhart had become one of and immutable values.
it
dinner one night,
the late 1930s the world of
clearly defined, fixed
was
and seven great-grandchildren
private funeral service will be held today with burial in
know,
Hattie Goodhart; eldest son of Arthur and Cecily Goodhart
Would
visit?"
In the early 1900s
She and her friends did not make a
grandson of Philip and
to
habit of repeating phras-
point of being Jewish. When
Goodhart,
Rorschach
was performed on Granny Goodhart
walking
saw an
a
home from
after
relatively
76
grandfather Philip was
the office
one day when he
attractive painting in a gallery
He went
test
my
inside
—
and bought
window.
six paintings
unknown French painter called
by
a
Renoir.
.
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
&
Philip
J.
Goodhart
Hattie with her great-grandchildren Marjorie
Gordan Bowden andjolw D. Gordan
John D. Gordan
Young Hattie
Jiolding
baby
Howard Goodhart,
Qohn D. Gordan
c.
1885.
III)
77
III)
III,
c.
1947
— Lots of Lehmans
back the
Lord William Howard Goodhart,
day after they were delivered because she
grandson of Hattie and Philip Goodhart; middle son of Arthur
thought they were indecent!
and Cecily Goodhart -
My
grandmother sent the whole
lot
My
father,
Arthur Lehman
Goodhart, was brought up in a brownstone on 81st Street just to the west of Central Park.
Robert M. MORGENTHAU, grandson of Hattie's younger
Settle Fatiiian;
sister,
Hattie's sister Settle
II]
my
Hattie.
- The
mother
said,
"You have
Bring your wife with you." So
to have tea
with Aunt Hattie,
who
by
I
Hattie was the opposite of her husband small, fierce,
jokes.
called
was very
in a
into the foyer,
loud voice, "Bobby,
Peggy could
hear.
I
and Hattie
who
told her
is
said to
My
it
I
got to
know my
me
as
grand-
well.
and the family view
main motives
is
that
for his deciding to
one of the
make
his
career in England was to put the Atlantic
between him and
was, and
she didn't invite her in because she had
given to
father was the youngest of her three
children,
me
much
can remember she used to terrify
mother quite
that?" so that
who
I
dominant, and not
a small child. Later
we were having tea, Peggy, the widow of Peter Lehman [Herbert and Edith Lehman's adopted son who died in World War came
which was placed the telephone.
houses.
formal. As
II],
a passage in
In those early days the telephone served both
on Aunt
to call
lived in the
house next door. The two houses were linked
younger son of Elinor and Henry
Lehman women, particularly Hattie, were strong-minded women. They w^ere very ladylike, but they knew exactly what they wanted to do. After the war [World War Morgenthau Jr.
and her family
come
ly a
dominating
ents, Arthur
without being invited.
his
mother. She was certain-
figure. Shortly after
my
and Cecily, had married and
par-
set
up
house in Cambridge, Hattie and Philip came over to be with them. Hattie insisted on
78
visit-
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
Interior
mew
&
Philip
J.
Goodhart
of the West 81st Street residence of Hattie and Philip Goodhart. Hattie's
and herjamily hved next door (Henry Morgenthau
79
III)
sister Settie
Lehman Fatman
Lots of Lehmans
ing
using
my mother
the food shops that
all
(this
over that year. In
war was about
was, of course, long before super-
markets) and
they were
was
on her return
told
my mother that
and
take her business elsewhere. Fortunately, Hattie
enough
didn't stay long
to discover that
other shops in Cambridge were just
remember when
can't
I
and
to Hattie
when
was very
I
England
them was it
first
came over
(when
as if
I
I
brother, Charles, and
older than
to
It
I
brothers
New York again. in England,
life
me
for
my
fell
my younger
into a regular
and was independent of
were dispatched
every
us).
We
to Tucson, Arizona, for the
months of October
to April
—me
to a board-
ing school, Charles with our nanny to the
five years old)
war was imminent.
Arizona Inn. We then spent
was
my grandparents should take me back to the United States
May
in
New York
decided then that
with our grandparents in their apartment
my
550 Park Avenue
brothers and
(with our nanny). night with
way
them
at
to catch the
New York just as
I
remember spending
the Ritz in
standing,
a
London on our
Queen Mary.
We
I
stayed
United
States
is
still
the apartment as large and dark,
at
Overbrook, their house near
Stamford. In July and August Hattie and Philip
through
—
took us somewhere cooler
the winter and returned to England in the spring of 1939. Hattie and Philip did not
building that
June and September we spent with the
the great 1938 hurricane was
in the
a
though now looking rather ancient.
remember
Altschuls
on
—
at
with heavy furniture.
arrived in
beginning.
We
of
pattern (my brother Philip was seven years
can associate with
was
my
was divided between
For the next four years,
bad.
month
were shipped off to
threat
grandparents and their daughter, Helen Altschul.
the
must have been
parents for a
memory
in 1938
looked
it
when the
to turn into reality,
responsibility for us
was introduced
I
small, as they
my
to visit
summer. The
when
Philip, but
as
all
August,
As both our parents remained
unhygienic and ordered her to
all
I
late
come
to a
8o
house they rented
at
in
1940 and 1941
Cotuit on Cape Cod,
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
P.J.
and Hattie taking
it
easy,
c.
8i
&
Philip
J.
Goodhart
1940. (John D. Gordan
III)
Lots of Lehmans
and
in
1942 and 1943 (perhaps fearing that
Cape Cod might be marines) to
German
attacked by
large extent succeed
younger and more
Whiteface Inn complex on Lake Placid. So for three
months
a
year
we saw
a great deal
Hattie and Philip. The pattern ended
of
when my
cards,
Temple Emanu-El and used every Saturday. As
brought up
as
my brothers
and
we
devout Anglican),
to
United
never went there. As
didn't
match the spectacularly high standards of
plentiful,
though
came
naturally.
She
a
person to
did,
whom
we
a
good
we saw
returned to England
in the
summer of 1947,
that time she
went
I
was
to the
failing
and
deal of time with the
story about her
last
all
at
comes from the
large
Overbrook. Frank Altschul gave
amounts of an innocent-tasting
but lethal cocktail.
and very
from her
warmth
—and
however, try
grandfather's death
parents and Charles and
organization
Gentleness was certainly no part of Hattie's
She was not
rummy, and (improba-
time Helen was hosting a meeting of a women's
it
them
firm.
remember her
use.
saw her only
By
was
very good way of shuffling
of her. After
States.
One
the Altschuls.
character; she was small, determined,
my
a
I
who
Altschuls.
Emanu-El, the dietary laws were not observed. 550 was good and
I still
was spending
would be expected of members of Temple
at
1
when my
a
Food
less
in 1945,
it
were being
mother was
Christians (our
much
members of
I
me
Following
walk over
to
which
boisterous.)
to play gin
bly) she taught
grandfather died, in the spring of 1944.
Hattie and Philip were loyal
me
teaching
me. (I'm
in being kind to
not so sure about kindness to Charles,
sub-
cottage forming part of the
a
—
and
said,
rest,
82
Hattie
came down
she found the guests in a stupor,
"Helen, dear, your friends seem to be
very tired today."
to a
When
Philip J. Goodhart, Wall Street entrepreneur in his prime,
(Herbert
H. Lehman Suite
& Papers,
84
c.
1935.
Columbia University)
—
Philip
J.
Goodhart
1857-1944
NewYork
Times, April 27,
1944
Philip
J.
Goodhart,
Retired Broker, 88
Member
of Stock Exchange for 3 1 Years Dies
A Trustee Philip
J.
of Mount Sinai Hospital
Goodhart, former stock broker,
active in Jewish welfare
who
for
many
years
work, died early yesterday morning
was
at his
home, 550 Park Avenue, after a brief illness. His age was 88. Co-founder with his brother, Albert E. Goodhart, of the firm of P. J. Goodhart & Co. in 1882, Mr. Goodhart was a member of the NewYork Stock Exchange from 1878 to 1909. He also served as a director of the United States Pipe and Foundry Company from 1899 to 1928 and as a member of the company's executive committee for five years.
85
Lots of Lehmans
Born
in Cincinnati, Mr.
^vas associated
with
Goodhart attended schools there and
his father in a grain-dealing establishment.
dropped these connections and came
New York at the
to
to enter the brokerage business. In 1933,
when
his
He
age of 18
Stock Exchange
firm was dissolved, he retired. Recently he had maintained offices
654 Madison Avenue to handle his private affairs. One of his greatest philanthropic interests was the Mount Sinai Hospital, of which he was a trustee from 1907 until 1933, when he was made honorary trustee. Another activity to which he devoted much of his energies was the Temple Emanu-El, Fifth Avenue and Sixty-fifth Street. Joining the congregation in 1897, he was named a trustee in 1919. When plans were being formulated for construction of the present edifice he was an active member of the building committee. A Republican, he was known to have enjoyed telling his children that as a boy of 8 he watched a parade honoring Abraham Lincoln during the President's second campaign. In 1882 Mr. Goodhart married Hattie Lehman, sister of former Gov. Herbert Lehman and of Chief Judge Irving Lehman of the New York State Court of Appeals. Besides his widow, he leaves two sons, Howard Goodhart and Prof. Arthur Goodhart of Oxford University, England; a daughter, Mrs. Frank Altschul; seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. A fiineral service will be held tomorrow at 1 1 A.M. in the Temple Emanu-El. Burial wiU be private in Salem Fields Cemetery, Brooklyn. at
.
Phyllis Philip
Goodhart GoRDAN, granddaughter of Grampa Goodhart's
parents had
.
from Germany, and
his father
peddler, traveling with a
mid Hattie Goodhart; daughter of Howard and Mnijoric
Goodhart -
.
come
had
started out as a
wagon
in southern
Ohio and northern Kentucky. Granny
86
at
one
"
Chapter Three: Hattie Lehman Goodhart
W
.»
^M
It? .•;
r.
i
."''^1
Philip
J.
Goodhart
m
-"''^m^, :,_(f'(-'
&
«Miw>
f 1'
1:'
bk
'^,-
'.
^3^^1^
"'Af^lvM?!
n^^ p3^
^E^-'^^
^
PiP*;.^