Marcia Rabinowitz (daughter-in-law), Samuel Perlman (son-in-law), Joanne Grant (daughter-in-law), Joni Rabinowitz (granddaughter), Peter Rabinowitz (grandson), Bill Perlman (grandson), Lee Perlman (grandson), Mark Rabinowitz (grandson), Abby Rabinowitz (granddaughter)
Louis M. Rabinowitz (1887–1957) was an American businessman, philanthropist and art collector. Born in Lithuania (then part of the Russian Empire), he emigrated to the United States, where he founded a manufacturing company and became a millionaire. He established endowments at Yale University and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He funded Nelson Glueck's archaeological trips to the Negev of Israel. His art collection is held posthumously at the Yale University Art Gallery.
Background
Louis M. Rabinowitz was born on October 16, 1887, in Rosanne (Raseiniai), now Lithuania.[1][2][3] He emigrated to the United States in 1901,[1][2] at the age of 14.[4]
Career
Upon his arrival, Rabinowitz worked menial jobs and learned English by reading books in the Cooper Union library.[5]
He founded L.M. Rabinowitz & Co., a corset manufacturing company based in Brooklyn, New York City.[1][3][6] He served as its chairman.[3] He sold it to Holland Furnace Co., a Holland, Michigan-based home furnace company, for US$2 million in 1966.[7][8]
Rabinowitz served on the board of directors of the Municipal Bank of Brooklyn.[9]
Rabinowitz had a wife, Rose,[16] a son, Victor, who became a lawyer[17] and a daughter, Lucille. His daughter-in-law, Joanne Grant, was a journalist and Civil Rights activist.
Rabinowitz died on April 27, 1957, in New York City.[3][4][5] He was 69 years old.[3][4] By December 1957, the Yale University Library established the Louis M. Rabinowitz Memorial Fund in his honor.[20]
^"Louis M. Rabinowitz Memorial Fund in the Yale University Library". Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society. 47 (2): 124. December 1957. JSTOR43059927.
^Anderson, Jack (August 14, 1972). "Merry-Go-Round". Moberly Monitor-Index. Moberly, Missouri. p. 3. Retrieved September 1, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. The FBI file on black leader Floyd McKissick reveals that, in 1967, he "received Check Number 2665 made out in his name and drawn against the account of the Louis M. Rabinowitz Foundation, Incorporated, in the amount of $2500."