Black History Month Fact

ValueMe
on 2/5/09 11:40 pm, edited 2/5/09 11:52 pm
Reginald Lewis: Owner, Chairman-CEO of Beatrice Foods. One of My Personal heros and role models.

His Motto: Keep Going NO Matter What!   It works!


Reginald F. Lewis

Reginald F. Lewis

Reginald F. Lewis

 

Reginald F. Lewis Foundation Makes Largest Endowment Gift Ever to an African American Museum.
Charles Clarkson (former law partner of Reginald F. Lewis), Mrs. Loida Nicolas Lewis, Ms. Beverly A. Cooper, Mrs. Carolyn E. Fugett and Mr. Jean S. Fugett, Sr at the Museum Ground Breaking Ceremony.

Download Press Release

photo credit:
Courtesy of Loida Nicolas Lewis

Reginald F. Lewis was born on December 7, 1942, in a Baltimore, Maryland, neighborhood he later described as “semi-tough." Strongly influenced by his family, he began his career at the age of ten by delivering the local Afro-American newspaper. Fortune Magazine reported that “as a child, Lewis kept his earnings in a tin can known as ‘Reggie’s Hidden Treasure.’" The tin can had been given to him by his grandmother, who taught him the importance of saving some of everything he earned. Reginald later sold his newspaper business at a profit.

During his high school years at Dunbar, Reginald excelled in both his studies and sports. As quarterback of the football team, shortstop on the baseball team, and a forward on the basketball team, he served as captain in all three teams. Reginald was also elected vice-president of the student body; his friend and classmate, Robert Bell (current Chief Judge of Maryland), was president. In addition, Reginald worked nights and weekends at jobs with his grandfather, a head waiter and maitre d’.

In 1961, Reginald entered Virginia State University on a football scholarship, majoring in economics. He graduated on the Dean’s List despite having a rough first year academically as well as losing his scholarship due to an injury. After losing his scholarship, he worked in a bowling alley and as a photographer’s assistant to help pay his expenses. In his senior year, the Rockefeller Foundation funded a program at Harvard Law School to select a few black students to attend summer school at the school in an effort to introduce them to legal studies in general.

At the end of the program, Reginald was invited to attend Harvard Law School—the only person in the 148-year history of Harvard Law to be admitted before applying to the school. He arrived at Harvard with $50 in his pocket. During his third year at Harvard, he discovered the direction for his future career in a course on securities law. He wrote his third-year paper on takeovers. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 1968 and went to work for a prestigious New York law firm (Paul, Weiss.)

Within two years of graduation, he established his own Wall Street law firm, the first African American law firm on Wall Street. Although he focused on corporate law, he also helped many minority-owned businesses secure badly needed capital using Minority Enterprise Small Business Investment Companies (venture capital firms formed by corporations or foundations, operating under the aegis of the Small Business Administration).

A desire to “do the deals" himself led him to establish the TLC Group L.P. in 1983. His first major deal involved the $22.5-million leveraged buyout of the McCall Pattern Company. Reginald nursed the struggling company back to health and, despite a declining market, led the company to enjoy the two most profitable years in its 113-year history. In the summer of 1987, he sold it for $90 million, making $50 million in profit.

In October 1987, Reginald purchased the international division of Beatrice Foods, with holdings in 31 countries, which became known as TLC Beatrice International. At $985 million, the deal was the largest leveraged buyout at the time of overseas assets by an American company. As Chairman and CEO, he moved quickly to reposition the company, pay down the debt, and vastly increase the company’s worth. By 1992, the company had sales of over $1.6 billion annually, and Reginald was sharing his time between his company’s offices in New York and an office in Paris since most of the company’s businesses were in Europe.

With all of his success, Reginald did not forget others; giving back was part of his life. In 1987 he established The Reginald F. Lewis Foundation, which funded grants totaling approximately $10 million to various non-profit programs and organizations while Reginald was alive. His first major grant was an unsolicited $1 million to Howard University—a school he never attended—in 1988; the federal government matched the grant, making the gift to Howard University $2 million, which was used to fund an endowment. Interest from this endowment is used for scholarships, fellowships, and faculty sabbaticals. In 1992, Reginald donated $3 million to Harvard Law School—the largest grant in the history of the school at the time. In gratitude, the school renamed its International Law Center the Reginald F. Lewis International Law Center. Among other programs, the grant supports a fellowship to teach minority lawyers how to be law professors.

In January 1993, Reginald’s remarkable career was cut short by his untimely death at the age of 50 after a short illness. At his funeral, a letter from his longtime friend, David N. Dinkins, former mayor of New York, was read. In the letter, Dinkins said “Reginald Lewis accomplished more in half a century than most of us could ever deem imaginable. And his brilliant career was matched always by a warm and generous heart." Dinkins added, “It is said that service to others is the rent we pay on earth. Reg Lewis departed us paid in full."
Even after his death, his philanthropic endeavors continue. During his illness, he made known his desire to support a museum of African American culture. In 2002, the Vice President of the foundation read an article in the Baltimore Sun describing a museum of Maryland African American history and culture slated to be built near the Inner Harbor.

After further research and discussion, especially relative to the partnership between the museum and the Maryland State Department of Education to develop an African American curriculum to be taught in all public schools in the state of Maryland, the foundation made its largest grant to date to the proposed museum; $5 million dollars. The money is an endowment with the interest to be used for educational purposes.

Lawyer, entrepreneur, philanthropist, Chairman, CEO, husband, father, son, brother, nephew, cousin, friend—Reginald F. Lewis lived his life according to the words he often quoted to audiences around the country: “Keep going, no matter what."


 

 

Be Well, Live Well
I Am Most Excellent - Affirmed Only Of GOD.
I wish for You, what I pray for Myself: Wellness, Happiness and Success In ALL Things Good! 
I know for Sure I Control: My Attitude and Effort, My Health and Happiness.

 

 

MyQnA
on 2/5/09 11:45 pm
Great fact and I love the motto.....Keep Going NO Matter What!   It works!

I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. 
 

  
Faith *
on 2/5/09 11:48 pm
The first African American to dine at the White House: 
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON

When Washington's autobiography, Up From Slavery, was published in 1901, it became a bestseller and had a major impact on the African American community, and its friends and allies. Washington in 1901 was the first African-American ever invited to the White House as the guest of President Theodore Roosevelt.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Booker_T._Washington#Up_from_Sl avery_and_invitation_to_the_White_House

People are so worried about what they eat between Christmas and the New Year, but they really should be worried about what they eat between the New Year and Christmas. ~Author Unknown

PrettyPlum
on 2/5/09 11:54 pm

Value...you always add something of value to the board.

Great post......and the motto is words that I could use on my journey.

Thanks !

ValueMe
on 2/6/09 12:47 am
Thank-you...you're a "Peach" 

 

 

Be Well, Live Well
I Am Most Excellent - Affirmed Only Of GOD.
I wish for You, what I pray for Myself: Wellness, Happiness and Success In ALL Things Good! 
I know for Sure I Control: My Attitude and Effort, My Health and Happiness.

 

 

Nikki M.
on 2/5/09 11:58 pm, edited 2/5/09 11:58 pm - Buffalo, NY
Phillis Wheatley


Phillis Wheatley (1753 – December 5, 1784) was the first published African American poet whose writings helped create the genre of African American literature.[1] She was born in Gambia, Africa, and became a slave at age seven. She was purchased by the Boston Wheatley family, who taught her to read and write, and helped encourage her poetry.


The 1773 publication of Wheatley's Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, brought her fame, with dignitaries such as George Washington praising her work. Wheatley also toured England and was praised in a poem by fellow African American poet Jupiter Hammon. Wheatley was emancipated by her owners after her poetic success, but stayed with the Wheatley family until the death of her former master and the breakup of his family. She then married a free black man, who soon left her. She died in poverty in 1784 while working on a second book of poetry, which has now been lost.

 



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phillis_Wheatley

http://www.myspace.com/essnce04

Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome.   ~Booker T. Washington~

cafeaulait
on 2/6/09 2:38 am - Boston, MA
Very interesting to say the least...I really do appreciate these Black History Facts that you've posted so far and l look forward to reading and learning more.  One can never no to much about any subject, especially when it comes to your history.
Lashay1974
on 2/6/09 2:50 am - Randallstown, MD

Zora Neale Hurston

Zora Neale Hurston

Born in Notasulga, Alabama, Zora Neale Hurston grew up in Florida. Hurston later attended Howard University while working as a manicurist. In 1925 she went to New York City, drawn by the circle of creative black artists (now known as the Harlem Renaissance), and she began writing fiction.Annie Nathan Meyer, founder of Barnard College, found a scholarship for Zora Neale Hurston. Hurston began her study of anthropology at Barnard under Franz Boaz, studying also with Ruth Benedict and Gladys Reichard. With the help of Boaz and Elsie Clews Parsons, Zora Neale Hurston was able to win a six-month grant she used to collect African American folklore.

While studying at Barnard, Zora Neale Hurston also worked as a secretary (an amanuensis) for Fannie Hurst, a novelist. (Hurst, a Jewish woman, later -- 1933 -- wrote Imitation of Life, about a black woman passing as white. Claudette Colbert starred in the 1934 film version of the story. "Passing" was a theme of many of the Harlem Renaissance women writers.)

After college, when Zora Neale Hurston began working as an ethnologist, she combined fiction and her knowledge of culture. Her early patron, Mrs. Rufus Osgood Mason, supported her work on the condition that Hurston not publish anything. It was only after Zora Neale Hurston cut herself off from Mrs. Mason's financial patronage that she began publishing her poetry and fiction.

Zora Neale Hurston's best-known work was published in 1937: Their Eyes Were Watching God, a novel which was controversial because it didn't fit easily into stereotypes of black stories. She was criticized within the black community for taking funds from whites to support her writing; she wrote about themes "too black" to appeal to many whites.

Zora Neale Hurston's popularity waned. Her last book was published in 1948. She worked for a time on the faculty of North Carolina College for Negroes in Durham, she wrote for Warner Brothers motion pictures, and for some time worked on staff at the Library of Congress.

Eventually, Zora Neale Hurston went back to Florida and in 1960 died there in poverty, her work nearly forgotten and thus lost to most readers.

Alice Walker in the 1970s helped revive interest in Zora Neale Hurston's writings, and today Hurston's novels and poetry are studied in literature classes, women's studies and black studies courses, and have become again popular with the general reading public.

 
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