Jack Benaroya

Jack A. Benaroya (July 11, 1921 – May 11, 2012) was a pioneering real state developer who built what became the Northwest’s largest privately-held commercial real-estate empire which he sold in 1984 for $315 million.

Jack A. Benaroya
Born(1921-07-11)July 11, 1921
DiedMay 11, 2012(2012-05-11) (aged 90)
NationalityUnited States
OccupationFounder of the Benaroya Company
Spouse(s)Rebecca Benaroya
ChildrenDonna Benaroya
Alan Benaroya
Larry Benaroya

After selling his company, he became a venture capitalist and was an early investor in Starbucks[1]. He was also a noted philanthropist and prominent civic leader in Seattle, Washington[2].

Biography

Benaroya was born to Lebanese Jewish immigrants in Montgomery, Alabama[3][4] but spent his childhood in California before moving to Seattle at the age of 12.[3] Benaroya attended Seattle's Garfield High School.[5] After graduating, he took a job at his family's beer distributorship and then went on to serve with the United States Navy in the Philippines during World War II.[3]

Upon his return, he became involved in real estate by building post offices in the region which was experiencing a post-war boom; however, his fortune was earned by building industrial parks, a concept not yet seen in the northwestern United States.[3]

In 1956, Benaroya established the Benaroya Company which would become the largest commercial real estate developer in the state of Washington.[3] In 1984, he sold his real estate portfolio for $315 million shifting the focus of the company to venture capital.[3]

Benaroya was an early investor in Starbucks.[3]

Philanthropy

Benaroya was a former director of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce; the United Way of King County; Temple de Hirsch Sinai; Congregation Ezra Bessaroth; the Stroum Jewish Community Center; and the Pilchuck Glass School.[3] He was a supporter of the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International; the University of Washington Medical Center; Children's Hospital and Medical Center; Lakeside School; and the Jewish Federation and Council of Seattle.

He funded the Benaroya Hall, facility for the Seattle Symphony which opened in 1998; and the Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle which opened in 1999.[3]

Personal life and death

Benaroya was married to his wife Rebecca for over seventy years. They had three children: Donna Benaroya, Alan Benaroya, and Larry Benaroya.[3] In the years before his death, Benaroya was slowed by Parkinson's disease.[6] He died on May 11, 2012.[3][7]

gollark: In things not seen by other people much!
gollark: Expensive watches are status symbols. People probably know at some level that they are getting a status symbol.
gollark: If they wanted it for *function* they would buy a cheap digital one as I did.
gollark: But they probably do know that it's a high-status watch.
gollark: They might not know or care what would be a technically superior watch.

See also

References

Notes

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