John M. Hennessy

John M. (Jack) Hennessy is an American financier and philanthropist. The son of John F. Hennessy and Octavia Tanksley, he was born on May 5, 1936 in Boston, Massachusetts.

He was educated at the Roxbury Latin School, Harvard University (where he graduated magna cum laude), and the MIT Sloan School of Management. He and his wife, Margarita, divide their time among Nassau, Bahamas, London, England, where their daughter and son-in-law live, and Tuxedo Park, New York, where their son, daughter-in-law and three grandchildren live.

Career

Citibank

After college in 1958, Hennessy joined The First National Citibank (now Citigroup), working in New York and South America. He eventually became the head of the bank's West Coast of S.A. operations centered in Lima, Peru at the age of 28.

The U.S. Treasury

After returning to school at MIT for two years, in September, 1970, Hennessy joined the United States Department of the Treasury as Deputy Assistant Security, responsible for International Economic Development. On May 2, 1972, he was sworn in as Assistant Secretary for International Affairs, a Presidential appointment requiring the consent and approval of the United States Senate.[1]

The First Boston Corp, Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB), Credit Suisse

In July 1974, Hennessy left the U.S. Treasury to join First Boston, one of wall street's leading investment banking firms at the time. He spent the rest of his career in the firm, which subsequently was acquired by The Credit Suisse, Zurich. In 1982, he became Chairman and CEO of the joint venture CSFB, Ltd., London. In 1989, he became Chairman of Executive Committee and CEO of the merged global bank, Credit Suisse First Boston.[2] In 2001, he retired from the Bank to dedicate himself to philanthropic and not-for-profit activities, concentrating on education and programs in developing nations.

Other

  • Board Member, Corning Inc.[3] and Chairman of the Finance Committee, 1989-2008
  • Member of the Advisory Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 1990-2001
  • Member of the Twin Towers Fund to compensate the victims of 9/11/2001, 2001-2002
  • Trustee, The Appeal of Conscience Foundation,[4] 1992–2020
  • Chairman, The Economic Club of New York (founded 1910), 2004-2006
  • Member, MIT Corporation, 1990-2000
  • Trustee, George H. W. Bush Presidential Library Foundation,[5] 1994–Present
  • Independent Inquiry (Volcker) Committee into United Nations Oil for Food Iraq program, led team to set up Baghdad office, May & August 2004
  • Co-Chairman, Safe Water Network, Inc., founded by Paul Newman to provide clean water to villages in Africa and India, 2005-2010
  • Advisory Board Member and Inaugural Speaker, The Legatum Center for Entrepreneurship and Development at MIT,[1] 2008–2018
  • Chairman, Care Corporate Council
  • Member of the Visiting Committee, Harvard University, 1988-1993
  • Trustee, Roxbury Latin School, 1975-1980; 1990-1995
  • Board Member, American Friends of Eton College,[6] 2008–2018
  • Trustee, The Manhattan Institute, 1991- 2001
  • Co-Chairman, Shakespeare Globe Center USA, 1989

Awards and Distinctions

  • Exceptional Service Award U.S. Treasury (1974)
  • Corporate Leadership Award, MIT, (1987)
  • Commencement Speaker, Yale University School of Management, (1994)
  • Member of 5-man Blue Ribbon Committee on Future of Asian Development Bank, Chair Amartya Sen, Nobel Laureate (1988)
  • Honoree, New York Boy Scouts of America (1994)
  • Honoree, first Annual Award Dinner of Student Sponsorship (program for mentoring and financing failing NYC public students in Catholic schools) (2000)

Philanthropy

  • Established scholarships for Latin American students at Harvard University (3 students each year) and MIT (4 students each year)
  • Established International Exchange and Travel program, Jarvis international lecture series, and program for 1 student to attend Eton College for 1 year post graduate studies
  • President, Margarita and John Hennessy Family Foundation – grants for education and related initiatives
gollark: How do you *know* the Pipehon interpreter is slow?
gollark: It has no parse tree and just does magic stupidity?
gollark: Well, how is a compiler meant to work, then?
gollark: In most cases, I doubt you'll notice the performance issue, if there even is one.
gollark: COMPILER POTATOING GOES THROUGH A PARSE TREE HOW CAN THAT BE FAST

References

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