Linda Bean

Linda Lorraine Bean (born April 28, 1941) is an American businessperson and donor. As a candidate of the Republican Party, Bean ran unsuccessfully for the United States Congress in 1988 and 1992. She is the granddaughter of Leon Leonwood Bean and an heiress to the L.L.Bean company.[2]

Linda L. Bean
Born
Linda Lorraine Bean

(1941-04-28) April 28, 1941
NationalityAmerican
Alma materAlaska Methodist University (Ecology, 1965-1966)
Antioch College (B.A., Business Administration, 1963)
OccupationBusinesswoman, political candidate
Known forOwner of Linda Bean's Perfect Maine restaurants [1]
RelativesLeon Leonwood Bean, founder of L.L.Bean (grandfather)

In January 2020, Linda Bean was one of thirteen "Women of Vision" honorees announced by the Farnsworth Art Museum.[3]

Business

Bean is part owner of L.L.Bean Inc. and serves on its Board of Directors. Bean also entered the Maine lobster business in 2007 at the age of 66,[4] starting with buying one wharf in Port Clyde and adding others in Tenants Harbor and on the island of Vinalhaven and relationships up and down the Maine coast to an annual peak purchase of over nine million pounds. In 2016 in a partial retirement move she turned over majority ownership of her lobster enterprises to her general manager and employees in an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP).[5][6] With John Hathaway, in whose Shucks Maine Lobster business with an HPP processing method she is also invested, Bean took the lead in achieving sustainability certification for the entire Maine coast trap lobster fishery by meeting the standards of the Marine Stewardship Council as announced by its founder Rupert Howes and by Maine Governor Paul LePage on March 10, 2013 at the International Boston Seafood Show. [7]

Bean is also a business figure in western Maine timberland ownership and management, including maple syrup producing sugarbushes in Weld and prospectively in Wyman, Maine. Her brand name enterprise Linda Bean's Perfect Maine, encompasses offerings of Maine vacation rental cottages and wedding locations, and various businesses in midcoast Maine including two traditional Maine general stores in St. George. in 2015 she initiated Linda Bean's Maine Wyeth Gallery in Port Clyde, and personally scripted Wyeths by Water art excursions on her converted lobster boat "Linderin Losh." She owns the Seaside Inn and Barn Cafe in Port Clyde, the Dip Net wharf restaurant and nearby historic Ocean House and Dining Room. Her restaurants feature her grandfather's camp recipes and her own Perfect Maine® lobster roll that has sold over 2 million since she introduced it in Freeport, Maine, in 2008 with a dusting of her own secret herbs blend. The Portland International Airport features a Linda Bean's Maine Lobster Cafe with a full lounge bar.[8] Her restaurant and Internet brand features her lobster bisque, lobster ravioli and other lobster specialties, several Maine coffees, Maine sea salt, Maine Pepper Maple Pinch™, Maine Blueberry BBQ Sauce, and Maine Maple BBQ Sauce. Her largest Maine restaurant, a 3-story operation open 7 days a week year-round with three shifts, is Linda Bean's Maine Kitchen & Topside Tavern located across from the L.L.Bean flagship store in Freeport, Maine, the original site of a tavern built there in 1790.[9] On September 27, 2010, Bean purchased the original tavern location from a retired fellow Freeport native George Denney, who started his career in her grandfather's store and went on to purchase a little known Freeport shoe company brand, Cole Haan, that he sold to Nike.[10]

In April 2018 in the face changing business venues in her original hometown, Bean created a new business concept in an architecturally distinguished historic home at 31 Main Street adjoining her grandfather's former home, bringing together 3 dozen antiques and art dealers under the name Freeport Antiques & Heirlooms Showcase, adding an auction component in 2019 to headquarter Casco Bay Auctions. [11] [12]

Bean's Wyeth art and business interest, coupled with previous trusteeships in the arts and conservation, brought her in 2014 to the attention of the Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, where she serves on its Board of Trustees.

In 2019 she founded The N.C.Wyeth Research Foundation and Reading Libraries, a non-profit private operating foundation established in Massachusetts to focus on the illustrator's home in Needham and other locations important to his leading contribution to the American age of book, magazine, calendar and poster illustration. [13]

In her home state she has served as a trustee of the Maine Chapter of The Nature Conservancy, the Maine Historical Society, and the Portland Museum of Art. In 2016 she was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters by The Kings College in Manhattan [14]. She currently serves as vice-chairman of the Board of Trustees of Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Wilmington, Delaware[15].

Bean's business dealings have not been without controversy. She has argued for more lobster processing in Maine rather than in Canada, where more than half of Maine's lobsters currently go for processing and sale by other companies to the U.S. and elsewhere.[16] That worries some observers of possible damage to relationships with Canadian businesses.[17] An undercover video taken by PETA allegedly at one of the Maine Lobster processing plants showed workers ripping limbs off live lobsters, raising questions of animal cruelty.[18] A lawyer for Bean told the Portland Press Herald that "Our practices do not violate Maine's laws on cruelty to animals because lobsters do not come within the covered definition."[19]

Politics

Publisher of The Maine Paper

Bean served as publisher of The Maine Paper, a conservative newspaper published from 1979 to 1982.[20]

Candidacy for Congress

In 1988, Bean sought the Republican nomination for the United States House of Representatives to challenge incumbent former Maine Governor Joseph Brennan. She ran under her married named of Linda Bean Jones. She outspent her opponent, Edward S. O'Meara, by $395,000 but narrowly lost.[21]

Bean ran again in 1992 for the Republican nomination, this time to challenge incumbent Democrat Thomas Andrews. She won the nomination but lost 65% to 35% in the general election.[22]

2016 donation to Donald Trump

In 2016, Bean donated $25,000 to Elect Donald Trump, via Making Maine Great Again PAC, a federal superpac established by Maine Republican David Jones. The donation became controversial, causing an anti-Trump entity in California to demand she be removed from the Board at L.L.Bean. She appeared on Fox News Channel to clarify the origin of the donation being her own, not the company's.[23]

References

  1. Quimby, Beth, "SAME NAME, SAME BUSINESS SAVVY: Bean's lobster business on roll" Archived September 9, 2013, at Archive.today, Kennebec Journal, December 12, 2010
  2. Paiella, Gabriella. "So What's Going on With L.L. Bean and Trump?". The Cut. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  3. "Farnsworth Art Museum Honors 13 Women of Vision". ArtfixDaily. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
  4. Quimby, Beth (December 12, 2010). "Clawing her way to new heights". Portland Press Herald. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  5. Acquisto, Alex (April 28, 2017). "Linda Bean won't sell her businesses as she readies for retirement". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  6. Waterman, Melissa (August 2016). "To sell a lobster: the tale of three Maine companies". Landings. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  7. "Maine lobster takes center stage at Boston seafood show".
  8. Linda Bean rolls out her lobster franchise Boston Globe, July 1, 2009
  9. Lobster Roll With That Anorak? New York Times, October 6 2009
  10. Linda Bean buying key Freeport property Portland Press Herald, September 27,2010
  11. https://www.maineantiques.org/directory-html?maDeC=360
  12. "About".
  13. "N. C. Wyeth Research Foundation and Reading Libraries, Inc. In Needham, MA | Company Info & Reviews".
  14. "68th Annual Commencement Exercises". May 12, 2016.
  15. Search domain isi.org/board-of-trustees/https://isi.org/board-of-trustees/
  16. Kriter Rollins, "Linda Bean Heats Up Lobster World Archived February 12, 2014, at Archive.today," WCHS6 16 November 2011.
  17. Abby Goodnough, "Lobster Roll with that Anorak?" The New York Times October 6, 2009.
  18. Stephen Smith, "PETA: Video Shows Illegal Lobster Killing Method at Major Maine Seafood Plant," CBSNews, September 20, 2013.
  19. Eric Russell, "Maine Denies PETA Claim of Cruel Lobster 'Kills'" Portland Press Herald, September 18, 2013.
  20. "The Maine Paper Ceases Publication". UPI. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  21. POLITICS '88 North Dakota Voters Again Reject Lottery Los Angeles Times, June 15, 1988
  22. Heiress to L.L. Bean Champions Conservatism in Race for Congress New York Times, July 24, 1992
  23. Murphy, Edward D. (January 22, 2017). "Unabashed Linda Bean has passion for politics". Portland Press Herald. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
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