Lynde Bradley Uihlein

Lynde Bradley Uihlein is an American heiress and philanthropist.[1][2]

Biography

Early life

Lynde Bradley Uihlein was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1945.[1] Her mother was Jane Bradley Pettit, a philanthropist.[1][2] Her maternal grandfather was Harry Lynde Bradley, co-founder of Allen-Bradley and the Bradley Foundation with her granduncle, Lynde Bradley.[2] Her father was David Vogel Uihlein, Sr., heir to the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company.[1] Her paternal great-grandfather was August Uihlein.[3] Her brother is David Vogel Uihlein, Jr., Vice Chairman of the Bradley Foundation.[1][4] She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History and a Master's degree in Social Welfare, both from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.[2]

Philanthropy

In 1989, she founded the Brico Fund, a feminist non-profit organization.[5] She has supported EMILY's List and NARAL Pro-Choice America.[1] She serves on the Boards of the League of Conservation Voters and the Milwaukee Art Museum.[2] An environmentalist, she also supports Midwest Environmental Advocates, Milwaukee Riverkeeper, Fondy Food Market, Growing Power, Walnut Way, Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service and Wisconsin Wetlands Association.[2] She operates a community-supported agriculture project, the "Afterglow Farm", north of Milwaukee, including The Kitchen Table Project.[2] She has donated more than US$2.6 million to her alma mater, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.[6]

She is a Democrat, and has supported Al Gore, John Kerry and Barack Obama.[1] She has also supported EMILY's List and NARAL Pro-Choice America.[1]

Personal life

She inherited a 300-acre parcel of land from her grandparents, Joseph and Ilma Uihlein, in Port Washington, Wisconsin.[2] In January 2009, she bought 25 acres of the former Squires Country Club.[2]

gollark: Anyway, the issue with making stuff mandatory at school and stuff is that it will often end up just making people learn how to run the algorithms and whatnot enough to pass exams rather than creating actual understanding and ability to solve practical problems.
gollark: Yes, apparently.
gollark: I don't know about in the US, but there is a *lot* of difference in earnings between courses.
gollark: The UK government has some interesting data from large-scale surveys on employment status of people after graduating from university.
gollark: I'm pointing out downsides to it.

References

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