Ethnicity Ukrainian-Jewish Spouse(s) Rebecca Witten | Name Joseph Meyerhoff Role Businessman | |
Children Harvey MeyerhoffEleanor Meyerhoff KatzPeggy Meyerhoff Pearlstone Education Balti City College, University of Maryland, College Park |
Explore the Meyerhoff
Joseph Meyerhoff (April 8, 1899 – February 2, 1985) was an American businessman, fundraiser, and philanthropist based in Baltimore, Maryland. His son is Harvey Meyerhoff.
Contents
- Explore the Meyerhoff
- Soulful Symphony Andrea Albert Encourage Yourself Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall
- Biography
- Personal life
- Legacy
- References
Soulful Symphony - Andrea Albert - Encourage Yourself - Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall
Biography
Meyerhoff was born in the Ukraine and was brought to the United States as a young boy in 1906. He grew up in Baltimore and graduated from Baltimore City College (which, despite its name, is a public high school); he then attended and completed his law degree at the University of Maryland in the mid 1930s. Meyerhoff practiced law for some years upon graduation from the UM School of Law until he opened a construction company with his brother called Monumental Properties Inc. This firm thrived for nearly 40 years until it was sold for about $180M (making Meyerhoff and his family one of the wealthiest in Baltimore). Monumental Properties was responsible for many buildings in the city, including various shopping centers throughout the west side. In the early 1950s Meyerhoff and other prominent Jewish-American businessmen were chosen to assist Israel during its initial establishment crises. He retired in 1965.
Meyerhoff continued his career as an avid philanthropist serving as president of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in the 1970s, where he personally contributed money and helped raise millions of dollars. He is credited, along with music director Sergiu Comissiona, with re-organizing and revitalizing the group. The BSO's primary home, the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, is named after him. Meyerhoff also supported many other Jewish charities and art museums throughout Baltimore and was eventually inducted into the Baltimore Business Hall of Fame along with Robert Merrick.
Personal life
Meyerhoff married in the 1930s to Rebecca Witten and they had three children whom they raised in Baltimore: