Evelyn (Edison) Newman

Evelyn (Edison) Newman (July 25, 1920 – September 1, 2015) was known for her fundraising and charitable contributions to the city of St. Louis, Missouri including Sophia M. Sachs Butterfly House at Faust County Park, Forest Park Forever, Forest Park Conservancy. Along with her husband Eric P. Newman, they have established the Eric P. Newman Education Center at Washington University School of Medicine and the Newman Money Museum at Washington University's Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts.

Early life

Evelyn Newman was born in Atlanta, Georgia and moved to St. Louis, Missouri in the family shoe business Edison Brothers Inc. relocated. She graduated from John Burroughs School in 1937, and attended Goucher College in Baltimore but transferred to Washington University in St Louis. On November 29, 1939 she married the American numismatist Eric P. Newman.[1]

Career

Newman began her retail experience working for the May Department Stores Co. She then joined Edison Brothers Stores working as a buyer and later developer of retail concepts. In the late 1940s, Edison Brothers was the largest chain of women's shoe stores in the country.[1]

In 1982, she established the Evelyn E. Newman Group, which helped to bring business expertise and sensible business practices to not-for-profit organizations.

Philanthropy

Newman was known as the "queen of fundraising" in the St. Louis community. In 1960, she helped create a high-end used clothing store to support the Scholarship Foundation of St. Louis. Since then, ScholarShop stores in Webster Groves and Clayton generated about $23 million in interest-free loans and grants for college students. She is also noted with establishing such local traditions as the Greater St. Louis Book Fair, the Gypsy Caravan (benefiting the St. Louis Symphony), the Little Shop Around the Corner (benefiting the Missouri Botanical Garden), as well as the Sophia M. Sachs Butterfly House at Faust County Park in Chesterfield, MO which was inspired from her travels to Thailand visiting the butterfly house.[2]

In the 1980s, Newman was the first executive director of Forest Park Forever, the nonprofit organization that has helped turn Forest Park into one of the region's biggest attractions, which has grown to a $6.5 million annual operating budget and an endowment of more than $75 million.[3]

Newman was a co-founding director in 1980 of The First Street Forum, what is now Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis.[4]

Awards and honors

Evelyn Newman has an honorary doctorate from the University of Missouri–St. Louis and received the Robert S. Brookings Award from Washington University in St. Louis. She was also the first recipient of the Award for Lifetime Achievement of the Arts & Education Council.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 Duffy, Robert W. "Evelyn Edison Newman: Creative philanthropist made it fun for others to contribute". Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  2. "The Edison/Newman Family: The Shoes Fit". 2015-08-20. Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  3. Duffy, Robert W. "Evelyn Edison Newman: Creative philanthropist made it fun for others to contribute". Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  4. Bogan, Jesse. "Evelyn Newman: Queen of St. Louis fundraising has died". Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  5. Ausberger, Leonard; Burdette, Roger W.; Orosz, Joel (2015). Truth Seekers: The Life of Eric P. Newman. Dallas, TX: Ivy Press. ISBN 978-1-63351-185-9.
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