Donald Fisher
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the long serving character in Home and Away see Donald Fisher (Home and Away)
Donald George Fisher (born 1928) is an American businessman who founded The Gap clothing stores.
Contents |
[edit] Personal history
Fisher was born in San Francisco, California to Sydney Fisher, businessman, and Aileen Fisher, a cabinetmaker. He spent his childhood in the then-middle-class Sea Cliff neighborhood of San Francisco. He graduated from Lowell High School in 1946, then attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he was a member of the both the Swimming and Water Polo Teams. He is an alumnus of the Theta Zeta chapter of the national fraternity Delta Kappa Epsilon. He earned a BS degree from the School of Business Administration at the University of California, Berkeley in 1951.
Named 2007 Alumnus of the Year Fisher had a robust experience at UC, Berkeley where his nickname was ‘Horny Fish’ and where he was caught cheating by then-Professor Clark Kerr. Kerr gave Fisher an F, but did not have him expelled. Had he been expelled, he writes, [it] “would have changed my life completely.” Fisher says he still thinks about his cheating and Kerr's response today.[1]
According to Forbes, his estimated worth is to be at US$3.3 billion. Fisher is a Republican, active in San Francisco, California politics. He was a founding Board Member of the Presidio Trust (the public corporation that runs the Presidio of San Francisco), a post nominated by the President of the United States.[2] He is married to Dorris Fisher.
[edit] Philanthropy
Fisher has been active in several public education causes, including being a major contributor to KIPP charter schools—a national network of low-income, high-achieving college preparatory public charter schools. He is also a contributor to Teach For America, GreatSchools.net, and EdVoice, a state-wide coalition of California business leaders and others who support education reform. Fisher also serves on the California State Board of Education. Fisher and his family donated a generous sum of money to Princeton University in 2006, and the Fisher Hall dormitory at Princeton's new residential college Whitman College is named for him. [3]. He has also donated to charter schools and museums in San Francisco, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and paid for public sculptures in San Francisco.[2] In 2007, Fisher was honored as the Alumnus of the Year by the California Alumni Association at the University of California, Berkeley. [4].
[edit] Edison Schools
Fisher, an investor in Edison Schools (a for-profit educational management organization), was found to be funneling "soft money" into the campaigns of pro-Edison board members during San Francisco's school board election on whether to break contract with Edison. The consulting firm Barnes, Mosher, Whitehead and Partners funded approximately $47,100 to a group called "San Franciscans for Sensible Government" that was distributing campaign flyers for Mary Hernandez, Stephen Herman, and Robert Varni. The pro-Edison campaign was not successful in preventing a new anti-privatization majority of four to three in the San Francisco Unified School Board.[5]
[edit] Art collection
Since founding the Gap in 1969, Fisher and his wife Doris began collecting contemporary Western art. In 1993, ARTnews Magazine declared Fisher one of the top ten art collectors in the world. His collection, largely housed at the Gap headquarters in San Francisco, includes comprehensive, career-spanning works by Andy Warhol, Alexander Calder and Roy Lichtenstein, Ellsworth Kelly, Gerhard Richter, Anselm Kiefer, Chuck Close, and Claes Oldenburg. On August 8, 2007, Fisher announced plans to build a 100,000 square foot museum in the San Francisco Presidio, tentatively named the Contemporary Art Museum of the Presidio, to house his art collection. The museum, if built, will be larger than the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.[2] But the plan has engendered widespread skepticism and even outright antagonism among some historic preservationists in San Francisco.[6]
[edit] References
- ^ http://alumni.berkeley.edu/calmag/200703/100years/20_23.pdf
- ^ a b c Cecilia M. Vega. "Donald Fisher, founder of Gap, offers to build a museum in the Presidio to house his art collection", San Francisco Chronicle, 2007-08-07. Retrieved on 2007-08-08.
- ^ The Princeton Website
- ^ [1]Donald Fisher honored as the California Alumni Association's Alumnus of the Year for 2007
- ^ Kenneth J. Saltman (2005). The Edison Schools: Corporate Schooling and the Assault on Public Education. Routledge, 142.
- ^ Architect waxes poetic with Presidio museum, John King, March 18, 2008