James H. Binger

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James H. Binger
Born 1916
St. Paul, Minnesota
Died 5 November 2004
Minneapolis
Occupation Entrepreneur
Net worth $900million
Website
[1]

James Henry Binger (born 1916, died 5 November 2004) was a lawyer who became Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Honeywell.

A well known philanthropist, horse enthusiast and New York and Minneapolis theatre entrepreneur

Contents

[edit] Career

The son of a doctor, Binger grew up on Summit Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota. He attended The Blake School[1], where he met his wife Virginia McKnight, daughter of 3M Chairman, William L. McKnight. He earned an economics degree from Yale University and a law degree from the University of Minnesota. On graduation, he joined Minneapolis law firm Dorsey & Whitney, where a client was Honeywell.

In 1943 he joined Honeywell, and became its president in 1961 and its chairman in 1965. On becoming Chairman of Honeywell, Binger revamped the company sales approach, placing emphasis on profits rather than on volume. he also stepped up the companies international expansion - it had six plants producing 12% of the companies revenue. He also officially changed the company's corporate name from Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co to Honeywell [2].

Under Binger's stewardship from 1961 to 1978 he expanded the company into such fields as defense, aerospace, computers and cameras. Honeywell was one of the eight major computer companies (with IBM - the largest, Burroughs, Scientific Data Systems, Control Data Corporation, General Electric, RCA and UNIVAC) through most of the 1960s. In 1970, Honeywell bought General Electric's computer division.

[edit] Outside Honeywell

Binger was a world traveller who had financial interests in the Minnesota Vikings, Butler Square in downtown Minneapolis and several hundred acres of land, including a polo field in western Hennepin County.

[edit] Tartan Farm

Binger was already a horse man, who played polo on weekends.[2] In 1974, James and Virginia took over operations of her father's Tartan Farm in Ocala, Florida and then ownership in 1978 on his death. During their stewardship, Tartan Farm bred 1980 Preakness Stakes winner Codex and 1990 three-year-old champion and Kentucky Derby winner Unbridled. The Bingers also bred and owned 1978 champion sprinter Dr. Patches, a son of McKnight's horse Dr. Fager. Tartan dispersed the majority of its horses at the 1987 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky November sale, including Unbridled who sold as a weanling for $70,000.

James Binger also served as chairman of Calder Race Course in Miami from the late 1970s through the '80s. He also received recognition for his contributions to horse racing and was the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation Champion Award recipient in 2000 [3]. Tartan Farm is now under new ownership, and known as Winding Oaks Farm.

[edit] Theatre

Virginia had a love of theatre, and when her father William L. McKnight wanted to sell his two theatres, Binger stepped in to assist. He found the business fascinating, and after paying the gift tax and selling the Colonial Theatre in Boston, he and Virginia agreed to expand the operation. Jujamcyn Amusement Corporation, named after their children (JUdith, JAMes, and CYNthia), expanded to five theatres to create the third-largest company on Broadway behind the Shubert Organization and the Nederlander Organization - the St. James, Al Hirschfeld, Eugene O'Neill, the Walter Kerr and the Virginia:

  • Virginia Theatre - this 1,275 seat theatre was designed by Crane, Franzheim & Bettis as the home of the Theatre Guild in 1925. President Calvin Coolidge officially inaugurated the theatre by flipping a switch for electricity in Washington, D.C. The theatre was leased in 1943 as a radio station. The American National Theater and Academy (ANTA) purchased the theatre in 1950 and renamed it the ANTA Theatre. Previously called the ANTA Theatre, in 1981 the theatre was renamed the Virginia in honour of Virginia Binger. It was renamed by new owner Rocco Landesman in October 2005, in honour of playwright August Wilson [4].

Jujamcyn only owned five of the 40 Broadway district playhouses, but created a much-envied business model that has accounted for as much as one-third of the gross revenues. One box office juggernaut was the musical The Producers, which won a record 12 Tony Awards in 2001[5].

Binger was a life member of the Guthrie Theater board. On the announcement of Binger's death in 2004, The League of American Theatres and Producers announced that Broadway's marquees would be dimmed at 8 PM on 4 November in tribute to this extraordinary man.

Rocco Landesman, producer and President of Jujamcyn, announced that he planned to buy Jujamcyn Theatres, telling the New York Times that he had a long-standing understanding with Binger that he would buy Jujamcyn's five playhouses. The theatres had an estimated net asset value of about $30 million.

[edit] Philanthropist

Binger was a leading member of his father-in-law's McKnight foundation, and set up his own Robina foundation on his death. He also made various other direct philanthropic donations, including:

  • Yale University - probably the law school's biggest individual benefactor, he was recognised as a $1 million giver by 1987 and had continued contributions until his death.
  • Minneapolis Theatre - Binger was a quiet champion of theater, often bailing out struggling organisations and building up the flagship institutions like the Guthrie Theater. In the early 1980s, Binger and Leland Lynch provided the money to bring shows to the decrepit Orpheum Theatre.
  • McKnight Foundation - Binger promoted grants for the arts, international-dispute resolution and research into neuroscience[5].

[edit] Personal life

Having dated since high school, Binger and Virginia McKnight married on June 24, 1939, slightly less than three months before her 23rd birthday. They were married for over 60 years and had three children: James (Mac), Cynthia and Judith (died 1989). The couple lived in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Ardmore, Pennsylvania, before returning to the Twin Cities, settling in Wayzata, Minnesota. On her fathers death, Virginia McKnight Binger became Minneapolis's richest woman - she died on 22 December 2002. After Virginia's death, he sold the house they had shared and moved downtown to Minneapolis.

Jane K. Mauer was president of the Tartan Investment Company in Minneapolis, which handled Binger's financial affairs. When Binger moved downtown, he became close to Mauer and they eventually became lovers. However, as his colon cancer progressed, his mental state deteriorated. The Binger family took court action to prevent their father making what they considered bad decisions, and specifically endangering the McKnight Trust [6].

[edit] Death

Binger died of Colon cancer on 8 November 2004. In December 2005, Minnesota state announced a surplus, including a death duties tax payment of $112M. Although not stating where this had come from, it was revealed as the largest estate tax payment state officials could ever recall. Greg Hoyt, the Minnesota Revenue Department's estate tax supervisor, summed his own reaction as: WOW!

Noa Staryk, granddaughter of Binger, later confirmed it was from Binger's estate - and that they were pursuing court action to recover $200M given in a late will change to Jane K. Mauer. A tax expert estimated that there would have been a similar size payment to Federal Tax authorities, and estimated the size of the estate at $900M, even before including setting up the Robina Trust fund of $200M [7].

The latest theory as to why so much tax was due, is similar to the case involving Anna Nicole Smith - property investment, and transfer of these assets to surviving family members.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Quotations

  • I wanted to develop my own set of problems to solve - Binger, on why he went into a manufacturing and joined Honeywell [2]
  • Jim Binger brought the modern numbers-oriented analytical world to Honeywell, which basically had been a family-run company - Edson Spencer, who later became chief executive of Honeywell
  • "My initial purpose really was to take a headache off his shoulders, and see if I could get the theatres to a point where they could be sold for a reasonable sum. But in the meantime I found it was a fascinating business and money could be made at it. One of the big differences between running Honeywell and Jujamcyn was that theatrical decisions, such as closing a play, could be made much more quickly than major corporate moves" - Binger in a 1987 interview with The Associated Press
  • Binger created the market for Broadway here in Minneapolis. These theatres and this theater district would not be around but for Jim Binger - Fred Krohn, who presented Binger-backed productions in Minneapolis
  • Jim was a risk-taker. There’s nothing more risky than owning racehorses and owning Broadway theatres, so he was always challenged. …He took both victory and defeat with grace - friend, thoroughbred owner, co-investor in the Vikings and fellow Minnesotan Wheelock Whitney to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune about Binger on the announcement of his death [3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Blake School web site
  2. ^ a b c Time magazine interview on becoming COO
  3. ^ a b Racing Museum Obituary
  4. ^ NYC thetre listing
  5. ^ a b McKnight Obituary
  6. ^ Star Tribune article
  7. ^ wcco.com article
  8. ^ City Pages article

[edit] External links