Leonard Lewisohn
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Leonard Lewisohn (October 10, 1847 - March 5, 1902)[1] was an American merchant and philanthropist. He was born in Hamburg, Germany to Jewish parents, Samuel and Julie Lewisohn. In 1863, Samuel, a prominent Hamburg merchant, sent Leonard and his brother, Julius, to the United States, as his firm's representatives; about three years later they were joined by their younger brother, Adolph, and they formed the firm of Lewisohn Brothers in January 1866. As early as 1868 the firm turned its attention to the metal trade, becoming prominent dealers in lead during that year. Recognizing the commercial future of electricity and the need of copper for conducting-wires, Lewisohn specialized in that metal, and by 1879 was recognized as an important holder of "Lake Copper." Thenceforward, the firm occupied a leading position in the copper markets of the world. He was also president of the United Metals Selling Company.
Lewisohn was equally prominent in the sphere of philanthropy. He contributed to the Alliance colony in New Jersey, founded in 1882, and to almost every philanthropic institution in New York, regardless of creed. He likewise acted as treasurer of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society in New York, to which institution he gave his counsel and large sums of money. He was one of the largest contributors to the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and to the Montefiore Sanatorium for Consumptives.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.