Stephen D. Hassenfeld
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Stephen D. Hassenfeld (1942 - June, 1989) was an American businessman best known for being the chairman and chief executive officer of Hasbro from 1980 until 1989. During his tenure, Hassenfeld restored the reputation of Hasbro and surpassed Mattel as the world's largest toy manufacturer.
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[edit] History and early life
Stephen was born in Rhode Island to Sylvia and Merrill Hassenfeld. He was the oldest of three siblings, the others being his sister Ellie and the youngest child, Alan. They lived in Providence's east side. He attended Moses Brown School where he was well-known as a skilled debater.
[edit] Accomplishments
Stephen's grandfather, Henry Hassenfeld, was a Jewish immigrant from Poland who, with his brother Helal, founded a textile company that sold remnants called Hassenfeld Brothers. The brothers would move on to sell pencil boxes, school supplies, and later, toys. After the success of Mr. Potato Head and G.I. Joe the Hassenfeld Brothers would create Hasbro Industries in 1968, and begin to list on the NYSE.
In 1980, Stephen's father Merrill died, and Stephen took over control of Hasbro. From 1980 to 1986, Stephen Hassenfeld increased Hasbro's profitability by 85% annually. Only two Fortune 500 companies have achieved such a high rate of growth in profitability. Forbes Magazine rated Hasbro number one in a thousand-corporation survey of increased value during the first half of the eighties, well ahead of other successful companies such as Wal-Mart and Berkshire Hathaway.
In 1983, Hassenfeld established the Hasbro Charitable Trust, and in 1984, he created Hasbro Children's Foundation. The two charities help to improve the lives of children and their families throughout the world by providing management of grant donations in operating areas, product donation, matching gifts to higher education, special community projects, and volunteering. Also, in 1990, the [Stephen D. Hassenfeld Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders] was created. The Children's Center is the best facility, and under its current director, Dr. William Carroll has been making remarkable strides in alleviating the worst of children's suffering. Bill Carroll has attained international recognition for his role in developing new treatments for children with cancer, especially the most common form of childhood cancer, acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
As Chair of the Children’s Oncology Group ALL Committee, he directs the largest clinical trials network for children with cancer worldwide and has used the field of genomics to understand the underlying biological pathways that drive leukemia progression and drug resistance.
[edit] Legacy
Stephen D. Hassenfeld died of AIDS in 1989 at the age of 47, and is buried next to his father in Lincoln Park Cemetery in Warwick, Rhode Island. In 1991 he was posthumously inducted into the Toy Industry Hall of Fame. At the time of Hassenfeld's death Hasbro was a company with annual net revenues of more than $1.3 billion.