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Intro | American businessman | ||
Places | United States of America | ||
was | Businessperson | ||
Work field | Business | ||
Gender |
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Birth | 1923 | ||
Death | 1999Rye, Westchester County, New York, U.S.A. (aged 76 years) | ||
Family |
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Biography
Frederick Phineas Rose (1923–1999) was an American real estate developer, philanthropist, and member of the Rose family.
Biography
Rose was born in Brooklyn to a Jewish family, one of three sons of Belle and Samuel B. Rose. He was raised in Mount Vernon, New York. His father and his uncle David Rose founded the real estate development company Rose Associates in 1923 and built small apartment buildings in the Bronx and then in Manhattan in the 1930s. He has two brothers, Daniel and Elihu. Rose graduated from Yale University in 1944 majored in civil engineering and then served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy Seabees during World War II After the war, he went to work for Rose Associates where he was responsible for design and construction while his brother Daniel was responsible for planning and finances; and his brother Elihu managed the family's apartment houses. The Rose family typically purchased properties with their own money, minimizing the use of debt thus enabling to better weather market downturns. In 1961, they built their first office development, the two-building, 1 million square-foot 280 Park Avenue. Long an opponent of rent control, in the 1990s Rose successfully converted more than 3,000 apartments in Manhattan into condominiums and co-ops. He eventually served as chairman of Rose Associates.
The Rose family was one of the most established and prominent real estate families in New York City in the 20th century (along with the Dursts, the Lefraks, the Rudins, and the Tisch family). In 2006, Rose Associates, managed over 31,000 apartments in New York City including Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village.
Philanthropy
Rose was a prominent philanthropist who gave away a total of $95 million including $5 million to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, $15 million to the New York Public Library, $18 million to Lincoln Center for Performing Arts, and $20 million for the $150 million Frederick Phineas and Sandra Priest Rose Center for Earth and Space at the American Museum of Natural History. Rose helped to create the Association of Yale Alumni and was the first chair of its Board of Governors from 1972 to 1974. He was a member of the University Council from 1976 to 1981 and served on the Yale Corporation as a Fellow from 1989 to 1994. In 1976, Rose received the Yale Medal for outstanding service to the University; in 1991, he received the Medal of Honor from the Yale Science and Engineering Society; and in 1988, Yale awarded him an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree.
Personal life
In the 1940s, he married Sandra Priest whom she met when she was 19 and a student at Vassar College. She returned in mid-life to school and graduated with a B.A. from Manhattanville College and a M.A. in learning disabilities from The College of New Rochelle; she later taught junior high school students in the South Bronx. They had four children: Deborah Anne Rose Stolwijk (b. 1950); Jonathan F. P. Rose (b. 1952); Samuel Priest Rose (b. 1955); and Adam Raphael Rose (b. 1959). His son, Adam R. Rose, is the current co-president (with cousin Amy Rose Silverman) of Rose Associates. His son Jonathan F. P. Rose is one of the largest developers of affordable and green housing in New York City. His son, Samuel P. Rose was a professor at the University of Colorado at Denver; he died in 1994. His nephew is Gideon Rose (son of his brother Daniel), is the editor of Foreign Affairs and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. His niece, Isabel Rose (daughter of his brother Elihu), is the author of the 2005 novel The J.A.P. Chronicles which she also adapted into an Off Broadway musical. His granddaughter is artist Rachel Rose. His funeral was held at the Westchester Reform Temple in Scarsdale, New York.