College Mourns Passing of
Rhoda Pritzker
Longtime Benefactress
and Board Member, 93, Passes Away at Casey Key Home
Following Prolonged Illness
(January 3, 2008) -- New College of
Florida suffered a deep loss over the holiday break when it
was learned that longtime College benefactress and
Foundation board member Rhoda Pritzker had passed away on
December 23 at her winter home on Casey Key, Florida. She was
93.
A member of one of Chicago's wealthiest
families, Pritzker will be remembered at New College both for her generosity
and for her genuine interest in
students and their lives - both inside and outside the
classroom.
In a letter to the campus community
announcing Mrs. Pritzker's death, New College President Mike
Michalson remembered her as one of the College's dearest and
most enduring friends. "If you ever met Rhoda, you know
first hand what a genuine and gracious lady she was. It
should be a source of great pride to us all that two
buildings on our campus bear her name."
Born in Manchester, England, Rhoda Pritzker
began her career as a journalist, writing for the British
Broadcast Corporation and several other news outlets before
immigrating to the United States in 1939. While living
in New York City and working as a foreign correspondent for
the Associated Press in the early 1940s, she met her future
husband, Jack, who at the time was serving in the
Navy. The two married in 1943 and returned to his
native Chicago following World War II.
A successful lawyer and businessman,
Jack Pritzker helped his family launch the Hyatt Hotel chain
during the 1950s while Rhoda continued to work as a
freelance journalist and to care for the couple's son, Nick.
It was during this time that Mrs. Pritzker also began her
long career of donating her time, ideas and money to a
variety of philanthropic pursuits related to education and
the arts. In addition to her support of New College,
she was a longtime board member of The Theater School at
Depaul University and a member of the board of trustees for
the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art.
Pritzker's involvement with New
College began in 1970, when she and her husband Jack purchased a
winter home on Casey Key. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Pritzker began
nearly a thirty-year stint as a board member of the New
College Foundation, a position she continued to hold in
emeritus status until the time of her death.
Over the years, the Pritzkers and their
family philanthropic foundation gave nearly $3 million to
help support student scholarships and research facilities at
New College, including a $2 million gift in 2006 that at the
time was the largest in the school's history.
In honor of their enduring support, two
campus buildings bear the Pritzker family name: the Rhoda
and Jack Pritzker Marine Biology Research Center, completed
in 2001, and Rhoda Pritzker Residence Hall, which opened
this past fall.
President Michalson announced that
plans are currently underway to hold a memorial service in
Mrs. Pritzker's honor on the New College campus sometime
this spring.
At the request of the family, memorial
donations in Mrs. Pritzker's honor can be made to the New
College Foundation, 5800 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota, FL
34243-2109; PAWS Chicago, 1110 W. 35th St., Chicago, IL
60609; or The Theatre School at DePaul University
Development Office, 2135 N. Kenmore Ave., Chicago, IL 60614.
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For more information, contact the New
College of Florida Office of Public Affairs at (941)
487-4150 or email
publicaffairs@ncf.edu.