AnCaps
ANARCHO-CAPITALISTS
Bitch-Slapping Statists For Fun & Profit Based On The Non-Aggression Principle
 
HomePortalGalleryRegisterLog in

 

 Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
RR Phantom

RR Phantom

Location : Wasted Space
Job/hobbies : Cayman Islands Actuary

Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave  Vide
PostSubject: Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave    Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave  Icon_minitimeThu Feb 05, 2015 8:53 pm

A man who sometimes held his coat together with safety pins and had a long-time habit of foraging for firewood also had a knack for picking stocks — a talent that became public after his death when he bequeathed six million dollars to his local library and hospital.

Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave  Inline_ronald_read_us_man_donations_1ad5209-1ad5211.jpg?x=656&sig=p6

The investments made by Ronald Read, a former petrol station employee and cleaner who died in June at age 92, "grew substantially" over the years, said his attorney Laurie Rowell.

Read, who was known for his flannel shirt and baseball cap, gave no hint of the size of his fortune.

"He was unbelievably frugal," Rowell said Wednesday. When Read visited her office, "sometimes he parked so far away so he wouldn't have to pay the meter."

The bequest of $4.8 million to the Brattleboro Memorial Hospital and $1.2 million to the town's Brooks Memorial Library were the largest each institution has ever received. Read also made a number of smaller bequests.

"It's pretty incredible. This is not something that happens on a regular basis," said the hospital's development director, Gina Pattison.

In addition to cash, Read had an antique Edison phonograph with dozens of recording drums that he left to the Dummerston Historical Society, Rowell said.

"It's really a beautiful machine," said the society's president, Muriel Taylor.

Read was born in the small town of Dummerston in 1921. He was the first in his family to graduate from high school, walking and hitchhiking about four miles each way from his home to school in Brattleboro.

After military service during World War II, he returned to Brattleboro and worked at a service station for 25 years and then 17 years as a janitor at the local J.C. Penney.

In 1960, he married a woman he met at the service station. She died in 1970.

Stepson Phillip Brown, of Somersworth, New Hampshire, told the Brattleboro Reformer he visited Read every few months, more often as Read's health declined. The only indication Brown had of Read's investments was his regular reading of the Wall Street Journal.

"I was tremendously surprised," Brown said of Read's hidden wealth.

"He was a hard worker, but I don't think anybody had an idea that he was a multi-millionaire."

https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/26201413/unlikely-millionaire-stuns-with-donations-from-the-grave/
Back to top Go down
 

Unlikely millionaire stuns with donations from the grave

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
 :: Anarcho-Capitalist Categorical Imperatives :: AnCaps' Laissez-faire Free Trade Zone-