Johns hopkins who is he




















In time, Hopkins became the leading financier in Baltimore. He was also a canny investor. He was also president of Merchants' Bank and director of a several other institutions. A lifelong bachelor, Hopkins stipulated in his will that his fortune be used for the benefit of others.

After bequests to family and servants, and provisions for his cousin Elizabeth, amounting to about one million dollars, there remained approximately seven million dollars to endow the university and the hospital that bear his name.

In , he selected twelve individuals to serve as trustees of a corporation called The Johns Hopkins University, whose purpose was to promote education in the state of Maryland. Likewise, a board was formed for the incorporation of The Johns Hopkins Hospital. To ensure the linking of the institutions, he named the same people to both boards that established the university and hospital. Hopkins, one of 11 children, made his fortune in the wholesale business and by investing in emerging industries, notably the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, of which he became a director in At the time, it was the largest philanthropic bequest in U.

Johns Hopkins University opened in with the inauguration of our first president, Daniel Coit Gilman. He guided the opening of the university and other institutions, including the university press, the hospital, and the schools of nursing and medicine.

The original academic building on the Homewood campus, Gilman Hall, is named in his honor. In the speech, he defined the model of the American research university, now emulated around the globe. Hopkins' obsession with making money was often the source of good-natured taunts. One of his fellow merchants, George Peabody, claimed that Hopkins was the only man he'd ever met that was more anxious to make money and determined to succeed than he was himself. Like Peabody, Hopkins felt an obligation to give back to the city where he had made his fortune.

We hope for this scholarship program to become a model for other such properties and institutions across the nation that have similar associations with the Enslaved. Whites Hall remained in the Hopkins family until when it was purchased by the Stewart Fruit Company, and continued operating as a farm until the early s.

From the s until just 12 years ago Whites Hall was a private home.



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