Jacob Hiatt
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Jacob Hiatt | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 1, 1908 |
| Died | February 25, 2001 (aged 92) Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Resting place | Bnai Brith Lodge Cemetery, Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Alma mater | University of Lithuania |
| Occupations | Businessman, philanthropist |
| Spouse | Frances Hiatt |
| Children | 2 daughters, including Myra Kraft |
| Relatives | Robert Kraft (son-in-law) Daniel Kraft (grandson) Jonathan Kraft (grandson) Josh Kraft (grandson) |
Jacob "Jack" Hiatt (July 1, 1908 – February 25, 2001)[1][2] was a Lithuanian-American businessman and philanthropist.
Hiatt was born to a Jewish family in the Russian Empire in 1908, the son of Joshua and Leah Hiatt.[3][4] He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Lithuania and became a district attorney and circuit judge.[4][5]
In 1935 he immigrated to the United States, settling in Worcester, Massachusetts, where two of his brothers, Alexander and Sidney, lived.[3] Although he was fluent in Lithuanian, Hebrew, Russian, and German, Hiatt did not speak English when he arrived in the U.S.[4] Frances Lavine, the secretary to the Worcester superintendent of schools, helped find him a school that taught English to immigrants.[4][6] They married in 1937. In 1946 he earned a master's degree from Clark University.[3]
Personal life
Hiatt and his wife had two children, Myra and Janice. In 1963, Myra married Robert Kraft. Hiatt's younger daughter, Janice, is intellectually disabled.[3] His wife, Frances Hiatt, died in 1980.[3][5]
Business career
After arriving in the United States, Hiatt worked at his brother Alexander's shoe manufacturing company, where he made boxes. He later went to work for E.F. Dodge Paper Box Corp. in Leominster, Massachusetts, where he eventually rose to the position of company president. The company was later acquired by Whitney Box to form Dodge-Whitney Co.[7] In February 1962, Dodge-Whitney and three other companies merged to create the Rand-Whitney Corporation.[8] Hiatt remained in charge of Rand-Whitney until 1968, when his son-in-law, Robert Kraft, purchased half of the company in a leveraged buyout.[9]
Hiatt was also president of Estey Investment Inc. and the Jacob Hiatt Income Trust and was an investor in the Educator Biscuit Co.[5][10]