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Man donates his entire fortune of $8 billion before passing away at the age of 92

How one man's extraordinary generosity reshaped philanthropy.

Man donates his entire fortune of $8 billion before passing away at the age of 92
Cover Image Source: YouTube | Forbes

While many people accumulate great wealth, few are like Charles Francis Feeney, who gave away his entire fortune during his lifetime. Feeney, a tech investor and visionary behind the global success of duty-free shops, passed away on October 9, 2023, at the age of 92, as reported by The New York Times. Before his peaceful death at his San Francisco home, Feeney had donated his entire $8 billion fortune to charitable causes.


 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by The Atlantic Philanthropies (@theatlanticphilantropies)


 

His foundation, The Atlantic Philanthropies, which he began funding in the early 1980s, shared the news of his passing. Despite his immense wealth, Feeney chose to live his final days in a modest, rented apartment. In 2016, he made headlines for donating $7 million to his alma mater, Cornell University, to support student community service initiatives. With this final donation, Feeney officially closed out the Atlantic Philanthropies accounts, staying true to his lifelong commitment to give away all his wealth before he died.

According to the outlet, the former billionaire retained only $2 million for himself after living a humble life while he worked to expand his business for six decades. "Chuck Feeney is a remarkable role model and the ultimate example of giving while living," co-founder of Microsoft Bill Gates told Forbes in 2012. Warren Buffett handed over a Forbes 400 Lifetime Achievement Award to Feeney in 2014 and called him "my hero and Bill Gates's hero—he should be everybody's hero," per Forbes. In contrast to other philanthropists, Feeney anonymously contributed to medical institutions, universities, human rights groups, and others.



 

His charity work aimed to improve people's lives in the United States, Vietnam, South Africa, Australia, Israel, and Jordan, to name a few. Being an Irish-American, he was more open about his charity work in Northern Ireland, which he visited frequently. He was also invited to join leaders of the United States, Britain, and Ireland at the initiation of a power-sharing government in Belfast in 2007. He used to make most of his donations to institutions through cashier's cheques and the beneficiaries were informed that the benefactor happens to be a generous person who wished to remain anonymous.

Feeney had a difficult childhood as he was raised in a working-class household that struggled during the Great Depression. He went on to serve in the Air Force, then studied hotel management and entered the duty-free shopping business. By the 1980s, he had invested about $35 million into the hotel business, land deals, retail shops, clothing companies, and tech start-ups. However, his affluent life was not really doing much to bring him peace. "He was beginning to have doubts about his right to have so much money," Conor O'Clery wrote in a biography of Mr. Feeney, "The Billionaire Who Wasn't."



 



 



 

Feeney turned his extravagant lifestyle around and started living humbly. "All Feeney's instincts, instilled in him by the example of his parents, by the sharing culture of his blue-collar upbringing in New Jersey, by his desire not to distance himself from his boyhood neighbors and friends, and by his own innate kindness and concern for others, undoubtedly shaped his decision," O'Clery further wrote.



 

His anonymity as a humanitarian benefaction was finally disclosed in 1997 after Feeney and a partner sold their interest in Duty-Free Shoppers to Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy. The legal filings disclosed that the value of his share at $1.5 billion belonged to a philanthropist residing in Bermuda who has been making anonymous donations for the past 15 years. It was actually Feeney himself. The world will always remember a man like him and his generosity during his lifetime in helping those in need.



 

This article originally appeared 1 year ago.

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