Joan Kroc

Joan Beverly Kroc (née Mansfield, previously Smith; August 27, 1928 – October 12, 2003), also known as Joni,[2] was an American philanthropist and third wife of McDonald's CEO Ray Kroc.

Joan Kroc
Born
Joan Beverly Mansfield

(1928-08-27)August 27, 1928
DiedOctober 12, 2003(2003-10-12) (aged 75)
Rancho Santa Fe, California, U.S.
Resting placeEl Camino Memorial Park
Sorrento Valley, San Diego, California
NationalityUnited States
Political partyDemocratic[1]
Spouse(s)
    Rawland F. Smith
    (m. 1945; div. 1969)
      (m. 1969; died 1984)
      Children1

      Early life

      Joan was born on August 27, 1928, in West St. Paul, Minnesota. Her father, Charles Smart Mansfield,[3] was a store keeper and later a railroad telegraph operator and salesman.[4] Her mother, Gladys Bonnebelle Mansfield, was born April 5, 1906, in Luck, Wisconsin, to Herman Conrad Peterson and his wife Emma Bonnebelle. Joan's mother, an accomplished violinist, studied music at the MacPhail School of Music in Minneapolis and started teaching at age 15.

      Marriage and family

      In 1945, she married Rawland F. "Rollie" Smith,[5][6][7] a Navy veteran who would become a McDonald's franchisee, eventually owning three stores in Rapid City, South Dakota. The couple's only child, a daughter named Linda, was born the following year.[8]

      Joan met McDonald's Corp. founder Ray Kroc while playing organ at the Criterion Restaurant in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1957.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Kroc said in his autobiography that he "was stunned by her blonde beauty". However, they were both married. They met again at a McDonald's conference in 1969. Within six months they had divorced their spouses and married each other. Following Kroc's death in 1984, she inherited his fortune.[16]

      Philanthropy

      External video
      Ray and Joan, 57:59, Lisa Napoli discusses her book on C-SPAN[17]

      One of Joan's first philanthropic endeavors was Operation Cork in 1976 in La Jolla, California. It aimed to inform doctors and other health workers about the dangers of alcoholism. Before that, she gave money to Rapid City, South Dakota for flood relief and to the local library.

      After Ray's death in 1984, Joan tried to donate his team, the San Diego Padres, to the city of San Diego, but Major League Baseball rules forbid public team ownership. Joan sold the team in 1990 and turned her attention to philanthropy. She drew controversy when she alluded to paying star and future Hall of Fame shortstop Ozzie Smith to maintain her garden at a time when he was refused a raise by her team's general manager.

      The Joan B. Kroc Foundation donated $18.5 million to the San Diego Hospice Corporation (now known as San Diego Hospice and The Institute for Palliative Medicine) in 1985 to create its multi-purpose hospice center. The donation covered the cost of planning, land acquisition (6.5 acres (26,000 m2)), construction and interior furnishings of the center.

      In 2002, Kroc Center, a large Salvation Army community center that she helped fund—to the tune of $87 million—opened to the public. She later bequeathed an additional $1.6 billion to open Salvation Army Kroc Centers across the nation, the largest one-time gift ever recorded. Several institutions in the San Diego area are named after her, including the think tank Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice and the Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies- the world's top peace institution- at the University of San Diego, the St. Vincent de Paul Joan Kroc Center for the Homeless (Part of Father Joe's Villages- San Diego's largest organization helping the homeless) in downtown and the Kroc–Copley Animal Shelter in the Morena District. Additionally, Joan established and endowed University of Notre Dame's Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies.[18] Kroc preferred to give donations anonymously, but recipient organizations often insisted on publicizing her gifts, hoping to attract new donors.[19]

      She also supported the Ronald McDonald Children's Charities and Ronald McDonald Houses.

      As the Padres owner, she started Major League Baseball's first employee-assistance program for players and staff with drug problems.[20]

      Kroc was also politically active. In 1985, she spent millions of dollars in support of nuclear disarmament, which included reprinting the book Missile Envy by Helen Caldicott, as well as publishing ads in major newspapers calling for disarmament. She anonymously gifted a Paul Conrad sculpture depicting a nuclear mushroom cloud, Chain Reaction, to the city of Santa Monica, where it still sits today. Because of her public no-nukes work, Cal Thomas, a conservative syndicated columnist, called her a "McNut."[19]

      She is affectionately known by the citizens of Grand Forks, North Dakota, and East Grand Forks, Minnesota, as the "Angel" because of her anonymous $15 million donation to assist the cities after a devastating flood occurred there in 1997. She was revealed as the source of the funds after reporters tracked down ownership of the jet that she used to fly into the area to survey the damage.[21]

      After her death in 2003, it was announced that she'd left the majority of her estate to the Salvation Army for the purpose of building recreation centers all across the nation. Another of her major hits was $225 million to National Public Radio (NPR)[22][23] including $5 million to her local public radio station, San Diego's KPBS.

      The ranch in Santa Ynez, California that Joan inherited from Ray Kroc (known as the J & R Double Arch Ranch) was sold in 1990 to Gerald Kessler, an impresario in the vitamin supplements business. It is now currently up for sale.

      Honor

      Joan Kroc was inducted into the San Diego County Women's Hall of Fame in 2004 hosted by the Women's Museum of California, Commission on the Status of Women, University of California, San Diego Women's Center, and San Diego State University Women's Studies.

      Death

      Joan died of brain cancer on October 12, 2003, at Rancho Santa Fe, California, at the age of 75. She was cremated and most of her remains were entombed at the El Camino Memorial Park in Sorrento Valley, San Diego.[24]

      Bequests

      Her will included significant bequests for a number of organizations.

      Posthumous recognition

      On August 25, 2009, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver announced that Kroc would be one of 13 California Hall of Fame inductees in The California Museum's yearlong exhibit. The induction ceremony was on December 1, 2009, in Sacramento, California. Kroc is also featured in the Museum's "California Remarkable Women" exhibition, which was founded by Shriver in 2004.

      The biography, RAY & JOAN: The Man Who Made The McDonald's Fortune and The Woman Who Gave it All Away, published by Dutton in 2016 and written by Lisa Napoli, looks extensively at her life. She is portrayed by actress Linda Cardellini in the 2016 American biographical drama film The Founder, but the film erroneously depicts her as Ray Kroc's second wife, not his third.

      References

      1. "'Ray And Joan' Chronicles Complex Life Of Kroc's Philanthropic Wife". npr.org. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      2. Anderson, Robert; Kroc, Ray (1987). Grinding it out : the making of McDonald's (St. Martin's pbk. ed.). [New York]: St. Martin's Paperbacks. ISBN 0312929870. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
      3. HARRIS, SCOTT (13 October 1985). "Dismayed by Nuclear Arms Race : McDonald's Fortune Fuels Joan Kroc's Peace Effort". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      4. "Joan and Ray Kroc's St. Paul love story – and why she gave away her McDonald's fortune". twincities.com. 7 January 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      5. Napoli, Lisa (2016). Ray and Joan: The Man Who Made the McDonald's Fortune and the Woman Who Gave It All Away. Penguin. p. 368. ISBN 9781101984956.
      6. Napoli, Lisa (15 November 2016). Ray & Joan: The Man Who Made the McDonald's Fortune and the Woman Who Gave It All Away. Penguin. ISBN 9781101984963. Retrieved 1 April 2018 via Google Books.
      7. http://www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/founder/ | The Founder (2017)
      8. John A. Drobnicki, "Kroc, Joan B.," in The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Vol. VII: 2003–2005 (Scribner's, 2007), p. 316.
      9. "The Criterion Restaurant". flickr.com. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      10. "Collections Online : mnhs.org". collections.mnhs.org. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      11. "Criterion Restaurant St. Paul, MN Postcard". www.cardcow.com. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      12. "McDONALD'S – St Louis Park Historical Society". slphistory.org. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      13. CRAMER, JOHN D. (14 September 1990). "Family Friend Arrested on Suspicion of Kidnaping Daughter of McDonald's Exec". Retrieved 1 April 2018 via LA Times.
      14. "History – Baldinger". www.baldingerbakery.com. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      15. "The Criterion Restaurant St Paul Minnesota Menu – #35874351". Worthpoint. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      16. "Kroc, Joan – Learning to Give". www.learningtogive.org. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      17. "Ray and Joan". C-SPAN. November 20, 2016. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
      18. "City Journal". city-journal.org. Archived from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
      19. John A. Drobnicki, "Kroc, Joan B.," in The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Vol. VII: 2003–2005 (Scribner's, 2007), p. 317.
      20. Cohen, Hannah S.; Harris, Gloria G. (2016). Remarkable Women of San Diego: Pioneers, Visionaries and Innovators. Arcadia Publishing. p. 84. ISBN 9781625857262.
      21. "Joan B. Kroc, North Dakota's "angel," dies at 75". Associated Press. October 12, 2003. Retrieved April 6, 2011.
      22. Mike Janssen (May 24, 2004). "Kroc gift lets NPR expand news, lower fees". Current. Archived from the original on March 22, 2011. Retrieved April 6, 2011.
      23. "NPR Receives a Record Bequest of More Than $200 Million". NPR. November 6, 2003. Retrieved April 6, 2011.
      24. Cremains of the daySan Diego Reader 22 April 2004.
      25. Tony Perry (January 31, 2004). "Philanthropy That Was Deeply Personal". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 6, 2011.
      This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.