Joseph Lubin (accountant)

Joseph I. Lubin (1899– April 4, 1983)[1] was an American accountant. He received his Certificate in Accountancy from Pace University in 1921. A native New Yorker, born on the Lower East Side, Lubin had attended local public schools in the city before enrolling at Pace. With his Pace training in accounting and a law degree from New York University, Joseph Lubin went on to establish the nationwide accounting firm of Eisner and Lubin. The Lubin School of Business at Pace University is named after him.

Joseph Lubin
Joseph Lubin House, Manhattan
Born
Joseph I. Lubin

1899
New York City
DiedApril 4, 1983 (aged 83)
New Rochelle, New York
Alma materPace University
New York University
OccupationAccountant

He also served as chairman of the New York State Board of Certified Public Accountant Examiners and as a director of the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants. During the Second World War, Dr. Lubin was Special Deputy Chief Investigator of the War Production Board, and Chairman of the Appeals Board of the New York County Selective Service. He also served on the board of the National Civil Service League and for a time was treasurer of the League. His corporate board memberships included United Cigar, Whelan Drug Corporation and the Phoenix Securities Corporation.

A great supporter of education, Joseph Lubin was chairman of the Founders Society of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and a member of the board of trustees of Syracuse University, New York University, and Yeshiva University. From 1961 until his death in 1983 Joseph Lubin was a member of the Pace University board of trustees. In 1955 his alma mater awarded him the honorary degree of Doctor of Commercial Science. Two years before he died, Joseph Lubin presented Pace with the largest single donation ever received from an individual, a land trust fund that over a fifteen-year period would amount to $7.5 million.

References

  • Joseph Lubin Biography
  • Walter H. Waggoner (6 April 1983). "JOSEPH LUBIN, PHILANTHROPIST AND BUSINESSMAN, DIES AT 83". The New York Times. p. D27.
  • Lubin School of Business
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