An
elderly man who had holes in his clothes and took buses instead of
taxis has amazed Seattle Children's Research Institute with what it says
is the biggest gift ever earmarked for pediatric research — in the
entire U.S.
The hospital's research center will receive the
largest portion of a $188 million charitable trust left by Jack
MacDonald, who died at the age of 98 after decades of secret
philanthropy, reports the Seattle Times.
Only a select few
family and friends knew that the bargain-hunting man who lived simply in
a retirement home had spent more than 60 years using his incredible
skill for picking stocks to turn the nest egg his parents left him into a
huge legacy for charity.
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The trust will also benefit the University of Washington School of Law and the Salvation Army.
MacDonald,
who served in the South Pacific in World War II before spending 30
years as an attorney for the Veterans Administration, supported hundreds
of other causes with donations while he was alive, including $536,000
to the Canadian village his grandfather moved to from Scotland.
The
president of the Seattle Children's Foundation describes MacDonald as a
humble, understated man who regularly visited the hospital and
sympathized with the patients and their families.
"He was drawn to the patient stories," he says. "There was a lot of hope in those stories, and that really resonated with him."
It's not the only fortune to make the news this week: A $7.5 million fortune is buried in a Welsh landfill.
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