Richard Rainwater dies; billionaire investor and philanthropist was 71
Richard Rainwater, the son of a North Texas grocer who went on to amass a fortune as an investment manager before becoming a billionaire investor and philanthropist in his own right, has died, according to his charitable foundation. He was 71.
A statement issued by the Rainwater Charitable Foundation said Rainwater died yesterday morning at his Fort Worth, Texas, home after a long battle with a rare neurological disease. He had been battling progressive supranuclear palsy since 2009 and had pumped millions into a campaign to finding a cure.
Among Rainwater's career achievements was conducting billionaire investor Sid Bass' acquisition of a major stake in the Walt Disney Co. and partnering with future President George W. Bush in the 1989 purchase of the Texas Rangers baseball team.
Forbes magazine listed Rainwater as the world's 663rd wealthiest person and ranked him 236th in the United States with an estimated net worth of $3 billion in 2015.
The Bass family, heirs to Texas oil wildcatter Sid Richardson's fortune, hired the Stanford Business School graduate from Goldman Sachs to manage its investments when Rainwater was 26, the statement said. In 1984, Richardson and Sid Bass invested $478 million in a struggling Walt Disney Co. and helped to install then-Paramount Pictures President Michael Eisner as Disney's chief executive.
In 1986, when he turned 42, Rainwater went into business for himself and later helped to engineer Bush's purchase of the Rangers, foundation of Bush's personal fortune.
"I was so saddened to learn that my friend Richard Rainwater died this weekend. Richard had a brilliant mind and a generous heart. He was a lot of fun, inspiring to be around, and generous and courageous to the very end," Bush said in a statement issued yesterday.
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke describes progressive supranuclear palsy as a brain disorder that causes serious and progressive problems with control of gait and balance, along with complex eye movement and thinking problems.
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