Bernard Osher
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bernard Osher is an American billionaire, best known for his work as an auctioneer and philanthropist.
[edit] Life and career
A native of Biddleford, Maine, Osher studied at Bowdoin College where he graduated in 1948. After having worked at Oppenheimer & Company in New York, he moved to California where he became a founding director of World Savings, which became the second largest savings institution in the United States. World Savings ultimately merged with the Wachovia Corporation. An avid art collector, Osher also purchased the British auction house, Butterfield & Butterfield, which became the fourth largest auction house in the world. In 1999, he sold the company to E-Bay.
As a philanthropist, Osher founded the Bernard Osher Foundation in 1977. The foundation is a major supporter of higher education and the arts, Osher has consequently become known as "the quiet philanthropist."
In 2005, Forbes listed him as the 584th richest man in the world, and in 2006, they listed him as the 746th.

