- Paul Bonwit
Paul Bonwit (
September 29 ,1862 –December 11 ,1939 )retail merchant and founder ofBonwit Teller department store inNew York City .Born Paul Joseph (or Josef) Bonwit near
Hanover ,Germany , the son of Bernard Bonwit. He moved toParis at the age of 16. He found work with a local export house as a clerk and continued his studies at night. At 21 in 1883 he emigrated to the United States. He moved to Lincoln,Nebraska , where he worked in a department store. He returned toNew York when a position opened with Rothschild & Company eventually becoming a partner, which was renamed Bonwit, Rothschild & Company. He married Sarah Woolf in 1893 and they had two sons.Wanting his own business, he opened a store at Sixth Avenue and Eighteenth Street in 1895. Two years later
Edmund D. Teller , and he relocated their establishment (now known as Bonwit Teller) to Sixth Avenue and Twenty-third Street. The partners incorporated their firm in 1907 as Bonwit Teller & Company and in 1911 relocated yet again, this time to the corner of Fifth Avenue and Thirty-eighth Street. Announcing:"an uncommon display of wearing apparel from foreign and domestic sources... which will appeal to those who desire the unusual and exclusive at moderate prices." "
staying on as vice president and general manager.
During his business career, Bonwit sat on the boards of both
Harriman National Bank andA. Sulka & Company , while he also maintained an interest in philanthropies and the arts. He died inManhattan after a brief illness. Paul Bonwit is interred in a private mausoleum inKensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York. The firm bearing his name enjoyed something of a revival under the direction of the Odlums. In May 1990 the developerDonald Trump demolished the Fifth Avenue store in order to make room for the Trump Tower, and the firm of Bonwit Teller no longer was in business.
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