- Jay Van Andel
Jay Van Andel, (
June 3 1924 -December 4 2004 ) was an Americanbusinessman best-known as co-founder of theAmway Corporation; he was born inGrand Rapids, Michigan .He was also known for funding [ [http://www.mediamouse.org/features/120904jay_v.php Mediamouse.org article] ] religious missions and conservative political causes, including the Republican Party. Shortly before his death from
Parkinson's Disease -related complications on4 December 2004 , aged 80,Forbes Magazine estimated his net worth at $2.3 billion, making him the world's 231st richest individual (at one point he was among the top 10 wealthiest Americans).Amway
Van Andel co-founded Amway with
Rich DeVos in 1959. This was not their first joint venture; DeVos had been a high-school classmate of Van Andel's, and the two had worked together in several business ventures in the twenty years prior to the founding of Amway. These included a flying school, a drive-in restaurant (the first in Grand Rapids), and theJa-Ri Corporation , which sold vitamins and food supplements. With Ja-Ri they experimented withmulti-level marketing , a way of building sales distribution networks based on individuals' personal contacts, and subsequently applied the same principle to Amway. Amway began as a family business, operating out of the basements of their neighborhood homes, and initially sold only one product, a biodegradable household cleaner.The company has since grown to 13,000 employees and several million distributors in more than 80 countries. Its parent company,
Alticor , has worldwide sales of $6.2 billion withChina being its largest market. After accusations that Amway was an illegal pyramid scheme, theFederal Trade Commission in 1979 ruled after a two-year investigation that it was not, though it did order some changes in Amway practices.Van Andel was succeeded as Chairman of Amway by his son, Steve, in 1995. His lifelong business partner, Rich DeVos, had already handed over the Presidency of Amway to his son Dick in 1992. The founders' sons shared the newly created office of Chief Executive of Amway.
Conservative contributor
From 1985, Van Andel was a member of the
Heritage Foundation , and was at the time of his death a trustee of the traditionally conservativeHillsdale College . A strong supporter of the Republican Party, Van Andel contributed $2 million to the re-election campaign of PresidentGeorge W. Bush , and $475,000 to the Michigan State Republican Party (mostly for state legislature candidates) in 2004 alone. He was noted for his friendship with former PresidentGerald Ford , who lamented his passing and called him "a great family man and a worldwide leader in the business arena". Van Andel had served as a director of theGerald R. Ford Foundation .In addition to Amway, Van Andel pursued many other business ventures throughout his life. He served as chairman of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce . He was particularly interested in leaving his mark on the city of Grand Rapids, and his name appears on landmarks throughout the city. After purchasing the 65-year-old Pantlind Hotel in 1978, he and DeVos had it rebuilt with a 29-story tower and reopened as theAmway Grand Plaza Hotel .He donated substantial funds to build the Van Andel Museum Center to house the
Grand Rapids Public Museum in 1994. He donated $11.5 million towards the $75 million cost ofVan Andel Arena downtown. Since he and his wife suffered from serious medical problems later in life, he established theVan Andel Institute (devoted to medical research and education), building its headquarters in Grand Rapids at a cost of $60 million, and pledging $2 billion, which was most of his personal estate, to medical research.His wife,
Betty Van Andel , preceeded him in death on18 January 2004 , at the age of 82. A sufferer ofAlzheimer's Disease , she died at theirPeter Island home in theCaribbean .A member of the
Christian Reformed Church , Van Andel had a life-long interest in Christian causes, and funded many religious ventures, including the construction of the Van Andel Creation Research Center in Chino Valley,Arizona operated by theCreation Research Society . [ [http://www.creationresearch.org/vacrc.html Van Andel Creation Research Center] , CRS]He summed up his business philosophy in his autobiography An Enterprising Life, in these words: "For me, the greatest pleasure comes not from the endless acquisition of material things, but from creating wealth and giving it away."
Mr. Van Andel was inducted into the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame in 1998.
References
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