Janet Annenberg Hooker
Janet Annenberg Hooker was an American philanthropist.
Life
She was born in Chicago to Sadie Cecilia and Moses Annenberg; Moses was the founder of a publishing empire based on The Daily Racing Form and The Philadelphia Inquirer. She was one of eight children born to the couple; two of the other children were Enid A. Haupt and Walter H. Annenberg.She contributed $5 million of the $10 million cost of the Janet Annenberg Hooker Hall of Geology, Gems and Minerals, which opened in 1997, and which is the most comprehensive earth sciences complex of its kind. It is part of the National Museum of Natural History. The Hope Diamond is one of the gems on permanent display there.
Her first gift to the National Museum of Natural History was the Hooker Emerald Brooch, which she donated to them in 1977, when it was valued at US$500,000. She later gave the museum the Hooker Starburst Diamonds.
She was married three times: first in 1924 to publisher L. Stanley Kahn, then in 1938 to investment banker Joseph A. Neff, and lastly in 1974 to James Stewart Hooker, head of labor relations for The Philadelphia Inquirer.