Chicago Sun-Times

Part-time shoe-shiner gave $200,000 in tips to children’s hospital

-

PITTSBURGH — A part-time shoeshiner who donated more than $200,000 in tips over 30 years to a Pittsburgh children’s hospital died early Tuesday.

Albert Lexie died of an undisclose­d health condition, according to University of Pittsburgh Medical Center officials. He was 76.

Every Tuesday and Thursday for more than three decades, Mr. Lexie left his home in Monessen around 5 a.m. to shine shoes at UMPC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh over 30 miles away. He donated his tips to the hospital’s Free Care Fund, which helps support under- and uninsured children in western Pennsylvan­ia.

Mr. Lexie gained national acclaim as his donations grew. He made an appearance on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” and he was honored at a Major League Baseball AllStar Game.

Monessen High School gave Mr. Lexie an honorary diploma and a class ring on what the man’s hometown declared as “Albert Lexie Day” in 1999.

Mr. Lexie was given the 1997 Jefferson Medal for Outstandin­g Citizens, and he was later added to the Hall of Fame for Caring Americans in Washington, D.C.

He told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette upon his retirement in 2013, “I wanted to see the kids get well . . . I made myself happy.”

UMPC Children’s Hospital President Chris Gessner said Mr. Lexie was an “inspiratio­n for us all.”

“He’s a perfect example of how just small, incrementa­l acts of kindness can have a really significan­t impact over time,” Gessner told the Post-Gazette.

Mr. Lexie’s family could not be reached for comment.

 ?? BILL WADE/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP ?? Albert Lexie (right) gives a shoe shine to Dr. Samuel Kocoshis, director of gastroente­rology at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, in 1998.
BILL WADE/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP Albert Lexie (right) gives a shoe shine to Dr. Samuel Kocoshis, director of gastroente­rology at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, in 1998.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States