San Francisco Chronicle

USF professor, a Goldman descendant, fondly recalled after fatal plane crash

- By Lizzie Johnson

In the hours after William Sachs Goldman died in a small plane crash that also injured his two children and their nanny, he was widely remembered as much more than just the grandson of prominent San Francisco philanthro­pists.

To friends, the 38-year-old was just Bill. Bill, the brilliant scholar who held a doctorate in European history from UC Berkeley. Bill, the assistant professor who livened up staff meetings at the University of San Francisco with his garrulous laugh. And Bill the pilot who loved flying his private five-seater plane, sometimes for Angel Flight West, a charity that transports critically ill patients.

It was in that single-engine, Cirrus SR-22 that he died Thursday after crashing just north of Highway 12 in Sonoma. The incident was reported at 12:46 p.m. just after the plane had taken off from the only runway at Sonoma Skypark Airport. His school-aged children and their Italian nanny sustained critical to severe injuries, Schell-Vista Fire Protection District officials said.

The minors were transporte­d by helicopter to UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland, and the woman was sent by ambulance to Queen of the Valley Hospital in Napa. Hospital officials were unable to provide updated conditions for any of the victims Friday. Calls to Goldman’s wife, Serra Falk Goldman, an attorney at Falk, Cornell & Associates law firm in San Carlos, were not returned.

“Investigat­ors are focused on documentin­g the site and any perishable evidence,” said Peter Knudson, a spokesman

“He never in any way let you know that he came from such a famous family or in any way had that kind of air of someone who came from privilege.” Elliot Neaman, USF professor of history

for the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. “It could take a year to get to the probable cause of the crash.”

In video footage taken after the crash, officers surround the crumpled plane. One of its wings is ripped off, and ragged metal parts scatter the ground. A red-and-white striped parachute lies deflated on the grass. Cirrus aircraft have parachutes as an emergency measure — but officials could not say whether it was deployed before the crash or as a result of the plane’s impact.

Goldman received his pilot’s license in February 2009, according to Federal Aviation Administra­tion records. His plane was registered out of Palo Alto, according to an agency spokeswoma­n. Goldman had addresses in Sonoma and San Francisco.

USF President Paul Fitzgerald praised Goldman as an “accomplish­ed scholar, a beloved and generous teacher, and a valued member of our community.”

“He will be greatly missed by his colleagues, students and the countless alumni who were inspired by him in and out of the classroom,” Fitzgerald said in a statement about Goldman, who was an assistant professor in internatio­nal studies at the university.

Elliot Neaman, a professor of history at USF, said Goldman was a “sweet man” who never alluded to his privileged upbringing.

The Goldman surname is associated with millions of dollars in collective assets and a history of prestigiou­s giving. Goldman’s grandparen­ts, Richard and Rhoda, created the Goldman Environmen­tal Prize, also known as the “Green Nobel,” which gave out $150,000 awards to fund efforts to protect and enhance the environmen­t. Nearly $700 million was given to 2,500 groups over the prize’s 60-year life span until it closed in 2012.

William Goldman and his siblings created their own fund, the Richard W. Goldman Family Foundation, in 2012 in honor of their father.

“He never in any way let you know that he came from such a famous family or in any way had that kind of air of someone who came from privilege,” Neaman said. “He was funny and personal and extremely smart. He was very, very good at what he did as a scholar. We all really liked him and are shocked that this happened.”

Thomas Dandelet, a professor at UC Berkeley and Goldman’s dissertati­on adviser, remembered his former pupil as an optimist who had a zest for life. The two would often chat over large lunches, or a glass of wine in the evening. They attended historical conference­s together in Spain and Italy. Dandelet went to Goldman’s wedding and frequently saw his children, George and Marie. It was a long friendship that went back to 2003, he said.

Back then, Goldman was applying to UC Berkeley, where Dandelet was on the admissions committee. In his applicatio­n, Goldman reflected on studying abroad in Spain as an undergradu­ate at Yale University. He fell in love with the richness of the country’s culture.

“He just had a lot of intellectu­al curiosity,” Dandelet said. “It was that early trip to Spain that sparked his love for the field. It was something that never really went away. He was a rising young talent taken from us before the fullness of his time. He had already contribute­d a great deal. He was just getting started in some ways.”

And, Dandelet said, Goldman never had a negative thing to say about anyone — even his fellow graduate students.

“I never heard a bitter thing come out of his mouth, which is pretty rare in my profession,” he said. “He’s good-natured and generous. He always understood how much good fortune he had.”

Daniel Sokatch, a CEO for the New Israel Fund, a nonprofit supporting democracy and civil rights in Israel, also mourned Goldman, who served on the organizati­on’s board of directors.

“His vision, idealism, and sharp sense of humor sustained us all,” Sokatch said in a statement Friday. “Our thoughts are with his family, and especially his children. As we begin to process this loss, we know that his memory will be a blessing, as was his life.”

 ?? University of San Francisco ?? William Sachs Goldman was a beloved teacher.
University of San Francisco William Sachs Goldman was a beloved teacher.

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