The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Campbell Soup heiress dies at 88

Dorrance Hamilton gave millions to philanthro­py.

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PHILADELPH­IA — Dorrance Hill Hamilton, whose grandfathe­r invented the process used to make Campbell’s condensed soups and who used her inherited fortune for philanthro­py, has died. She was 88.

Hamilton died April 18 at her home in Boca Grande, Florida, said Nancy Brent Wingo, executive director of the Hamilton Family Foundation. A cause of death wasn’t disclosed.

Hamilton, who embraced the nickname “Dodo,” was an avid gardener and tended to thousands of plants on her 10-acre estate in Wayne, just west of Philadelph­ia. She also had a home in Newport, Rhode Island.

Hamilton was the granddaugh­ter of Campbell Soup Co. founder John T. Dorrance and was a longtime fixture on Forbes’ list of the country’s 400 richest people. The magazine estimated her net worth at $1.1 billion in 2006, but she dropped off the list in subsequent years.

She gave away millions of dollars to Philadelph­ia educationa­l and cultural institutio­ns, including $25 million to Thomas Jefferson University, a medical school; $25 million to the University of the Arts; $5 million to the Pennsylvan­ia Academy of the Fine Arts; and at least $10 million to the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts.

Hamilton was a fixture at the Philadelph­ia Flower Show, winning countless ribbons over three decades before retiring from competitio­n in 2014. She had many full-time gardeners working in the greenhouse­s around her red brick Georgian mansion.

Her longtime support of the Pennsylvan­ia Horticultu­ral Society, which sponsors the flower show, allowed the organizati­on to redesign and maintain civic landscapes around the city.

She and her husband establishe­d the Hamilton Family Foundation in 1992. It provides funding for literacy-based educationa­l projects in underserve­d schools in Philadelph­ia; Camden, New Jersey; and Chester, Pennsylvan­ia.

In 1999, she founded the Newport-based SVF Foundation, a nonprofit that works to preserve endangered breeds of food and livestock. She also helped develop Forty 1 North, a hotel marina resort in the city.

Born in New York on Aug. 16, 1928, Hamilton grew up on Park Avenue in Manhattan and in Newport.

She moved to Wayne, Pennsylvan­ia, after marrying Samuel M.V. Hamilton in 1950; they raised two sons and a daughter. Samuel Hamilton died in 1997.

 ?? STEVEN M. FALK / AP 2014 ?? Dorrance Hill Hamilton, the granddaugh­ter of the Campbell Soup Co. founder, died April 18.
STEVEN M. FALK / AP 2014 Dorrance Hill Hamilton, the granddaugh­ter of the Campbell Soup Co. founder, died April 18.

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