The Day

Jeanne Blum

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Mystic — Jeanne (Cotten) Blum, 98, a pioneering female executive at IBM and an arts and civic leader in Brooklyn and New York, died Wednesday, May 16, 2108.

Born Nov. 24, 1919, in New York, Jeanne Cotten Blum was the daughter of Madeline (Lynch) Cotten and Chester Cotten, a Colorado civil engineer. As a child, she and her late sister, Patricia (Cotten) Isbrandtse­n, lived in Barcelona, Spain and later Kobe, Japan, where from 1925 to 1927 her father worked on public works projects, including roads.

After the family returned to the United States and Chicago, her parents divorced. The girls and her mother moved to Brooklyn, where her mother sold insurance. She attended Brooklyn’s P.S. 8, and then Packer Collegiate Institute. She attended Swarthmore College where she majored in chemistry. She later graduated from the Packer Collegiate Institute.

Jeanne joined Internatio­nal Business Machines in March, 1939 at the World’s Fair, where she was hired as a demonstrat­or at the IBM Gallery of Science and Art. She stayed at IBM for over a dozen years, first as a systems servicewom­an and later moving to the commercial research department at the Endicott complex. She later joined the sales promotion department, where she handled placements in IBM’s key punch classes. In 1942, she moved to the IBM World Headquarte­rs on Madison Avenue, where she was personnel manager and later assistant to the general sales manager and was president of the IBM Club.

In 1952, she married John Fairfield Thompson Jr., the son of Internatio­nal Nickel founder Dr. John Fairfield Thompson. She was active in civic affairs in Brooklyn; from 1949 to 1950, she was the president of the Brooklyn Junior League. She served on the Board of Trustees of the Brooklyn Museum from 1971 to 1986 and on its Board of Advisors from 2003 to 2005.

On Jan. 2, 1971, she married John Robert Halsey Blum, a widower whose late wife, Susanne Delatour Blum, had been a friend in Brooklyn Heights. Blum, an attorney and banker, had seven children, four of them younger than age 10. She quickly adopted the new role of mother, moving the family from Columbia Heights to Riverside in Greenwich next door to her sister, Patricia, who was married to shipping executive Jacob Isbrandtse­n, who also had seven children with roughly the same age spans.

After her first husband’s death, she inherited Thompson’s Wytheville, Va., registered angus cattle operation, Fairfield Farms, which she and Jack continued to operate. The Blums later purchased a second farm in Sharon, the Tory Hill home of the original Hotchkiss family.

In Connecticu­t, she continued a concern for local social and environmen­tal causes, including serving 16 years as director of the Sharon Hospital; she also served as trustee of the Cary Institute for Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, N.Y. The Blums later endowed the Jeanne Cotten Blum ’40 Scholarshi­p at Swarthmore, which supports students with academic merit and financial need.

She was a member of the Colony Club, Cosmopolit­an Club and Millbrook Garden Club. She returned to her childhood Catholic faith in her later years at her residence in Boca Grande, Fla., where she joined the Our Lady of Mercy parish.

She is survived by her husband of 48 years, Jack; and their children, Anne Blum Brengle (George), John R.H. Blum Jr., Sara Blum Hadden (David), Jane Blum Burdett (Gregg), Robin Blum Wiseman, Alice Blum Pollard (Garland) and Suzette Blum Devine (John); as well as 18 grandchild­ren and eight great-grandchild­ren.

The Connecticu­t burial will be private, and the family and friends will celebrate her life at an upcoming memorial service.

In lieu of flowers, a donation may be made to the The Jeanne Cotten Blum ’40 Scholarshi­p at Swarthmore or The Brooklyn Museum.

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