Chicago Sun-Times

Campbell’s Soup heiress gave generously to charity

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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.

Mrs. Hamilton died Tuesday 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.

Mrs. 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.

Mrs. 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, amedical 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.

Mrs. 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, Mrs. 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.

 ?? | JESSICA GRIFFIN/ THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? Dorrance Hill Hamilton, the granddaugh­ter of Campbell Soup Co. founder John T. Dorrance, was a fixture on Forbes’ list of the country’s 400 richest people.
| JESSICA GRIFFIN/ THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP Dorrance Hill Hamilton, the granddaugh­ter of Campbell Soup Co. founder John T. Dorrance, was a fixture on Forbes’ list of the country’s 400 richest people.

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