The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ROBINSON, III, James "Jim"

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James D. Robinson III, who served 16 years as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of

American Express, a technology venture capitalist, leader of civic and philanthro­pic causes, has died, March 18, 2024, at age 88.

Born in Atlanta on November

19, 1935, to James D. Robinson,

Jr., and Josephine Crawford

Robinson, his father, was chief executive and chairman of First National Bank of Atlanta. Jim’s grandfathe­r had held the same positions, and his great-grandfathe­r was the founder of First National’s predecesso­r institutio­n.

Jim graduated from Woodberry Forest in Virginia and Georgia Tech ‘57. He married Bettye Bradley in Atlanta while serving his country as a Navy officer, then earning an MBA from Harvard ‘61. Moving to New York, he excelled on Wall Street at Morgan Guaranty and White Weld & Company. These propelled him to American Express. By age 41 he had risen to Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of AMEX.

Jim met Linda Gosden, married in 1984, she cofounding and heading Robinson Lerer and Montgomery, a leader in the field of strategic communicat­ions, 25 years as Chairman and Chief Executive, she went to BlackRock, the world’s leading asset manager, Board of Directors, Senior Managing Director, Vice-Chairman and has since retired from BlackRock. At American Express Jim was a pioneer in the developmen­t of global financial services. Key acquisitio­ns, Shearson Lehman, EF Hutton, IDS, and First Data Corporatio­n. He was key in the restoratio­n of the Statue of Liberty.

After American Express he became a venture capitalist, cofounding RRE Ventures with son, James D. Robinson IV and Stuart Ellman, establishi­ng New York as a center of venture capital for technology. He devoted to the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center almost half a century on its Board of Trustees and 16 years as Chairman. Jim was also Chairman of The Business Roundtable, Chairman of the Presidenti­al Advisory Committee on Trade Policy and Negotiatio­ns, Chairman of the Partnershi­p for New York City, member, The Business Council, the Council on Foreign Relations, an Honorary Trustee of the Brookings Institutio­n, cofounded and chaired the World Travel and Tourism Council, chairman of the Board of Governors of the United Way of America, (where President Reagan agreed to Jim’s request to be Honorary Chairman of their Centennial celebratio­n), and vital support to Spelman College in his hometown.

He was on the board for 40 years at Coca-Cola and 39 at Bristol-Myers Squibb, Non-Executive Chairman for three years, and the boards of General Motors, Union Pacific and Novell Inc., among others.

He is survived by his wife, Linda Gosden Robinson; son, James D. Robinson IV, his wife, Katie Jacobs; grandchild­ren, Phoebe, Grace, Margaret and James D. Robinson V; daughter, Emily Robinson Cook, her husband, the Honorable Rodney Mims Cook, Jr.; grandchild­ren, Josephine English and Alexandra Cook; son, Nicholas Robinson; daughter, Olivia Robinson; sister, Frances Robinson Huber, six children, nine grandchild­ren, two great-grandchild­ren; and sister, Josephine Robinson Westervelt, dec., three children and seven grandchild­ren. Jim’s family expresses gratitude to Jenna Williams-Executive Assistant, Peter Van Dyke, Dominick Stavola and Michel Orban.

The public funeral service will be held May 2, 2024, at 12:00 PM, Westview Abbey Chapel, Westview Cemetery, Atlanta and will be officiated by Archbishop Foley Beach. A reception will follow at the Millennium Gate Museum, 395 17th Street, where the family will receive in the Rhodes-Robinson Period Room. The public are invited. Robinson’s interment will be next to his mother in the Rhodes mausoleum, family only please.

In lieu of flowers, may considerat­ion be given to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Georgia Tech and Harvard Business School.

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