Anne Cox Chambers, media heiress and former US ambassador, has died at 100
She was not on the list.
Anne Cox Chambers, who with her sister took over the family
media conglomerate that became Cox Enterprises and once served as US ambassador
to Belgium, died Friday at her Atlanta home at the age of 100, the company
said.
Chambers and her sister Barbara Cox Anthony in the 1970s
became controlling owners of the newspaper, TV and radio empire founded by
their father, three-term Ohio governor and onetime presidential candidate James
M. Cox.
Forbes estimated her net worth at $17 billion in 2016. Two
years earlier, she was Georgia's richest person -- one of only six women at the
time to lead their state in net worth, according to global wealth-tracking
company Wealth-X.
"My aunt, a vivacious and charismatic woman, was very
proud of Cox Enterprises' success and the accomplishments of its
employees," Jim Kennedy, Cox Enterprises chairman and Chambers' nephew,
said.
"In addition to her work for the company, she had a
career of her own that was driven by her personal passions and the respect she
earned within the business community."
Cox Enterprises' media holdings include The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution newspaper and WSB radio in Atlanta, though it recently
sold a majority stake in 14 TV stations around the country and some radio
stations and newspapers in Ohio.
But the business branched out into much more. It includes
Cox Communications, one of the country's largest cable companies, and Cox
Automotive, which includes Autotrader and Kelley Blue Book.
Chambers was born in December 1919 in Dayton when James Cox
was serving the last of three two-year terms as Ohio governor. She still was a
baby when her father ran for president in 1920 with running mate Franklin D.
Roosevelt. Cox lost to fellow Ohioan Warren G. Harding.
She became the first woman in Atlanta to become a bank
director when Fulton National Bank appointed her to its board board in 1973.
Chambers took over her family's media empire with Anthony
when their brother James M. Cox Jr. died in 1974.
Active in politics, she backed Jimmy Carter's 1976 run for
president. In 1977, he appointed her as US ambassador to Belgium, a post she
held until 1981.
"I received a check each month from the US government,
and I knew that I had earned it," Chambers told Fortune magazine in 1991
about her ambassador post.
Carter said Friday that he and his wife Rosalynn offered
their condolences to Chambers' family and friends.
"Ambassador Chambers was an important part of our lives
for over six decades," Carter said. "Her life serves as a path for
fairness and equality for everyone and especially for women and girls.
"Atlanta, our state of Georgia, and the world has lost
a wonderful woman, business leader, and philanthropist. Rosalynn and I are
grateful to have been among those whose lives were so richly touched by
her."
Chambers served on the boards of The Coca-Cola Company and
Atlanta's High Museum of Art. She supported numerous causes including animal
welfare, and "was a generous supporter of the Atlanta Human Society, which
opened a shelter in her name in 2011," Cox Enterprises said.
Chambers' sister died in 2007. Chambers passed ownership of
the company to her descendants earlier this decade, the Atlanta Business
Chronicle reported, but she remained director emeritus.
Chambers is survived by three children: Katharine Rayner,
Margaretta Taylor and Jim Cox Chambers. She also is survived by several
grandchildren, great-grandchildren and nieces and nephews.
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