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Ruth Caplan Perelman, major philanthropist

Ruth Caplan Perelman, 90, of Rittenhouse Square, died of pneumonia Sunday, July 31, at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Raymond and Ruth Perelman at the opening of the Philadelphia Museum of Art building named for them. (Michael Bryant / File photo)
Raymond and Ruth Perelman at the opening of the Philadelphia Museum of Art building named for them. (Michael Bryant / File photo)Read more

Ruth Caplan Perelman, 90, of Rittenhouse Square, died of pneumonia Sunday, July 31, at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Mrs. Perelman and her philanthropist husband, Raymond G. Perelman, have been major donors to Philadelphia institutions, including giving $6 million for the Perelman Theater at the Kimmel Center, $15 million for the Perelman Building at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and $3 million for the Perelman Jewish Day School, with campuses in Lower Merion and Melrose Park. The Perelmans were trustees of the Raymond and Ruth Perelman Education Foundation Inc., which supports Jewish cultural and welfare organizations, as well as arts and history museums and other cultural institutions.

In May, the couple, who had been married 70 years, signed paperwork for the naming rights to the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine after making a $225 million donation to the school.

"Philadelphia has lost a most beloved and consummately gracious public citizen," Penn president Amy Gutmann said in a statement on Sunday. "Ruth's generous spirit and strong commitment to education, medicine, and culture in Philadelphia will be remembered for countless generations to come."

In a 2007 profile of the Perelmans in The Inquirer, Raymond Perelman was described as "a no-nonsense workaholic, a pistol who, by his estimation, has 'bought and sold between 30 or 50 companies.' "

Mrs. Perelman was described as "more retiring, comfortable letting her husband hold center court, but quick to correct him when she disagrees."

She told The Inquirer, "I had a clue, though I had no idea he would be this successful. He just felt he had to do these things. It's a fire in his belly."

Contacted Sunday, Jeffrey Perelman, one of the couple's two sons, said, "Ruth was a wonderful and loving mother and grandmother. She will be missed dearly by her entire family."

"She was kind, elegant, wise, and generous," son Ronald Perelman said Sunday. "She liked working one to one, personally helping people in need. She wanted people to be happy and well and was a great support to my father."

Ruth and Raymond Perelman's gifts were made in both their names, and their many pieces of contemporary art were bought by mutual consent. "She's sort of the quiet authority," Ronald Perelman told The Inquirer in 2007. "There's very little they don't agree upon."

Gail M. Harrity, president of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, on Sunday called Mrs. Perelman "an enlightened philanthropist and dear and devoted friend and supporter of the museum" who, for a generation with her husband, had been "closely associated with its success and growth."

Previously, Harrity had described the couple as a "fabulous duo."

"Ray is hardworking, involved, very driven and energetic and hands-on. Ruth is quieter but keenly aware and committed, sort of a wise counselor," she told The Inquirer in 2007.

Mrs. Perelman was active in philanthropic activities on her own. She had chaired the Harvest Ball to benefit the Albert Einstein Healthcare Network, and in 2007 she cochaired the ball celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Academy of Music with son Jeffrey Perelman and Dorrance Hamilton and Hamilton's son, S. Matthews V. Hamilton Jr.

A native of New Haven, Conn., Mrs. Perelman attended the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. "I wanted to attend Duke," she told The Inquirer, "but was discouraged because it was coed."

While in Greensboro, she met her future husband, who was working for his family's company.

After marrying in 1941, they moved to Elkins Park, where she focused on raising their two children.

In 1970, Mrs. Perelman and her husband moved to Rittenhouse Square. When he gave a tour of the impressive art in their penthouse apartment to an Inquirer reporter, he stopped before what he called "my favorite painting."

"It's Ruth," he said.

The Perelmans spent winters in Palm Beach, Fla., and summer weekends at their home in Atlantic City.

In addition to her husband and sons, Mrs. Perelman is survived by a sister, Phyllis Horton; eight grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 3 p.m. Monday, Aug. 1, at Beth Shalom Congregation, 8231 Old York Rd., Elkins Park. Entombment will be private.

Donations may be made to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Penn Medicine Development, 3535 Market St., Suite 750, Philadelphia 19104.