Sage:
Walter Sondheim Jr. is stepping down from his state
post, but that doesn't mean he's retiring after decades
of civic service.
By A Sun Staff Writer
June 20, 2003
One of his closest friends can already predict what
Walter Sondheim Jr., the self-effacing sage of Baltimore,
is likely to say tomorrow night as he is honored,
yet again, for another of his countless contributions
to the city where he was born nearly 95 years ago.
"He's going to say: 'I don't know why they picked
me. Twenty people must have turned them down,'"
said Lainy LeBow-Sachs, a confidante for decades and
a frequent dinner companion.
And just as Sondheim is receiving those accolades
- this time from the Maryland Science Center - LeBow-Sachs
figures she'll probably tell him, as she often does:
"Walter, please don't make that speech again."
Another dinner in his honor. Another organization
thanking Sondheim for the good he has done. Another
chance for the ever-humble Sondheim - a one-time department
store executive better known as an adviser to mayors
and governors, as the man who helped oversee both
the desegregation of the city schools and the transformation
of Baltimore's Inner Harbor - to wonder why all the
attention.
And there will be another reception next week, when
Sondheim closes his second term as a member of the
state school board. It's not as if at 94 he is actually
retiring. That is certainly not in his nature.
This is a man who still puts on a suit and suspenders
each morning and drives to work at the Greater Baltimore
Committee, lunches with city dignitaries, attends
meetings, has dinner with a full complement of friends,
and does it again the next day. It's just that after
eight years on the board, the law says his time there
is up.
Not that such an accomplishment means the newspaper
should write an article about him. He says there must
a better use of all that ink. He thinks it's silly
to make such a fuss.
"There's only one thing that's interesting about
me and that's just sheer luck," Sondheim said.
"It's that I'm almost 95 years old."
He doesn't have much advice for others on how to live
a long and healthy life. Seems he doesn't watch what
he eats, nor does he exercise - the last time he ran
may have been as a student in the 1920s at The Park
School. He practices none of the stuff they're preaching
these days.
Instead, he makes time for friends, among them his
late wife's brother, Richard Neustadt, a founding
director of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University, and Neustadt's wife, Baroness Shirley
Williams, a former member of the British Parliament
and co-founder of Britain's Social Democratic Party.
And until a couple years ago, he squeezed in trips
to foreign countries, invited to talk about how to
revive their cities.
"He's very modest," explains state Comptroller
William Donald Schaefer, an octogenarian himself who
has relied on Sondheim's counsel over his many years
as Baltimore's mayor and then Maryland's governor.
Living history.
Sondheim has held seats on dozens of local boards,
won nearly every civic award this city's organizations
give, been linked in some way to every important moment
in the city for much of the last century. He is a
living history lesson.
This is the man whose parents returned from their
Niagara Falls honeymoon the day of the Great Baltimore
Fire of 1904, who regularly drank beer with H.L. Mencken
and his brother August, who is the father of the state's
education reform which spawned the Maryland State
Performance Assessment Program (MSPAP).
"All young politicians, if they just had sense,
they would go to him and sit down and talk to him
hour after hour and get his advice and they would
really come up with something good," Schaefer
said.
Walter Sondheim was born July 25, 1908, at his family
home in the 1600 block of Bolton Street, a house that
he still drives over to see every now and then.
He recalls summers spent in the country - in Pikesville
of all places, just miles from the city home, turned
sauna in the stifling heat. The owners of those country
homes, the doctors, professors, those with more money,
would spend their summers at the beach. One summer
while they were gone, when Sondheim was a young boy,
his father told Walter and his sister a secret, the
first one they weren't allowed to share with their
mother.
Their house in the city, his father said, was being
electrified. They would be among the first on their
block to get power.
He graduated from the Park School in 1925, then from
Haverford College in Pennsylvania in 1929, the first
in his family to go to college. His father, who would
go on to be well-known for his book collection, had
been forced to quit City College before graduation
when his own father died.
'Sheer nepotism'
Sondheim graduated into the job market of 1929, in
the moments leading up to the stock market crash and
the Great Depression. He went to work in the executive
training program at the old Hochschild, Kohn &
Co. department store, where his father was an officer.
"Sheer nepotism," he calls his hiring.
But he figures he was treated like everyone else there:
He took the same 10 percent pay cut as his co-workers
when times were tough.
In 1934, he married his wife, Janet, who danced with
the Denishawn Dancers, the legendary troupe founded
by Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. He has a son and
daughter, two grandchildren and a great-grandchild.
Sondheim served in the Navy during World War II, shipped
to Chicago and then to Cleveland, further from salt
water than he had ever been as a civilian. In his
unassuming way, he says, "I didn't interfere.
If I had never put on a uniform, the United States
would have won the war."
It was in 1948, in his 40th year, that he was asked
to join the city school board. The way he tells it,
Mayor Thomas D'Alessandro Jr. - known as "Big
Tommy" - chose him because the Jewish seat on
the board was to be vacant. "Big Tommy didn't
want anything to do with the schools," Sondheim
recalled. "He didn't want to be blamed for them."
A landmark case
In 1954, when the U.S. Supreme Court issued its Brown
vs. Board of Education decision requiring school systems
to desegregate their schools "with all deliberate
speed," Sondheim was president of the Baltimore
school board. Sondheim took the court's words to mean
now and set about readying the schools for both black
and white children by fall. In doing so, Baltimore
became the first school district south of the Mason-Dixon
Line to move on the court order.
"It would be fun for me to say it was a remarkable
act on our part," he said. "I don't think
it was. I think we were ready for it."
At the time, the mayor was in Bon Secours Hospital
and Sondheim went to see him to talk about what was
happening. "He said, 'I don't know whether you
did the right thing but the priests here tell me you
did the right thing,'" Sondheim recalled.
Once school started in the fall, and words were translated
into action, there was some trouble. "We thought
we were having riots. We were having what at best
could be considered minor disturbances," he said.
"It was not a popular decision. People are prejudiced.
People were used to it. They wanted a segregated system."
He almost forgets to mention the cross - it was small,
he says - that was burned on his front lawn.
The drama of 1954, though, was nothing like the one
two years earlier. There was an emotional appeal that
year by eight to 10 African-American students who
wanted to get into the highly technical "A course"
at Polytechnic Institute, which Sondheim called "the
most prestigious engineering course in the country."
Graduates were given sophomore standing at powerhouse
schools such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania.
The school board had previously decided to create
a "separate but equal" A course at one of
the black high schools. The Urban League protested,
saying "separate but equal" couldn't be
done with a program as prestigious as the one at Polytechnic.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People got involved and its attorney - future Supreme
Court Justice Thurgood Marshall - gave an impassioned,
finger-pointing argument.
The school board sided with them and allowed the African-American
students to enroll at Polytechnic.
Sondheim went on to run the city's Urban Renewal and
Housing Commission, something he says he didn't really
want to leave the school board to do. But Big Tommy
forced him into it, warning Sondheim that he would
never get full funding for the schools if he stayed
on the job.
"He looked at me and said, 'You know when you
come down here and ask for that last $500,000?' He
said, 'You'll never get it again,'" Sondheim
recalled.
Reinventing the harbor
On the day Sondheim turned 62, he retired from the
department store and moved on to his next project
- the redevelopment of 32 acres that became Charles
Center, with its offices and theater and plaza.
Then came his work that helped transform the Inner
Harbor, the centerpiece of Baltimore's urban revitalization,
a model recognized across the country. He helped spearhead
the project and oversaw much of the changes to downtown.
The harbor had gone downhill after the war when a
vibrant shipping industry started moving out. The
bigger merchant ships were too large for the small
basin. Some smaller ships still used the pier, mostly
to bring Eastern Shore produce to the railroad, but
trucking picked up after the war and cut into that
business.
It became a place of abandoned buildings with drunks
sleeping in doorways. There was an active wholesale
food market in the wee hours of the morning but "the
rest of the time it was left to the rats," he
said.
Sondheim tells the story as he sits in the restaurant
at the Renaissance Hotel, with its spectacular views
of the harbor of today. Asked what it looked like
in the 1960s, he replies: "I couldn't look at
it because my mother wouldn't have let me go down
there."
Sondheim retired again in the 1980s and took the job
he holds now as a senior adviser at the Greater Baltimore
Committee, a business group that promotes the Baltimore
region.
Persistent worries
Retirement is a concept that scares Sondheim, but
not as much as the concept of staying too long. "When
you get to be my age people won't tell you you ought
to retire and that worries me," Sondheim said.
Seven years ago, he wrote a letter to about a dozen
of his closest friends asking that they let him know,
through an anonymous letter if they must, when he
should "hang up the spikes." None wrote
back. He still worries that they're coddling the old
man.
It is clear that they are not.
"I read that letter every month and I remind
myself that first of all this is not the time [for
him] to retire and I hope I would have that level
of wisdom" to know when it was time for her to
step down, said State Schools Superintendent Nancy
S. Grasmick, who has known Sondheim for more than
40 years since she had a summer job in the office
of Hochschild, Kohn.
Sondheim muses it might be time for another letter.
He has been mentioning it to his old friends. This
one might come with a self-addressed stamped envelope,
maybe just a check-off box so the authors wouldn't
have to worry that Sondheim could decipher their identities.
"We said, 'Walter, you can do it, but we're throwing
it in the trash,'" LeBow-Sachs said. "He's
so afraid he's going to slip and people won't tell
him. I would like to be that way when I'm 70, let
alone 95."
Sondheim's last state school board meeting will be
held Tuesday and Wednesday. He knows he leaves with
unfinished business. The board must soon decide how
- and whether - to link its new high school assessment
tests to graduation. If the bar for graduation is
set too high, there will be a flood of students who
fail to earn their diplomas - and doubtless a flood
of controversy. If the bar is set too low, the diplomas
could be meaningless.
He worries that if it's done wrong, it could end up
out of the hands of the school board - and into the
hands of the Maryland Legislature. "In state
after state where this has been done, a howl goes
up," Sondheim said. "I would hate to have
that happen here. I don't think we ought to rely on
the legislature for that kind of education problem.
"I don't know the answer to this one," he
said. "I don't envy them," he says of his
soon-to-be former colleagues.
That kind of thoughtful discourse is what Marilyn
D. Maultsby, the president of the school board, will
miss.
"He's been the consummate statesman," she
said. "I always refer to him as Mr. Accountability.
He is steadfast in that."
"At my age," Sondheim says, "it's much
easier to know the problems than know the solutions.
The people younger than I am say they know the solutions.
"I hope they do, but I'm not so darn sure they
do."
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Baltimore Sun
September 10, 1992
Janet Sondheim, 80
teacher, dance pioneer
Janet Sondheim, who danced with the pioneering Denishawn modern dance troupe before turning to teaching, died of liver cancer yesterday at her home in Canton. She was 80.
The family plans no services, according to her husband of 58 years, Walter Sondheim Jr., senior adviser to the Greater Baltimore Committee.
Mrs. Sondheim was born in San Francisco on Dec. 17, 1911, daughter of Solomon Blum, a professor of economics at the University of California, and Minna Blum, an artist. Reared in Berkeley, she moved with her family to New York after her father's death and graduated from Mamaroneck (N.Y.) High School.
Instead of attending college, she chose to study modern dance. Mrs. Sondheim took classes with Hanya Holm and at the Martha Graham School in New York and also studied in Vienna, Austria; and Berlin.
In the 1930s, she joined the Denishawn Dancers, the legendary troupe founded by Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn. Later, she taught modern dance for a short time.
Following her marriage to Mr. Sondheim in 1934 and after her children began school, she turned to teaching. ``I've never seen anybody with such an affinity for children,'' her husband said.
During World War II, she taught in a nursery school set in the Carroll Mansion that was organized for children of defense workers.
For about 15 years, she taught at the Children's Guild, a program for the treatment and education of severely emotionally disturbed children.
In the 1960s, she organized a play program in the pediatric department of Sinai Hospital. After her retirement from the Children's Guild, Mrs. Sondheim was a volunteer tutor at Highlandtown Elementary School.
Edgar Jones, a longtime neighbor, recalled that community youngsters regularly congregated at the Sondheim home. ``The children were always over there,'' Mr. Jones said. ``She was one of the most generous neighbors you can imagine. She was a great hostess.``She had her own opinions. At the same time, she was one of the shyest people I ever met.''
Besides her husband, Mrs. Sondheim is survived by a daughter, Ellen Dankert of Reston, Va.; a son, John W. Sondheim of Baltimore; a brother, Richard E. Neustadt, professor emeritus at Harvard University of Cambridge, Mass., and London; two granddaughters; and nieces and nephews.
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