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History

The Berg Center

The David Berg Center for Ethics and Leadership was established in the fall of 1998 when David Berg, an alumnus and good friend of the University of Pittsburgh, allowed funds in the David Berg Family Fund to be converted to a new fund to establish the center.

The mission of the center is "to be a leading academic institute in the understanding, promotion, and development of ethical leadership."

David Berg

One of New York City's most accomplished developers and generous philanthropists, real-estate lawyer David Berg grew up in Manhattan, the younger son in a struggling Jewish family that arrived at Ellis Island in 1904.

In a career spanning nearly 70 years, Berg, together with many clients, developed shopping centers, apartment buildings, and hotels in many cities, including Regency Towers in New York, N.Y., and Harbor Towers in Boston, Mass. He also was a major shareholder in several banks—among them the Gotham Bank—in 1958, which he and some of his clients developed and merged into the Royal National Bank of New York in 1963; he sold out in 1972.

Influences

Berg credited his mother—who not only put him through college and law school, but helped get him get his first clients—for much of his success. "My first bits of legal work," he said, "were small cases from my mother's inquiries of her customers in the hand laundry she ran on 44th St. Some of her customers ran rooming houses, and I began to build up a practice in legal matters involving leases and ownerships of small rooming houses and hotels."

By the late 1930s, Berg had built a good clientele and reputation in the hotel field. His work led him into the hotel business as an owner, and at one time he and his clients owned nearly 30 hotels. In 1942 he became an owner, at his clients' request, of New York's famed Chelsea Hotel—frequented in the 1960s by such art and entertainment figures as Andy Warhol and the Rolling Stones.
One of the greatest influences in his life, Berg said, was Dorthea Thomas, the head librarian of the children's section of the New York City Public Library on 125th St. "She helped me get books from the adult section after I had finished everything in the children's section," said Berg, who graduated from high school at 15.

Charitable Contributions

The University of Pittsburgh, where Berg spent his undergraduate years and his first year of law study, and Harvard Law School, where he earned his LLB in 1926, were high on Berg's list of important causes. "I never forget the individuals and institutions that have helped along the way," he said. “I have experienced a great deal of joy in setting up scholarships at the schools that prepared me for such a gratifying career."

Berg also contributed to Yeshiva University, where he was a trustee; Cardozo Law School, where he was director; and Adelphi College.

Berg's other charitable contributions include an 18th-century English dining room—complete with furniture, silver, ceramics, and other antiques—which he had installed for the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Dedicated to Berg's mother on his 70th birthday in 1974, the room remains among the museum's most popular attractions.