Fred Trump Jr. | |
|---|---|
Trump in 1966 | |
| Born | Frederick Crist Trump Jr.[1] (1938-10-14)October 14, 1938 Queens, New York City, U.S. |
| Died | September 26, 1981(1981-09-26) (aged 42) Queens, New York City, U.S. |
| Burial place | All Faiths Cemetery, Queens, New York City |
| Other names | Freddy Trump |
| Alma mater | Lehigh University (BA) |
| Occupation(s) | Pilot,maintenance worker |
| Spouse | |
| Children | |
| Parents | |
| Family | Trump family |
Frederick Crist Trump Jr. (October 14, 1938 – September 26, 1981) was an American airplane pilot and maintenance worker. The eldest son of real-estate businessmanFred Trump Sr., he fell out of his father's favor and became an airline pilot instead of taking overthe family business, leading to his younger brotherDonald Trump taking over the business instead. Both Fred Trump Sr. and Donald disparaged Trump for this decision. By the early 1970s, he could no longer function as a pilot due to hisalcoholism, a condition which also contributed to his fatalheart attack at the age of 42.
Both of his children,Fred Trump III andMary L. Trump, would eventually become vocal critics of Donald Trump and his presidency.[2][3]
Frederick Crist Trump Jr. was born on October 14, 1938, as the first son of real-estate developerFred Trump Sr. andMary Anne MacLeod Trump inQueens, New York City.[1] In 1956, Trump graduated fromSt. Paul's School, a college preparatory academy for boys. In that same year, his father, Fred Trump Sr., donated money to have the playing fields redone, which were renamed Trump Field in his honor.[4]
Trump attendedLehigh University and joined a historicallyJewish fraternity,Sigma Alpha Mu, although he was not Jewish.[5][a] In 2018, psychoanalystJustin A. Frank asserted that Trump joined a Jewish fraternity to rebel against his father, who was, Frank alleged,anti-Semitic.[7] (In 2020, Trump's daughter,Mary, accused Fred Trump Sr. of being "quiteanti-Semitic".[8]) Trump became president of the fraternity and graduated with aBachelor of Arts in business, also completingReserve Officers' Training Corps and entering theAir National Guard as a second lieutenant.[9]
In 1958, Trump met Linda Clapp while vacationing inThe Bahamas. She later became a flight attendant and asked him for help finding an apartment nearIdlewild Airport; they soon began dating. He proposed to her in 1961. In early 1962, they were married in Florida, and she resigned from the airline, which did not allow its flight attendants to be married. They settled in Manhattan and had their first child,Fred Trump III, in November 1962.[10] The next year, they moved into one of Fred Trump Sr.'s apartments inJamaica, Queens. During this time, Trump did maintenance jobs on his father's properties.[11]
Fred Trump Sr. wanted his oldest son to be "invulnerable" so he could take over his real-estate business, E. Trump & Son (later known asthe Trump Organization), but Trump was the opposite in personality.[12] In 1966, Trump was listed in newspapers as vice president of the company, but he had a difficult time working with his father.[13] That same year, Fred Jr. left the company to pursue his dream of being a pilot, quickly being accepted atTrans World Airlines, which created tension with his father.[14] According to Trump's daughter,Mary L. Trump (born 1965), her grandfather "dismantled him by devaluing and degrading every aspect of his personality." She said that Fred Trump Sr. andDonald Trump mocked him for his decision to become an airline pilot, comparing it to being a bus driver or chauffeur.[15][16][17][18]

By 1970, after a series of domestic incidents, Clapp asked Trump to leave their home and arranged for Fred Sr. to change the locks.[19] When hisalcoholism prevented him from continuing to function as a pilot, Trump returned to work for his father's business. He eventually moved into the unfurnished attic of his parents' house and again did maintenance on Trump properties.[20] On September 26, 1981,[21] at the age of 42, he died from a heart attack caused by his alcohol use.[22][23][b]
Donald Trump, who since 1976 has spoken publicly of his own abstinence from alcohol,[25][26] initially cited the formative influence of their father'steetotalism,[27][28] but also included experience with his brother, saying:
"Every day he lectured me, 'Look at the mess I'm in. If I ever catch you smoking, you'll be sorry, drinking even a glass of booze because you'll like it too much.' ...Freddy did a good job."[29]
On March 16, 1994, Trump's mother stated in an interview with Irish broadcasterBibi Baskin that "We lost a son, our oldest son. He was 41. Something a mother never forgets."[c][30]
In 2019, Donald Trump said about his brother's death:[31]
"I do regret having put pressure on him [as running the family business] was just something he was never going to want. ... It was just not his thing. ... I think the mistake that we [Donald and Fred Sr.] made was we assumed that everybody would like it [running the business]. That would be the biggest mistake. ...what he loved doing was flying airplanes."
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