Arlene Hirschfeld | |
---|---|
Born | Arlene Friedman 1944 (age 80–81) Denver, Colorado, US |
Education | B.A. English,University of Denver, 1966 |
Occupation | Community activist |
Years active | 1980s–present |
Spouse | A. Barry Hirschfeld |
Children | 2 |
Awards | Colorado Women's Hall of Fame, 2006 |
Arlene Hirschfeld (born 1944) is an American communityactivist. Since the 1980s, she has served on the board of trustees of numerousDenver andColorado state organizations, working in advisory, leadership, and fundraising capacities.[1] The recipient of numerous awards, she was inducted into theColorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2006.
Arlene Friedman[2] was born in 1944 inDenver, Colorado.[3] She earned her B.A. in English from theUniversity of Denver in 1966.[4]
From 1966 to 1970, she taught English at theAbraham Lincoln High School in Denver, also serving as anAmerican Field Service sponsor.[4][5]
Hirschfeld became active in local and state organizations and nonprofits on an almost full-time basis[3] beginning in the 1980s. She is a member of the board of trustees of theDenver Art Museum,[6] the MDC Richmond American Homes Foundation, the Children's Diabetes Foundation of Denver, Breathe Better Foundation, theMizel Museum, and the Colorado Governor's Residence Preservation Fund.[5][7] She is an honorary trustee of the Women's Foundation of Colorado, and an emeritus member of the board of trustees of theAnti-Defamation League.[1][7]
She was the first Jewish president of theJunior League of Denver (1986–1987), and the first woman board chair for the Rose Community Foundation (2006–2008).[1][3][7] She also chaired the Allied Jewish Federation (now JewishColorado).[1] As a member of the steering committee of the Dean's Council atHarvard Divinity School, she was involved in raising $1 million to endow one of the five scholars of that university's Women's Studies in Religion Program.[3]
Hirschfeld has received many awards, including the 1991 Community Service Award from the University of Denver,[2] the 1997 Denver Women of Distinction award from Girl Scouts of Colorado,[8] the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, the 2002 Rex Morgan Award,[9] the 2003 Colorado Philanthropy Day Outstanding Volunteer Fundraiser Award,[10] and the Martin Luther King, Jr. Business Social Responsibility Award.[3] She was inducted into theColorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2006.[1][3] She received a Lifetime Achievement Award from Metro Volunteers in 2015.[11] She and her husband were the 2018 recipients of the Community Service in the Arts Award from theBonfils–Stanton Foundation.[7]
She married A. Barry Hirschfeld, anMBA graduate of the University of Denver, in 1966.[4] They have two sons.[3] Barry became the owner of A. B. Hirschfeld Press (later known as National Hirschfeld, closed in 2009[12]) founded by his grandfather in 1907, and A. B. Hirschfeld & Sons, a real estate company.[4][13] In the mid-1970s, the couple purchasedShangri-La, an 8,000-square-foot (740 m2) Denver mansion built by movie theater ownerHarry E. Huffman as a replica of the monastery featured in the 1937 filmLost Horizon.[14][15][16]