Dear [first_name]:
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NEWS & EVENTS (PAST AND FUTURE)
# CAA GROUP TOUR: ONE PLACE LEFT plus places on non-CAA tours may be available: If you are interested in joining one of Alice Sachs Zimet's non-CAA tours of the New York Photography Show between March 31 and April 2nd, please let Andrea know at news@chasealum.org.The show offers exceptional photography from the world's top fine art photography galleries and will be held at Center415, 415 Fifth Avenue (between 37th and 38th streets). We'll be having lunch (Dutch treat) at the Bryant Grill afterwards.
Alumna Zimet teaches courses on collecting photography and would create a special course for Chase alumni -- dues-paying and non- -- if there is sufficient interest. If you are interested, please contact Andrea at news@chasealum.org.
You must be a dues-paying member of the Chase Alumni Association to purchase the seat, and we promise to sit you with an amiable alum! No refunds. NOTE: There are no paper tickets for the game. You must be able to access the MLB Ballpark app on a smart phone and show those electronic tickets at CitiField to gain entry. Questions? Contact Andrea at news@chasealum.org.
CAA President for More Than the Interim! The Board of the Chase Alumni Association is pleased to announce that Ken Jablon, who has given countless hours of service and leadership to the CAA, has agreed to serve as President of the Association, succeeding the late John A. Ward. Thank you, Ken!
Pay Tribute to Your Mentor: We have added a tribute to Tom Poplawski from Steve Wertheim in Part 4 of our series, which also includes a contribution from Dave Farrell that is also a reminiscence of Chase Manhattan South Africa. We continue to invite you to pay tribute to a mentor at the bank who helped shape your career, values and interests, someone who went beyond just being your boss. You must write about an employee of Chase, Chemical, Manny Hanny, Bank One, First Chicago or the other banks that are the heritage of JPMorgan Chase. Please include specifics. If you have a photo of yourself with your mentor, please send it. Last year we had enough essays to require that we run it in three parts. We've begun Part 4. Let's see if we need a Part 5!
Corruption, or That's Not How We Do Things (Part 2): We're starting to post more stories about experiences alumni have had being approached overseas (or stateside) to participate in corrupt practices–or having to look the other way. The latest post is a story by Sergei Boboshko about his experiences in Russia in the 1990s. (Also visit Part 1)
If this is a subject you are willing to write or be interviewed about, please contact Andrea at news@chasealum.org. You can speak confidentially, or we can run your story anonymously if you prefer. We've already heard from a number of alumni. Add your tale!
EVENT PHOTOS (Viewable by dues-paying members)
From Carmelo Macannuco: "For nearly 20 years, a group of Chase alumni has been meeting monthly at Villa Mosconi in NYC’s Greenwich Village, to drink, eat and, most importantly, relive our years at Chase. Members of the Chase Lunch Club featured in the photo above (from left) are Ben Cassese, George Keenan, Joe Murphy, Joe Salsberry, Jim Peterson, Carmelo Macannuco and Bob Deak. Absent on the day the picture was taken were Ed Cooper and Ed Meyers. In spite of the hard commute to get to Villa Mosconi from Pennsylvania, Eastern Long Island, New Jersey and, occasionally, Florida, it is a monthly event we all look forward to. We talk about everything we experienced at Chase, people we dealt with, conflicts we had and, often, the laughs we enjoyed. It is a fun three-hour event that we hope to continue."
...and from a gathering of Chase alumni in Mexico City on November 10, 2022. (Viewable by all)
LIFE AFTER CHASE
We've written before about Chase alumnus and polymath Bob Graboyes, who, while an economics professor, won the 2014 Bastiat Prize for Journalism, an international award for “writing that best demonstrates the importance of individual liberty and free markets with originality, wit and eloquence.”
Graboyes has now left academia and is writing a substack (blog) he has dubbed Bastiat's Window, and it displays that same originality, wit and eloquence over a wide variety of subjects – with numerous references to his experiences at Chase. He just published a three-parter entirely related to and heavily laden with Chase Manhattan lore. The first installment is called Fun and Death in Lagos, but you need to register on the site to read it. It's well worth the effort!
# A General Note: Alumnae of First Chicago and Morgan Guaranty have sent us emails complaining that those institutions are not sufficiently represented on this website, that everything is about Chase, Chemical and Manny Hanny. (And, of course, we get complaints from Chem and MHT alumni that everything is about Chase!) This is a reminder that we largely rely on you, our members, to send us your stories and recollections. We propose story topics – e.g. mentors, romance in the workplace, working in dangerous situations, memorabilia, best hires, ways you spent the pandemic, book recommendations, to name a few – and then hope that alumni from all the JPMC heritage organizations will chime in. We're also always looking for contributions to Moments in Bank History (all the banks!) and Life After Chase (or Chem, MHT, First Chicago, etc.). So please, scour your memories and contact us! As always, you can write up a story yourself or just ask to be interviewed. Contact Andrea at news@chasealum.org.
MOMENTS IN BANK HISTORY
(And remember...you have friends at Chase Alumni who want to see photos of your Bank memorabilia! Please send to news@chasealum.org.)
# Object of the Week: eBay has a listing for this relic with the curious title "Circa 1800 Piece of NYC Wood Water Pipe That Led to Hamilton & Burr’s Deadly Duel". The plaque reads: "Section cut from a length of old wooden water main laid in New York City by the Manhattan Company in the year 1800 - Dug up in 1933. Bank of the Manhattan Company, Chartered 1799, 40 Wall St., New York, N.Y."
The Chase Manhattan Bank had many of these water pipe sections with similar plaques. Since the Bank of Manhattan merged with the Chase National Bank in 1955, this one had to have been produced before then. They are still finding the log water pipes when they dig up parts of lower Manhattan.
Trying to draw the connection between the pipe and the duel, the lister notes:
The Manhattan Company was founded by Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton, among others. It was chartered by the New York State legislature to supply "pure and wholesome" drinking water to the city's growing population. This relic is from pipe laid in 1800 as a result of the charter.
But Aaron Burr’s ulterior motive was to use the water utility as a money-raising front to start a bank. Without Hamilton’s knowledge, Burr had a provision added to the State’s charter. It allowed The Manhattan Company to use surplus capital for banking operations. Within five months, The Bank of The Manhattan Company opened and became the second commercial bank in New York City after Hamilton’s Bank of New York.
Furious, Hamilton cut ties with the water company. The subterfuge earned Burr a lifelong enemy in Alexander Hamilton. Five years later, Hamilton died following his infamous duel with Burr. The Bank of The Manhattan Company is still running today and known as JPMorgan Chase.

# Last week we launched Part 2 of the series a recollection by Sergei Boboshko, as always a great chronicler of his adventures as the Chase banker in Russia. This week we add Sandi Beers Tuttle's additional reminiscences of the Moscow apartment and a story by Nancy Sauer about flats on different "storeys" in London.
We would love to hear from other alumni who lived in Chase-owned buildings – including bankers from heritage banks who lived in their equivalent on overseas duty. Please contact Andrea Axelrod at news@chasealum.org. Speaking of housing: If you have a great story about finding non-bank-owned housing overseas, let us know as well!
From a moment in very distant bank history: Two Chase alumni in Antwerp, Marc Smits and Josse Borremans, continue their remarkably researched saga into the DNA of U.S. credit standing. This lengthy installment focuses on the late 18th century negotiations between Charles De Wolf (whose Belgian bank was the forerunner Banque de Commerce) and John Quincy Adams (in photo), then the U.S. Envoy to the Netherlands, later the sixth president of the United States. (Happy Presidents' Day in the USA!) With talk of default in the air now, it's interesting reading. Smits and Borremans even found a "Bourne Ultimatum" at work! Pull up a chair and learn some fascinating history.
BANKERS IN DANGER: The three-part (so far) series features our intrepid alumni in hair-raising situations in the Middle East, Asia and South America. Were you ever asked to continue working–or struggling to get out of town–in a war zone or amidst other types of violence? Let us know. Here are links to the stories so far: Part 1 (stories by Bob Aberlin, Ed von Leffern, George Lacen, Alan Delsman, Mariana Abrantes de Sousa) | Part 2 (stories by Geoff Scott, Chris Matlon and Jim Haynes) | Part 3 (story by Thomas Lane and about Frank Ciulla).
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In Memoriam
The CAA mourns the passing of longtime member Margaret (Peggi) Einhorn, who died on February 9, 2023 at the age of 69. A former SVP at Chase, she followed her 24-year career at the bank with a 16-year tenure as CFO and Treasurer of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
# A Celebration of Peggi‘s Life will be held on Sunday, March 19, 2023 at 1 pm at The Brooklyn Children’s Museum. Click here for details. RSVPs are requested for those intending to attend in person.
How Best to Use the CAA Membership Directory
If you have not done so recently, please update
the information in your profile, so that the CAA and other members would be better able to contact you. Using the Membership Directory is a privilege of dues-paying CAA members.
Now get a refresher on how to best use the membership directory to find an individual or
groups of individuals you would like to contact. (Note that only dues-paying members have
access to the directory.).
To get to the directory, log in at www.chasealum.org. On the home page menu, click on Membership and then Member Directory.
When searching by name, or in any of the other search areas, we advise starting by putting in less information in the search field. For example, if you want to find William Smith, type only Smith in the Search by Name box; if you put in “William Smith” and he is calling himself Bill Smith in his profile, you will not find him.
If you want to find members who live near you, enter the city, state or country (or any combination) under Location. The Years at Chase search is very valuable. Type in 1996-2005, for instance, and you will find everyone who worked for the bank (including heritage banks) during those years. You can narrow your search by also typing in a location or job title.
Once you have entered the search words, click on Search at the bottom of the page. When members’ names appear, click on their names to obtain more detailed information about them.
If you have any problem with any of this, contact Ken Jablon at jablonkt@aol.com.
As always: If the links do not work for you, you can always access the latest stories by logging on to CAA's web site.
If you have any questions, please send an e-mail to Ken Jablon or call Ken (during normal working hours) at 212-799-9525.
By the by: Don't forget to explore the rest of the CAA Web site. Just click on the home page menu buttons to find the news archive, photo album, membership directory, past In Memoriams and benefit information.
The Board of the Chase Alumni Association
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CHASE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
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