Ralph Hornblower III

Ralph "Ray" Hornblower III (born March 17, 1948) is chairman of Hornblower & Company, LLC, an investment firm specializing in early stage companies in the biomedical, alternative energy, health care, and transportation/logistics sectors.[1]

Hornblower is the great-grandson of Henry Hornblower, the founder of Hornblower & Weeks. His grandfather and father were in their turn partners in that firm. Although the present firm of Hornblower & Company is not a descendent firm, the right to the name Hornblower passed, by the original Hornblower & Weeks partnership agreement, to Ralph Hornblower, thence to Ralph, Jr., and to Ralph III.[1]

Hornblower graduated in 1970 from Harvard, and obtained a law degree in 1974 from the University of Virginia Law School. He joined the U.S. Department of Justice in 1974, first working as a trial attorney in the Special Litigation Section of the Department's Civil Rights Division. Subsequently, in the post-Watergate period under Attorneys General Edward Levi and Griffin Bell, he was assigned to oversee all matters of ethics and professional responsibility in the Justice Department.[1]

Leaving the Justice Department in 1980, and after spending one year in private practice, Hornblower began a second career as a professional concert and opera singer by spending six years in Paris. As a tenor, he performed principal roles in Turandot and Carmen at Opera Pacific in Costa Mesa, California and at opera festivals in Aix-en-Provence, France, and Buxton, England.[2][3]

Hornblower was a member of the board of overseers of Plimoth Plantation, the living history museum in Plymouth, Mass., that was founded by his uncle, Henry Hornblower II.

Between 1969 and 2000, Hornblower was married to Margot Roosevelt great-granddaughter of U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt. In 2004 he married Cynthia Morgan Edmunds, executive editor of Bride's magazine.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Hornblower & Company, "The Hornblower History"
  2. "Cynthia Edmunds, Ralph Hornblower III", The New York Times (November 7, 2004)
  3. The New York Times "Emily Allen, Samuel Hornblower" (June 13, 2009)
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