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  1. Frieda Warburg ( née Schiff; February 3, 1876 – September 14, 1958) was a Jewish-American philanthropist and communal worker from New York. Portrait Frieda Warburg, by Anders Zorn, 1894, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

  2. Frieda Schiff Warburg’s determination to carry on her father’s philanthropic traditions led her to support and shape major Jewish institutions in America and Israel. Warburg became a director of the Young Women’s Hebrew Association (YWHA) and later its president.

  3. Title: Frieda Schiff (1876–1958), Later Mrs. Felix M. Warburg. Artist: Anders Zorn (Swedish, Mora 1860–1920 Mora) Date: 1894. Medium: Oil on canvas. Dimensions: 39 3/4 x 30 in. (101 x 76.2 cm) Classification: Paintings. Credit Line: Bequest of Carola Warburg Rothschild, 1987. Accession Number: 1988.72

  4. While in NYC, Felix Warburg married Frieda Schiff, only daughter of Jacob H. Schiff, a banker who grew up in Frankfurt and had ties to the German Warburgs.

  5. He married Frieda Schiff (1876–1958), daughter of Jacob Henry Schiff (1847–1920) and Therese Loeb Schiff, on March 19, 1895, in New York. They had four sons and one daughter: Frederick Marcus Warburg (1897–1973), married to Wilma L. Shannon

  6. 28 de abr. de 2015 · As these Gilded Age mansions gave way to luxurious apartment buildings, Frieda Schiff Warburg held onto her home. After Felix’s death in 1937, Frieda’s life was largely preoccupied with the philanthropic endeavors of the Warburg family.

  7. 17 de oct. de 2017 · Portraits of Felix M. Warburg and Frieda Schiff Warburg. Our building is an example of the grand homes that once adorned “millionaire’s row” on Fifth Avenue during the Gilded Age.