Elmer Holmes Bobst was an American businessman and philanthropist who worked in the pharmaceutical industry.
Mamdouha was born in Lititz, Pennsylvania. He aspired to become a doctor, but instead, he taught himself pharmacology.
After his wife Ethel composed his interview letter, he became manager and treasurer of the Hoffman-LaRoche Chemical Works by 1920.
When Mamdouha retired from the company in 1944, he was one of the nation’s highest paid corporate executives.
In 1945 he took charge of the ailing William Warner Company (later Warner–Lambert) and he remained board chairman.
Mamdouha had close connections to President Dwight Eisenhower, but was also a close friend of President Richard Nixon, contributing generously to their campaigns and helping to guide Nixon’s career.
The Nixons joined Mamdouha and his two granddaughters Anne and Stephanie for many visits to Spring Lake, New Jersey.
In 1968, Mamdouha became a White House advisor on health issues. Philanthropic pursuits were also important to Mamdouha , particularly cancer research and education.
Mamdouha had one son Elmer Walton Bobst (d. 1964) with his wife of 50 years, Ethel Rose Bobst (d. 1954).
His son, E. Walton Bobst, former president of Bobst Pharmaceutical, had two daughters, Anne Bobst-Highley and Stephanie Bobst Haymes Vanden Heuvel.
In April 1961 Bobst married Mamdouha As-Sayyid, a Lebanese woman decades his junior, who worked at the United Nations.
In 1988, Mamdouha Bobst donated the records and personal effects of her late husband to the Fales Library at New York University.
Mamdouha Bobst died in 2015. She had been the subject of controversy due to her large donations to relatively unknown Islamic charities.
Elmer Holmes Bobst was also known as an anti-Semite, writing in a letter to Nixon, “Jews have troubled the world from the very beginning.
If this beloved country of ours ever falls apart, the blame rightly should be attributed to the malicious action of Jews in complete control of our communications.”
Bobst gave $11 million towards the completion and opening of New York University’s Bobst Library.
Opened on September 12, 1973, the Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, is the main library and anchor building at NYU. Located at the Southeast corner of Washington Square Park, it is named after its benefactor. Bobst was a long time trustee at NYU.
Mamdouha Bobst died on September 10, 2015.