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The 2007 Virginia 100
Virginia Business
June 2007
Intro | Rankings | Alphabetical
List
Articles:
Giving
Back | Investing
in Charity | Steve
Johnson | Bill and Alice Goodwin
Virginia 100 Profiles: Part
1 2 3 4
Note: * Includes assets held in trust
or by other family members
MARS FAMILY
McLean and Arlington
Based in McLean with annual sales
of $19 billion, Mars Inc. is one of the world's largest
privately held companies, with emphasis on the word private:
It doesn't issue an annual report, and the company routinely
refuses media interviews. Founded in 1911 in Tacoma,
Wash., by candy makers Frank and Ethel Mars, creators
of the Milky Way bar, the company is chaired by their
youngest grandson, John Franklyn Mars, 71, who lives
in Arlington. Mars and his two siblings - Forrest Edward
Mars Jr., 76, of McLean, and Jacqueline Mars, 66, of
Bedminster, N.J. - collectively hold the No. 58th spot
on this year's Forbes magazine list of the world's billionaires,
with an estimated net worth of $10.5 billion. (Comparatively,
America's richest man, Microsoft founder Bill Gates,
has a net worth of about $50.3 billion.) The Mars family
doesn't oversee day-to-day management of Mars Inc. It
manufactures such staples as M&Ms and Snickers bars,
as well as pet foods and the Uncle Ben's line of rice
products.
Net worth: $10.5 billion
Confidence: B
WINKLER FAMILY
Alexandria
After selling off its vast real estate holdings
for $2.3 billion last year, the family firm that employed
375 and owned 5,000 apartments and 3.6 million square
feet of commercial space operates as an investment
company with six employees out of an Alexandria office.
The Mark and Catherine Winkler Foundation, named after
the founder and his wife, distributed almost $250,000
in 2005. Of the money, $125,000 went to the Potomac
School in McLean and $50,000 to the Child & Family
Network Centers in Alexandria, according to the foundation's
most recent tax filing.
Net worth: $1.8 billion+
Confidence: C
WINNIE JOHNSON-MARQUART
Virginia Beach | Age: 47
One of the late Sam Curtis
Johnson's four children, Johnson-Marquart joined SC
Johnson in 1986, 100 years after the Racine, Wis.-based
company was started by her great-great-grandfather.
Sam Johnson transformed the floor wax company, growing
the company to a $6 billion enterprise with four family
businesses. Johnson-Marquart inherited $1.5 billion
when her father died in 2004. She ranks No. 618 on
Forbes' list of the world's billionaires. The mother
of four children graduated from Cornell University,
her father's alma mater. Currently, Johnson-Marquart
works part time as a project coordinator in corporate
public affairs for SC Johnson. She is married to Michael
Marquart, who runs Windmark Studios, a music recording
studio in Virginia Beach. She serves as president of
The Johnson Family Foundation which provided large
grants in 2005 to the Prairie School, a college preparatory
school in Racine; the Racine County Pony Club, an equestrian
center; and Norfolk Academy, where Johnson-Marquart
serves as a member of the board of trustees. She was
heavily involved in a $40 million fundraising campaign
for the school's John H. Tucker Jr. Arts Center. The
arts center includes the Samuel C. Johnson Theater.
Net worth: $1.6 billion
Confidence B
FRANK BATTEN SR.
Virginia Beach | Age: 80
The retired chairman and CEO
of Norfolk-based Landmark Communications continues
to make his mark as a philanthropist. In April, the
University of Virginia announced that Batten is giving
the school $100 million - the largest single gift in
its history. The money will be used to start the first
new school in more than five decades: the Frank Batten
School of Leadership. Batten earned his bachelor's
degree from U.Va. in 1950. Son Frank Batten Jr. graduated
from the university's Darden Graduate School of Business
Administration in 1984. In November, before the U.Va.
gift became public, BusinessWeek ranked Batten Sr.
and his wife Jane as 37th on its 2006 list of 50 Most
Generous Philanthropists in America. According to the
magazine, the Battens have given or pledged $228 million
from 2002 and 2006, most of which went to education
and early childhood development. Forbes magazine pegs
Batten as the 664th richest person in the world with
an estimated net worth of $1.5 billion. In 2006, Batten
received the Downtown Norfolk Council's Lifetime Achievement
Award, the first of its kind, for his philanthropic
and community endeavors. He continues as a director
at privately held Landmark, now run by his son.
Net worth: $1.5 billion
Confidence: B
SHEILA C. JOHNSON
The Plains and Wellington, Fla. | Age: 57
The billionaire
entrepreneur continues to invest in Virginia. The only
woman in the country with a stake in three professional
sports teams - Washington Mystics of the WNBA, the
Washington Wizards of the NBA and the Washington Capitals
of the National Hockey League - Johnson was honored
last month by the National Foundation for Teaching
Entrepreneurship as the first local woman Entrepreneur
of the Year. The Washington, D.C., nonprofit recognized
Johnson for her business achievements and philanthropy.
She recently pledged $5 million to the Curry School
of Education at the University of Virginia to create
a center for human services that will assist needy
families. She also serves as an ambassador for CARE,
a humanitarian group that fights global poverty. Meanwhile,
she continues as CEO of Salamander Hospitality, which
has a resort and spa under construction in Middleburg.
In April, the Middleburg Town Council gave the green
light for the project to expand from 120 to 168 rooms,
with more rooms needed to counter rising construction
costs. Johnson reportedly became the nation's first
black female billionaire after the sale of Black Entertainment
Television in 2000 to Viacom for $3 billion. She co-founded
the company with her former husband, Robert Johnson,
and the divorced couple split the proceeds. In 2005,
she married William T. Newman, chief judge of Arlington
Circuit Court.
Net worth: $1.5 billion
Confidence: B
RANDAL J. KIRK
Radford | Age: 53
As buyouts go, the numbers were pretty impressive: $1.2
billion for Kirk's 50 percent share in New River Pharmaceuticals,
or $64 per share for stock that sold for as little as
$8 per share during its IPO in 2004. Kirk, founder, chairman
and CEO of New River Pharmaceuticals, started the company
11 years ago. In April, United Kingdom-based Shire PLC
bought it for $2.6 billion. The attraction: access to
Vyvanese, a new drug for attention deficit disorder with
abuse-resistant qualities. The deal bumped Kirk's net
worth from $700 million in 2006 to more than $1 billion.
And his deal-making days aren't over.
Kirk tells Virginia Business that the team at Third Security
LLC in Radford, a private investment management firm
he started in 1999, has more irons in the fire. It has
opened an office in San Francisco and is working with
seven portfolio companies, including Clinical Data Inc.
(Nasdaq: CLDA). Third Security owns 42 percent of the
Rhode Island company's shares. Kirk has served on the
board since 2002 and is currently its chairman. Third
Security also holds a position in Intrexon Corp., a private
biotechnology R&D company with primary operations
at the Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center in Blacksburg
that's expected to have a portfolio of 600 patents by
next year. "So, as you can see, we have not been
idle," says Kirk. In fact, he predicts future performances
as impressive as New River's numbers.
Kirk's four-year term as a member of the board of visitors
at Radford University - where he is rector - ends this
month. He earned a bachelor's degree in economics from
Radford in 1976 and went on to get a law degree from
the University of Virginia. He has been a pivotal figure
in capital fundraising for Radford and donated $1 million
in 1999.
Net worth: $1.2 billion
Confidence: B
RAJ AND NEERA SINGH
Alexandria
The wireless communications pioneers are
investing more in philanthropy. In 2006, they transferred
4 million shares of LCC International worth $16.6 million
to the Raj and Neera Singh Charitable Foundation. LCC
International is the wireless consulting firm they
founded with $1,000 in 1983. Neera manages the family's
portfolio, while Raj manages Telecom Ventures LLC,
which started a major wireless cable operation in Argentina.
Last year, the University of Maine presented the couple
with its Stillwater Presidential Award for Achievement
in recognition of their "remarkable and inspiring" journey
from poverty in India to careers that have advanced
telecommunications and philanthropy. Raj Singh is a
1977 University of Maine graduate. The Singhs also
endowed a chair in the Department of Chemical Engineering
at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur where
he received a distinguished alumnus award in 2000.
Raj remains a trustee at Marymount University in Arlington
and serves on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce board of
directors.
Net worth: $1.2 billion
Confidence: A
STEPHEN M. CASE
McLean | Age: 48
Goodbye AOL, Hello Gratiscard. After
resigning in 2003 as chairman of AOL after its rocky
merger with Time Warner, Case has thrown himself into
new business ventures. His private investment firm,
Revolution LLC, has launched startups in health care,
hospitality and now, credit cards. Case's latest endeavor
is Gratiscard, which seeks to undercut fees charged
by credit-card giants Mastercard and Visa in an effort
to increase credit accessibility to low-income consumers.
Case isn't going the new project alone. AOL Vice-Chairman
Theodore Leonsis and former Secretary of the Treasury
Lawrence Summers sit on Gratiscard's board. Case was
reinstated as a billionaire this year by Forbes magazine.
In 2005, he bought Merrywood, the McLean childhood
home of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, for $25 million.
He supports charity through his Case Foundation, which
donated $5 million to the Clinton Global Initiative
to help bring clean water to sub-Saharan Africa. Case
also serves as chairman of the Accelerate Brain Cancer
Cure, a nonprofit dedicated to finding a cure for brain
cancer, a disease that killed Case's brother in 2002.
Net worth: $1 billion
Confidence: B
SMITH/KOGOD FAMILY
Crystal City and Washington
Charles E. Smith Commercial
Realty, a division of Vornado Realty Trust, continues
to be a major player in Washington, D.C.'s commercial
real estate market. It owns 15.9 million square feet
of office properties and manages 8 million square feet
of office and commercial space. In recent years, the
company renovated Crystal City, a popular office destination
that draws tenants wanting easy access to the nation's
capital. The company was started by Charles E. Smith
in 1946. Robert H. Smith, 78, and Robert P. Kogod,
75, continue to serve as directors for both Vorando
and Archstone-Smith, (a real estate investment trust
that the residential division of Charles E. Smith merged
with in 2001). Robert Smith is the son of the late
Charles E. Smith, who died in 1995. Kogod is Robert
Smith's son-in-law. Both men have given generously
to their alma maters, establishing the Robert H. Smith
School of Business at the University of Maryland and
the Kogod School of Business at American University.
Kogod also donated $25 million in 2004 to the Smithsonian
Institution and created the Robert & Arlene Kogod
Program on Aging at the Mayo Clinic in 2002.
Net worth: $1 billion
Confidence: A
CARL D. SILVER
Fredericksburg | Age: 81
The founder of real estate
developer Silver Cos. has turned the reins over to
his son, Larry. The private company continues to add
to its portfolio, which includes 11 million square
feet of commercial development and 50,000 residential
units. Silver's vision for the 2.4-million-square-foot
Celebrate Virginia in Fredericksburg now includes a
fourth hotel, a 139-room Hyatt Place. It will join
three Hilton properties in the mixed-use tourism and
conference center. Tax credits for the project, though,
remain in question with a recent denial of the credits
by the state Department of Taxation. Another new project
slated for Celebrate Virginia is WorldStreet Development,
a destination retail attraction where vendors can buy
space. It's scheduled to open in 2008. Philanthropy
is a main priority for Silver these days. The Silver
Foundation gave away $390,000 from May 2005 through
April 2006, including $222,000 to the American Red
Cross and Hurricane Katrina relief. His $2 million
contribution last year to the Moss Free Clinic in Fredericksburg
helped the outpatient medical center for the poor reach
its $10.2 million goal
Net worth: $800 million
Confidence: B
RICHARD D. FAIRBANK
McLean | Age: 56
Fairbank continues to be chairman and
CEO at Capital One, the credit card giant which diversified
by combining its nationally known name with a retail
banking franchise. But just as other banks have suffered
a downturn in profits as a result of mortgage-related
problems in the wake of a cooled down housing market,
so has Capital One. While revenue was up for the first
quarter of this year, the company posted lower profits,
which sent stock prices down and caused the company
to back off earnings projections of $7.40 to $7.80
a share to a range of $7 to $7.40 per share. What happens
to the stock effects Fairbank directly. Since 1997,
he has given up salary, bonus and other cash incentives
in exchange for options or performance-based shares.
Overall, he has made out pretty well over the past
five years, taking home more than $306 million in pay,
according to Forbes magazine. He owns more than 2.3
million shares outright and has unexercised-but-vested
options on another 5.9 million shares. By the end of
2006, Capital One had $85.8 billion in deposits and
$146.2 in managed loans. Fairbank is also a partner
in Washington, D.C.-based Lincoln Holdings LLC, which
owns the NBA's Washington Wizards, the Washington Capitals
pro hockey franchise, Washington's Verizon Center and
the Baltimore/Washington, D.C. Ticketmaster franchise.
Net worth: $750 million+
Confidence: B
FRANK BATTEN JR.
Norfolk | Age: 48
Chairman and CEO of Landmark Communications
Inc. The private company's key properties include The
Virginian-Pilot, The Roanoke Times and The Weather
Channel as well as television stations in Las Vegas
and Nashville. Batten's philanthropic efforts are channeled
through The Aimee & Frank Batten Jr. Foundation,
which donated more than $11 million to charity in 2005:
Largest donations were $2.4 million to All India Mission
and $2 million to Focus on the Family, a Christian
organization in Colorado Springs, Colo. Batten also
is president of the Landmark Communications Foundation,
which contributed more than $3 million in 2005, with
much of that amount going to local colleges. The company
has invested in several emerging businesses, such as
Continental Broadband Inc., a managed data network
services company, and Landmark Education Services in
Norfolk, which owns career schools focusing on allied
health.
Net worth: $700 million
Confidence: C
GOTTWALD FAMILY
Richmond
The Gottwald family owns significant stock
in three publicly traded Richmond companies - Albemarle
Corp., Tredegar Corp. and NewMarket Corp. William M.
Gottwald, 59, is chairman of Albemarle, a specialty
chemicals manufacturer. His father, Floyd D. Gottwald
Jr., 84, retired from the board in April, but will
continue serving as a director and chairman emeritus
with non-voting status. William and Floyd, along with
other Gottwalds, own more than 16.6 percent of Albemarle's
stock, valued at about $466 million. William Gottwald's
brother, John D. Gottwald, 52, is CEO of Tredegar,
which manufactures film and aluminum extrusions. The
Gottwalds own more than 20 percent of Tredegar's stock,
valued at about $117 million. Floyd's younger brother,
Bruce C. Gottwald, 73, is chairman of NewMarket, a
holding company for two fuel-additive manufacturers
- Afton Chemical Corp. and Ethyl Corp. In March, Bruce
co-hosted a fund-raiser for Republican former Gov.
Jim Gilmore's presidential exploratory campaign at
the Richmond Marriott in March with former Secretary
of the U. S. Treasury John W. Snow and CCA Industries
Chairman Bill Goodwin. Bruce's son, Thomas E. "Teddy" Gottwald,
46, is president and CEO of NewMarket. Thomas and his
wife, Ann Parker Gottwald, made news in 2006 with their
purchase of the $3.7 million, 4.4-acre Windsor House
property in Windsor Farms. Thomas and Bruce Gottwald
control 10.7 percent of NewMarket stock and the stock
solely owned by Thomas and Bruce is valued at $70.9
million.
Net worth: $675 million+
Confidence: B
P.WESLEY "WES" FOSTER
JR.
McLean | Age: 73
Overshadowing the groundbreaking of the Long & Foster
Cos. new 282,200-square-foot Chantilly headquarters last
year was the cooling of the residential real estate market
after five booming years. While the company handled $65.1
billion worth of real estate, mortgage, insurance and
settlement services in 2006 - a 2 percent drop - the
dollar volume of home sales at the nation's largest privately
owned real estate company was off 16 percent for the
year compared with 2005 records. The decline led to some
belt tightening, which included axing a companywide picnic
and cutting an advertising campaign by 75 percent. Continued
growth came in part from expansion. The company entered
the Raleigh, N.C., market by buying the region's largest
residential real estate brokerage, Fonville Morisey Realty,
which posted $2.6 billion in closings last year. Foster
was named one of real estate's 25 most "influential
thought leaders" by Realtor Magazine in December.
The 1956 Virginia Military Institute graduate also was
recognized for his generosity during a halftime ceremony
at the renamed Foster Stadium at the school.
Net worth $500 million+
Confidence: C
THEODORE J. LEONSIS
McLean | Age: 51
Stepped down as president of AOL's audience-based
businesses in January but will continue to serve as
vice chairman of AOL LLC for two more years. Got into
filmmaking last year with the making of "Nanking," a
documentary about the 1937 slaughter of 300,000 Chinese
citizens by the Japanese Army. It debuted at the Sundance
Film Festival and won the grand jury prize. Any profits
from "Nanking" will go toward creating a
foundation to benefit the victims and their children.
Coining the phrase "filmanthropy," Leonsis
says he will finance more films that focus on human
rights and generate discussion and charitable giving.
He's also making outside investments again, most recently
teaming up with former AOL executive Steve Case to
start Gratiscard, a credit card aimed at giving low-income
clients more access to credit. In what has been a year
of firsts, Leonsis started a personal blog in 2007
called "Ted's Take." He continues as majority
owner of the Washington Capitals hockey team and the
Washington Mystics WNBA team, and he's a minority owner
of the Washington Wizards NBA team. Ownership and investment
in the teams over the past seven years has boosted
his net worth "a minimum of $50 million," reports
Leonsis. He's active in local charities, including
Hoop Dreams, Best Buddies and Youthaids. His Leonsis
Foundation focuses on children's activities.
Net worth: $475 million
Confidence: A
DWIGHT C. SCHAR
McLean | Age: 65
After stepping down in 2005 as CEO,
the chairman of NVR Inc. has been branching out. He
became a director of theme park operator Six Flags
Inc., and he owns about 15 percent of the Washington
Redskins. The team's chief owner, Daniel Snyder, is
Six Flags' chairman and a business partner in another
deal. Schar, Snyder and Six Flags CEO Mark Shapiro
partnered in 2006 to create First and Goal LLC to back
Tom Cruise's production company, although they have
the right to back out of the deal in two years. Despite
a downturn in the real estate market, NVR had a decent
2006 with consolidated revenues of more than $6 billion,
up 17 percent over 2005 revenues. Schar exercised $59.4
million worth of stock options. He owns 542,000 shares,
or about 9.4 percent of the home building and home
mortgage company. A major donor to Republican campaigns,
he hosted a January 2006 reception Bush attended for
GOP donors at the oceanfront Palm Beach estate he purchased
from billionaire Ron Perelman and actress Ellen Barkin
for a reported $70 million. He also owns a home valued
at more than $7 million in McLean.
Net worth: $445 million
Confidence B
C. DANIEL CLEMENTE
McLean | Age: 70
Testing his hand at a wide array of
business endeavors, this lawyer-turned-consultant-turned-real
estate mogul keeps cash flowing in from several channels.
He is chairman of Clemente Development Co., a real
estate firm that owns office space worth approximately
$300 million in Northern Virginia. Clemente also is
founder of Community Bank and Trust in Springfield
and First Commercial Bank in Arlington. Clemente and
Clemente Development have contributed significant sums
to Republican candidates. Clemente is also a family
trustee for Cargill Inc.
Net worth: $410 million
Confidence: C
ESTES FAMILY
Richmond
The Estes family mourned the loss of Robey
W. Estes Sr. in September. The former president of
Estes Express Lines was the son of W.W. Estes, who
founded the company in 1931. It is the largest family-owned,
less-than-truckload trucking company in the nation.
Estes Sr. passed away in his Richmond home at the age
of 85. Since then, Estes Express Line has been named
National Champion in its class by readers of Logistics
Management magazine. This year will be a year of expansion
for the company, headed by CEO Robey W. Estes Jr. Currently
boasting 13,500 employees and 185 terminals spanning
46 states, the company plans to spend $30 million this
year on new terminals and upgraded technology.
Net worth: $400 million+
Confidence: C
ROBINS FAMILY
Richmond
In 2006 the family's Robins Foundation disbursed
$6.7 million in grants, continuing the family's history
of philanthropy. Recipients included the North Richmond
Partnership for Families, the Healing Place, Valentine
Richmond History Center and the Virginia Historical
Society. The late E. Claiborne Robins Sr., who headed
A.H. Robins Co., began the family's philanthropic efforts
in the late 1960s with a $50 million gift to the University
of Richmond, his alma mater. Matriarch Lora Robins,
son E. Claiborne Robins Jr. and daughters Ann Carol
Robins Marchant and Betty Robins Porter serve as directors
of the family's foundation. Claiborne Jr. also runs
E.C. Robins International Inc., which continues the
family's interest in pharmaceuticals with its ECR Pharmaceuticals
subsidiary. The company, with 21 employees, also has
interests in wine imports and an air charter. For the
third time since 1995, it was selected for the Rising
25, a list of the fastest-growing privately held companies
in the Richmond area.
Net worth: $400 million+
Confidence: C
MCGLOTHLIN FAMILY
Grundy and Bristol
James W. McGlothlin, chairman and
CEO of The United Co. of Bristol, made headlines earlier
this year for revoking a $12 million pledge to the
College of William & Mary's capital campaign, the
largest donation in the school's history. McGlothlin,
a W&M law school alum and former member of its
board of visitors, was protesting a decision by the
college President Gene R. Nichol to remove a brass
cross from permanent display in Wren Chapel in an effort
to make the chapel more inviting to non-Christians.
After the fallout, Nichol formed a religious committee
that decided to reinstate the cross in a prominent
place in the chapel. A college spokesperson said in
early April that the campaign was still short the $12
million pledge but would not confirm that McGlothlin
was the donor who had withdrawn. In 2005, McGlothlin
and his wife, Frances, donated $140 million worth of
artwork and funds to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,
where Frances is a member of the board. The couple
has homes in Texas and Virginia. McGlothlin's family
made its fortune from coal. The privately held United
Coal Co. is one of the nation's largest coal suppliers,
although it has other interests as well. James' brother,
Thomas D. McGlothlin, continues as president of the
family's foundation, which had nearly $24 million in
assets as of late 2005. The foundation offers the second
largest individual teaching award in the nation. Another
brother, Michael D. McGlothlin, serves as the foundation's
secretary and James serves as treasurer.
Net worth: $350 million+ *
Confidence: C
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