Count and Countess de Hoernle


The Count and Countess de Hoernle were a philanthropic couple who made many major donations to arts, educational, and social agencies, primarily in the Boca Raton, Florida area. Their names are seen on more than 50 buildings in the area. Their titles are from the Knights of Malta. The Countess said that the importance of the titles was that they made it easier to raise money.

Adolfe de Hoernle

Adolfe de Hoernle was born in Pforzheim, Black Forest, Germany. He earned his degree as an engineer in 1923 and came to the United States in 1926. He created his fortune as creator and owner of the Stewart Stamping Corporation of Yonkers, New York, a metal stamping company. He sold the company and retired in 1965. He suffered a stroke in 1990.

Henrietta Rach Hoernle

Henrietta Rach was born in Karlsruhe, Germany, the daughter of musicians. She came to the United States in 1931. They were married on October 26, 1950, and they settled in Bronxville, N.Y., where they raised two daughters. He was her third husband. She was an avid bridge enthusiast.

Their philanthropy

Over the course of three decades, with the Countess taking the more public role as a leader or board member of a host of charity foundations, the Count followed her guidance in donating millions of dollars of his fortune. Recipients in New York included the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, the Isabella Home for the Aged in New York City, and Lawrence Hospital in Bronxville, where the east wing is named The Hoernle Pavilion.
The largest amounts were focused on projects in Boca Raton, Florida, where they retired permanently in 1989 after nine years of splitting their time between Boca Raton and their home in Bronxville. Organizations benefitting from their generosity include the Boca Raton Museum of Art, the Boca Raton Community Hospital, the Caldwell Theater, an annual nursing scholarship for migrant workers at Florida Atlantic University, the local Association for Retarded Citizens, and The Haven, a home for neglected children. The couple financed the construction of Lynn University's Count and Countess de Hoernle Sports and Cultural Center with a $2.5 million donation, and their names are on two other Lynn buildings: Count and Countess de Hoernle Residence Hall and de Hoernle International Center. His funds helped build the Countess de Hoernle Student Life Center on the West Palm Beach campus of Keiser University, and the Count de Hoernle Pavilion in Boca's Mizner Park. Henrietta bought the then-abandoned Florida East Coast Railway station in Boca Raton, which after their $500,000 donation for renovation became the Boca Express Train Museum, "as a birthday present for her husband", whose name it bears. Also bearing his name is the Dehoernle Alzheimer's Pavilion in Deerfield Beach, Florida, to which he was moved five days before he died. The Countess paid $1,000,000 for the naming rights to the statue of Flossy in Mizner Park, which she named for her friend Florence "Flossy" Keesely.
They are buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens North in Pompano Beach, Florida. They are survived by their daughters Diana Burgess, of New York, and Carol Wagman, of York, Pennsylvania.

Honors

In 1994, the couple were given a key to the city of Boca by then-Mayor Bill T. Smith. A statue of the couple, created by artist & sculptor Yaacov Heller, is located in Mizner Park. It lists 42 buildings named either after the Count, Countess, or both, and, said the artist, "she continued to donate money after those statues were put up."