Oral history of Michael Bloomberg

General

Abstract

Michael Bloomberg, born February 14, 1942 in Boston, Massachusetts, was Mayor of New York City from 2002 to 2013. Bloomberg attended Johns Hopkins, receiving a B.S. in electrical engineering in 1964, and Harvard Business School, receiving an MBA in 1966. Bloomberg then worked on Wall Street at Salomon Brothers before founding his own company named Market Systems, which eventually became the highly successful and eponymous Bloomberg L. P. in 1987. Bloomberg became Mayor of New York City in 2002, shortly after the attacks of September 11, 2001. He is also a noted philanthropist through his Bloomberg Philanthropies Foundation, which has donated extensively to Johns Hopkins University among many others. The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health is named in his honor. In this oral history, Bloomberg discusses his student days at Hopkins in the 1960s and his philanthropic relationship with Hopkins. This oral history is part of the Mame Warren oral histories series.
Title Language
Dates

Date Published

1999-11-17
Publisher
Publisher Country
Language
Identifiers

Collection Number

MS.0404

DSpace Item ID

793dadfb-291c-4002-9bcb-2d6e4b02276d
Resources
Resource Type
Sound

Extent

00:37:46 hh:mm:ss
Contributor
Interviewer (ivr): Warren, Mame, 1950-
Interviewee (ive): Bloomberg, Michael
Copyright and Use
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Audio

Unique ID

24a9767d-be59-4a7d-933c-ec222b59a191