Harry Helmsley

Harry Helmsley

Harry B. Helmsley (March 4, 1909 – January 4, 1997) was an American businessman. He built a company that became one of the biggest property holders in the United States. Part of his company's portfolio at one time included the Empire State Building, The Helmsley Palace, the Park Lane Hotel, the Helmsley Middletowne Hotel, the New York Helmsley Hotel (also known as the New York Harley), The Helmsley Windsor Hotel, the St. Moritz (now the Ritz-Carlton), the Carlton House hotels, the Harley Hotel chain and The Helmsley Building in New York City.

His wife, Leona Helmsley — notoriously called the "Queen of Mean" — was convicted in 1989 on federal charges of tax evasion in a celebrated trial. Harry had been indicted along with Leona, but it was determined that he was far too ill physically to stand trial and too weak mentally to be capable of assisting his attorneys in his own defense, one of the legal standards which allows crimes to go unprosecuted on the grounds of mental defect of the defendant.

In 1980, Mr. Helmsley received The Hundred Year Association of New York's Gold Medal Award "in recognition of outstanding contributions to the City of New York."

Read more about Harry Helmsley:  Early Career, Death

Famous quotes containing the words harry and/or helmsley:

    Money certainly brings out the best in you, doesn’t it?
    Mark Hanna, and Nathan Hertz. Harry Archer (William Hudson)

    Only the little people pay taxes.
    —Leona Helmsley (b. 1921)