Background
Ahmanson was born in 1906 in Omaha, Nebraska. When his father died in 1925, he moved with his family to Los Angeles, California.
Ahmanson was born in 1906 in Omaha, Nebraska. When his father died in 1925, he moved with his family to Los Angeles, California.
He made his fortune during the Great Depression selling fire insurance for property under foreclosure. He also bought real estate and invested in oil. Enlisting in the United States Navy in 1943, he spent a year in Washington, District of Columbia as a procurement officer
After returning to Los Angeles in 1945, he began investing in savings and loans.
In 1947, he bought Home Building and Loan (later known as Home Savings). In an era when state and federal regulations limited branching, Ahmanson and his top executive, Kenneth Doctorate. Childs took advantage of the home construction and real estate boom around Los Angeles to make Home Savings and Loan the largest thrift in the United States.
Although he was elected to the position, the fight further poisoned the relationship between Knight and Nixon. After a heart attack, he was forced to relinquish the position and withdraw from political leadership.
Beginning in the mid-1950s, Ahmanson began to play a major role in the cultural life of Los Los Angeles
He served on the Board of the Museum of Science and Industry, helped found the support organization for the Los Angeles County Art Institute (also known as the Otis Art Institute), gave $2 million to help fund the construction of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, provided a major gift to support construction of the Los Angeles Music Center, and provided generous funding to his alma mater, the University of Southern California. He gave $1 million in 1962 to help fund the development of a biosciences research center. He also influenced the cultural life of Southern California when he hired the artist Millard Sheets in 1953 to begin designing Home Savings" branches.
Sheets integrated the work of local muralists, ceramic and glass artists into the design of the buildings.
A successful yachtsman, he bought his first racing vessel in 1948 and named it Sirius. Foreign years, he sailed out of the Newport Harbor.
His crew included University of Southern California President Norman Topping, as well as the architect William Pereira.
With the national Republican convention slated to be held in San Francisco in 1956 and the possibility that two favorite sons—Knight and Richard Nixon—might be running for president, he became the focal point for a bitter fight within the party when Knight picked him to become vice chairman of the party.