Ted Lerner, Nats owner, father of White Flint, Tyson’s Corner, dies at 97

D.C.-born real estate mogul gave millions for Jewish education

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The Washington Nationals celebrate their 2019 World Series victory with owner Ted Lerner. Photo by Jeff Malet Photography

Ted Lerner, who died Feb. 12 at age 97, was as famously workaholic as he was shy.

So it was a big deal when Washingtonian magazine scored an interview with him in 2007, the year after he assumed ownership of the Nationals, the first baseball team in Washington, D.C., since 1971.

In the interview, Lerner described his 18-hour days building up a real estate empire of malls and other developments that has shaped D.C. and its suburbs. He also mentioned the two things that could pull him away from his work: a ball game, and Jewish holidays.

“I just worked,” he said. “I took off for Jewish holidays and a [football] game or two.” But he said his true love was baseball, a game that brought him back to the days of his youth. “In Washington in the 1930s, that’s all there was — baseball,” he said.

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He recalled that as a teenager, he would aim to sell enough Saturday Night Evening Posts to afford the streetcar to the Senators’ Griffith Stadium (price: 3 cents) and the cheapest ticket (25 cents).

He managed to get a gig as an adolescent usher to watch the 1937 All-Star game at the stadium — “when Dizzy Dean was hit on the foot by a line drive,” he told the magazine. “He was never the same after that.” (The injury effectively ended the legendary pitcher’s career.)

When Major League Baseball decided in 2004 that the Montreal Expos’ new home would be in Washington, he secured meetings with the team’s management for himself and his heirs. His son and two daughters, and their spouses, were his sacrosanct inner circle.

Lerner did not schmooze at Major League Baseball confabs and did not mount a publicity campaign. But his seriousness led him to beat out seven other bids for the Nationals.The payoff for that decision came in 2015, when the stadium he built to house the team hosted Washington’s first All-Star Game since 1969. Lerner brought a memento to that match: the program of the 1937 All-Star Game, with his notations scribbled in the margins.

One aspect of the job Lerner never got used to was public speaking. His high school yearbook dubbed him “Silent Ted.”

Alongside baseball, Lerner made his name by turning Northern Virginia into a locus for shopping. The massive mall complex he built from dairy farms, Tysons Corner, gained international renown. His family business, Lerner Enterprises, is the largest private landowner in the region.

Lerner died at his home in Chevy Chase of complications from pneumonia. He was born and raised in Washington, D.C., to Orthodox Jewish parents. His father immigrated from British Mandatory Palestine, and his mother came from Lithuania.

His extensive charitable giving included donations to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and his synagogue, Ohr Kodesh Congregation.

The campus of the Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School in Rockville is named in his and wife’s honor after a multi-million dollar donation to the school, according to jewage.org.

The lunch room in the Melvin J. Berman Hebrew Academy was donated the Lerner Family. Along with the Lerner Center at Hebrew University in Israel. The family donated the theater at Imagination Stage in Bethesda.

The family has also donated the Lerner Family Health and Wellness Center and Theodore Lerner Hall at George Washington University in the District, where Lerner earned his bachelor’s and law degrees.

“Headlines about the loss of Ted Lerner will inevitably focus on his tremendous impact on the fabric of Washington, from shopping malls to Nats Park,” Adena Kirstein, executive director of GW Hillel, told GW Today. “However, in my heart and for all of us here at GW Hillel, his memory will be a blessing because of the model he set in other arenas. He had a deep and lasting commitment to family, a long-term investment in building vibrant Jewish communal life, and a giving spirit that impacted many corners of our city.”

After he purchased the Nationals, the team continued to grow its local fan base but took years for the team to become a contender. General Manager Jim Bowden explained the strategy to Sports Illustrated in 2012.

“The Lerners made it clear: We’re not in a hurry,” Bowden said. “We want to build this through just like we build our buildings, from the bottom up. We don’t build the penthouse first.”

The strategy paid off. A year after Lerner, age 93, handed his son Mark control of the team in 2018, the Nationals won the World Series.

“There were generations of baseball fans who grew up in D.C. without a team,” Mark Lerner told The New York Times at the time. “Now they have one, and one that won a World Series. To put it into context, my father was born one year after we won the last World Series. That says it all.”

Ted Lerner was elected to the Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington Sports Hall of Fame in 2007.

Beloved husband of 71 years to Annette Morris Lerner; loving father of Mark D. Lerner (Judy) and Debra Lerner Cohen (Edward) of Washington, D.C., and Marla Lerner Tanenbaum (Robert) of Bethesda. He is survived by nine grandchildren, Lauren Lerner Naft (Noah), Jonathan A. Lerner (Ilyse), Jacob M. Lerner (Dahlia), Jaclyn Lerner Cohen (Will Rapaport), Michael L. Cohen (Tali), Stefanie Lerner Cohen (Jake Greenberg), Eden Lerner Tanenbaum, Haley Lerner Tanenbaum (Matt Rosenthal) and Grant L. Tanenbaum (Audrey); and eleven great-grandchildren.

His family still owns the team.

“I never could have dreamed of owning a baseball team,” Lerner said in 2015, receiving the Urban Land Institute Washington’s lifetime achievement award, when he contrasted his style with that of another famous real estate developer.

“And I never could have imagined over my life that I would build over 20 million square feet of commercial and residential space, and very few people would know my name,” he said. “I guess I have a different approach to real estate development than Donald Trump. And I’m fine with that.” ■

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

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