The body of a 102-year-old St. Louis builder and philanthropist and leader of the region’s Jewish community was found the Missouri River on June 2, more than two weeks after a witness saw an elderly man jump from a bridge.
The body of I.E. Millstone was found by a barge worker near the St. Charles riverfront.
On May 16, a witness saw an elderly man jump from the Daniel Boone Bridge into the Missouri River. A vehicle belonging to Millstone’s caretaker was parked nearby. Water Patrol crews searched for several days.
Millstone’s company built dozens of St. Louis landmarks, including the old Busch Stadium, the fountains near Union Station and the original double-deck Highway 40 through downtown. He donated millions to Jewish projects and for causes related to education and the arts. He helped build housing for refugees in Israel in 1948.
“He was a man who was most concerned about making a difference in life by helping others,” said Rabbi Howard Kaplansky of St. Louis’ United Hebrew Congregation, where a sanctuary and library bear Millstone’s name. “He was known and respected and admired for his wisdom, his vision. He was looked to as a patriarch of the Jewish community.”
Despite his age, Millstone remained relatively active, and he spoke on May 3 at the St. Louis Jewish Community Center.
However, close friend William H. Danforth said age was taking a toll. Millstone was having difficulty carrying out normal functions and sleeping, and his emotional stability “began to fray.”
“He wanted to remain in charge of his own destiny,” Danforth, a longtime Washington University chancellor and brother of former Republican Sen. John Danforth, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Millstone entered Washington University at age 16. Two years after graduating in 1927 with an engineering degree he founded his construction company, now known as Millstone Bangert Inc. — ap