Ann Kaplan, a social worker, was deep into her studies for a Ph.D. in sociomedical sciences when fate intervened.
She accidentally left the voluminous notes for her dissertation in the back of a New York City taxi. Shock and disappointment eventually gave way to the realization that she hadn’t been that happy on her career path, anyway.
Switching gears, Kaplan studied business, joined
She shared in the bounty of its 1999 initial public offering — a time when partners called “John” still outnumbered female partners — and left in 2003 to pursue philanthropy, academia and helping other successful women manage their wealth.
Kaplan died at a New York City hospital on Sept. 14 after a long illness, said her son, Andrew Fippinger. She was 78.
“Ann was one of the most talented partners at
“She was a no-nonsense kind of person — I loved that about her,” said Janet Hanson, who founded the influential
Hired in 1977 and assigned to municipal finance, Kaplan was named a
Reporting on Kaplan’s promotion, The Bond Buyer said she had the distinction of being the firm’s first female partner to rise from its municipal finance division. “It’s taken a while for women to move up through the firm,” she said. “But
About one in five partners are women now, a figure that the firm has said is not good enough and it’s trying to improve.
Kaplan leaned into her status as an early female leader in finance. She was most recently a partner at Circle Wealth Management, a New York-based adviser serving affluent female entrepreneurs.
Female Focus
At Columbia University, where she taught and served on the board, she was a
“If there’s a centerpiece of the story of my mom’s life, it’s about empowering women — through mentorship, primarily, but also through investments and philanthropic pursuits,” her son, the dean of faculty at Horace Mann School in the Bronx, said in an interview.
Kaplan shared in the windfall as one of 221 partners when
Kaplan’s advocacy for women made a “significant” impact at the firm, said Jacki Zehner, another in the select group of women who reached partner before
Hank Paulson, who was
Chicago Native
Ann Frances Kaplan was born on Aug. 27, 1946, in Chicago, the first of four children. Her mother was the former Charlotte Larsen. Her father, Jerry Kaplan, was a college dropout who used seed money from an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer for whom he worked to open Free Press, an independent publisher of sociological texts.
The family moved to Westport, Connecticut, shortly before Ann’s teenage years.
After earning a bachelor’s degree in 1967 from Smith College in Massachusetts, she studied social work and got her master’s from Columbia in 1972. She chose that line of work in part due to the influence of her father, a leftist intellectual who “would have, in her telling, looked down on business and finance,” her son said.
Following her break from social work and sociomedical sciences, she earned a master’s in business administration from Columbia in 1977. She went straight to
She rose to become
In 1980 she married Robert Fippinger, a securities lawyer who later served as
Second Act
In 2000, Kaplan
After leaving the firm in 2003, she founded Circle Financial Group, a wealth management membership organization. There, she and 11 other successful mid-career businesswomen would analyze the markets and debate strategy.
Being part of such a group “allows you to hear different opinions,” Kaplan said in 2013, and she likened it to training for a marathon: “When it’s organized, when you know you have to show up on a certain day, people tend to do it.”
Kaplan was its first client and became a partner. “She was really interested in helping women understand their money and not just sign the papers their husbands handed them,” her son said.
At her alma mater, Smith College, Kaplan’s name is on the
“Ann was a trailblazer,” said George Walker, the longtime CEO of Neuberger Berman who was a partner with Kaplan at