Janet Wilbur Prindle collection
Collection Statement
This collection includes a photograph and two articles about Janet Wilbur Prindle.
Dates
- Creation: circa 1958; 2025
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
Legal title, literary rights, including copyright reside with the creators of the documents or their legal heirs and assigns. All requests to publish or quote must be submitted to the DePauw University Archives and Special Collections. The publisher must also obtain permission from the copyright holder.
Biographical Note
Originally from Cleveland, Janet Prindle Seidler followed her sister Anne Prindle Johnson ’54 and brother-in-law David S. Johnson ’53 to DePauw, graduating in 1958 with a major in history. During her time on campus, she was actively involved in numerous student organizations, including the Delta Delta Delta sorority, the Panhellenic Council and the National Student Educational Association.
Following graduation, Janet began the pursuit of a career in investment management. Despite many obstacles along the way in a field few women at the time pursued, her perseverance and devotion ultimately prevailed, setting her apart as a leader in a profession occupied almost exclusively by men. She held portfolio management positions with several financial firms, including Bessemer Trust Company, E.F. Hutton and Moody’s Investor Services.
In 1977, she joined the firm Neuberger Berman, where she championed investments in companies that valued their employees, did not harm the environment and did not sell tobacco, alcohol, weapons or nuclear power. She went on to manage the firm’s Socially Responsive Fund, first launched in 1994, and she earned the distinction of becoming the firm’s first woman to be named partner.
Even after her retirement in 2004, Prindle Seidler’s professional influence continued to have a profound impact. Her commitment to conscientious investing has shaped the practice of many investment firms throughout the financial industry, and she is widely considered to be one of the pioneers behind the growth of Socially Responsible Investing (SRI).
In addition to her support for ethics and ethical business practices, Janet was committed to many philanthropic causes. She was an advocate for career advancement for women and an active mentor for young professionals. She was a patron of Carnegie Hall, and served on the boards of the Orchestra of St. Luke’s and the Atlantic Classical Orchestra in New York, NY. As a part of her work with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, she established The Janet Prindle Seidler Future Audiences Fund with a transformational gift in 2001. She was also a trustee of the Healthcare Chaplaincy and a founding member of the City Church in New York City.
Janet focused a generous portion of her philanthropic support toward her alma mater. She joined DePauw’s Alumni Board in 1983, and the Board of Trustees in 1990. As a Board of Trustee member, she served the university for several decades, becoming an advisory trustee in 2004 and named a life trustee in 2022. She was also the recipient of the Old Gold Goblet in 1997 and received an honorary Doctorate of Public Service from DePauw in 2013.
In addition to sharing her experience and expertise through her service to DePauw, she was an ardent financial supporter of DePauw throughout her lifetime. Janet helped establish an endowed chair for the Department of Women’s Studies, now the Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, in 1990 and provided the funding for the construction of the Janet Prindle Institute for Ethics building, which opened in 2007. In 2014, she made an additional commitment for the institute’s programming, at which time she stated, “The importance of critical thinking about ethical issues was at the forefront of my mind when we established the institute, and I feel even stronger about that need today.”
Since then, the Prindle Institute for Ethics has carried out its unique, national mission from its welcoming headquarters adjacent to DePauw’s Nature Park. Community members from DePauw and around the country connect in person at the institute and through its media platforms to advance thoughtful and reasoned discussions of the quandaries of humanity. The institute fosters ethics and moral reasoning education, dialogue and research, not only for DePauw students, but also for teachers and leaders in business and non-profit organizations.
Janet's impact on DePauw will endure for generations, in the physical architecture on campus and through the university’s ongoing legacy of intellectual and ethical inquiry. Throughout her many decades of service and support, she has faithfully ensured that thousands of students will be equipped to navigate personal, professional and societal challenges with a strong sense of ethical awareness and moral responsibility.
Source: DePauw Stories, “DePauw mourns Janet Prindle Seidler ’58, founder of The Prindle Institute for Ethics.” DePauw University website. Posted on: February 21, 2025.
Extent
0.02 Cubic Feet (1 file folder)
Language of Materials
English
Subject
Genre / Form
- Title
- Janet Wilbur Prindle collection
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Paxton Stephenson; Bethany Fiechter
- Date
- 2025/03/05
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- Description is in English.
Repository Details
Part of the Archives of DePauw University and Indiana United Methodism Repository
Roy O. West Library
405 S. Indiana St.
Greencastle Indiana 46135 United States
archives@depauw.edu