“Our greatest responsibility
is to be good ancestors.”

- Jonas Salk

Salk Institute for Biological Studies - “Our greatest responsibility
is to be good ancestors.” - - Jonas Salk

Imparting a Legacy


Audrey Geisel

Audrey Geisel (1921-2018)

The Salk Institute and the greater San Diego community lost a good friend recently. Audrey Geisel, the fun-loving, dedicated philanthropist who was a founding Symphony donor and attended every year until the last few due to declining health, passed away at age 97 on December 19, 2018.

Born Audrey Stone in Chicago on August 14, 1921, she went on to graduate from Indiana University and have an early career as a nurse. Geisel and her first husband, Dr. E. Grey Dimond, and their two daughters moved to San Diego in 1960.

She later married Theodor Geisel, more famously known as Dr. Seuss, in 1968.

Geisel was a generous supporter of numerous charitable organizations and causes. She and Theodor Geisel were long-time La Jolla residents who valued art and ventures that benefitted humanity. There is no better evidence of the latter than her creation of the Audrey Geisel Chair in Biomedical Science, established at Salk in 2012, which was first held by Professor Edward Callaway and is now held by Professor Gerald Shadel.

“She was a generous person with a warm and loving soul,” says Rebecca Newman, Salk’s vice president of External Relations. “She did so much for the Institute that we would not have been able to accomplish otherwise and her imprint on our success will be seen for years to come. She only supported institutions she truly believed in, so it is a real honor for Salk to count her as one of our great benefactors.”

Geisel, who was friends with Institute founder Jonas Salk and his wife, famed artist Françoise Gilot, cherished her support of Salk. She was a founding donor to the President’s Club and founding member, in 1978, of the Women’s Association of the Salk Institute, which helped increase awareness about the importance of basic research and provided support for the Salk Scholars Fund.

“One thing that she hated to miss was a good party and the Symphony at Salk is one of the great ones,” says Judith Morgan, a Salk supporter, friend of Geisel and author of Dr. Seuss and Mr. Geisel. “I shall miss her.”

Longtime Salk supporters Irwin and Joan Jacobs agree, sharing that it was always special to see Geisel at Symphony.

“We met Audrey shortly after we came here in 1966 and it was a pleasure to be with her because she had such a bubbly and welcoming personality,” Salk Trustee and Board Chair Emeritus Irwin Jacobs says. “It was always fun to meet her at Symphony at Salk and talk about the music.”

In addition to supporting Salk, she gave to other local organizations including UC San Diego (the main campus library is named for Audrey and Theodor Geisel), The Zoological Society of San Diego, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the La Jolla Playhouse and the Old Globe Theatre, among many others.

“I had the wonderful experience of working with Audrey and Ted Geisel for over forty years,” says Claudia Prescott, Dr. Seuss Foundation president. “They meant a great deal to me and I learned so much working side by side with them.”

A thoughtful and conscientious donor, Geisel met regularly with her associates. Karen and Don Cohn (a Salk trustee) recall Geisel’s notoriously early breakfast meetings fondly, noting how Geisel would pull up in her Cadillac—complete with personalized “Grinch” license plates—to conduct business at one of La Jolla’s iconic restaurants.

“You would meet her at 7:30 a.m. and had to have a pink grapefruit and breakfast before conducting business,” Karen Cohn says. “Then you would make your request to her and she would usually say yes. It was always an honor to have her involved in a project.”

“Audrey was such a strong force, with a great sense of humor,” Don Cohn adds. “She had a purpose and she exercised it beautifully.”

Geisel’s positive nature and advocacy for the arts and sciences ensures that her influence lives on—both in San Diego and beyond.