Loyola to receive $6.3 million bequest to fund opportunities for graduate students
Anna and James Lambdin, MSF ’83, have selected 鶹ѡ as the beneficiary
of $6.3 million from their estate. Their bequest gift will support fellowships for
graduate students in the Sellinger School of Business and Management and provide fellowship
assistance for graduate students in the speech-language-hearing sciences department
in Loyola College of Arts and Sciences.
The gift will be the largest in University history.
The Lambdins’ support of the speech-language-hearing sciences department will increase the impact of the Ann Lambdin Beetz Huntington's Disease Memorial Fellowship Fund for Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences. The Lambdins created that fund in memory of Jim’s sister, Ann Lambdin Beetz, M.S.’75, who taught at Loyola for 30 years before she passed away in 2018.
“My family has a number of connections with Loyola,” said Jim Lambdin. “I wanted to create a fund in honor of my sister, Ann Lambdin Beetz. Ann had such a following with her students, and when I met some of them, I could tell she had developed personal relationships with them and had left an impression on the University.”
The Lambdins also made a separate $100,000 gift to establish the Anna and Jim Lambdin Fellowship Fund, an endowed fund that provides fellowship assistance to graduate students enrolled in the Sellinger School of Business and Management. Their bequest will grow that fund and ensure its posterity.
“Forward-looking gifts such as this one from the Lambdins allow us to envision the
future of Loyola and consider how the work we do can bring that vision to life,” said
Rev. Brian F. Linnane, S.J., president. “This transformational bequest will shape
a legacy of graduate learning at Loyola.”
A Calvert Hall graduate, Jim Lambdin earned his master’s degree in finance from Loyola
in 1983. He is the president & CEO of Lambdin Development Company, a real estate development
company focusing on residential and commercial land development, commercial construction,
and management of investment properties in Harford and Cecil counties.
“I’ve benefited greatly from the education I received at Loyola,” said Jim Lambdin. “My wife, Anna, and I consider ourselves to be very fortunate, and we want to leave behind a legacy that could benefit other young graduate students who are working hard to further their careers.”
While attending graduate school at Loyola, Jim Lambdin also worked fulltime at Ernst & Young. He went on to work as the vice president of First National Bank of Maryland (which would later become M&T Bank) from 1978 - 1987. He attributes the skills he learned at the University to helping him advance his career and climb the corporate ladder.
Jim and Anna Lambdin, who are passionate about philanthropy, live in Fair Hill, Cecil County. In addition to being Jim’s business partner, Anna had a career in fundraising for non-profit organizations and recently retired from the ARC Northern Chesapeake Region. She is currently a full-time community volunteer. They have set up additional scholarship funds at two local community colleges to provide funding to nursing students. Jim Lambdin recently stepped down as the vice chairman for the University of Maryland/Upper Chesapeake Health System Inc. having served 25 years on their Board of Directors.
He is a member of the Harford Community College Foundation, has been a member of the Upper Chesapeake Health Foundation Board since 1999 and has served on several other community and civic organizations throughout his career.
“Through our gift to Loyola, Anna and I hope that others who are able will be compelled to give back,” he said.