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1674-1 Jacobs Family 2 of 64, 2 Terms mh GRACE JACOBS, SOCIALITE, HOTEL DEVELOPER'S WIDOW, AT 85 03/10/1993 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1993, The Miami Herald DATE: Wednesday, March 10, 1993 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 4B LENGTH: 46 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Grace Jacobs (n) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DONNA GEHRKE Herald Staff Writer MEMO: DEATHS GRACE JACOBS, SOCIALITE, HOTEL DEVELOPER'S WIDOW, AT 85 Grace Jacobs mixed with the likes of Al Jolson, Jimmy Durante and Jack Benny at the posh Tarleton Hotel in Miami Beach. Her death Sunday marked another end to a glamorous era of Miami Beach history. Jacobs was 85. She married into the Jacobs family, pioneers who started some of the most elegant hotels -- including the Tarleton -- on Miami Beach. Jacobs' husband, Albert, was the quiet, behind-the-scenes, power. In 1958, he and his brother, Walter, built the Dupont Plaza Hotel in downtown Miami for the then-princely sum of $11 million. It was the beginning of the new Miami skyline. Amid the excitement, Grace Jacobs entertained hundreds -- from Jolson to Joseph Cotten -- and ran major charity fund- raising drives. "She was quite a lady," said her son, Carl. "Very classy, very strong-willed, very powerful woman. She had a great impact on people. She was extraordinarily charming." He said his mother raised money for Brandeis University. She served as president of the Brandeis University Women's Committee of Greater Miami. She also helped Mount Sinai Medical Center and the Hebrew Home for the Aged. Jacobs was a career woman with a family. Before she married, in 1941, she served as creative director for her brother's advertising company in Hartford, Conn., and helped edit a newspaper on conservation. "That was before the word ecology was used," said her son. After her husband died in 1964, Grace Jacobs started a new career. In her 60s, she took over her late brother's automotive supply business in Hartford. "She was a female executive in a male-dominated business," said her son. "She was in her glory. You couldn't get her out of the office. " The family sold the business in December 1986, when Grace Jacobs was nearing 80. Still, she refused to slow down. Just a few months ago, she took on swimming lessons -- three times a week. In addition to her son, Jacobs is survived by her daughter, Rosaleen Horn; long-time companion Albert Joseph Pitre and a granddaughter. Funeral services will be today at 12:30 p.m. at the Weinstein Mortuary in Hartford. • •