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Secret Vermont multimillionaire had two hobbies: collecting firewood and stocks

Ronald Read left $4.8 million to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital and $1.2 million to the Brooks Memorial Library. Until he died, not even his stepson knew that Read had amassed an $8 million fortune in stocks. 

By Staff , Associated Press
Brattleboro, Vt.

A Vermont man known for frugally foraging for firewood has bequeathed millions of dollars to his local library and hospital.

Ronald Read left $4.8 million to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital and $1.2 million to the Brooks Memorial Library upon his death in June at the age of 92. The Brattleboro Reformer reports they're the largest gifts either has received.

Read served in World War II before returning home in 1945. He was a private, modest man who worked at a service station for nearly 25 years, retired and then decided to go to work at JC Penney until 1997.聽

He drove a 2007 Toyota Yaris and residents of Brattleboro assumed that he was poor. One woman reportedly knitted him a hat and gave it to him to keep him warm.聽

But lawyer Laurie Rowell says Read had two hobbies: cutting firewood and picking stocks. She says over time, his investments "grew substantially."

Read's stepson,聽Phillip Brown,聽told the Brattleboro Reformer that he had no idea that his frugal stepdad was a multimillionaire - other than his daily reading of the Wall Street Journal.聽

鈥淭he staff, Friends of the Library, volunteers and board are delighted at this great news,鈥 said Jerry Goldberg, president of the board of trustees of聽Brooks Memorial Library, in a press release. 聽It is the largest gift the library has received since 1886.

鈥淚t will help to guarantee the future viability and sustainability of Brattleboro鈥檚 public library, an institution much respected by Mr. Read.鈥