Charlotte, North Carolina – Leon Levine shaped the world in which he was born and raised and prospered. In the process, he took care of his family and took care of his community in many ways, large and small. First, he succeeded in business beyond even his own dreams by a focus on meeting the needs of people, many of whom lived in the margins. The name of the chain of discount stores he founded explains it all: Family Dollar. He wasn’t finished. In the second chapter of his life, with the wealth he earned, he gave millions of dollars to the benefit of Carolinians doing their best to overcome life’s struggles, the same decent folks who depended on his store for everyday goods.
Mr. Levine passed away on April 5, 2023, peacefully at home under hospice care, surrounded by family. There is no other one person who has made such an indelible improvement to so many facets of the lives of fellow Charlotteans and Carolinians. The discount store he founded lives on, under new ownership. The charitable foundation that bears his name lives on as well, for there will always be people who need a hand up to a better life. His legacy will endure - that of a small-town kid who, in the grandest meaning of the word, made good. He was 85.
Mr. Levine was born on June 8, 1937, the youngest of Harry and Minnie Levine’s four children. Early on he learned the meaning of work. Raised in Rockingham, N.C., 70 miles southeast of Charlotte, Leon’s job was to clean out ash from the coal-fed furnace in the basement. A lifetime later, on a trip to Rockingham to celebrate Discovery Place Kids, the children’s museum supported by his Foundation, he visited his childhood home. The basement was his first stop.
Leon had to grow up fast. He was 12 when his father died from a heart attack. The Levines owned The Hub, a small department store in downtown Rockingham. With his father gone, Leon headed straight from school to the family business to help. He was being a dutiful son when the road to the future opened before him. Leon, constantly learning and dreaming in business, asked his mother one day if he could take the goods that weren’t selling in The Hub and offer them at a discount in the basement. When she said “Yes” Leon was off and running with a business strategy that lasted the rest of his life. The moral of his story is a lesson for the rest of us. Choose a direction and work like mad. He was 19 when he and his brother, Sherman, purchased a chenille bedspread factory in nearby Wingate, N.C. By day, Leon attended Wingate College (now University). After class, he made and marketed bedspreads. He at first knew very little about the product, but he knew how to connect with people. This was the start. Leon sold the bedspread company. He had bigger plans.
In 1958, when he was 21, Leon moved to Charlotte in search of opportunity. In 1959, with $3,000 of his own money and $3,000 from a partner, he opened his first Family Dollar store in the 1500 block of Central Avenue near The Plaza. He soon opened his second store beside the old Park N’ Shop on Wilkinson Boulevard.
At 22, Leon wasn’t just a visionary, he was a disrupter. He was changing the way Americans shop, especially the ones who must keep a sharp eye on price tags. Remember, Family Dollar was here first, before big-box megastores like Walmart and Target made discount shopping popular.
From the start, Leon’s business instincts paved the way to success. He bought out his partner and opened Family Dollars at breakneck speed, focusing on small towns and neighborhoods ignored by malls and higher-end stores. Each time he opened one, he’d try to make it better than the last. “Polish the stone” he called it.
In 1970, Family Dollar went public and sold stock. In 1974, the offices moved to Matthews, N.C. In 2002, Family Dollar joined the Fortune 500 list of largest publicly held companies. By the time Leon retired in 2003 to focus on his Foundation, Family Dollar had more than 4,300 stores in 44 states. In this age of business consolidation, Dollar Tree completed the purchase of Family Dollar in 2015. That familiar “Family Dollar” sign still appears often on the horizon under the Dollar Tree umbrella.
Leon was a big-picture guy, yet no detail was too small for him to consider. He knew how to buy merchandise. On business trips to New York, he’d wait until a company’s showroom was empty, walk in and say, “I see business is slow, what can I help you with?”. When he could he preferred buying from local manufacturers and smaller operators. The men and women in the warehouse and everywhere else he roamed around Family Dollar appreciated that he knew their names and cared enough to visit.
He was a careful steward, often visiting stores unannounced.
While driving the South Carolina back roads to his condo at Myrtle Beach, he and his cousin, Lewis, walked into one Family Dollar store. It was empty. No customers. No employees in sight. So, they picked up the cash register, carried it to their car, walked back in and picked out something small to buy. The look on that manager’s face when he went to ring it up wasn’t pretty.
At another store, Leon filled up a trash can with merchandise and went to check out. The manager charged him for the trash can but not for the stuff inside. Leon took that trash can (still filled) to the next board meeting to show and tell them what had happened.
His family fondly recalls this same sense of humor around the house. His stories were rich with humor, his antics sometimes surprising. Not everyone knew this side of Leon, but the family surely did.
What inspired Leon to build a business empire, start a charitable foundation, then retire in 2003 to expand that foundation into one of the nation’s largest? He saw it as a way to practice tzedakah, a hallmark of his Jewish faith. In Hebrew, it means charitable giving. To Leon, it meant sharing his blessings.
He also saw the Foundation as an extension of Family Dollar, a way to sustain a connection with his customers, to help them, to help the Carolinas, where he was born and raised.
The Foundation was founded in 1980. It took off when Leon retired from Family Dollar Stores in 2003 to devote himself to its charitable work. It has given $450 million to support organizations large and small across the Carolinas. In a typical year, 400 to 500 grants are awarded, totaling $35 million a year. Grants focus on four areas – human services, health care, education, and Jewish values.
Imagine the blessings that have come to those who need it most, from a family whose own experiences shape its philanthropy.
The largest gifts have gone to Atrium Health Foundation to launch Levine Children’s Hospital, Levine Cancer Institute, Mindy Ellen Levine Behavioral Health Center, and the Sandra and Leon Levine Psychiatry Residency Program. The Foundation has also sought to train the next generation of healers, and keep young people fit. These gifts have included the Levine Sciences Research Center at Duke University, Campbell University School of Osteopathic Medicine, Levine College of Health Sciences at Wingate University, Leon Levine Hall for Health Sciences at Appalachian State University, and the beautiful Levine Center for Wellness and Recreation at Queens University of Charlotte.
Many gifts support health and wellness for a reason. His father died from a heart attack when he was 12. Breast cancer took his first wife, the former Barbara Leven, in 1966, eight years into their marriage. She was 27. They lost the youngest of their three children, Mindy, in 1988 at age 25. His wife, Sandra, is a two-time cancer survivor. To help others fighting to outlive cancer and other ailments is a tender part of the Levines’ legacy.
Leon was sitting in his doctor’s office one day and noticed a Morehead Scholars plaque on the wall, signifying that his doctor, Mike Richardson, had earned the prestigious scholarship to UNC Chapel Hill. “What did that scholarship mean to you?”, he asked Mike, closely followed by “How do we start a program like that at UNC Charlotte?” He did just that by funding the Levine Scholars Program, a four-year scholarship for the best and brightest from across the nation to attend UNC Charlotte in program that focuses on leadership and community engagement.
Leon and Sandra enjoyed Charlotte Pops concerts and Broadway shows. They knew how important access to the Arts was for the growth of Charlotte. Their passion for the arts extended beyond buying tickets to the next great performance. Major funding to the Levine Center for the Arts uptown supported the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art, Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture, Knight Theater and Mint Museum Uptown. The Sandra Levine Theater at Queens University of Charlotte expanded their impact on the Arts further into the community.
In response to the Great Recession of 2008, the Foundation gave nearly $3 million to the Critical Need Response Fund in Charlotte to help shelter, feed and clothe individuals in need. A $5 million gift helped establish A Way Home Housing Endowment through Foundation For The Carolinas. It supports rental subsidies and services for homeless and at-risk families.
Over Leon’s lifetime, he donated millions to Jewish causes. In Charlotte, Shalom Park on Providence Road is the center of Jewish life. At the center of Shalom Park is the Sandra and Leon Levine Jewish Community Center. Here is where people of all backgrounds come to learn, deepen their social activism, send their children to camp, exercise, attend social events and more.
Leon was a hands-on philanthropist. He loved learning about these great causes and meeting people who benefited from his giving. He was filled with questions about the work being done in his family’s name. He looked for organizations with great leadership, a tract record of measurable impact, and a sustainable path to continue and extend their work.
Among his many recognitions for his work include the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce Citizen of the Carolinas Award, the Jack Callaghan Cornerstone Award by Goodwill Industries of the Southern Piedmont, the Inaugural Carolinas Entrepreneur Hall of Fame Award from Queens University, Recipient of the NC Order of the Long Leaf Pine and the Induction into the Order of the Hornet by the Mecklenburg Board of County Commissioners.
He was predeceased by parents Harry and Minnie Levine; his siblings, Dorothy Segal, Sherman Levine and Alvin Levine and his daughter Mindy Ellen Levine.
Leon is survived by his wife, Sandra. Theirs is a beautiful story. They were married on June 5, 1978. Together, they had a daughter, Amy. With Sandra as counsel and inspiration, they built the Foundation into what it is today. Late in life, she was his comforter and protector.
He is also survived by three children – Howard and Julie Levine, Lori and Eric Sklut and Amy and Alfred Dawson, all of Charlotte; 11 grandchildren – Brian, Amanda, Evan, Sophie Levine; Blair (Jeff) Goldsmith, Haley (Gavriel) Ben David, Mason (Bashia) Sklut; Mindy, Bentley, Ashton and Connor Dawson; two great-grandchildren – Oliver and Jordan Goldsmith; and numerous nieces and nephews.
A service to celebrate his life will be Monday April 10th at Temple Israel in Charlotte. Shiva Minyan will be held at Temple Israel on the first 2 nights after this celebration of life.
In lieu of flowers, a gift in Leon’s memory can be made to Levine Children’s Hospital, Levine Cancer Institute or a nonprofit of choice.
The family is deeply grateful for the love and care shown by Dr. Mike Richardson, Dr. Geoff Rose, along with nurses Jordan Donnelly, Beth Puha, Lori Levin, Caroline Fitts and Susan Taylor. They also appreciate the love and care of their housekeeper of many years, Dorothy Johnson.
Leon didn’t have time for hobbies. He didn’t yearn to be the life of the party, though he’d dress up for a charitable gala if it would further the cause. He cherished close friends. He loved keeping up with his 11 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. They called him Papa.
He was one of the original partners of the ownership group which was responsible for bringing the Carolina Panthers to Charlotte. He rarely missed a game in his friends-filled suite and was in person to see both of the Panthers Super Bowl games.
A dinner out was always made better when someone came up to their table to say something along the lines of “My daughter is alive today because of the Levine Children’s Hospital” or “I got great care from the nicest people at Levine Cancer Institute”. A legacy summed up in a simple thank you from strangers. A small-town youngster established a chain of stores to serve regular folks, then found life’s greatest fortune in serving those same good people in the most vital ways he could.
Condolences may be offered at www.McEwenPinevilleChapel.com
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