Sir John Templeton, investor and philanthropist, dies at 95

NASSAU, Bahamas — Sir John Templeton, an investor and mutual fund pioneer who dedicated much of his fortune to promoting religion and reconciling it with science, has died. He was 95.

Temple­ton died Tuesday from pneumonia at Doctors Hospital in Nassau, Bahamas, said his spokesman, Donald Lehr.

Temple­ton created the $1.4 million Templeton Prize to honor advancement in knowledge of spiritual matters. Win­ners have included Mother Teresa, Billy Graham and Soviet dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

Temple­ton was born in Tennessee and later moved to Nassau and became a naturalized British citizen.

He launched his Wall Street career in 1937 and was considered a pioneer in foreign investment, Lehr said. He also founded Templeton Funds, which he sold in 1992 to the Franklin Group for $440 million.

Templeton, a member of the Presbyterian Church, often started his mutual fund’s annual meetings with a prayer.

In 1987, he established the John Templeton Foundation to fund projects that could reconcile religion and science.

Templeton was knighted in 1987 for his philanthropic accomplishments.

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