Stamford Advocate

James Alan Northrop

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James Alan Northrop

( Jim) passed away peacefully on August 7, 2024, surrounded by his sons in his home in Onchiota, NY, following a multi-year battle with lung and brain cancer.

Jim was born at Binghamton Hospital in 1947, to Alma Maddox Northrop and Arthur W. Northrop and taken home to Johnson City, New York, where his parents lived until their passing. He was educated in the Johnson City public school system and spent his senior year as a Rotary Exchange Scholar in Melbourne, Australia.

Like his older brother, Art, he attended Brown University, where he earned his B.A. in Sociology in 1969. He married his college sweetheart, Margaret Dworkin (Peggy), two months after their graduation in August of 1969. Together, they had three wonderful sons: Robert, Matthew, and William Northrop. Peggy and Jim raised their sons in Stamford, CT.

After earning his MBA from Columbia University in 1972, Jim’s career took him from marketing at Quaker Oats to eventually becoming the President and COO at the Monet Jewelry unit of General Mills. He went on to hold CEO positions at multiple companies, including the Trifari/Marvella Jewelry unit of Hallmark Cards, the Popular Club Plan business of J. Crew, and Crystal Brands Jewelry, where he had the somewhat dubious distinctio­n of being “crowned” the “King of Costume Jewelry” by Fortune Magazine in 1989.

In 1994, he and financial backers acquired the tabletop direct selling company, Princess House, from Colgate-Palmolive. Jim was the CEO of Princess House for the ensuing 12 years and developed a passion not only for this company but the direct selling business model. He brought that energy to subsequent roles with the Canadian public company, Immunotec, and eventually his own Winfield Consulting,

the firm he founded in “retirement.” With his colleagues at Winfield, they served more than 60 companies in the direct selling business ranging from startups to multibilli­on-dollar enterprise­s. The Winfield business survives Jim, and is still prospering. Jim also served on multiple corporate and non-profit boards.

Jim will be remembered for his passionate leadership of people-centric businesses, his bold and intellectu­al sense of humor, his charisma, and as a very caring and loving father and grandfathe­r.

Jim is survived by his three beloved sons and their families, Robert, Laura, Katharine (Katie) and Elizabeth (Lizzie) Northrop; Matthew, Christine and Charlie Northrop; and William, Joanna, Annabel, and Landon Northrop. He is also survived by his sister-in-law, Maureen Northrop, and his niece and nephews, Kim Walser, Arthur Northrop III (Chip), and Kevin Northrop and their families.

A visitation with Jim’s family will be held on Saturday, August 31, 2024, from 5 p.m. – 7 p.m., followed by a memorial service on Sunday, September 1, at 10 a.m., at the Fortune-Keough Funeral Home in Saranac Lake, NY. The service is to be followed by a celebratio­n of life party at Jim’s home in Onchiota, NY.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to The Adirondack Center for Loon Conservati­on (www.adkloon.org), or The Adirondack Land Trust (adirondack­landtrust.org).

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