Robert Milburn:

Her mission is deeply personal. Her father, Reginald Lewis, broke Wall Street’s glass ceiling in the 1980s, by founding a leveraged buyout firm—which ultimately put him on Forbes’ rich list. It’s that family legacy that Lewis Halpern hopes to keep alive in students graduating from All Star Code.

“The goal is to create a new generation of entrepreneurs, who are able to build tech start-ups after passing through our programming,” Lewis Halpern says.

HOPEFULLY, THEY WILL soon repeat in Silicon Valley what Reginald Lewis accomplished on Wall Street. Lewis was born into a middle-class family in 1942, in what was then segregated Baltimore, and was tapped by a 1960s Harvard Law outreach program for minorities. Lewis studied corporate law and graduated from Harvard Law School in 1968, moving up the ranks at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, the big-time law firm, before founding his own leveraged buyout outfit, TLC Group. In 1987, Lewis became the first African-American to run a billion-dollar company, TLC Beatrice International, a major food processor.

Wealth didn’t stop Lewis from continuously learning. Hard-driven and known for brandishing large imported cigars, he moved his family to TLC Beatrice’s headquarters in Paris, where he learned and conducted business in French. It was there that he also built up a sizable art collection, with works by Picasso and Matisse. Then, in 1993, at the age of 50, Lewis died from a cerebral hemorrhage related to brain cancer. Among his last wishes: Twelve-year-old Christina and her older sister would join the board of the Reginald F. Lewis Foundation.