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The Oram Group, Inc. (formerly Harold L. Oram, Inc.) was founded in 1939 as a fund raising and public relations consulting firm specializing in liberal social causes. Early clients of the Group addressed social and political issues including
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and
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, the environment,
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s, and
refugee A refugee, conventionally speaking, is a displaced person who has crossed national borders and who cannot or is unwilling to return home due to well-founded fear of persecution.
relief. Today, the Oram Group, Inc. continues to serve the
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in the areas of religion, social action, health, civil rights, the environment, and performing arts.


Founder

The firm's founder, Harold Leon Oram, was born on December 2, 1907 in Butler, Pennsylvania to Austro-Hungarian immigrants, Samuel and Freda (Ginzler) Oram. After graduation from Butler High School, he spent two years at the
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in Florida majoring in history and economics. In 1934, he earned a law degree from
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, but appears never to have practiced law In 1930, Oram began a journalism career in Texas. His first venture, a weekly paper called the Fort Worth Monitor, partnered him with Leopold Mamolen. When the newspaper failed, he left Texas and went to work for newspapers in
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and
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while he attending law school. In 1936, Oram began working with the
North American Committee to Aid Spanish Democracy North American Committee to Aid Spanish Democracy was an American organization established in 1936. It was an umbrella organization for ethnic groups and trade unions. The ethnic groups and trade unions donated money, medical necessities and food ...
, an activist group committed to the Loyalist side in Spain's Civil War. When that organization split, Oram joined the group's liberal faction that included Ralph Bates, Varian Fry, and Roger Baldwin and helped form the Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign. As Director of Publicity and Fund Raising for the organization, Oram was responsible for obtaining funds for relocating Spanish Loyalists who fled Spain following General
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's victory.


Harold L.Oram, Inc.

In September 1939, Oram started a fund raising firm called Consultants in Fund Raising. Shortly afterward, he changed the name to Harold L. Oram, Inc. The firm's early clients were devoted to aiding victims of social injustice. Clients included the
Emergency Rescue Committee Varian Mackey Fry (October 15, 1907 – September 13, 1967) was an American journalist. Fry ran a rescue network in Vichy France that helped approximately 2,000 to 4,000 anti-Nazi and Jewish refugees to escape Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. ...
(predecessor to the International Rescue and Relief Committee), an organization that helped anti-
Nazi Nazism ( ; german: Nazismus), the common name in English for National Socialism (german: Nationalsozialismus, ), is the far-right totalitarian political ideology and practices associated with Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party (NSDAP) in ...
intellectuals and political leaders escape Europe following the fall of France during World War II. Another client, the
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, sought to improve the conditions for tenant farmers and migrant workers in the United States. A third client from the early 1940s, the
NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (NAACP LDF, the Legal Defense Fund, or LDF) is a leading United States civil rights organization and law firm based in New York City. LDF is wholly independent and separate from the NAACP. Altho ...
, sponsored the legal assault on segregation. Oram's first employees were women, Eileen Fry (wife of Varian Fry) and Anna Frank Loeb, who had also met Oram through the Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign. Eve Bates (wife of Ralph Bates), another friend from the days of the Spanish Refugee Campaign, became a part of the firm in 1941. In 1942, Oram left to serve in the army during World War II, leaving them to manage the firm. When he returned from the army in 1946, Oram's business began to expand. At first, most of the firm's clients were associated with efforts to recover from the effects of World War II and to combat the spread of Communism. They included the
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, the Citizens Committee for the Marshall Plan, and the
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. Gradually the list began to include causes concerned with environmental, educational, and health issues. During the 1950s and early 1960s, he represented a number of anti-Communist Asian causes, including the
American Friends of Vietnam Joseph Buttinger (30 April 1906, Reichersbeuern, Germany – 4 March 1992, Queens, New York) was an Austrian politician and, after his immigration to the United States, an expert on East Asia. He co-founded the American Friends of Vietnam, a Cold ...
, Aid Refugee Chinese Intellectuals, Inc., the Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Red China to the United Nations, and the Dr. Tom Dooley Foundation. Oram also handled public relations in the United States for the Republic of South Vietnam during the late 1950s.


1960s

During the 1960s and 1970s, the organization expanded into new fund raising areas including the arts, education, and environmental campaigns. Beginning in the 1960s, Oram began raising money, through capital fund campaigns, for buildings and institutions as well as causes. Two of the earliest capital fund campaigns were designed for the Hampton Institute and Goodwill Industries of Greater New York. As the clientele of the organization made a gradual shift, so did the internal operations. The Oram firm had expanded into several branches and associate offices and found itself in a new era when the company's founder retired. In the course of his career, Oram was responsible for a number of novel fund raising techniques. He pioneered modern direct mail appeal methods, collecting and compiling lists of donors in the days before such lists were bought and sold wholesale. Once, when a suitable list was unavailable, he used Who's Who as a mailing list. Oram is reputed to be the first to take out full-page advertisements in prestigious newspapers, such as The New York Times, for their value as stuffers in direct mail appeals. Another early tactic he employed involved telegrams. Taking advantage of the sense of urgency a telegram conveyed, he first sent them to important and wealthy individuals inviting them to contribute funds to the client's particular cause. Later, he sent telegrams as urgent invitations to attend convocations (another Oram innovation) combining information sessions and fund raising events for his clients. Henry Goldstein, a long-time member of the Oram firm, purchased the company in 1977. Goldstein, a native of New York, entered the fund raising field in the mid-1950s. His first fund raising job was with the United Community Chest of Paterson, New Jersey, and he came to Harold L. Oram, Inc. in 1964. Shortly after Goldstein joined, the organization began to expand. A subsidiary, Oram Associates, was formed to handle capital campaigns, under the guidance of Goldstein and Sidney W. Green. When Green departed, the subsidiary became Oram-Goldstein Associates. Soon, there were other subsidiaries:. Constituency Builders, Inc. (CBI) handled the direct mail campaigns, and Rusk and Oram focused on annual giving. By the time Goldstein purchased the organization in 1977, it consisted of three corporations: the Oram Group, Oram International Corporation, and CBI. Goldstein merged the three into one corporation, Oram Group, Inc. After Goldstein's purchase of the firm, he continued the traditional fundraising that served as its foundation from the beginning, but began a gradual shi to also provide consultation to the client organizations, with traditional fund raising just one piece of the firm's service to an organization. The Oram Group, Inc. now operates out of two offices in New York and California. Areas of consultation include management counsel for successful interaction within an organization, fund development counsel from planning through implementation of a fundraising campaign, board development, planning studies, organizational assessments, and senior executive search t.


Works or publications

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Notes and references


External links

* Th
Oram Group, Inc. records
are available at th
Ruth Lilly Special Collections & ArchivesIUPUI University Library
* Entry for th
Oram Group
available through th
Social Networks and Archival Context
portal. {{DEFAULTSORT:Oram Group, Inc., Public relations companies of the United States