Anne Gould Hauberg

Anne Gould Hauberg (November 13, 1917 – April 11, 2016) was an American civic activist, philanthropist, and patroness of the arts.

The Haubergs gave funds for the creation of the Pilot School for Neurologically Impaired Children which opened in 1960 in two small buildings on the University of Washington campus.

The School continues today as the EEU (Experimental Education Unit), a portion of the University of Washington Center on Human Development and Disability.

By the 1960s, Anne Hauberg was involved in the Seattle Municipal Art Commission, and she was a founding member of the civic activist organization, the "Committee of 33."

In 1969, Anne and John Hauberg together supported Dale Chihuly's idea for a glass-blowing summer school program in the rural Northwest.

Hauberg (right) with Jerry Anderson, Nordic Studies Librarian, founder of the University of Washington Libraries' Artist Images Award, at the presentation of the 2007 award. She is holding a copy of the bookmark honoring Trimpin , winner of that year's award.