Saperstein was the eldest of nine children, several of whom were involved with the Globetrotters. In the early years, Saperstein's then-teenage brother Harry worked as a typist and secretary, sending out press releases and game schedules. His sister Fay, the youngest sibling, helped Abe with paperwork for years and ran the New York office in the 1950s. After Abe's death in March 1966, his brother Morry Saperstein assisted in running the business before it was sold to a group of Chicago businessmen for $3.7 million and eventually moved from Chicago to New York City. He then served as the first vice president at Madison Square Garden Corporation, reporting directly to the then-Chairman
Sonny Werblin. Jerry died on November 16, 2021, two days after his 81st birthday. Jerry's two sons, Adam and Lanier Saperstein, and his daughter
Sara Chana (Simone) Silverstein all live in the New York area. Lanier is a partner in the law firm of
Dorsey & Whitney LLP. Eloise established a non-profit organization, the Abe Saperstein Foundation, designed to advance opportunities through sports for Chicago's youth, and she also was the first woman ever certified as an NBA player representative. She died on July 15, 2018, at the age of 81. Eloise's three children, Lonni, Avi and Abra, live in the Chicago area. Saperstein was a tireless worker, taking off just one day a year,
Yom Kippur. He continued to work right up until his death from a heart attack in March 1966. "He had more energy than the Grand Coulee Dam," wrote Chuck Menville in
The Harlem Globetrotters: An Illustrated History. The news of Saperstein's death came as a shock to the Globetrotters. The team's star, Meadowlark Lemon, was on the road in Charlotte, North Carolina at the time. "My mouth went dry," Lemon said. "The boys cried. I had to force myself to be funny. I did it only because Abe would have wanted the show to go on." Saperstein is buried in the
Westlawn Cemetery in
Norridge, Illinois, near Chicago. == See also ==