Peter Leitner Arts Scholarship Reception

December 11, 2012

The Peter Leitner Arts Scholarship is celebrating its’ 10th Anniversary with a reception at Masterworks Museum of Art on Sunday, December 16. The scholarship is funded through the generosity of Margaret and Peter Leitner who arrived in Bermuda in 1996 and lived here until their deaths.

Peter Leitner was a Hungarian Jew who fled his homeland at the age of 19 during the quelling of the Hungarian Uprising in 1956. He found refuge in Canada and England before coming to Bermuda as a trained architect. In 1969, he joined Maurice Terceira in what would eventually become the firm Terceira & Leitner.

Meanwhile, Mrs Leitner, who was English, was embarking on a career in Government service that would eventually see her serving as secretary to the Attorney General, and finally as the Chief Justice’s secretary. Throughout this time she was also responsible for the Supreme Court Library. She worked long hours without the benefit of the high-tech equipment we now take for granted.
The Leitners each moved to Bermuda in 1966, and met the same year. They were married in 1968.

They lived in a small house “Sixty Steps” that overlooked Harbour Road and the harbour beyond. Peter and Margaret, and their beloved dog Toschka, settled happily into their home. Mr Leitner could often be seen running on the beach with his canine companion or riding his scooter around town with the irrepressible Toschka riding atop the gas tank.

Mr Leitner’s artistic sensibilities were certainly important to his career, but he needed to accommodate the commercial realities of life. Many Bermudian houses and office buildings owe their origins to his designs. Mr Leitner had a strong interest in art and music, and was a skilled water-colourist in his own right. Naturally, Peter and Margaret looked to Bermuda’s arts scene for both the stimulation and relaxation so necessary for working couples.

The Leitners commitment to Bermuda was complete in every way; from 1966 until their deaths, they never considered any other place their home. Mr Leitner died in 1988. Mrs Leitner continued to live at “Sixty Steps”, but her zest for life slowly eroded until she, too, died in 2000. There is no question that she missed her husband and carefully tended his memory.

In deciding that this scholarship should benefit “creative Bermudians”, Mrs Leitner acknowledged what her husband always considered himself to be, albeit without the status to prove it. It was Mrs Leitner’s wish that the scholarship be in the name of her husband alone.

The Peter Leitner Arts Scholarship over the course of the past 10 years has awarded 67 individuals with 91 scholarships totally over $400,000.00.

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  1. Creative Minds says:

    How may one obtain The Peter Leitner Arts Scholarship application?
    @bernews