Frederick Koch, low-profile Koch brother, dies at 86
Frederick Koch, who kept a low profile as an arts benefactor rather than joining the family oil business that became Koch Industries, has died, according to The New York Times. He was 86.
His friend and longtime assistant John Olsen told the Times Koch died at his Manhattan home on Wednesday of heart failure.
Koch was the oldest of four sons of Fred Koch of Wichita, Kansas. His high profile billionaire younger brothers, Charles and David, ran Koch Industries and bankrolled libertarian causes, but Frederick rarely saw them and preferred to live in relative anonymity, according to the Times.
Koch used his share of the family wealth to support a career as a benefactor of the arts and historic preservation. He amassed extensive collections of rare books, musical manuscripts and fine and decorative arts, including Marie Antoinette's canopied bed.
His collection of manor houses included a 150-room castle in Austria once owned by Archduke Franz Ferdinand, which Koch used for decades as a summer retreat.
Koch is also listed on Butler County property records as the owner of a large historic mansion in the city of Butler commonly known as Elm Court or the Phillips mansion.
In 1986, Koch stood beside Queen Elizabeth II at the opening of the new $2.8 million Swan Theater he had built for the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon in England. The queen thanked the “generous benefactor,” but didn't name him, respecting his wish for privacy.
Olsen said Koch's entire estate will be used to establish a foundation to promote the study of literature, history and the arts.