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Frederick Paul Keppel (July 2, 1875 – September 8, 1943) [1] [2] was an American educator and executive in the field of philanthropy. In education he served as dean of Columbia College, in government he served as Third Assistant Secretary of War, and in philanthropy he served as president of the Carnegie Corporation.
Frederick Keppel (1845–1912) was an American art dealer, scholar, writer, owner and founder of Frederick Keppel & Company. [1] Keppel came to America in 1864 and became a print dealer in 1868. He was a patron and promoter of the Etching Revival and etchers including Whistler, Zorn, Buhot and Pennell.
Frederick Keppel may refer to: Frederick Keppel (bishop) (1728–1777), Church of England bishop of Exeter; Frederick Keppel (art dealer) (1845–1912), American art dealer; Frederick Paul Keppel (1875–1943), American educator and philanthropist; See also. Frederick Kappel (1902–1994), American businessman
Frederick Paul Keppel is born in Staten Island New York, the first child of Frederick Keppel (1844-1912) and Frances Matilda Keppel (1854-1941). FPK’s lifelong fascination with prints begins while working at his father’s print dealership, Frederick Keppel & Co (established 1868).
4 de set. de 2009 · The Carnegie Corporation found its first great manager in Frederick Paul Keppel (1875–1943). Keppel's career is important to historians of education because interwar Carnegie initiatives, articulated through the Corporation's Dominions and Colonies Fund and Teachers College, Columbia University, internationalised American ...
Frederick Keppel was a New York publisher and print dealer. Life: Keppel came to America in 1864 and became a print dealer in 1868. He was a patron and promoter of etchings and etchers including Whistler, Zorn, Buhot and Pennell.
Frederick Keppel sold the work of modern etchers in New York during the last few decades of the 19th-century. In particular, he was known as “one of the most enthusiastic promoters of the Barbizon etchings, exhibiting Daubigny, Jacque, and above all Millet.”