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  1. Frederick Paul Keppel (July 2, 1875 – September 8, 1943) 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 .

  2. 4 de set. de 2009 · Abstract. 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 ...

    • Richard Glotzer
    • 2009
  3. Frederick Paul Keppel is born in Staten Island New York, the first child of Frederick Keppel (1844-1912) and Frances Matilda Keppel (1854-1941). 1890s. FPK’s lifelong fascination with prints begins while working at his father’s print dealership, Frederick Keppel & Co (established 1868).

  4. This collection was assembled by her late husband, Frederick Paul Keppel (1875-1943), who served as Dean of Columbia College between 1910 and 1918. Throughout the 1920s and 30s, Keppel was actively collecting engravings by Nanteuil, communicating with dealers and auction houses in the United States and Europe.

  5. Direct link. ERIC Number: EJ865503. Record Type: Journal. Publication Date: 2009-Sep. Pages: 28. Abstractor: As Provided. ISBN: N/A. ISSN: ISSN-0046-760X. EISSN: N/A. A Long Shadow: Frederick P. Keppel, the Carnegie Corporation and the Dominions and Colonies Fund Area Experts 1923-1943. Glotzer, Richard.

    • Richard Glotzer
    • 2009
  6. 29 de set. de 2017 · Frederich P. Keppel. Routledge, Sep 29, 2017 - Education - 138 pages. As president of the Carnegie Corporation from 1922 to 1941, Frederick Keppel became a widely respected interpreter of...

  7. Frederick P. Keppel and the Carnegie Corporation's Interwar Area Experts: An Overview. Under the leadership of Frederick Paul Keppel (1875-1943) Carnegie Corporation's Dominions and Colonies Fund supported a vast array of philanthropic projects in the dominions and colonies of the Britain's interwar empire.