New York socialite Brooke Astor dead at 105

Mon Aug 13, 2007 7:34pm EDT
 
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By Michelle Nichols

NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York socialite Brooke Astor, a philanthropist whose generous gifts were a cornerstone for cultural institutions and charities across the city, died on Monday at the age of 105.

Astor died of pneumonia at Holly Hill, her estate in Briarcliff Manor, New York, said Kenneth E. Warner, lawyer for her son Anthony Marshall.

Astor was married to Vincent Astor and, when he died, inherited part of a fortune made in fur trading and real estate by John Jacob Astor in the late 1700s and early 1800s.

She donated some $195 million to libraries, museums and charitable organizations. She was also a posed and elegant fixture for decades on the New York social scene.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg called Astor "a quintessential New Yorker and one of the great philanthropists of our time."

"Tens of thousands of New Yorkers were the beneficiaries of Mrs. Astor's good will and kind nature, many unaware of the origins of the donations," he said in a statement.

Former New York Mayor Abraham Beame once said of her, "She has done more for New York City than any other one person."

Her son Marshall said in a statement that her tombstone would be inscribed with words she had requested: "I had a wonderful life."

Astor's last years were marked with controversy when a court ordered her care be taken away from Marshall in October after he was accused by his son Philip of keeping her in squalid conditions. Marshall denied the accusations.

The family feud cast a shadow over one of New York's most renowned and wealthy families. Guardianship of Astor was given to her friend Annette de la Renta, the wife of designer Oscar de la Renta.

'MONEY IS LIKE MANUR'

"Brooke left the world peacefully, in a dignified manner, in her own house. We could not have asked for more," Annette de la Renta said in a statement to The New York Times.

Astor was named as an example of elder abuse during a U.S. Senate hearing in Washington last year.

Born Roberta Brooke Russell in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Astor was the child of a Marine Corps officer and his wife. She lived on Marine posts in Hawaii, Panama, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and China, where she learned "coolie" Chinese.

At 16, her mother arranged a marriage to J. Dryden Kuser. Astor later said it was her only regret. They had a son, Anthony, but after 10 years the couple divorced.  Continued...

 
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