Brooke Astor
From Freepedia
Brooke Astor (born March 30, 1902)1 was born Roberta Brooke Russell in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the daughter of John Henry Russell, a Marine Corps officer, and his wife, née Mabel Cecile Hornby Howard. Her father, who retired as a major general, ended his military career as 16th commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps.
After a childhood spent in China, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and points beyond, Brooke Russell married three times, the first time at age 16, to J. Dryden Kuser. She described this marriage as "the worst years of her life", with her husband physically abusing her, drinking to excess and philandering. Their only child, Anthony Dryden, born in 1924, was later was adopted by her second husband, Charles Marshall, a stockbroker; as Anthony Dryden Marshall, he served as U.S. ambassador to Malagasy Republic, Kenya, Trinidad and Tobago, and Seychelles. She married Marshall, a brother-in-law of the mercantile heir Marshall Field III, in 1932; he died in 1952.
At various times in before, during and after World War II, she worked as an editor at House & Garden magazine and was on staff at Ruby Ross Wood Inc., a prominent New York decorating firm.
She achieved particular social prominence through her third marriage. In 1953, she married Vincent Astor (1891-1959), the last notably wealthy American member of the famous Astor family and elder son of Titanic victim Colonel John Jacob Astor IV (1864-1912).
Upon Vincent Astor's death in 1959, she took charge of the philanthropies to which he left his fortune. Despite liquidating the Vincent Astor Foundation in 1997, she continues to be active in charities and in New York's social life.
She is the author of several books, including novels and a memoir, A Patchwork Child.
Footnotes
Categories: 1902 births | The Astors | Centenarians | U.S. philanthropists | People from New Hampshire | Socialites | Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients | National Medal of Arts recipients



