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James Busch Orthwein

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James Busch Orthwein

Birth
Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA
Death
15 Aug 2008 (aged 84)
Huntleigh, St. Louis County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Affton, St. Louis County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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James Busch Orthwein

ST. LOUIS (AP) — James Busch Orthwein, the former New England Patriots owner who played a role in the Rams move to St. Louis, has died. He was 84.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch said Orthwein died Friday at his home in Huntleigh after a long battle with cancer.

Orthwein bought the Patriots in 1992 and sold them to Robert Kraft two years later.

Orthwein played an important role in the Rams' move from Los Angeles to St. Louis by donating his 65-percent ownership share of the stadium rights to FANS Inc., the nonprofit group that persuaded the team to move.

Orthwein's mother, Clara Busch, was the granddaughter of Adolphus Busch, one of the founders of Anheuser-Busch. Orthwein was a longtime member of the brewery's board.

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James Busch Orthwein took a St. Louis advertising agency to worldwide status. He fished off the coast of Bimini with Ernest Hemingway and set worldwide fishing records. He owned a National Football League team and was a player in the arrival here of the Rams.

Those were only some of the hats worn by Mr. Orthwein, who died Friday (Aug. 15, 2008) at his home in Huntleigh after a long battle with cancer. He was 84.

Mr. Orthwein was the son of Percy and Clara Busch Orthwein. His mother was the granddaughter of Adolphus Busch, one of the founders of Anheuser-Busch. Mr. Orthwein was a member of the brewery's board of directors from 1963 to 2002.

Prominent St. Louis lawyer and family friend Walter Metcalfe said of Mr. Orthwein:

"Jim was a private man who thrived as a fisherman, outdoorsman and painter. Yet he understood business and he had an enormous talent to see what was important and then connect his product, be it candy or cola or beer or the then-broken and ridiculed Patriot franchise, to the public."

Born in St. Louis, Mr. Orthwein attended Country Day School; the Choate School in Wallingford, Conn.; and Washington University.

In 1947, Mr. Orthwein became an artist with the D'Arcy advertising agency that his father had helped to found three decades earlier. He took over the firm in 1970 and soon moved to make it a player on the international stage.

Sumner Charles, of Ladue, a D'Arcy executive, said Mr. Orthwein, in effect, created D'Arcy MacManus & Masius - also known as DM&M Worldwide - with mergers of the St. Louis company and firms in Detroit and London.

"He was very capable, very creative; he was a great leader," Charles said, adding that the agency's accounts included not only the brewery but Coca-Cola, Mars Candy, General Tire and the corporate, Pontiac and Cadillac divisions of General Motors.

"At one time we were ranked as high as No. 8 in the world," Charles said.

In November 1985 - two years after Orthwein's retirement - D'Arcy merged with Benton & Bowles of New York to form D'Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles, with corporate headquarters in New York. It was acquired by Publicis of Paris in 2002.

After retiring from advertising, Mr. Orthwein co-founded and headed Precise Capital, LP, a private investment partnership.

Mr. Orthwein was an avid deep-sea fisherman, and one of his acquaintances was writer Ernest Hemingway, whom Mr. Orthwein described as difficult to get to know in a Post-Dispatch interview in 1990.

Mr. Orthwein held three world records for bonefish, said Charles, off the Australian coast, Mr. Orthwein caught a black marlin that tipped the scales at more than 1,000 pounds.

An avid horseman, Mr. Orthwein was master of the hounds at Bridlespur Hunt Club for 35 years. He was also a member or the Missouri Horseman's Hall of Fame. He helped raise more than $1 million in horse-show related charities, he confirmed in the interview in 1990.

As a leader at Bridlespur, Mr. Orthwein pulled off one of the most successful practical jokes, says Florence Shinkle, a retired Post-Dispatch reporter and a family friend.

In 1962, Mr. Orthwein introduced to the horse crowd in top hat and tails Lord Forkingham of Duncington, who then got the royal treatment from members of the hunt club.

But the Lord was really Russell Forgan, a New York stockbroker, whom Mr. Orthwein had recruited to play the role. So believable was Forgan that Mr. Orthwein was afraid to tell anyone at the hunt club about the charade, Shinkle said.

"Jimmy used to say the joke was so successful that he felt like the priest who shot a hole in one on Sunday - he was afraid to say a word," said Shinkle, who wrote about it for Bridlespur's 50th anniversary. Stephen Birmingham also wrote about it in his book, "America's Secret Aristocracy."

In 1992, Mr. Orthwein bought the floundering New England Patriots. He sold the team two years later to its current owner, Robert Kraft. Mr. Orthwein had hired Bill Parcells as the Patriots' head coach, and the team had drafted Drew Bledsoe as its quarterback. The team made the Super Bowl after the 1996 season.

Mr. Orthwein played a role in the arrival of the Rams in St. Louis from Los Angeles. He had owned 65 percent of the stadium rights and donated his ownership of those rights to FANS Inc., the nonprofit group that persuaded the Rams to move here.

Besides his outdoor activities, Mr. Orthwein was also an accomplished artist. He would send Christmas cards every year, Charles said, to his friends with his portraits of animals and horses. His favorite, Shinkle said, was a portrait of his horse, Beau Laurin.

Funeral services will be private. Among the survivors are his wife, Loris; two daughters, Katherine Snowden of Ladue, and Romaine Orthwein of New York; two sons; Percy Orthwein and James Orthwein of Delray Beach, Fla.; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
James Busch Orthwein

ST. LOUIS (AP) — James Busch Orthwein, the former New England Patriots owner who played a role in the Rams move to St. Louis, has died. He was 84.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch said Orthwein died Friday at his home in Huntleigh after a long battle with cancer.

Orthwein bought the Patriots in 1992 and sold them to Robert Kraft two years later.

Orthwein played an important role in the Rams' move from Los Angeles to St. Louis by donating his 65-percent ownership share of the stadium rights to FANS Inc., the nonprofit group that persuaded the team to move.

Orthwein's mother, Clara Busch, was the granddaughter of Adolphus Busch, one of the founders of Anheuser-Busch. Orthwein was a longtime member of the brewery's board.

***********************************************************

James Busch Orthwein took a St. Louis advertising agency to worldwide status. He fished off the coast of Bimini with Ernest Hemingway and set worldwide fishing records. He owned a National Football League team and was a player in the arrival here of the Rams.

Those were only some of the hats worn by Mr. Orthwein, who died Friday (Aug. 15, 2008) at his home in Huntleigh after a long battle with cancer. He was 84.

Mr. Orthwein was the son of Percy and Clara Busch Orthwein. His mother was the granddaughter of Adolphus Busch, one of the founders of Anheuser-Busch. Mr. Orthwein was a member of the brewery's board of directors from 1963 to 2002.

Prominent St. Louis lawyer and family friend Walter Metcalfe said of Mr. Orthwein:

"Jim was a private man who thrived as a fisherman, outdoorsman and painter. Yet he understood business and he had an enormous talent to see what was important and then connect his product, be it candy or cola or beer or the then-broken and ridiculed Patriot franchise, to the public."

Born in St. Louis, Mr. Orthwein attended Country Day School; the Choate School in Wallingford, Conn.; and Washington University.

In 1947, Mr. Orthwein became an artist with the D'Arcy advertising agency that his father had helped to found three decades earlier. He took over the firm in 1970 and soon moved to make it a player on the international stage.

Sumner Charles, of Ladue, a D'Arcy executive, said Mr. Orthwein, in effect, created D'Arcy MacManus & Masius - also known as DM&M Worldwide - with mergers of the St. Louis company and firms in Detroit and London.

"He was very capable, very creative; he was a great leader," Charles said, adding that the agency's accounts included not only the brewery but Coca-Cola, Mars Candy, General Tire and the corporate, Pontiac and Cadillac divisions of General Motors.

"At one time we were ranked as high as No. 8 in the world," Charles said.

In November 1985 - two years after Orthwein's retirement - D'Arcy merged with Benton & Bowles of New York to form D'Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles, with corporate headquarters in New York. It was acquired by Publicis of Paris in 2002.

After retiring from advertising, Mr. Orthwein co-founded and headed Precise Capital, LP, a private investment partnership.

Mr. Orthwein was an avid deep-sea fisherman, and one of his acquaintances was writer Ernest Hemingway, whom Mr. Orthwein described as difficult to get to know in a Post-Dispatch interview in 1990.

Mr. Orthwein held three world records for bonefish, said Charles, off the Australian coast, Mr. Orthwein caught a black marlin that tipped the scales at more than 1,000 pounds.

An avid horseman, Mr. Orthwein was master of the hounds at Bridlespur Hunt Club for 35 years. He was also a member or the Missouri Horseman's Hall of Fame. He helped raise more than $1 million in horse-show related charities, he confirmed in the interview in 1990.

As a leader at Bridlespur, Mr. Orthwein pulled off one of the most successful practical jokes, says Florence Shinkle, a retired Post-Dispatch reporter and a family friend.

In 1962, Mr. Orthwein introduced to the horse crowd in top hat and tails Lord Forkingham of Duncington, who then got the royal treatment from members of the hunt club.

But the Lord was really Russell Forgan, a New York stockbroker, whom Mr. Orthwein had recruited to play the role. So believable was Forgan that Mr. Orthwein was afraid to tell anyone at the hunt club about the charade, Shinkle said.

"Jimmy used to say the joke was so successful that he felt like the priest who shot a hole in one on Sunday - he was afraid to say a word," said Shinkle, who wrote about it for Bridlespur's 50th anniversary. Stephen Birmingham also wrote about it in his book, "America's Secret Aristocracy."

In 1992, Mr. Orthwein bought the floundering New England Patriots. He sold the team two years later to its current owner, Robert Kraft. Mr. Orthwein had hired Bill Parcells as the Patriots' head coach, and the team had drafted Drew Bledsoe as its quarterback. The team made the Super Bowl after the 1996 season.

Mr. Orthwein played a role in the arrival of the Rams in St. Louis from Los Angeles. He had owned 65 percent of the stadium rights and donated his ownership of those rights to FANS Inc., the nonprofit group that persuaded the Rams to move here.

Besides his outdoor activities, Mr. Orthwein was also an accomplished artist. He would send Christmas cards every year, Charles said, to his friends with his portraits of animals and horses. His favorite, Shinkle said, was a portrait of his horse, Beau Laurin.

Funeral services will be private. Among the survivors are his wife, Loris; two daughters, Katherine Snowden of Ladue, and Romaine Orthwein of New York; two sons; Percy Orthwein and James Orthwein of Delray Beach, Fla.; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.


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  • Created by: CMWJR
  • Added: Mar 22, 2021
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/224767148/james_busch-orthwein: accessed ), memorial page for James Busch Orthwein (13 Mar 1924–15 Aug 2008), Find a Grave Memorial ID 224767148, citing Sunset Memorial Park and Mausoleum, Affton, St. Louis County, Missouri, USA; Maintained by CMWJR (contributor 50059520).