William A. Koch

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William Albert "Bill" Koch, Sr. (1915-October 4, 2001), developed what is today known as Holiday World and Splashin' Safari in Santa Claus, Indiana, the oldest and one of the best-known theme parks in the United States.

A native of Evansville, Indiana, Koch was the son of Louis J. and Clarice Koch. He graduated from Purdue University in 1937 with a degree in architecture, but, although he worked in that field while in the Navy during World War II, it would be a project started by his father that would change his life.

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[edit] Holiday World: From father's "folly" to money-maker

In the 1940s, Louis Koch retired, and decided he wanted to breathe life into the tiny town of Santa Claus. He started a mail-order gift shop, and, in 1946, a small theme park that he called Santa Claus Land.

At first, Bill Koch didn't think much of his father's project. "I thought it was sort of a folly," he said later. "I didn't think it would go anywhere."

But it did.

In 1955, Ronald Reagan, then an actor and spokesman for General Electric, stopped for a visit. And the park steadily grew from there.

By 1984, Koch and his family decided to include other holidays in the park, and the name was changed to Holiday World.

In recent years, a water park - Splashin' Safari - was added, and a new Thanksgiving-themed area was also constructed. Over a million visitors a year now visit what Bill Koch once thought was nothing more than a folly!

[edit] Bringing an Interstate south

With so many projects going - seemingly all at once - Bill Koch discovered in the late 1950s that Indiana's segment of Interstate 64 was going to run from Vincennes to New Albany. This did not go over well with the man who wanted the new highway to bring people to his theme park and growing town.

So, Koch started knocking on doors and attending meetings.

Recalled Koch: "I told them, 'Gentlemen, I think the route for 64 is too far north. What do I need to do to get it to go straight across?' They said, 'You have to get the governors of Indiana and Illinois to agree to get the road changed so the Bureau of Roads will agree to relocate it.'"

The governors couldn't resist Koch's insistent efforts, which gained traction when Evansville interests got involved as well. The highway moved south.

[edit] Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial

Spencer County and the state of Indiana had for many years worked to build a memorial to the formative years of Abraham Lincoln, who lived in the area around what is now Lincoln City from 1816 to 1830. Koch wanted to take it a step further.

With federal money and national park status, more people would learn about Lincoln's Indiana years, and Koch knew that. If those people happened to travel east along Highway 162 and visit his park, so much the better!

In 1962, Congress approved the creation of the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial, and Bill Koch and his wife, Patricia, were on hand as President John F. Kennedy signed the bill into law.

[edit] Personal life

Bill Koch was popular, as the son of the park's founder, and had quite a following among the young ladies.

But Koch had eyes for only one young lady - Patricia Yellig, the daughter of Santa Claus Land's original Santa Claus, Jim Yellig, a well-known local moonshiner who served time in a federal prison. Patricia Yellig had been a nun, but left the Daughters of Charity in the late 1950s to move back home. Despite their age difference (Bill was 17 years her senior), Patricia and Bill were married in 1961 and had five children.

[edit] Building a town around the park

As Santa Claus Land grew, Koch believed that the town of Santa Claus needed to grow along with it. In the mid-1960s, he developed a 2,300-acre gated community known as Christmas Lake Village, where the majority of the town's residents now live. He also built the town hall and a shopping center that today is decorated in a Christmas theme all year long.

When Koch started, the town had a population of 37 people. Today, more than 2,200 call Santa Claus home.

[edit] Death

Bill Koch died at his home in Santa Claus on October 4, 2001, at the age of 86.

Following his death, and in recognition of the many developments he was responsible for, the state of Indiana named Indiana State Highway 162 from Gentryville to Interstate 64 as the "William A. Koch Memorial Highway."

[edit] References

Koch's legacy is park, town, family

From Santa Claus Land to Holiday World: 61 Years of Family Fun