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Given By
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^
REGISTER
OP THE
DER^RTMENT OF STATE
JANUARY 1.1925
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
1925
V3
i-/f
o
REGISTER
OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
JANUARY 1, 1923
"" ■' ■" \)i^ashingt6n
' GO v'EFcKivlflNT "PRINTING OFFICE
^^C±^
ADDITIONAL COPIES
OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED FROM
THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON, D. C.
AT
75 CENTS PER COPY
V^h
4i h SUfC|lMT£IU)£Ht OF DOCUMLATS
O-f
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
f
Page.
I. Secretaries of State i
II. Counselors for the Department of State 3
III. Undersecretaries of State 4
IV. Assistant Secretaries of State 4
V. Second Assistant Secretaries of State 5
VI. Third Assistant Secretaries of State 6
VII. Chief Clerks of the Department of State 7
VIII. Officers and Clerks of the Department of State 8
IX. Organization of the Department of State 23
X. Diplomatic Service of the United States 37
XI. Consular Districts 43
XII. Tariff of United States Consular Fees 50
XIII. Disposition of fees and compensation of Consular Agents and Vice Consuls 53
. XIV. Consular Service of the United States 53
Foreign Service Officers detailed as Inspectors 53
Supervisory Consulates General and the limits of their jurisdiction 54
Consular Officers in Argentina, 54; Austria, 54; Belgium, 54; Bolivia, 55; Brazil, 55;
Bulgaria, 55; Chile, 55; China, 56; Colombia, 57; Costa Rica, 57; Cuba, 57;
Czechoslovakia, 58; Danzig, Free State of, 58; Denmark, 58; Dominican Re-
public, 58; Ecuador, 58; Egypt, 58; Esthonia, 59; Finland, 59; France and
Dominions, 59; Germany, 60; Great Britain and Dominions, 61; Greece, 67;
Guatemala, 67; Haiti, 67; Honduras, 67; Htmgary, 67; Iraq (Mesopotamia), 68;
Italy, 68; Japan, 68; Latvia, 69; Liberia, 69; Lithuania, 69; Mexico, 69; Morocco,
70; Netherlands and Dominions, 70; Nicaragua, 71; Norway, 71; Palestine, 71;
Panama, 71; Paraguay, 71; Persia, 72; Peru, 72; Poland, 72; Portugal and
Dominions, 72; Rumania, 72; Salvador, 73; Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, King-
dom of, 73; Siam, 73; Spain and Dominions, 73; Sweden, 73; Switzerland, 74;
vSyria, 74; Uruguay, 74; Venezuela, 74; Offices not elsewhere listed, 75.
Student Interpreters in China 75
Student Interpreters in Japan 75
Student Interpreters in Turkey 75
Foreign Service Officers assigned, temporarily, to the Department of State or on
leave of absence 75
X V. Classification of the Foreign Service of the United States 76
XVI. Foreign Service Officers Retired from Active Service under the Provisions of the Act
of May 24, 1924 89
X V'll. Biographical Statement Respecting Persons Serving Under Appointment of the Depart-
ment of State, at home or abroad, and the names and last posts of servdcc of Diplo-
matic Officers and Consuls General, Consuls, Consular Assistants, Interpreters, Mar-
shals, and vStudent Interpreters, who have died or retired from the Service since
January i , 1906 90
\' f IL List of Persons who have served as Officers of Career in the Foreign Service since Jan-
uary I, 1906, and who have died in the Service or since their separation from the
Service. The ICdition of the Register in which the biographical sketch last appeared
is given opposite each name 216
XIX. r.ist of Principal Diplomatic Agents of the United States, March 4, i789-Januar)- i, 1925. 218
III
IV TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
XX. Regiilations Concerning Precedence of Diplomatic Agents 232
XXI. The Foreign Service 233
XXII. Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service 257
XXIII. United States Court for China 257
XXIV. Despatch Agents 257
XXV. International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico 257
XXVI. Alaskan Boundary Delimitation Commission and Canadian Boundary Delimitation
Commission 257
XXVII. International Joint Commission, United States and Canada, tmder the Treaty of
January 11, igog 257
XXVIII. American and British Claims Arbitration, under the Agreement of August 18, 1910. 258
XXIX. Mixed Claims Commission, United States and Germany, under the Agreement of
August 10, 1922 258
XXX. General Claims Commission, United States and Mexico 258
XXXI. Special Claims Commission, United States and Mexico 258
XXXII. Inter-American High Commission, United States Section 258
XXXIII. International Prison Commission 259
XXXIV. International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, Italy 259
XXXV. International Office of Public Health at Paris 259
XXXVI. Pan-American Committee of the United States 259
XXXVII. International Tribunals of Egypt 259
XXXVIII. Permanent Court of Arbitration Provided for by the Convention Signed at The Hague
July 29, 1899 259
XXXIX. Foreign Embassies and Legations in the United States 266
XL. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 273
Index 319
ABBREVIATIONS.
Agt. — Consular Agent.
Agt. & C. G. — Agent (Diplomatic) and Consul
General.
Amb. E. & P. — Ambassador Extraordinary^ and
Plenipotentiary.
Asst. Mil. Att. — Assistant Militarj^ Attache.
Asst. Nav. Att. — Assistant Naval Attache.
C. — Consul.
C. G. — Consul General.
Com'l Att. — Commercial Attache.
E. E. & M. P. — Envoy Extraordinary and Min-
ister Plenipotentiary.
Lang. Offr. — Language Officer.
Mil. Att.— Military Attach^.
Nav. Att. — Naval Attache.
Stud. Int. — Student Interpreter.
V. C— Vice Consul.
KEY TO REFERENCES.
a Bom of American parents residing abroad.
b Entered the service after examination under Executive order of September 20, 1895.
c Entered the service after examination under Executive order of November 10, 1905.
d Entered the service after examination tmder Executive order of June 27, 1906.
e Appointed from the Department of State under the provisions of Executive orders.
/ Entered the service as Consular Assistant, after examination.
g Entered the service as Student Interpreter, after examination.
h Incomplete returns.
i Entered the service after examination under Executive order of November 26, 1909.
j Accredited to Esthonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
k The Consul General is also Minister Resident.
/ The Consul General is also Agent (Diplomatic).
tn Entered the sersdce as assistant to consuls general in economic investigational work, after exami-
nation, under Executive order of August 26, 1919.
n Naturalized citizen.
0 Accredited as Ambassador to Belgium and as Minister to Luxemburg.
p Appointed by Executive order.
q No reference.
r Entered the service as Vice Consul de carrihe, after examination, under Executive order of
August 26, 19 19.
s No reference.
t Temporary recognition.
u Provisional recognition.
V
■^
REGISTER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
I.— SECRETARIES OF STATE (1789-1924).
Presidents.
George Washineton .
Do
Do
Do
John Adams.
Do.
Do.
Vo
Thomas Jefferson
Do
James Madison
Do
Do
Do
James Monroe
Do
Do
John Quincy Adams .
Do
Andrew Jackson
Do
Do
Do
Do
Martin Van Buren.
Secretaries of State.
Thomas Jefferson , of Virginia
Entered upon duties March 32, 1790. Retired December 31, 1793.
Edmund Randolph, of Virginia
Entered upon duties January 2, 1794. Retired August 19, 1795.
Timothy Pickering, of Pennsylvania (Secretary of War)
Ad interim August 20, 179s, to December 9, 1795.
I Timothy Pickering, of Pennsylvania,
f F
Entered upon duties December 10, 1795. Retired May 12, 1800.
Charles Lee, of Virginia (Attorney General)
Ad interim May 13, 1800, to June 5, 1800.
John Marshall, of Virginia
Entered upon duties June 6, 1800. Retired February 4, 1801.
John Marshall, of Virginia (Chief Justice of the United States)
Ad interim February 4, i8oi, to March 4, 1801.
Levi Lincoln, of Massachusetts (Attorney General) ,
Ad interim March 4, 1801, to May i, 1801.
James Madison, of Virginia ,
Entered upon duties May 2, 1801. Retired March 3, 1809.
Robert Smith, of Maryland
Entered upon duties March 6, 1809. Retired April i, 1811.
James Monroe, of Virginia
Entered upon duties April 6, 181 1. Retired September 30, 1814.
James Monroe, of Virginia (Secretary of War)
Ad interim October i, 1814, to February 28, 1815.
James Monroe, of Virginia
Entered upon duties March i, 1815. Retired March 3, 1817.
John Graham (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim March 4, 1817, to March 9, 1817.
Richard Rush, of Pennsylvania (Attorney General)
Ad interim March 10, 1817, to September 22, 1817.
John Quincy Adams, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties September 22, 1817. Retired March 3, 1835.
Daniel Brent (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim March 4, 1825, to March 8, 1825.
Henry Clay, of Kentucky
Entered upon duties March 9, 1823. Retired March 3, 1839.
James A. Hamilton, of New York
Ad interim March 4, 1829, to March 27, 1829.
Martin Van Buren, of New York
Entered upon duties March 28, 1829. Retired May 33, 1831.
I
Edward Livingston, of Louisiana
Entered upon duties May 34, 1831. Retired May 39, 1833.
Louis McLane, of Delaware
Entered upon duties May 39, 1833. Retired June 30, 1834.
Uohn Forsyth, of Georgia
/ Entered upon duties July i, 1834. Retired March 3. 1841.
Date of commission.
September 36, 1789.
January 3, 1794.
December lo, 1795.
May 13, 1800.
March s. 1801.
March 6, 1809.
April 3, 181 1.
February 28, X815.
March 5, 1817.
March 7, 1835.
March 4, 1829.
March 6, 1829.
May 14, 1831.
May 39, 1833.
June 17, 1834.
I
SECRETARIES OF STATE.
Presidents.
Secretaries of State.
Date of commitsion.
William H. Harrison
J. L. Martin (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim March 4, 1841, to March s, 1841.
Do
IDaniel Webster, of Massachusetts
March s.
1S41.
John Tyler
/ Entered upon duties March 6, 1841. Retired May 8, 1843.
Do
Hugh S. Legard, of South Carolina (Attorney-General)
Ad interim May 9. 1843, to June 20, 1843. Died Jime 20, 1843.
Do
William S. Derrick (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim June 21, 1843, to June 23, 1843.
Do
Ad interim June 24, 1S43, to July 23, 1843.
Do
Abel P. Upshur, of Virginia
July 24, I
841
Entered upon duties July 24, 1843. Died February 28, 1844.
Do
John Nelson, of Maryland (Attorney General)
Ad interim February 29, 1844, to March 31, 1844.
Do
March 6,
1844.
Entered upon duties April i, 1844. Retired March 10, 1845.
James K. Polk
James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania
March 6,
1845.
Entered upon duties March 10, 1845. Retired March 7, 1849.
Zachary Taylor
\ John M. Clayton, of Delaware
March 7,
1849.
Millard Fillmore
/ Entered upon duties March 8, 1849. Retired July 22, 1850.
Do
Daniel Webster, of Massachusetts
July 22, 1
850.
Entered upon duties July 23, 1850. Died October 24, 1852.
Do
Charles M. Conrad, of Louisiana (Secretary of War)
Ad interim October 25, 1852, to November s, 1832.
Do
Novemb
;i 6, 1832.
Entered upon duties November 6, 1852. Retired March 3, 1853.
Franklin Pierce
William Hunter, jr. (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim March 4, 1853, to March 7, 1853.
Do
William L. Marcy, of New York
March 7,
1853.
Entered upon duties March 8, 1853. Retired March 6, 1857.
James Buchanan
Lewis Cass, of Michigan
March 6,
1857.
Entered upon duties March 6, 1857. Retired December 14, i860.
Do
William Hunter, jr. (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim December 15, i860, to December 16, i860.
Do
Jeremiah S. Black, of Pennsylvania
Decembe
r 17, i860.
Entered upon duties December 17, i860. Retired March 5, 1861.
Abraham Lincoln
1 William H. Seward, of New York
March 5,
1S61.
/ Entered upon duties March 6, 1861. Retired March 4. 1869.
Elihu B. Washbume, of Illinois
Ulysses S. Grant
March 5,
1869.
Entered upon duties March s, i86g. Retired March 16, 1869.
Do
March n
March 17
, 1869.
Entered upon duties March 17, 1869.
Recommissioned
. 1873.
Retired March 12, 1877.
Rutherford B. Hayes
William M. Evarts, of New York
March 12
, 1877.
Entered upon duties March 12, 1877. Retired March 7, 18S1.
March 5,
1881.
Chester A. Arthur
/ Entered upon duties March 7, 1881. Retired December 19, 1881.
Do
Frederick T. Frelinghuyscn, of New Jersey
Decembe
r 12, 1881.
Entered upon duties December 19, 1881. Retired March 6, 1885.
Grover Cleveland
Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware
March 6,
1885.
Entered upon duties March 7, 1885. Retired March 6, 1889.
James G. Blaine, of Maine
March s,
1889.
Entered upon duties March 7, 1889. Retired June 4, 1892.
Do
William F. Wharton, of Massachusetts (Assistant Secretary)
Ad interim June 4, 1892, to June 39, 1893.
Do
June 29,
1892.
Entered upon duties June 29, 189a. Retired February 23, igjs.
COUNSELORS FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
Presidents.
Secretaries of State.
Date of commission .
Benjamin Harrison.
Grover Cleveland. . .
Do
Do
William McKinley.
Do
Do
Do
Theodore Roosevelt
Do
Do
Do
William H. Taft....
Woodrow Wilson . . .
Do
Do
Do
Do
Warren G. Harding,
Calvin Coolidge
William F. Wharton, of Massachusetts (Assistant Secretary)
Ad interim February 24, 1893, to March 6, 1893.
Walter Q. Gresham, of Illinois
Entered upon duties March 7, 1893. Died May 28, 1895.
Edwin F. Uhl, of Michigan (Assistant Secretary)
Ad interim May 28, 1895, to June 9, 189s.
Richard Olney, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties June 10, 189s. Retired March 5, 1897.
John Sherman, of Ohio
Entered upon duties March 6, 1897. Retired April 27, 1898.
William R. Day, of Ohio
Entered upon duties April 28, 1S9S. Retired September 16, 1898.
Alvey A. Adee, of the District of Columbia (Second Assistant Secretary)
Ad interim September 17, 189S, to September 29, 1898.
Uohn Hay, of the District of Columbia
/ Entered upon duties September 30, 189S.
Recommissioned
Recommissioned ,
Died July i, 1905.
Francis B. Loomis, of Ohio (Assistant Secretary)
Ad interim July i, 1905, to July i8, 1905.
EUhu Root, of New York
Entered upon duties July 19, 1905. Retired January 27, 1909.
Robert Bacon, of New York
Entered upon duties January 27, 1909. Retired March 5, 1909.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania
Entered upon duties March 6, 1909. Retired March $• 1913-
William Jennings Bryan, of Nebraska
Entered upon duties March 5, 1913. Retired Jime 9, 19x5.
Robert Lansing, of New York (Counselor for the Department of State) . .
Ad interim June 9, 1915, to June 23, 1915.
Robert Lansing, of New York 1
Entered upon duties June 24, 1915. Retired February 13, 1920.
Frank Lyon Polk, of New York (Undersecretary)
Acting February 14, 1920, to March 13, 1920.
Bainbridge Colby, of New York
Entered upon duties March 23, 1920. Retired March 4, 1921.
ICharles Evans Hughes, of New York
/ Entered upon duties March 5, 1921.
March 6, 1893.
June 8, 1895.
March s. 1897.
April 26, 1898.
September 20, 189S.
March s. 1901.
March 6, 1905.
July 7, 1905.
January 27, 1909.
March 5, 1909.
March 5, 1913.
June 23, 1915.
March 22, 1920.
March 4, jgai.
II.— COUNSELORS FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE (1909-1919).
Counselors for the Department of State.
Date of commission.
Henry M. Hoyt, of Pennsylvania
Entered upon duties August 27, 1909. Died November 20, 1910.
Chandler P. Anderson, of New York
Entered upon duties December 16, 19:0. Retired April 22, 1913,
John Bassett Moore, of New York
Entered upon duties April 23, 1913. Retired March 4, 1914.
Robert Lansing, of New York
Entered upon duties April i, 1914. Retired Jime 23, 1915.
Frank Lyon Polk, of New York
Entered upon duties September 16, 1915. Retired June 30, 1919.
32952—25 2
August 21, 1909.
December 16, 1910
April II, 1913.
March 17, 1914.
August 30. 1915.
ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE.
111.— UNDERSECRETARIES OF STATE (1919-1924).
Undersecretaries of State.
Date of commis-
sion.
Frank Lyon Polk, of New York
Entered upon duties July i, 1919. Retired June 15, 1920.
Norman H. Davis, of New York
Entered upon duties June 15, 1920. Retired March 7, 1921.
Henry P. Fletcher, of Pennsylvania
Entered upon duties March 8, 1921. Retired March 6, 1922.
William Phillips, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties April 26, 1922. Retired April 11, 1924
Joseph C. Grew, of New Hampshire
Entered upon duties April 16, 1924
June 26, 1919.
June II, 1920.
March 7, 1921.
March 31, 1922.
March 7, 1924.
IV.— ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE (1853-1924).
Assistant Secretaries of State.
Date of commis-
sion.
Ambrose Dudley Mann, of Ohio ,
Retired May 8, 1855.
William Hunter, jr. , of Rhode Island (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim May 9, 1855, to October 31, 1855.
John A. Thomas, of New York
Entered upon duties November i, 1855. Retired April 3, 1857.
John Appleton, of Maine
Entered upon duties April 4, 1857. Retired Jime 10, i860.
William H. Trescot, of South Carolina
Entered upon duties June 11, i860. Retired December 20, i860.
William Hunter (Chief Clerk)
Ad interim March i, 1861, to March 5, 1861.
Frederick W. Seward , of New York
Entered upon duties March 6, 1861. Retired March 4, 1869.
J. C. Bancroft Davis, of New York
Entered upon duties April i, 1869. Retired November 13, 1871.
Charles Hale, ol Massachusetts
Entered upon duties February 19, 1872. Retired January 24, 1873
J. C. Bancroft Davis, of New York
Entered upon duties January 25, 1873. Retired June 30. 1874.
John L. Cad walader, ol New York
Entered upon duties July i, 1874. Retired March 20, 1877.
Frederick W. Seward, of New York
Entered upon duties March 21, 1877. Retired October 31, 1879.
John Hay, of Ohio
Entered upon duties November i, 1879. Retired May 3, 1881.
Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois
Entered upon duties May 4, 1881. Retired December 19, 1881.
J. C. Bancroft Davis, ol New York
Entered upon duties December 20, i88i. Retired July 7, 1882.
John Davis, of the District of Columbia
Entered upon duties July 8, 1882. Retired February 23, 1885.
James D. Porter, of Tennessee
Entered upon duties March 21, 1885. Retired September 10, 18S7.
George L. Rives, ol New York
Entered upon duties November 21, 1887. Retired March 5, 1889.
William F. Wharton, ol Massachusetts
Entered upon duties April 11, 1889. Retired March 20, 1893.
Josiah Quincy, ol Massachusetts
Entered upon duties March 21, 1893. Retired September 21, 1893.
March 23, 1853.
May 8, 1855.
November i, 1855.
April 4, 1857.
June 8, i860.
March i, 1861.
March 6, 1861.
March 25, 1869.
February 19, 1872.
January 24, 1873.
June 17, 1874.
March 16, 1877.
November i, 1S79.
May 4, 1881.
December 19, 1881.
July 7. 1882.
March 20, 1885.
November 19, 1887.
April 3, 1889.
March 20, 1893.
SECOND ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE.
Assistant SKretaries of State.
Date of cominis-
sion.
Edwin F. Uhl, ol Michigan
Entered upon duties November ii, 1893. Retired February 11, 1896.
William Woodville Rockhill, of Maryland
Entered upon duties February 14, 1896. Retired May 10, 1897.
William R. Day, of Ohio
Entered upon duties May 11, 1897. Retired April »7, 1898.
John B. Moore, of New York
Entered upon duties April 28, 1898. Retired Septenjber 16, 1898.
David J. Hill, of New York
Entered upon duties October 25, 1898. Retired January 28, 1903.
Francis B. Loomis, ol Ohio -
Entered upon duties February 9, 1903. Retired October 10, 1903.
Robert Bacon, of New York
Entered upon duties October 11, 1905. Retired January 27, 1909.
John Callan O'Lauchlin, of the District of Columbia
Entered upon duties January 28, 1909. Retired March s, 1909.
Huntington Wilson, of Illinois
Entered upon duties March 6, 1909. Retired March 19, 1913.
John E. Osborne, of Wyoming
Entered upon duties April 21, 1913. Retired December 14, 1916.
William Phillips, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties January 25, 1917. Retired March 25, 1920.
Fred Morris Dearing, of Missouri
Entered upon duties March 15, 1921. Retired February 28, 1922.
Leland Harrison, of Illinois
Entered upon duties April 4, 1922.
Alvey A. Adee, of the District of Columbia
Entered upon duties under title of Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924. Died July 4, 1924
J. Butler Wright, of W^yoming
Entered upon duties under title of Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.
Wilbur J. Carr, of New York
Entered upon duties July i, 1924.
John Van A. MacMurray, of New Jersey
Entered upon duties November 19, 1924.
November i, 1893.
February 11, 1896.
May 3, 1897.
April 27, 1898
October 2s, 1898
Januari' 7, 1903
September s. '9oS-
January ay, 1909.
March 5, 1909.
April 21, 1913.
January 24, 1917.
March 11. 1921.
March 31, 1922.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
November 18, 1924.
v.— SECOND ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE (1866-1924).
(Title changed to Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.)
Second Assistant Secretaries of State.
Date of commis-
sion.
William Hunter, of Rhode Island
Entered upon duties July 27, 1866. Died July ij, 1886.
Alvey A. Adee, of the District of Columbia
Entered upon duties August 6, 1886. Title changed to Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.
July 27, 1866.
August 3, 1886.
THIRD ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE.
VI.— THIRD ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE (1875-1924).
(Title changed to Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.)
Third Assistant Secretaries of State.
Date of commis-
sion.
John A. Campbell, of Wyoming
Entered upon duties February 24, 1875. Retired November 30, 1877.
Charles Payson, of New York
Entered upon duties June 22, 1878. Retired June 30, 1881.
Walker Blaine, of Maine
Entered upon duties July i, 1881. Retired June 30, i88a.
Alvey A. Adee, of the District of Columbia
Entered upon duties July 18, 1882. Retired August 5, 1886.
John B. Moore, of Delaware
Entered upon duties August 6, 1886. Retired September 30, 1891.
Wilham M. Grinnell, of New York
Entered upon duties February is. 1892. Retired April 16, 1893.
Edward H. Strobel, of New York
Entered upon duties April 17, 1893. Retired April 16, 1894.
William Woodville Rockhill, of Maryland
Entered upon duties April 17, 1894. Retired February 13, 1896.
William Woodward Baldwin, of New York
Entered upon duties February 29, 1896. Retired April i, 1897.
Thomas Wilbur Cridler, of West Virginia
Entered upon duties April 8, 1897. Retired November 15, 1901.
Herbert H. D. Peirce, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties November 16, 1901. Retired June 22, 1906.
Huntington Wilson, of Illinois
Entered upon duties July 3, 1906. Retired December 30, 1908.
William Phillips, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties January 11, 1909. Retired October 13, 1909.
Chandler Hale, of Maine
Entered upon duties October 14, 1909. Retired April 21, 1913.
Dudley Field Malone, of New York
Entered upon duties April 22, 19x3. Retired November 22, 1913.
William Phillips, of Massachusetts
Entered upon duties March 17, 1914. Retired January 24, 1917.
Breckinridge Long, of Missouri
Entered upon duties January 29, 1917. Retired June 8, 1920.
Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, of New York
Entered upon duties June 24, 1920. Retired March 4, 1921.
Robert Woods Bliss, of New York.
Entered upon duties March 16, 1921. Retired May 3, 1923.
J. Butler Wright, of Wyoming
Entered upon duties June 11, 1923, Title changed to Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.
February 24, 1875.
June II, 1878.
July I, 1881.
July 18, 1882.
August 3, 1886.
February 11, 1892.
April 13, 1893.
April 14, 1894.
February 24, 1896.
April 8, 1897.
November 15, 1901
June 22, 1906
January 11, 1909.
September 23, 1909.
April 21, 1913.
March 13, 1914.
January 24, 1917.
June 21, 1920.
March 15, 1921.
January 30, 1923.
CHIEF CLERKS.
VII.— CHIEF CLERKS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE (1789-1924).
Name.
Henry Remsen, jr
Roger Alden
Henry Remsen, jr
George Taylor, jr
Jacob Wagner
John Graham
Daniel Brent
Asbury Dickins
Aaron Ogden Dayton
Aaron Vail
J. L. Martin
Daniel Fletcher Webster. .
William S. Derrick
Richard K. Crall^
William S. Derrick
Nicholas P. Trist
William S. Derrick
John Appleton
William S. Derrick
William Hunter, jr
Roberts. Chew
William Hunter, jr
Roberts. Chew
Sevellon A. Brown
James Fenner Lee
Sevellon A. Brown
Robert S. Chilton, jr
WilUam W. Rockhill
Edward I. Renick
William H. Michael
Charles Denby
Wilbur J. Carr
William McNeir
Ben G. Davis
Edwin C. Wilson (Acting)
E. J. .^yers
Whence
ap-
pointed.
N. Y....
Corm.. . .
N. Y....
N. Y...,
Pa
Va
Va
N.C....
N.J
N. Y...,
N.C...
Mass. ...
Pa....'..
Va
Pa
Va
Pa
Me
Pa
R.I
Va
R.I
Va
N. Y....
Md
N. Y....
D.C....
Md
Ga
Nebr. . . .
Ind
Ohio....
Mich....
Nebr....
Fla
N.J
Date of
appointment.
Jan.
Sept.
Apr.
Feb.
July
Sept.
Aug.
Dec.
June
July
Mar.
Apr.
Apr.
Mar.
Aug.
Apr.
Jan.
Apr.
May
May
Nov.
July
Aug.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Apr.
Apr.
May
Nov.
May
Nov.
Apr.
June
July
1790
1790
179a
1798
1807
1817
1833
1836
1838
1840
1841
1843
1844
184s
184s
1847
i85J
185s
185s
1866
1873
188S
1890
1893
1893
1894
1897
190S
1907
1909
1913
1924
1924
Date of
retirement.
Dec.
July
Mar.
Feb.
Mar.
July
Aug.
Dec.
June
July
Mar.
Apr.
Apr.
Mar.
Aug.
Apr.
Jan.
Apr.
May
May
Oct.
July
Aug.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Apr.
Apr.
May
Nov.
Apr.
Nov.
Apr.
May
July
i78»
1799
1791
1798
1807
1817
1833
1836
1838
1840
1841
1843
1844
1845
184s
1847
1853
i8ss
18SS
1866
1873
1888
1890
1893
1893
1894
1897
190S
1907
1909
1913
1924
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
VIII.— OFFICERS AND CLERKS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed
Date of appoint-
ment.
Secretary of Stale i,$i2,ooo).
CHARLES EVANS HUGHES
Under Secretary of Slate (.$7,300).
JOSEPH C. GREW
Assistant Secretaries of State ($7,soo).
LELAND HARRISON
J. BUTLER WRIGHT
WILBUR J. CARR
JOHN VAN A. MacMURRAY
Solicitor {$6,000) .
CHARLES CHENEY HYDE
Chief Clerk {$3,800).
E. J. AYERS
Executive Cotnmitiee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board.
Charles C. Eberhardt, Consul General, Chairman ($9,000)
Hugh R. Wilson, Counselor of Embassy, Member ($9,000)
Edward J. Norton, Consul General, Member ($7,000)
Chiefs and assistant chiefs of divisions, bureaus and offices.
Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs
Frank P. Lockhart, Assistant Chief (Acting Chief) ($4,400)
Francis White,' Chief of the Division of Latin- American Affairs ($7,000)
Dana G. Mxmro,' Assistant Chief ($6,000)
William R. Castle, jr., Chief of the Division of Western European Affairs ($5,200).
Dorsey Richardson, Assistant Chief ($4,400)
Allen W. Dulles,' Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs ($7,000)
Franklin Mott Gunther,' Chief of the Division of Mexican Affairs ($9,000)
Richard C. Tanis, Assistant Chief ($3,800)
Evan E. Young,' Chief of the Division of Eastern European Affairs ($9.000)
Arthur N. Young, Economic Adviser ($5,200)
George L. Brist, Chief of the Division of Passport Control ($3,300)
John J. Scanlan, Assistant Chief ($2,800)
N. Y.
N. H.
111...
Wyo.
N. Y.
N.J..
Tyler Dennett, Chief of the Division of Publications and Editor of the Department of State
($3,800).
Prentiss B. Gilbert, Chief of the Division of Political and Economic Information ($4,400)
Hugh R. Wilson,' Chief of the Division of Current Information ($9,000) ,
Michael J. McDermott, Assistant Chief ($3,000)
Herbert C. Hengstler, Chief of the Division of Foreign Service Administration ($3,800)
John D. Johnson,' Assistant Chief ($4,500)
David A. Salmon. Chief of the Bureau of Indexes and Archives ($3,800)
Roger S. Drissel, Assistant Chief ($2,800)
William McNeir, Chief of the Bureau of Accounts, and Disbursing Officer ($3,';oo)
Harry R. Young, Assistant Chief ($3,000)
' Foreign Service Officer.
D.C.
N.J.
Kans.
Ill ... .
Tenn.
Tex
Md . . . .
N. J . . .
D. C. . .
Md . . . .
N. Y...
Va
N. J . . .
S. Dak.
N. J . . .
Iowa.. .
D.C...
N. Y...
N. Y.
Ill ... .
Mass.
Ohio.
Vt...
Conn .
Pa...
D.C.
Pa. . .
March 4, 192 1.
March 7, 1924.
March 31, 1922.
January 30, 1923.
July I, 1924.
November 18, 1924
February 6, 1923.
July 10, 1924.
July 29, 1924.
July 29, 1924.
July 29, 1924.
July 29, 1914.
April 14, 1923.
December 20, 1923.
December 20, 1921.
August I, 1924.
April 14, 1922.
June 25, 1924.
July 28, 1915,
July 3, 1923.
September i, 1922.
November i, 1922.
November i, 1922.
December 22, 1924.
May 24, 1921.
March 10, 1924.
April I, 1924.
May 9, 1907.
June 30, 1921.
May I, 1916.
April 23, 1913.
June 6, 1924.
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Name, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
Chiefs and assistant chiefs of divisions, bureaus and offices — Continued.
Arthur Bliss Lane,' Assistant to the Undersecretary of State ($6,000)
Coert du Bois,' Chief of the Visa Office ($5,000)
Carol H. Foster,' Assistant Chief ($5,000)
N. Y.
Calif.
Md..
Worthington E. Stewart, Chief of the Office of the Executive Committee of the Foreign Serv- t Ohio,
ice Personnel Board ($3,800). 1
Edgar A. Shreve, Assistant Chief ($2,100) I Va. . .
Margaret M. Hanna, Chief of the Office of Coordination and Review ($3,500) Kans..
Ruth B. Shipley, Assistant Chief ($3,000) ! Md . .
Md.
D. C.
D. C.
N.J.
Mass.
Mass.
Percy F. Allen, AssistanttotheChief Clerk and Chief of the Appointment Section ($3,000) .
Other miscellaneous officers.
Henry L. Bryan, Editor of the Laws of Congress ($2,800)
Charles Lee Cooke, Officer in Charge of Ceremonials ($3,800)
William H. Beck, Private Secretary to the Secretary of State ($3,500)
George A. Morlock, Private Secretary to the Undersecretary of State ($2,800)
James E. McKenna, Private Secretary to Assistant Secretary Harrison ($2,800)
Marvin W. Will, Private Secretary to Assistant Secretary Wright ($2,800) Va
Beulah M. Griffith, Private Secretary to Assistant Secretary Carr ($2,400) Va
William P. Carey .Private Secretary to Assistant Secretary MacMurray ($2,400) Mass
PROFESSIONAL AND SCIENTIFIC SERVICE.
Grade five — Senior professional.
At$s,20o:
Joseph R. Baker Okla .
William R. Castle, jr D. C.
Green H. Hackworth Ky. . .
Ralph W. S. Hill Mo. . .
Jacob A. Metzger Ohio .
Arthur N. Young.
At $4,400:
Richard W. Flournoy, jr. .
Prentiss B. Gilbert
Frank P. Lockhart
Dorsey Richardson
At $4,200:
Wallace Mitchell McClure.
Spencer Phenix
William R. Vallance
At$3,Soo:
Charles M. Barnes
S. W. Boggs
J. Paul Jameson
Richard C. Tanis
Edgar WiUis Turlington . .
Grade four — Full professional.
N.J.
At $3,500:
William R. Manning
Joseph B. Matre
At $3,200:
Alfred B. Haupt
William B. Norris, jr
' Foreign Service Officer.
Grade three — Associate professwnal.
Md . . ,
N. Y.
Tex..
Md...
Tenn.
N. Y.
N. Y.
Va...
N.J.
Pa...
N.J.
N. C.
Tex..
Ohio.
Md.
Mo.
May 12, 1924.
December i, 1924.
December i, 1924.
June 30, 1921.
August 19, 1924.
January 31, 1924.
November i, 1924.
August 19, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July 8, 1919.
July I, 1924.
May 20, 1924.
April 1, 192 1.
July I, 1921.
July I, 1924,
January i, 1925.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
September 16, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
December 16, 1924.
October i, 1924.
November i, 1924.
September r, 1924.
September i, 1924.
November i, 1914
July I, 1924.
October i, 19*4.
October i, 1924.
October i, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July r, 1924.
July I. 1924.
November i, 1924.
November i, 1924
lO
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, oflfices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
PROFESSIONAL AND SCIENTIFIC SERVICE — continued
Grade Three — Associate professional — Continued.
At $3,000:
Francis M. Anderson t
Knute E. Carlson
Herbert B. Collins
Francis Colt de Wolf
Benedict M. English
Edwin D. Keith
Preston Kumler
Stephen Latchf ord
Anna A. O' Neill
Raymond V. Shepler
Frank X. Ward
Grade Tivo — Assistant professional.
At $3,000:
Westel Robinson Willoughby
At $2,800:
Henry Carter
Emerson B. Christie
At $2,500:
Frederick M. Diven
At $2, 400:
Philip C. Jessup
Conway N. Kitchen
Ethel L. Lawrence
Raymond T. Yingling
Grade One — Junior professional.
At $1,860:
Bertha E. Pierce
Clifton R. Wharton
SUBPROFESSIONAL SERVICE.
Grade Four — Assistant professional.
At tlfiSO:
Rosa V. Sands
N.J.
Nebr.
Ga...
R. I..
Nebr.
111....
111....
D.C.
D.C.
Ohio.
Pa...
Md...
Mass .
D.C.
Md...
N. Y.
D.C.
Kans
Md...
Calif.
Mass
D.C.
Grade Two — Under professional.
At $1,260:
Joseph S. Herr
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND FISCAL SERVICE.
Grade Eleven — Assistant chief administraiive.
At $4,600:
Robert C. Bannerman
A t $4,000 :
Harry G. Dwight
At $3,800:
E. J. Ayers
Charles Lee Cooke
Tyler Deimett
Herbert C. Hengstler
David A. Salmon
Sydney Y. Smith
Worthington E. Stewart
Conn ,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
Jvdy I, 1924.
October 15, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
August 16, 1924.
July I, 1924.
Jioly I, 1924.
Me
N.J
July I, 1924.
N.J
July 10, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
N. Y
December 22, 1924
Ohio
July I, 1924.
Conn
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Ohio
July I, 1924.
OFFICERS AND CI^ERKS.
II
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVK, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued.
Grade Ten — Senior administrative.
Al$s,50o:
Margaret M. Hanna
William McNeir
At$-i,30o:
George L. Brist
Grade Nine — Full administrative.
At $3,500:
William H. Beck
At $3,000:
Percy F. Allen
Faber J. McFadden
Michael J. McDermott
Frances M. Marsh
Miles M. Shand '
Ruth B. Shipley
B. Leslie Vipond
Grade Eight — Associate Administrative.
Al'fi.ooo:
Frederick Livesey
Harry R. Young
At $2, 800:
Henry L. Br>'an
James L. Duncan
John J. Scanlan
Mangtim Weeks
Grade Seven — A ssistant administrative.
At $3,000:
Harry A. Havens
AtSz.Soo:
Paul Trauger Culbertson
Roger S. Drissel
James E. McKenna
George A. Morlock
Edward B. Russ
Marvin W. Will
At $2,400:
William P. Carey
Beulah M. Griffith
James A. Nash
Grade Six — Principal clerical.
At $2,700:
Edmund W. Van Dyke
At $2,400:
J. Hubbard Bean
John S. Martin, jr
At $2,300:
Robert S. Clayton
W. Ford Cramer
At $2, 100:
Alice M. Blandford
Joseph A. Fennell
Walter P. Hibbs
Kans.
D. C.
Iowa.
N. Y.
Pa...
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
N.J
July I, 1924.
Md
December i.
1924-
Iowa
November i
1924.
Mass
July I, 1924.
Pa
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924-
N.J
Md
1924.
N. Y
July I, 1924.
D. C.
Conn.
D. G.
D. C.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
Kans July I, 1924.
Pa July I, 1924.
Mass ^ July i, 1924.
Mass July I, 1924.
Pa July I, 1924.
Va July I, 1924.
Mass.
Va...
Pa....
January i, 1925.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
Pa July I, 1924.
N. J j July I, 1924.
N. Y I July 1 , 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
D. C 1 July I, 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
12
OFFICERS AND CIvERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLBRICAI,, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued
Grade Six — Principal clerical — Continued.
At $2,100 — Continued.
Aura I. Middlekauff
Joseph B. Quinlan
George H. Schultze
Aloysius Wenger
Maitland S. Wright
Grade Five — Senior clerical.
At $2,400:
George B. Stambaugh
John A. Tonner
A t $2,300 :
Frank O. McNew
At $2,100:
v. Virginia Alexander
Margaret V. Bennett
Ethel G. Christenson
Bertha S. Bavis
Rtbekah L. DeLashmutt
Henry P. Dugan
Paul W. Eaton
Harvey E. Fenstermacher
Frances R. Hough
Joseph W. McMahon
Leonard A. Werritt
Har\-ey B. Otterman
Stephen H. Quigley
Nina G. Romeyn
Edgar A. Shreve
Clarence E. Sisler
James S. Skinner
Glenn A. Smith
Edwin Tarrisse
Julian Taylor
Wilbur Underwood
At$i,S6o:
Marion Arnold
Helen L. Budd
Dorothy K. Butler
William L. Cundiff
Helen F. Doran
Mary A. Duffy
Will F. Dunker
Percy G. D wyre
Thomas F. Farrell
Louis E. Gates
J. Moyle Gray
Albert B. Havenner
George T. Heckert
Frederick A. Kendall
Erma M. Knemeyer
Victor H. Loftus
Seth D. Logsdon ,
Ward B. McCarthy
D. C
July I, 1924.
Mo
November i, 1924
July I, 1924.
R.I
La
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
Wash
Pa....
Ohio.
Tenn.
D. C.
Ga...
Ind...
Va....
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
Pa....
D. C.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
December 19, 1924.
Minn .
Pa....
Md . . .
Ind..
Va...
D.C.
Tex..
Tenn.
D.C.
Va . . . ,
D.C.
D.C...
D.C...
Fla . . . .
Ill
D.C...
D.C...
Iowa. . .
Colo...
Mass . . .
N. Y...
Utah...
D.C...
W. Va.
D.C...
Iowa . . .
Mass . . .
lU
D.C...
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I.
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I.
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
Januarj
r I, 1925.
Septem
:)tris, 1924
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
t924.
July I,
1924.
July I.
924.
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
13
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLERICAL, ADMnsiISTRATIVB, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued.
Grade Five — Senior clerical — Continued.
At y/,5(5o— Continued.
Johnson McFetridge
Lloyd C. Mitchell
Marjorie iloss
Louis E. Mundy
Ethel Myers
Kathleen D. O'Shaughnessy
Charles P. Roach, jr
Eugene C. Rowley, jr
Blanche V. Rule
Margaret R. Shedd
Julia F. Simpson
Sidney A. Skinner
Elsie M. A. Stanley
L. Adelaide Watson
Fred R. Young
At $2,040:
James A. O'Keefe
NataUa Summers
Al$i.S6o:
Jane B. Bassett
Clayton S. Becker
Mary N. Birch
Jennie Cook Bopp. . . .
Albert V. Caffee
Margaret F. Conover . .
Marianna Davis
Edward E. DriscoU . .
Esther R. Foster
Thomas Griffin, jr. . . .
WiUiam J. Kavanagh.
Alice R. Lucas
Eileen McKenny
LilUan H. Middleton. .
Emily S. Morrison
Orlando F. Smith, jr .
At $1,740:
Charles H. Miller
At $1,680:
Blanche A. Barker . . .
Winfield S. Byars ....
Elizabeth H. Carey...
Grace C. Clairmont. . .
Hazel L. Cloyes
Ahce M. Covel
Estelle Crawford
David Crenshaw
Murray Lewis Crosse .
Helen L. Daniel
John F. Doyle
Marie H. DuVal
Meta E. Ferguson ....
John R. Fitzpatrick . .
Grade Four — Main clerical.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Pa
December 15, 1924
July I, 1924.
D.C
Ind
July I. 1924.
Pa
July I, 1924.
January i, 1925.
Mass
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Mass
July I, 1924.
Pa
December i, 1924.
N. Dak....
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
Tenn
July I,
1924.
Conn
July I,
1924.
Pa
1924.
Va
Iowa
July I,
1924.
Ky
July I,
N. Y
July I,
1924.
Ohio
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
N. Y
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I,
1924.
N. Y
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924-
D.C
October 15, 1924
Ill
Del
July I
N. Y
August 16, 1924.
D.C
August 16, 1924.
N. Y
July I
1924.
Ala
July I
Va
Minn
July I,
1924.
Va
July I,
m
July I,
Md
July I.
Pa
U.C
October is. "924
M
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVB, AND FISCAL SBRVICB— continued
Grade Four — Main clerical — Continued.
i4< ?/,6<?o— Continuod.
Laurence C. Frank
Seale Robertson Giles
James R. Givens
Ralph M. Howe
Edna K. Hoyt
Addie F. Jonscher
Louise E. Lacy
Eldora C. La wson
Georgia E. McMillion
Gladys E. Merriman
Minnie D. Middleton
Herbert B. Monroe
Margaret C. Monroe
Dorothy D. Morrison
Rajonond E. Murphy
Woody Murray
Nellie Vass Myers
Tuley W. Nelson
John G. Palcho, jr
George R. Schooley
Francis I. Smith
Hugh L. Sturgis
Harold F. Tracy
Forrest D. Van Valin
John B. Wells
J. Everett Will
Grade Three — A ssistant clerical.
At$i.S6o:
Stuart R. Bailey
Anna L- Clarkson
Edith P. Connelly
Maud M. Crane
Mildred V. Deike
Adele E- Dix
Maurice W. Lacey
Eunice A. Lincoln
William V. Madden
Walter E. Pelton -.
William A. Poole
Joseph D. Steele
Elbert H. Watt
At$i.6So:
Judith B. Anderton
Nettie N. Bagby
M. Esther Barry
Ella A. Benesh
Clara L. Borjes
Virginia C. Braxton
Mary Agnes Breen
Joseph P. Burg
Kathryn H. Conrad
Florence M. DeLoy
R.I : September IS, 1924.
Ala October i, 1924.
Ala July I, 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
Mich July I, 1924.
D. C July I, 1924.
D. C • July I, 1924.
Mass July i, 1924.
Ohio I July I, 1924.
Mo I July I, 1924.
D. C,
Pa ... ,
N. D.
Md....
Me....
Ark...
Va . . . .
Md....
Pa ... .
D. C.
Cal....
Md....
Mass . ,
Wash.
Va . . . .
Va . . . .
D. C.
N.J..
Md...
D. C.
Md...
D. C.
D. C.
Va...
Pa...
D. C.
S. C,
Va...
D. C.
Va...
Va . . .
N. Y.
Nebr.
N.J..
Teim.
D. C.
N. Y.
D.C..
Conn.
July I, 1924.
December i, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I,
1924
July I,
1924
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I.
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
July I,
1924.
OFFICERS AND CIvERKS.
15
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence Date of appoint-
appointed. ment.
CLERICAI,, ADMINISTRATIva, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued
Grade Three — Assistant clerical — Continued.
At $1,680 — Continued.
Lillie V. Dickson
Lillie B. Dowrick
Anna B . Ferber
Rose P. Fuller
John L. Hayes
Gertrude W. Holinger
Margaret J. Joy
Maud Kennedy
Ruth D. Kerr
Gertrude G. Lewis
Alice McGavack
Sadie Moore
Stanton C. Moore
Earl R. Mosburg
Lois M. Nichols
SudyeM. Pfau
Archibald S. Pinkett
Leonelda S. Seibold
Charles Siegel
Elizabeth B. Smith
Viola Tasker
Laura R. Tonner
Vernon B. Zirkle
At$i,soo:
Belle J. Abrams
Marie Ackermann
Edgar P. Allen
Walter H. Anderson
Vivian M. Ashenden
Eva S. Bamhart
Marie Alice Bates
Margaret B. Bell
Blanche Bowers
John Percy Bradford
John T. Brubaker
Marion L. BrufFey
Lucy E. Bumell
Ellen C. Callicott
Sophie Caplan
Frances M. Carlson
Gladys Chalfant
Emily T. Chase
Katharine Clauser
Henry L. Coakley
Robert Craven
Mary H. Cusack
DeLyle Davis
John D. DeFco
Stella M. Dorgan
Mildred V. Dryer
Effa H. Durham
Frank E. Duvall
Loretta E. Fitzgerald
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
Pa...
D. C.
D. C.
Iowa.
D. C.
Va...
N. Y,
Va...
Md..
D. C.
D. C.
Pa...
D. C.
D. C.
Fla...
D.C.
Md...
Va...
Md...
Pa...
Pa...
111....
Calif.
N. Y.
Md...
Ala..
N. Y.
Ala..
Md...
Va...
Vt...
Vt...
D.C.
Minn
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Pa...
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Conn
Mass .
D.C.
Tenn
D.C.
D.C.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
December
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
, 1924.
, 1924.
, 1924.
, 1924.
. 1924-
. 1924-
. 1924-
, 1924-
, 1924.
, 1924.
, 1924.
. 1924.
I, 1924.
, 1924.
. 1924.
, 1924.
, 1924.
. 1924.
. 1924.
. 1924-
, 1924.
, 1924.
, 1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
October 8, 1924.
December 15, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July 1, 1924.
September 15, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924,
July I, 1924.
September is, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July 1, 1924.
I6
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVK, AND FISCAL SERVICE — Continued
Grade Three — Assistant clerical — Continued.
At $1,500 — Continued.
Samuel S. Ford
Irene B. Fret
Florence E. Frisby
Mary A. Fuerst
Charles F. Funkhouser
Dorothy U. Gait
Marjorie D. Glennan
Laura F. Godard
Florence P. Graves
Edith M. Gray
Catherine E. Gross
Mabel U. Gruber
William I. Hagen
Gertrude C. Heeter
Susanna Hemry ,
Marion R. Hogan ,
Eoline Howze
Edna E. Johnston
Joseph T. Keating
Mary G. Lackey
Phoebe F. Leckey
G. Victor Lindholm
Ella C. Linehan
Nina B. McCuen
Ruth E. McGee
Ruth E. Mclntire
Sarah B. McLean
Grace E. McMahon
Edith A. Mahon
Kathryn M. Masterson
Earl F. May
Laura M. Miles
Grace M. Millard
Edith Miller
Ellamanda H. Miller
Eugene M. Moriarty
Loretta Moriarty
Vivian R. Mosher
John F. Murphy
Helena D. Murray
Katherine Neale
Emma L. M. Neesley
Anna Belle Newcomb
Constance Newell
Dorothy K. Norwood
Winne B. Oswald
Olive F. Palmer
Albina L. Parkins
Estella A. Powell
Ruth Carter Power
Kirby L. Prince ,
Edward E. Pringle
Laurence J. Purcell
Whence
appointed.
Dale of appoint-
ment.
D. C
July I
1924.
N.J
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Iowa
July I
1924.
Va
September i. 1024.
Md
July I
D.C
July I
1924.
Pa
July I
Va
July I
Wis
July I,
1924.
D.C
December i, 1924.
Ind
July I
1924.
N. D
August I, 1924.
D.C
August 16, 1924.
Ohio
July I,
1924.
N. Y
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Ky
July I
1924.
N. Y
July I
1924.
Ky
August 16. I02A.
Va
July I
1924.
N.J
September i, 1924.
Mass
July I,
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Mass
July I
1924.
Iowa
July I
1924.
Calif
July I
1924.
Ohio
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
N. Y
July I
1924.
D.C
January i, 1925.
Md
July I
1924.
Md
July I
1924.
Kans
July I
1924.
Pa
July I
1924.
Mass
July I
1924.
Va
July I
1924.
Pa
July I
1924.
Mass
July I
1924.
Mass
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Iowa
July I
1924.
Mass
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
N. Y
July I
1924.
Md
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Ill
D.C
July I
1924.
Va
July I
D.C
December 15, 1924.
D.C
July I
1924. •.
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued.
Grade Three — Assistant clerical — Continued.
At $1,500 — Continued .
Berry Rector
Dorothy I. Reichert
Ruth Rinker
Elizabeth C. Roach
Myrtle E. Robinette
Mary A. Sadler
Consuclo A. Schater
Blanche B. Schwartz
Adeline C. Shuler
Elizabeth L. Smith
Genevieve E. Sparadoski.
Nettie S. Spencer
Edith F. Stiles
Florence G. Sweet
Anna R. Theaker
Percy O. Tillett
Daniel Henrj' Tilton
Paul Tomasello
Mary G. Veeder
Leo J. Vincelette
Florence L. Welch
Ethel Wolpe
Janet M. WjTikoop
At $1,680:
Walter Scott
At $1,440:
Minna E. Baukhages
Ruth H. Baxter
Elizabeth B. Blackwood.
Elsie B. Cheever
Florence M. Clayton
Laurie A. Davis
Paul Dunbar
Vivian E. Grove
Robert V. Haig
Bertha Hall
Hilda M. Hart
Douglas W. Hartman . . .
Leo B. Humey
William G. James
Georgina Krai
Marguerite B. McCally . .
Ann E. Mullen
Myra A. Murdock
Frances B. Paxson
Madge M. Pearson
Frank Place
Mary L. Powers
George G. Riddiford
Mary W. Robertson
Sallie F. Ross
Grade Two — Junior clerical.
Va...
Iowa.
Va...
D. C.
Pa...
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
S. c.
Ind..
Conn.
Pa...
Mass.
Kans
111...
Va...
D. C.
N.J.
D. C.
Vt...
Md..
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
D. C.
Pa...
D. C.
Mass.
D. C.
Ky..
Md..
D.C.
D. C.
Mass.
Pa...
Wis..
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Md..
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
N. Y,
Mass.
Va...
Ohio.
Va...
Va...
August 16, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
August s. 1924-
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
August 16, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I," 1924.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924-
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
i8
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND FISCAL SERVICE — continued.
Grade Two — Junior clerical — Continued.
At $1,440 — Continued.
Elsie M. Schneider
Milford A. Shipley
Imogen Slaughter
Mary Sprigman
EfBe K. Turner
Ernestine M. Walker
Hattie V. Young
At $1,380:
Clifford O. Barker
Annabelle H. Bocock
Elizabeth S. Doane
Glenn M. Gillette
Louise F. McClare
May Mason
Dwight M. Reed
Ada G. Settle
Margaret C. Sunderland
At $1,320:
Elvia B. Allpress
Inez A. Ayers
Clarence L. Bahr
Nannie W. Berrey
Craig E. Bradbury
Charlotte Bradshaw
Edmond L. Broomfield
Mary W. Bunch
Roy L. Burge
Anna V. Burroughs
Elisabeth L. Buskie
John D. Clarke"
Evelyn E. Cosh
John W. Cowan, jr
Orin J. Crump
Earl A. Cushing
Mary L. Darley
Elsie C. Davis
Edith DeCell
Scott H. Dow
Mildred M. Durand
Daniel J. Durning
Katharine Easton
Anna C. M. Ehrhart
Charles C. Eidler
Eric H. Erickson
L. James Falck
Douglas Fallon
Francis E. Flaherty
Edward C. Gallagher
Alyre J. Gallant
Florine G. Galmish .'
Leo E. Gilbert
Kermit Girdner
Bartley P. Gordon
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Va
D.C
July I, 1924.
W. Va
July I, 1924.
Ohio
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
R.I
July I, 1924.
Va
July I, 1924.
September 1, 1924.
D.C
N. Y
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
December i, 1924.
Mo
November, i, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
November 26, 1924.
Va
November 10, 1924.
October 20, 1924.
S. Dak
D.C
July I, 1924.
D.C
October 15, 1924.
D. C
December i, 1924.
Ark
July I, 1924.
D.C
October 27, 1924.
Iowa
July I, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Va
November i, 1924.
July I, 1924.
October •29, 1924.
Va
D.C
N.Y
July I, 1924.
Kans
July I, 1924.
Utah
August 25, 1924.
Va
December 2, 1924.
December 15, 1924.
D.C
Miss
July I, 1924.
Mass
July 28, 1924.
D.C
October 6, 1924.
Mass
July I, 1924.
D.C
December 13, 1924.
D.C
November 10, 1924.
Minn
September 15, 1924
Utah
September 25, 1924
Utah
July I, 1924.
Va
July I, 1924.
September 8, 1924.
D.C
Eans
July I, 1924.
Mass
December i, 1954.
Pa
December 9. 1924.
Kans
July I, 1924.
D.C
July 14. 1924.
Mass
September 16, 1924
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
19
Names, ofSces, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of apf)oint-
ment.
CLERICAL, ADMINISTRATIVB, AND FISCAL SERVICE— continued.
Grade Two — Junior clerical — Continued.
At $1,320 — Continued.
Erwin P. Hair
Ada J. Hampton
Oris E. Hayden
Elizabeth Hecht
Fred G. Heins
Moody Hull
Louis Hunt '
Elizabeth F. Johnson
Gladys F. Kaiser
Blanche M. Kane
Ruth H. Langley
Josephine C. Legendre
Myma N. Lindsey
Ralph M. Lundahl
William F. Mclnnes
Rhoda A. Mathews
Ira P. Meyer
Otto O. Olsson
David W. Palmer
Edward T. Painter
Linwood H. Perkins
Margaret C. Pease .•
WiUiam C. Pfeiffer
Lillian Phillips
Floyd S. Pomeroy
Beatrice F. Pros!
Margaret H. Raedy
Stoughton J. Richmond
Marguerite R. Roddy
Charlene Roland
Howard E. Sangston
Walter B. Scarborough ,
Dominick A. Sea varda
Theresa C. Schloss
Clarence T. Smith ,
Helen L. Smith ,
Humphrey M. Walsh ,
Byrle A. Whitney ,
Vallie Whittington ,
Grade One — Under clerical.
At $1,440:
Grace E. Jones
Loyal T. King
Helen G. Preil
Mary E. Snyder
Delia Tumulty
Jennie V. Wright..
At $1,380:
Mary J. Loar
Louis G. Owens. . .
Clarence H. Peake.
Ruby F. Reid
Francis J. Sickel...
•u. *- 1
D.C
juiy xo. 1924.
July 16, 19J4.
Me
D.C
October 24, :924.
Mo
November 11, 1924.
W. Va
December 17, 1924.
Ohio
July I, 1924.
N. Y
December 8, 1924.
N. Y
October 22, 1924,
Pa
Minn
July I, 1924.
Miss
July I, 1924.
Va
S. Dak
July I, 1924.
R.I
August 29, 1924.
Va
D.C
July I, 1924.
Mass
December 6, 1924.
Tenn
July I, 1924.
Okia
September 2, 1924.
Me
July I, 1924.
Mass
December i, 1924.
Va
December 18, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Ill
Conn
September 27, 1924
D.C
Septembers, 1924"
D.C
August 7, 1924.
Nebr
November i, 1924.
Ill
December 8, 1924.
D.C
July I, 1924.
Tex
August 16, 1924.
Colo
July I, 1924.
Wis
December i, 1924-
D.C
July r, 1924.
D.C
December i, 1924.
D.C
July 14, 1924.
Iowa
November 18, 1924
Ill
July I, i9«4.
Kans
July I,
1924.
Pa
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Mich
July I
1924.
ni
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924.
Iowa
July I
1924.
D.C
July I
1924-
20
OFFICERS AND CIvERKS.
Names, offices.
and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CLBRICAL, ADMINISTRATIVB, AND FISCAL SBRVICE— Continued.
Grade One — Under clerical — Continued.
Ai%i,32o:
William H. Welch
Md
November 28, 1924.
At $1,260:
Nellie Bresnahan
D.C
D.C
Conn
D.C
Wis
Iowa
Wis
Calif
Tex
Ohio
D.C
D.C
Kans
Mo
July I, 1924.
Elsie M. Carey ....
July I, 1924.
William F. Delaney
July I, 1924.
Lloyd Gibson . ...
July I, 1924.
Ellen E. Nutter
July I, 1924.
James R. O'Neil
July I, 1924.
At $1,140:
Gladys C. Ahrens
September 18, 1924.
Rose E. Archer Allison. .
July I, 1924.
J. Brent Clarke
October 27, 1924.
Emma E. Comes
December i, 1924.
Caroline Dickey
July I, 1924.
Frances N. Dismon
October 27, 1924.
Frances J. Frankenhoff
November i, 1924.
Ruth Patee Griffin
December i, 1924.
Fred E. Hailer
D.C
D.C
D.C
Colo........
Md
July I, 1924.
Marie S. Haneke
July I, 1924.
Frances I,. Hynson
August 12, 1924.
Dorothy Jackson
July I, 1924.
Cornelia M. Kirby
August 20, 1924.
Laura E. Langley
D.C.......
D.C
D.C
Pa
July I, 1924.
James Martin
July I, 1924.
Ruth C. Mason
July I, 1924.
Walter A. Miller
October 28, 1924.
Beulah K. Pangle
D.C
Fla
September 11,1924.
Louisa Pastorini
July I, 1924.
Lila C. Scott
D.C
D. C
N.J
D.C
D.C
D. C
D.C
D.C
D. C
Pa
October 6, 1924.
Inga Stejneger
November 10, 1924.
Meador Wright
November 24, 1924.
At $1,500:
Daniel W. Lewis
CUSTODIAL SBRVICB.
Grade Six — Assistant custodial.
January i, 1925.
At $1,500:
Grade Four — Under custodial.
July I, 1924.
At $1,260:
George Scott
Grade Three — Minor custodial.
July I, 1924.
At $1,140:
July I, 1924.
At $1,080:
July I, 1924.
D.C
D.C
D. C
Ark
July I, 1924.
Warren McBeth
July I, 1924.
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
21
Names, offices, and salaries.
ctJSTODlAl, SBRVICB — continued.
Grade Three — Minor CM^/orf/o/— Continued.
At $i,o8o — Continued.
Louis S. Myers
Ulysses S. G. Prince. . .
Charles Reeder
Lloyd Sharps
Paul A. Simmons
Clayborne Tennille
Willard H. Wheeler...,
At $1,020:
Hugh F. Alexander....
Eugene Beasley
John N. Boasman
Burnett Booker
Guy B. Booth
C. Eloise Bourke
Rufus R. Burnett
John L. Butler
Clarence Compton
Bernard C. Cooke
Harry W. Cornell
Frederick A. Dodson. .
William H. Dorsey
Howard H. Early
Walter B. Edmonds...
Edward Fauntroy
George A. Green
Victor E. Green
James W. Hardy
John F. Harkum
George F. Harris
William W. Hawley. . .
William H. Hester . . . .
James O. Holmes
James H. Home
Alfred L. Jackson
Charles L. Johnson
Victor E. Jones
William J. Kelly
Augustus Lee
Parker H. Lee
Crespino Mandara
George H. Morris
Melville E. Penn
Roswell N. Pinckney.
Ralph W. Pryor
Earle G. Ragan
Michael J. Ready
Herbert B. Savage
John N. Savage
Thomas Sayers
Samuel R. Shipman. .
Ransellear F. Shorter.
Edward T. Simmons.
Arthur J. Smith
Carothers Smith
Whence
appointed.
D. C.
D.C.
D.C.
Nebr.
Pa....
Ala...
D.C.
D.C.
D. C.
D. C.
D.C.
Pa...
Ga...
D.C.
Md...
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Md...
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Va....
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Pa...
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Pa...
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
D.C.
Md...
Md...
D.C.
D.C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. Y.
D.C.
D.C.
Pa...
La...
Va...
Date of appoint-
ment.
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July t,
July I.
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I.
July I,
July I,
July I,
July r,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July t,
July I,
July I.
July I.
July I,
July I.
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I.
July I,
July I,
July I.
22
OFFICERS AND CLERKS.
Names, offices, and salaries.
Whence
appointed.
Date of appoint-
ment.
CUSTODIAL SERVICE— continued.
Grade Three — Minor custodial — Continued.
At $1,020 — Continued.
James S. Swann ,
Colbert S. Syphax
Edgar Thomas
George A. Thomas
Edward J. Tobin
William E. Toyer
Ralph C. Walker
Edward Wells
Leland S. West
Harrison O. Williams
William G. Williams
Frank T. Wright
Grade Two — Office laborer.
At$QOo:
Nicholas Anthony ,
Robert W. Brown ,
D. C
D.C
Ga..
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
D.C
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
July I, 1924.
PASSPORT AGENCIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
$2,300)
At New York:
Ira F. Hoyt, agent ($3,000)
James J. Hughes, assistant agent
Philip H. Ahrens ($1,860)
William F. Marshall ($1,860)
Beulah G. Baer ($i,85o)
Henry W. Lindgren ($1,860)
Cecilia R. Smyth ($1,680)
Elma V. Waldron ($1,680)
Charles L. Pierce ($1,680)
Richard Opitz ($1,440)
Teresa M. La Grutta ($1,200)
Eugene Straight ($900)
At San Francisco:
William A. Newcome, agent ($3,000)
John W. Redmond, assistant agent ($2,000) .
Gordon Norquist ($i,soo)
At Chicago:
Robert A. Proctor, agent ($2,800)
Harry H. Bolds, assistant agent ($2,000)
John L. Barton ($1,680)
At New Orleans:
Somerset A. Owen, agent ($2,500)
J. Milton Pilcher ($1,680)
At SeatUe:
Eugene C. Rowley, sr., agent ($2,800)
Esther M. Dillon ($1,680)
Conn.
N. Y.
N. Y.
R. I..
Va...
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
N. Y.
Calif.
Calif.
Calif.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
1924.
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
November s. 1924-
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August t, 1924'.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
August I, 1924.
PERSONS WHO HAVE RETIRED FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF THE ACT OF MAY 22, 1920.
Lucy E. Abbot, of Ohio June 30, 1922.
Thomas Morrison, of New York June 30, 1922.
Elisha J. Babcock, of District of Colum-
bia. (Died April 22, 1924) Jime 30, 1922.
Frank H. Peabody, of Ohio June 30, 1922.
Samuel Cole, of District of Columbia Jtme 30, 1922.
John T. Coughlin, of Michigan. (Died
September 20. 1922) June 30, 1922.
John Barry, of District of Columbia June 30, 1922.
T. John Newton, of District of Columbia. June 30, 1922.
Martha A. Gwin, of District of Columbia. April 13, 1923.
Mary W. Goss, of New York June 30, 1923.
ORGANIZATION. 23
IX.— ORGANIZATION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE.
The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the duties appertaining
to correspondence with the public ministers and the consuls of the United States and with the represen-
tatives of foreign powers accredited to the United States, and to negotiations of whatever character
relating to the foreign affairs of the United States. He is also the medium of correspondence
between the President and the chief executives of the several States of the United States; he has
the custody of the seal of the United States, and countersigns and affixes such seal to all treaties.
Executive proclamations, to various commissions, and to warrants for the extradition of fugitives
from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among the members of the Cabinet. He is also the
custodian of the treaties made with foreign States, and of the laws of the United States. He grants
and issues passports, and exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his
office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Constitution, and
proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union.
Charles Evans Hughes, Secretary of State.
William H. Beck, Private Secretary.
Clerks to the Secretary.
Messengers.
George Scott.
Louis E. Mundy.
Edward A. Savoy ,^
J. Everett Will.
Charles L. Johnson.
OFFICE OF THE UNDERSECRETARY OF STATE.
The Undersecretary of State is the principal assistant of the Secretary of State in the discharge of his
various functions, aiding in the formulation and execution of the foreign policies of the Government,
in the reception of representatives of foreign governments, etc. In matters which do not require
the personal attention of the Secretary of State he acts for the Secretary of State, and in the absence
of the Secretary of State he becomes the Acting Secretary of State. The Undersecretary of State is
charged with the general direction of the work of the Department of State and of the foreign service,
and is chairman of the Foreign Service Personnel Board.
Joseph C. Grew, Undersecretary of State.
George A. Morlock, Private Secretary.
Assistants.
Arthur Bliss Lane.' - Robert C. Bannerman.
Clerks.
Marion Arnold.
Blanche B. Schwartz.
Paul A. Simmons.
L. Adelaide Watson.
Ada J. Hampton.
Messengers.
Claybome Tennille.
Eldora C. Lawson.
Carothers H. Smith.
' Foreigu Service Ollicer.
24 ORGANIZATION.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE.
The Assistant Secretary charged with all matters pertaining to foreign commercial policy, commercial
treaties, transportation and communication, etc., and who supervises the Office of the Economic
Adviser. In the absence of the Secretary of State and the Undersecretary of State he becomes the
Acting Secretary of State.
IvELAND Harrison, Assistant Secretary of State.
James E. McKenna, Private Secretary.
Elsie M. A. Stanley, Clerk.
Charles Reeder, Messenger.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE
The Assistant Secretary charged with the administration of the department, administrative matters
concerning international conferences and commissions, and with matters pertaining to ceremonial
and protocol. He has supervision over the office of the chief clerk, the Division of Publications,
the Bureau of Accounts, and the Bureau of Indexes and Archives. Is charged with the presentation
to the President of ambassadors and ministers of foreign countries newly accredited to the United
States. Is a member of the Foreign Service Personnel Board.
J. Butler Wright, Assistant Secretary of State.
Marvin W. Will, Private Secretary.
Sydney Y. Smith. Charles Lee Cooke.
F. Lammot Belin.' Edwin C. Wilson.'
Clerks.
Erma M. Knemeyer. Edith P. Connelly. Genevieve E. Sparadoski.
George F. Harris, Messenger.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE.
The Assistant Secretary charged with the direction of the Consular Service and all consular activities in
connection with the work of the several bureaus and divisions of the department; his office has
charge of censoring, grading, and criticizing of commercial and economic reports; drafting of cor-
respondence on consular trade assistance and reporting; distribution of commercial and economic
reports to the Department of Commerce and such other Government departments and organiza-
tions and non-Government organizations as may properly receive them. He is also the Budget
officer of the Department of State and is charged with the supervision of the preparation of all
estimates of appropriations for the department and for the foreign service and of their presenta-
tion to Congress. vSupervises the expenditures made from the appropriation for "Emergencies
arising in the Diplomatic and Consular Service." Is a member of the Foreign Service Personnel
Board.
Wilbur J. Carr, Assistant Secretary of State.
Beulah M. Griffith, Private Secretary.
Rebekah L. dcLashmutt, Clerk.
Arthur J. Smith, Messenger.
' Foreign S;rvice Officer.
ORGANIZATION.
25
Hamilton C. Claiborne.^
Aloysius Wenger.
Clifton R. Wharton.
Raymond E. Murphy.
Helen L. Daniel.
Margaret C. Monroe.
Anna B. Ferber.
Budget Office.
Tracy Lay,' in charge.
B. Leslie Vipond, Assistant.
Clerks.
Helen F. Doran.
Edna E. Johnston.
Consular Commercial Office.
Addison E- Southard, ' in charge.
H. Merle Cochran.' Arthur F. Tower.'
Clerks.
Joseph P. Burg.
Helen G. Preil.
Margaret B. Bell.
Kathryn M. Masterson.
Elsie B. Cheever.
Vivian E. Grove.
Ann E. Mullen.
Delia Tumulty.
Grace E. Jones.
Kermit Girdner.
Charlotte Bradshaw.
Samuel R. Shipman, Messenger.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE.
The Assistant Secretary who deals with Far Eastern questions, and exercises supervision over_the
Division of Passport Control. Makes decisions in citizenship and other cases involving complex
questions of law and policy.
John Van A. MacMurray, Assistant Secretary of State.
William P. Carey, Private Secretary.
Kathleen D. O'Shaughnessy, Clerk.
Isaac Edwards, Messenger.
OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR.
Deals with questions of municipal and international law; handles claims of citizens of the United States
• against foreign governments and of nationals of foreign countries against the United States; matters
pertaining to intema:tional extradition; the protection of interests of American citizens in foreign
coimtries; rights of aliens in the United States; international arbitrations; and drafting and inter-
pretation of treaties.
Charles Cheney Hyde, Solicitor.
James Alan Nash, Executive Assistant.
Joseph R. Baker.
Jacob A. Metzger.
Green H. Hackworth.
Ralph W. S. Hill.
Richard W. Flournoy, Jr.
William R. Vallance.
Edgar Willis Turlington.
Charles M. Barnes.
Assistants to the Solicitor.
Joseph B. Matre.
William B. Morris, Jr.
Anna A. O'Neill.
Alfred B. Haupt.
Benedict M. English.
Herbert B. Collins.
Francis Colt de Wolf.
Frank X. Ward.
Stephen Latchford.
Fra.ncis M, Anderson.
Raymond V. SheplEr.
Frederick M. Diven.
Raymond T. Yingling.
Ethel L. Lawrence.
Conway N. Kitchen.
Philip C Jessup.
' Foreign Service Officer.
26
Mary A. Duffy.
W Iter . Pel ton.
Louis S. Myers.
Alfred L. Jackson.
ORGANIZATION.
Clerks.
M. Esther Barry.
Florence G. Sweet.
Messengers.
Clarence L. Compton.
Margaret H. Raedy.
Frederick A. Dodson.
War Trade Board Records and Files.
Edmund W. Van Dyke, in charge.
Stella M. Dorgan, Clerk.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK.
General supervision of the clerks and other employees of the department and of routine departmental
matters; purchase of supplies; custody of the property of the department; supervision and assign-
ment of ofhce rooms and space; issuance of passes, when required, to persons entitled to enter the
building; authentication of applications for automobile licenses of foreign diplomatic officers resid-
ing in Washington; correspondence on departmental matters; leaves of absence and sick leave;
preparation and custody of efficiency records of the department. The chief clerk signs authentica-
tions and such other papers as the Secretary of State may direct. The appointment section of his
office has charge of the receipt and custody of applications for appointment in the departmental
service and of the indorsements of applicants; correspondence relating thereto; preparation of nomi-
nations to the Senate of foreign service officers and other officers commissioned by the Department
of State whose appointments are subject to confirmation by the Senate; issuance of commissions,
exequaturs, and warrants of extradition ; bonding of foreign service officers and other officers account-
able to the department for moneys received or expended; preparation of copy for the department
register, diplomatic and consular list, and mailing list; editing, proof reading, and distribution of
the same; civil service and departmental personnel matters; oaths of office; custody of the seal of
the United States.
E. J. Ayers, Chief Clerk.
Percy F. Allen, Assistant.
James L. Duncan.
Alice M. Blandford.
Margaret R. Shedd.
Clerks.
Alice McGavack. Meta E. Ferguson.
Warren McBeth, Messenger.
Stephen H. Quigley.
Will. F. Dunker.
Appointment Section.
Percy F. Allen, Chief.
Clerks.
Sudye M. Pfau.
John Percy Bradford.
Ulysses S. G. Prince, Jr., Messenger,
Humphrey M. Walsh.
Moody Hull.
Translators' Section.
John S. Martin, Jr., Translator.
Edna K. Hoyt, Clerk-Translator^
ORGANIZATION.
27
Margaret V. Conover.
Ella A. Benesh.
Florence M. DeLoy.
Lois M. Nichols.
Lillie B. Dovmck.
Helena D. Murray.
Janet M. Wynkoop.
Grace E. McMahon.
Vivian R. Mosher.
EVa S. Bamhart.
Mabel U. Gruber.
Dorothy I. Reichert.
Eoline Howze.
Stenographic Section.
Edward B. Russ, in charge.
Adeline C. Shuler.
Emma L. M. Neesley.
Nettie S. Spencer.
Ruth E. McGee.
Anna Belle Nevvcomb.
EstellaA. Powell.
Vivian M. Ashenden.
Frances M. Carlson.
Elizabeth L. Smith.
Hilda M. Hart.
Mary Sprigman.
Mary W. Robertson.
Annabelle H. Bocock.
Margaret C. Sunderland.
Oris E. Hay den.
Beatrice F. Prosl.
Gladys F. Kaiser.
Marguerite R. Roddy.
Theresa C. Schloss.
Mary L. Darley.
Charlene Roland.
Florine G. Galmish.
Elsie C. Davis.
Frances J. Frankenhoff.
Ruth Patee Griffin.
John L. Hayes.
Earl F. May.
Robert Warren.
William J. Kelley.
Daniel W. Lewis, Typewriter repairman.
Walter Scott, Lithographer.
Gertrude C. Heeter, Photostat operator.
Anna V. Biuroughs, Multigraph operator.
Laura E. Langley, Mimeograph operator.
C. Eloise Bourke, Helper.
Edward Wells, Messenger boy.
James R. Warren, Chauffeur.
John N. Savage, Messenger.
Nicholas Anthony, Laborer.
Robert W. Brown, Laborer.
Mail Room.
Robert S. Clayton, in charge.
32952— 2i>
Alyre J. Gallant.
William H. Welch.
Willard H. Wheeler, Messenger.
Chauffeurs.
William H. Hester.
John N. Boasman.
Stationery Room.
Maitland S. Wright, in charge.
Loyal T. King, Bookkeeper.
Howard E. Sangston, Subclerk.
James S. Swann, Packer.
John Louis Butler, Messenger.
J. Brent Clarke.
Bernard C. Cooke.
28 ORGANIZATION.
OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL
BOARD.
Preparation of efficiency records of foreign service officers; submission to the Secretary of State of names I
of foreign service officers recommended for advancement in the service, for designation as counselors
of embassy or legation, and for promotion to the grade of minister; recommendations to the Secretary
of State regarding the assignm.ent of foreign service officers to posts and their transfer from one j
branch of the service to the other according to the needs of the service; recommendations to the j
Secretary of State regarding separations from the service. Tlie office of the executive committee I
of the Foreign Service Personnel Board is charged with the receipt and custody of all applications i
for appointment in the foreign service and with arranging for examinations for entrance to the \
foreign service. Correspondence relating thereto. Prints and distributes blank forms of application i
for appointment in the foreign service and pamphlets regarding requirements for entrance therein. \
Executive Committee. I
Charles C. Eberhardt,' Chairman.
Hugh R. Wilson,' Member representing the Diplomatic Service, ]
Edward J. Norton,' Member representing the Consular Service.
WORTHINGTON E. STEWART, Chief of the Office. "!
Edgar A. Shreve, Assistant Chief of the Office. I
i
William Dawson.' Thomas M. Wilson.' Miles M. Shand, ;
Clerks.
Mildred V. Deike. Ellen C. Callicott. Douglas Fallon. I
Hazel L. Cloyes. '
Lloyd Sharps, Messenger.
DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS.
General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic,
with China and leased territories, Japan, Siam, the Far Eastern possessions of European nations
(in conjunction with the Division of Western European Affairs), and Siberia (in conjunction with
the Division of Eastern European Affairs). j
%
Frank P. liOCHKAKr, Acting Chief of Division.
Eo-mN L. Neville.' Mahlon Fay Perkins.' John K. Caldwell. ^
J. Paul Jameson. George Atcheson, Jr.'
Clerks.
Ethel G. Christenson. Grace M. Millard. Bertha Hall.
Katharine Clauser.
William D. Evans, Messenger.
1 Foreign Seivice OfBcer.
ORGANIZATION. 29
DIVISION OF LATIN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS.
General supervision, tmder the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic,
with Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Salvador, Uruguay,
and Venezuela.
Francis White,' Chief of Division.
Dana G. Munro,' Assistant Chief of Division.
William R. Manning. Westel Robinson Willoughby.
Orme Wilson, Jr.' Edward L. Reed.' Lucile Atcherson.'
Clerks.
Nina G. Romeyn. Eunice A. Lincoln. Edith M. Gray.
Anna L. Clarkson. Judith W. Anderton.
Victor E. Jones, Messenger.
DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS.
General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic,
with Austria, Belgium, British Empire (Canada, Union of South Africa, British colonies or pro-
tectorates not elsewhere enumerated, and, in conjunction with the Far Eastern Division, Australia,
New Zealand, India, and other British or European possessions in the Far East), Czechoslovakia,
Denmark, France (Morocco), Germany, Hungary, Italy, Liberia, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal
Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.
William R. Castle, Jr., Chief of Division.
DorsEY Richardson, Assistant Chief of Division.
Ir\ing N. Linnell.'
J. Theodore Marriner.' George A. Gordon.'
Henry Carter.
Clerks.
Eileen McKenny. Mary Agnes Breen. John D. De Feo.
Georgia E. McMilUon. Nettie N. Bagby.
Edward J. Tobin, Messenger.
DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. '^1
General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and eco-
nomic, with Abyssinia, Afghanistan, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Egypt, Georgia,
Greece, Hedjaz, Mesopotamia, Palestine, Persia, Rumania, Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes, Syria, and Tiu-key.
Allen W. Dulles,' Chief of Division.
Knute E. Carlson. Emerson B. Christie.
Richard B. Southgate.' Herschel V. Johnson.' George Wadsworth.i
Clerks.
Mary N. Birch. Viola Tasker. Gladys Chalfant.
Lillie V. Dickson.
George A. Green, Messenger.
> Foreign Service OfiScer.
30
ORGANIZATION.
DIVISION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS.
General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and eco-
nomic, with Mexico.
Franklin Mott Gunther,* Chief of Division.
Richard C. Tanis, Assistant Chief of Division.
WaldEmar J. Gaxlman.^
Clerks.
William J. Kavanagh. Ethel Wolpe.
Thomas Sayers, Messenger.
Edwin D. Keith.
Rutli H. Baxter.
DIVISION OF EASTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS.
General supervision, under the secretaries, of matters pertaining to Russia (including Siberia), and of
relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Esthonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithu-
ania, and Poland.
Evan E. Young, > Chief of Division.
Alexander R. Magruder.'
Jane B. Bassett.
Leonelda S. Seibold.
Robert F. Kellev."
Preston Kumler.
Clerks.
Elizabeth B. Smith.
James H. Home, Messenger.
LoY W. Henderson.!
Katherine Easton.
OFFICE OF THE ECONOMIC ADVISER.
Gives advice and recommendations to the department on questions of general economic policy ; unifies
and coordinates economic matters within the department; establishes and maintains liaison with
the various economic bureaus in other departments; handles economic cases which have no regional
character or which overlap geographical divisions; drafts correspondence on matters falling within
the following special fields: Natural resources, finance, foreign commercial policy, commercial
treaties and tariffs, transportation, and communications.
Spencer Phenix.
Marianna Davis.
Virginia C. Braxton.
Arthur N. Young, Economic Adviser.
Wallace M. McClure.
Clerks.
Mildred V. Dryer.
Crespino Mandara, Messenger.
Paul Trauger Culbertson.
Marion R. Hogan.
• Foreign Service Officer.
ORGANIZATION.
DIVISION OF PASSPORT CONTROL.
31
Examination and adjudication of applications for passports and for registration in consulates of the
United States as American citizens; issuance of departmental passports; supervision over the
department's passport agencies in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, New Orleans, and Seattle;
direction of clerks of courts who take passport applications; custody of applications for passports
and registration; correspondence regarding citizenship, passports, registration, and rightto pro-
tection while abroad; issuance of letters of introduction.
George L. Brist, Chief of Division.
John J. Scanlan, Assistant Chief of Division.
Clerks.
Clarence E. Sisler.
Bertha S. Davis.
Joseph B. Quinlan.
Walter P. Hibbs.
Thomas F. Farrell.
Jennie Cook Bopp.
William L. Cundiff.
Charles P. Roach, jr.
Orlando F. Smith, jr.
George T. Heckert.
J. Movie Gray.
Julia F. Simpson.
Albert B. Havenner.
Ward B. McCarthy.
Eugene C. Rowley, jr.
Grace Clairmont.
vSeale R. Giles.
Archibald S. Pinkett.
Alice M. Covel.
Gertrude G. Lewis.
Elizabeth H. Carey.
Maud Kennedy.
George R. School ey.
Margaret J. Joy.
Gladys E. Merriman.
Louise E. Lacey.
Edgar Thomas.
George A. Thomas.
James Martin.
Eugene Beasley.
John G. Palcho, jr.
Ralph M. Howe.
Marie H. Du Val.
Nellie Vass Myers.
Harold F. Tracy.
Mary G. Lackey.
Belle J. Abrams.
Myrtle E. Robinette.
Phoebe F. Leckey.
Consuelo A. Schafer.
Elizabeth C. Roach.
Winne B. Oswald.
Paul Tomasello.
Myra A. Murdock.
Ernestine M. Walker.
Minna E. Baukhages.
Jennie V. Wright.
Elizabeth B, Blackwood.
Leo B. Humey.
Mary L. Powers.
Florence M. Clayton
William G. James.
Hattie V. Young.
Robert V. Haig.
Edith De Cell.
Elizabeth S. Doane.
Messengers,
Edward Faun troy.
Burnett Booker.
Messenger boys.
Hugh F. Alexander.
Michael J. Ready.
May Mason.
Ada G. Settle.
Ruby F. Reid.
Mary J. Loar.
Louise F. McClare.
Louis G. Owens.
Clifford O. Barker.
Lillian F. Phillips.
Ruth H. Langley.
Josephine C. Legendre.
Nannie W. Berrey.
Clarence T. Smith.
Stoughton J. Richmond.
Mildred M. Durand.
Craig E. Bradbury.
Elsie M. Carey.
Nellie Bresnahan.
Lloyd Gibson.
William F. Delaney.
Beulah K. Pangle.
Gladys C. Ahrens.
Lila C. Scott.
Frances N. Dismon.
Walter A. Miller.
Meador Wright.
Victor E. Green.
Guy B. Booth.
Ralph Walton Pryor.
Earl G. Ragan.
Passport Bureau, New York.
(Customhouse.)
Ira F. Hoyt, Passport Agent.
James J. Hughes, Assistant Passport Agent.
32
Philip H. Ahrens.
William F. Marshall.
Beulah G. Baer.
ORGANIZATION.
Clerks.
Henry W. Lindgren.
Cecilia R. Smyth.
Elma V. Waldron.
Teresa M. La Grutta, Messenger.
Eugene Straight, Messenger.
Charles L. Pierce.
Richard Opitz.
Passport Bureau, San Francisco.
(Customhouse.)
William A. Newcome, Passport Agent.
John W. Redmond, Assistant Passport Agent.
Gordon Norquist, Clerk.
Passport Bureau, Chicago.
(Transportation Building, 608 South Dearborn Street.
Robert A. Proctor, Passport Agent.
Harry H. Bolds, Assistant Passport Agent.
John L. Barton, Clerk.
Passport Bureau, New Orleans.
(357 Post Office Building.)
Somerset A. Owen, Passport Agent.
J. Milton Pilcher, Clerk.
Passport Bureau, Seattle.
(1008 White Building.)
Eugene C. Rowley, Sr., Passport Agent.
Esther M. Dillon, Clerk.
DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. ,1
Issuing of requisitions on the Public Printer and general supervision of press work done for the depart-
ment, of which the chief of the division is the editor; compilation of the session laws, statutes at j
large of the United States, papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, and other \
publications; custody of the original laws, treaties, proclamations, and Executive orders; printing j
of the slip laws and printing and distribution of treaties, proclamations, and Executive orders; j
custody of Indian treaties and other historical manuscripts, of papers relating to constitutional '
amendments and the ascertainment of electors, and of records of boundary and claims commissions; '
authentications. i
Tyler Dennett, Chief of Division.
Henry L. Bryan, Editor of the Laws. i
Charles H. Miller, Assistant Editor. |
George H. Schultze.
Joseph A. Fennell.
Thomas Griffin.
Augustus Lee.
Clerks.
Forrest D. Van Valin.
Laura R. Tonner.
Irene B. Frei.
Messengers.
William I. Hagen.
Paul Dunbar.
Dwight M. Reed.
John F. Harkum.
ORGANIZATION.
DIVISION OF POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC INFORMATION
33
Collection and coordination of political, ethnological, geographical, social, and economic information;
custody of the map collection of the department and the drafting of such special maps as may be
required; management of the library of the department.
Prentiss B. Gilbert, Chief of Division'.
S. W, BoGGS, Geographer
Frederick Livesey. John A. Tonner.
Clerks.
Frederick A. Kendall. Blanche Bowers. Ruth E. Mclntire.
Johnson McFetridge. Emily T. Chase. Mary G. Veeder.
Gertrude W. Holinger. Susanna Hemry.
Laurence J. Purcell.
James O. Holmes, Messenger.
Constance Newell.
Bertha E. Pierce.
Library.
Mangum Weeks, zw charge.
Assistants.
Rosa V. Sands.
Harry W. Cornell, Messenger.
Joseph S. Herr.
DIVISION OF CURRENT INFORMATION.
Preparation of news items for the press; receiving and replying to inquiries from newspaper correspond-
ents; preparation and distribution to officials of the department of daily press summaries and special
articles; furnishing them with press bulletins, copies of texts, and general information bearing upon
foreign relations.
Hugh R. Wilson', Chief of Division.
Michael J. McDermott, Assistant Chief of Division.
Gerharb Gade.'
James R. O'Neil, Clerk.
Messengers.
Thomas J. Delaney. William G. Williams.
DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE ADMINISTRATION.
General administration of the Foreign Service, including matters of appropriations and expenditures,
rentals, equipment and supplies, organizations, instruction of diplomatic and consular officers, etc.
Correspondence relating to the foregoing and to customs courtesies and free entry, letters rogatory',
decoration of American citizens by foreign governments, international exchange of publications,
diplomatic pouch service between the United States and foreign countries, and the designation of
commercial, military, and naval attaches; whereabouts and welfare of Americans abroad, shipping
and seamen, settlement of estates of deceased Americans in foreign countries, consular protection
of American interests and, other than commerce, the general work of consular offices, such as immi-
gration, quarantine, notarial acts, protection of tlie customs revenues, etc.
Herbert C. HengstlER, Chief of Division.
John D. Johnson,^ Assistant Chief of Division,
Harry A. Havens. Frances M. Marsh.
J. Klar Huddle.' William W. Heard.' Frederick W. Hinke.'
Charles C. Broy.' Charles H. Derry.' Richard S. Leach.'
Rtnfus H. Lane.'
' Foreign Service Officer .
34
ORGANIZATION.
Julian Taylor.
Paul W. Eaton.
Edwin Tarrisse.
Harvey B. Ottennan.
Glenn A. Smith.
Margaret V. Bennett.
Percy G. Dwyre.
Maud M. Crane.
Louis E. Gates.
Esther R. Foster.
Albert V. Caffee.
Adele E. Dix.
Blanche A. Barker.
John R. Fitzpatrick.
Herbert B. Savage.
Henry Hawkins.
Clerks.
Laurence C. Frank.
Hugh L. Sturgis.
Tuley W. Nelson.
Clara L. Borjes.
James R. Givens.
Murray Lewis Crosse.
Woody Miuray.
Effa H. Durham.
Robert Craven.
G. Victor Lindholm.
Edith A. Mahon.
Edgar P. Allen.
Effie K. Turner.
Marguerite B. McCally.
Messengers.
Walter B. Edmonds.
Madge M. Pearson.
George G. Riddiford.
Douglas W. Hartman.
Mary E. Snyder.
Clarence H. Peake.
William F. Mclnnes.
Edward T. Painter.
Francis E. Flaherty.
Bartley P. Gordon.
Fred G. Heins.
Floyd S. Pomeroy.
Fred E. Hailer.
Otto O. Olsson.
William H. Dorsey.
BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES.
Recording and indexing the correspondence of the department; custody of the archives; telegraph
telephone, and cipher commtmications.
David A. Salmon, Chief of Bureau.
Roger S. Drissel, Assistant Chief of Bureau.
Clerks.
J. Hubbard Bean.
Wilbur Underwood.
Henry P. Dugan.
James S. Skinner.
Joseph W. McMahon.
Harvey E. Fenstermacher.
Natalia Summers.
James A. O'Keefe.
Sydney A. Skinner.
Clayton S. Becker.
Maurice W. Lacey.
William V. Madden.
Dorothy K. Butler.
William A. Poole.
Elbert H. Watt.
Joseph D. Steele.
Stuart R. Bailey.
Edward E. Driscoll.
Alice R. Lucas.
Minnie D. Middleton.
Winrield S. Byars.
John B. Wells.
Rose P. Fuller.
David Crenshaw.
Charles Siegel.
Earl R. Mosburg.
Vernon B. Zirkle.
Kathryn H. Conrad.
Ruth D. Kerr.
Addie F. Jonscher.
Loretta Mori arty.
Charles F. Funkhouser.
Berry Rector.
Dorothy U. Gait.
Albina L. Parkins.
Lucy E. Bunnell.
Percy O. Tillett.
Nina B. McCuen.
Edith Miller.
Laura F. Godard.
Mary A. Sadler.
Frank E. Duvall.
Ruth Carter Power.
Anna R. Theaker.
Ruth Rinker.
Marion L. Bruffey.
DeLyle Davis.
Mary A. Fuerst.
Walter H. Anderson.
Loretta E. Fitzgerald.
Samuel S. Ford.
Dorothy K. Norwood.
Ellamanda H. Miller.
Olive F. Palmer.
Kirby L. Prince.
John F. Murphy.
Florence L. Welch.
Marjorie D. Glennan.
Sarah B. McLean.
Laura M. Miles.
Florence P. Graves.
Katherine Neale.
Marie Ackermann.
John T. Brubaker.
Leo J. Vincelette.
Daniel Henry Tilton.
Eugene M. Moriarty.
Mary H. Cusack.
Joseph T. Keating.
Marie Alice Bates.
Milford A. Shipley.
Frank Place.
ORGANIZATION.
35
Glenn M. Gillette.
John W. Cowan, jr.
Louis Hunt.
Lin wood H. Perkins.
L. James Falck.
Khoda A. Mathews.
Dominick A. Scavarda.
Daniel J. Burning.
Ira P. Meyer.
Orin J. Crump,
Ralph M. Lundahl
\'allie WTiittington.
John D. Clarke.
Leo E. Gilbert.
Roy L. Burge.
Edward C. Gallagher.
Edmond L. Broomfield.
Erwin P. Hair.
Scott H. Dow.
Walter B. Scarborough.
Charles C. Eidler.
Eric H. Erickson.
Clarence L. Bahr.
William C. Pfeiflfer.
Ellen E. Nutter.
Dorothy Jackson.
Rose E. Archer Allison.
Frances L. HATison.
Marie S. Haneke.
Irving Jackson,
Edward T. Simmons.
James W. Hardy.
Melville E. Penn.
Telephone Operators.
Catherine E. Gross, Chief Operator.
Louisa Pastorini.
Messengers.
William E. Toyer,
Howard H. Early.
Harrison O. Williams.
Laborers.
Caroline Dickey,
Ralph C. Walker.
Ransellear F. Shorter.
Roswell N. Pinckney.
Rufus R. Burnett.
William W. Hawley.
BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS.
Custody and disbursement of appropriations and indemnity funds; correspondence relating thereot;
administrative examination of accounts.
William JMcNeir, Chief of Bureau and Disbursing Clerk.
Harry. R. Youxg, A'isislanl Chief of Bureau.
George B. Stambaugh.
Aura I. Middlekauff.
Leonard A. Merritt.
Frances R. Hough.
Fred R. Young.
Victor H. Loftus.
Seth D. Logsdon.
Parker H. Lee.
32952—25 4
W. Ford Cramer.
Clerks.
Lloyd C. Mitchell.
Emily S. Morrison.
Lillian H. Middle ton.
Florence E. Frisby.
Sophie Caplan.
Messengers.
Frank O. I\Ic\ew.
Edward E. Pr ingle.
Imogen Slaughter.
Francis J. Sickel.
David W. Palmer.
Byrle A. Wliitney.
George H. Morris.
36
ORGANIZATION.
VISA OFFICE.
Matters pertaining to the entry of aliens into the United States with respect to the granting or refusal of
visas: correspondence on matters pertaining to visa work; examination of visa applications sub-
mitted by American consuls abroad.
CoERT Du Bois.i Chief of the Office.
Carol H. Foster,' Assistant Chief of the Office.
George L. Brandt.'
Marjorie IMoss.
Dorothy D. Morrison.
Estelle Crawford.
Frances I. Smith.
Herbert B. Monroe.
Ella C. Linehan.
Edith F. Stiles.
Elsie M. Schneider.
Georgina Krai.
Clerks.
Laurie A. Davis.
Frances B. Paxson.
Earl A. Cushing.
Elizabeth Hecht.
Myma N. Lindsay.
Mary W. Bunch.
Evelyn Cosh.
Elisabeth L. Buskie.
Inez A. Ayers.
Colbert S. Syphax, Messenger.
Frank T. Wright, Laborer.
Faber J. McFadden.
Anna C. M. Ehrhart.
El via B. AUpress.
Blanche M. Kane.
Helen L. Smith.
Elizabeth F. Johnson.
Ruth C. Mason.
Cornelia M. Kirby.
Inga Stejneger.
Emma E. Comes.
OFFICE OF COORDINATION AND REVIEW.
Reviews all outgoing diplomatic, consular, and other correspondence. Coordinates the correspondence
of the several bureaus of the Department for consideration and initialing when necessary. Dis-
patches the mail and certifies copies tliereof for the records. Maintains a current ready-reference
file and an index of diplomatic precedents. Advises the bureaus of.the Department of changes in
forms of address or changes in the accepted style of correspondence.
Margaret M. Hanna, Chief of the Office.
Ruth B. Shipley, Assistant Chief of the Office.
Clerks.
F. Virginia Alexander.
Blanche V. Rule.
Helen L. Budd.
Ethel Myers.
Stanton C. Moore.
Sadie Moore.
Leland S. West, Messenger.
Sallie F. Ross.
Margaret C. Pease.
' Foreign Service Officer.
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
X.— DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
37
Country to
which
accredited.
Name and rank.
Residence.
Whence ap-
pointed.
Date of
commission.
Com-
pensa-
tion.
Albania...
Do...
Do ... .
Argentina.
Do...
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do
Austria
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Belgium...
Do....
Do....
Do
Do
Do....
Bolivia
Do
Do
Brazil
Do....
Do....
Do
Do....
Do....
Bulgaria...
Do....
Do....
Chile
Do....
Do....
Do
Do....
Do...
China
Do....
Do...
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
Do....
U. Grant-Smith, E. E. & M. P
Trojan Kodding, ' 3d Secretary
John N. Hamlin, > 3d Secretary
John W. Riddle, Amb. E. & P
Benjamin Thaw, jr. ' ist Secretary
Walter H. Schoellkopf, « 2d Secretary
Edward F. Feely, Com'l Att
Com. Andrew S. Hickey, Nav. Att
Maj. Ralph W. Dusenbury, Mil Att
Albert Henry Washburn, E. E. & M. P
William Whiting Andrews, > ist Secretary
Warden McK. Wilson, « 2d Secretary
William Ford Upson, Com'l Att
Lt. Col. Harry N. Cootes, Mil. Att
William Phillips.o Amb. E. & P
James Clement Dunn,J ist Secretary
Walter T. Prendergast, ' 3d Secretary
Samuel H. Cross, Com'l Att
Prentis M. Terry, Asst. Com'l Att
Maj. Donald C. McDonald, Mil. Att
Jesse S. Cottrell, E. E. & M. P
W. Roswell Barker,* 3d Secretary
Capt. Elwood M. S. Steward, Mil. Att
Edwin V. Morgan, Amb. E. & P
Robert M. Scotten,« ist Secretary
Thomas L. Daniels,' 2d Secretary
William L. Schurz, Com'l Att
Capt. Hugh Barclay, Mill. Att
Lt. Com. WilUam T. MaUison, Nav. Att
Charles S.Wilson, E. E. &M. P
Philander L. Cable,a « ist Secretary
Maj. Sherman Miles, Mil. Att
William Miller Collier, Amb. E. & P
L. Lanier Winslow,' ist Secretary
Gustave Pabst, jr.,< 3d Secretary
Ralph H. Ackerman, Com'l Att
Com. Andrew S. Hickey, Nav. Att
Col. James Hanson, Mil. Att
Jacob Gould Schurman,n E. E. & M. P
, Counselor of Embassy
Willys R. Peck, a g Chinese Secretary
Ferdinand L. Mayer,' ist Secretary
Elbridge Gerry Greene," «' ist Secretary
Clarence B. Hewes,< ist Secretary
Merritt Swift,< 2d Secretary
Rees H. Barkalow, ' 3d Secretary
Paul R. Josselyn , g Chinese Asst. Secretary
Julean Arnold, Com'l Att
Arthur H. Evans, Asst. Com'l Att
George R. Paschal, jr.. Stud. Int
Paul W. Meyer, Stud. Int
Capt. George T. Pettengill, Nav. Att
Lt. Col. Joseph H. Barnard, Mil. Att
Maj. Hayes Kroner, Asst. Mil. Att
Capt. Norman Lee Baldwin, Asst. Mil. Att
Tirana
Tirana
Tirana
Buenos Aires. .
Buenos Aires. .
Buenos Aires..
Buenos Aires. .
Buenos Aires . .
Buenos Aires..
Vienna ,
Vienna
Vienna
Vienna
Vienna
Brussels
Brussels
Brussels
Brussels
Brussels
Brussels
La Paz
La Paz
La Paz
Rio de Janeiro.
Rio de Janeiro .
Rio de Janeiro .
Rio de Janeiro .
Rio de Janeiro .
Rio de Janeiro .
Sofia
Sofia
Sofia
Santiago
Santiago
Santiago
Santiago
Santiago
Santiago
Peking ,
Peking ,
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking ,
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Pennsylvania . .
Pennsylvania . .
Oregon
Connecticut
Pennsylvania . .
New York
Navy
Army
Massachusetts.
Ohio
Indiana
Army ,
Massachusetts .
New York
Ohio
Army
Tennessee. .
Minnesota.
Army
New York .
Michigan...
Minnesota.
Army
Navy
Maine
Illinois
Army
New York .
New York .
Wisconsin.
Navy
Army ,
New York.
Sept.
Feb.
Oct.
Nov.
July
July
Oct.
Nov.
Aug.
Feb.
Apr.
June
July
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Nov.
July
Dec.
Mar.
Oct.
Mar.
Feb.
Jan.
Nov.
July
Nov.
Mar.
Oct.
Oct.
July
Oct.
June
Apr.
July
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
June
CaUfomia
Indiana
Massachusetts. .
Louisiana
Dist. Columbia.
New Jersey ....
Iowa
California
Florida...
Colorado .
Navy . . . .
Army
Army
Army
July
Mar.
July
Apr.
Feb.
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
Feb.
Apr.
Nov.
July
July
July
1924
1924
1921
1924
1923
1920
1924
1924
1922
1924
1923
1924
1923
1924
1924
1922
1924
1924
1924
1921
1924
1923
1913
1924
1924
1920
1924
1924
1931
I9»3
1933
193 1
1934
1924
1923
1924
1923
192 1
1931
J9a3
1924
1924
1924
1924
1921
1914
1923
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
38
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
Country to
which
accredited.
Name and rank
China— Con Capt. Woodrow Woodbridge, Lang. Offr..,
Do ' Capt. Marvil G. Armstrong, Lang. Offr
Do ' Capt. Samuel Victor Constant, Lang. Offr.
Do Capt. Thomas J. Betts, Lang. Offr
Do i Capt. John P. Ratay, Lang. Offr
Do j ist Lieut. David D. Barrett, Lang. Offr
Colombia Samuel H. Piles, E. E. & M. P
Do j Jefferson Patterson, i 2d Secretary
Do ] Capt. Charles A. Willoughby, Mil. Att
Costa Rica Roy T. Davis, E. E. & M. P
Do....
Do....
Cuba
Harold M. Deane,' 3d Secretary
Capt. Harry M. Gwyim, Mil. Att
Enoch H. Crowder, Amb. E. and P
Do I Cornelius Van H. Engert,"' ist Secretary.
Do ' Curtis C. Jordan, i 2d Secretary
Do ! John H. MacVeagh.i 3d Secretary
Do Carlton Jackson, Com'l Att
Do 1 Maj. William H. Shutan, Mil. Att
Do { Lieut. Henry C. Clark, Asst. Mil. Att
Czechoslovakia.! Lewis Einstein, E. E. & M. P
Do j Frederick F. A. Pearson,' 2d Secretary. . .
Do I H. Lawrence Groves, Com'l Att
Lieut. Col. Harry N. Cootes, Mil. Att
John Dyneley Prince, E. E. & M. P
OUver B. Harriman.J ist Secretary
Col. Arthur L. Conger, Mil. Att
Capt. John V. Klemann, Nav. Att
William W. Russell, E. E. & M. P
Joseph Flack,' 2d Secretary
Ecuador Gerhard A. Bading, E. E. & M. P
Do Richard M. de Lambert,' 3d Secretary
f'- Do Capt. Charles A. Willoughby, Mil. Att....
Egypt
fv Do
Esthonia . .
Do....
Do....
Residence.
Do
Denmark
Do
Do
L Do
Dominican Re-
public.
Do.
Do.
Do..
Finland.
Do..
Do..
France. .
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
J. Morton Howell, E. E. & M. P
Stewart Johnson,' ist Secretary
Frederick W. B. Coleman, E. E. & M. P.i
John Campbell White, a i ist Secretary
David B. Macgowan,d C. with rank of ist
Secretary.
John Sterett Gittings, jr.,' 3d Secretary
Earl L. Packer,3 V. C, with rank of 3d Secre-
tary.
Capt. Trevor W. Swett, Mil. Att
Charles L. Kagey, E. E. & M. P
Barton Hall,' 2d Secretary
Capt. Trevor W. Swett, Mil. Att ,
Myron T. Herrick, Amb. E. & P
Sheldon Whitehouse," Counselor
Hallett Johnson,' ist Secretary
Harold H. Tittmann, jr.,' 2d Secretary
G. Harlan Miller,' 2d Secretary
Christian Gross,' 3d Secretary
Chester Lloyd Jones, Com'l Att
John F. Butler, Asst. Com'l Att
Capt. Thomas L. Johnson, Nav. Att
Col. T. Bentley Mott, Mil. Att ,
Lt. Col. John R. Thomas, jr., Asst. Mil. Att.
Lt. Col. William I. Westervelt, Asst. Mil. Att
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Peking
Bogota
Bogota
Bogota
San Jose
San Jose
San Jose
Habana
Habana ,
Habana
Habana
Habana
Habana
Habana
Prague
Prague
Prague
Prague
Copenhagen
Copenhagen
See Germany
See Germany
Santo Domingo..
Santo Domingo. .
Quito
Quito
Quito
Cairo
Cairo
See Latvia
See Latvia
See Latvia
See Latvia.
See Latvia.
See Latvia. ,
Helsingfors.
Helsingfors. ,
See Latvia. .
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris ,
Paris ,
Paris
Paris
Paris ,
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Whence ap-
pointed.
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Washington.
Ohio
Army
Missouri
Connecticut .
Army
Missouri
California
California
New York . . .
Army
Army
New York
Rhode Island . .
Army
New Jersey
West Virginia..
Army
Navy
Dist. Columbia
Pennsylvania ..
Wisconsin
New Mexico
Army
Ohio
Illinois
Minnesota
Maryland
Tennessee
Maryland .
Utah
Army
Kansas
Missouri
Army
Ohio
New York . . . .
New Jersey . . .
Missouri
Pennsylvania .
Ilhnois
Wisconsin
Navy.
Army.
Army.
Army.
Date of
commission.
July
May
May
June
Jime
Jime
Mar.
July
Apr.
Feb.
July
Jan.
Feb.
Sept.
July
July
Dec.
Jan.
Feb.
Oct.
Mar.
July
Jan.
Sept.
July
Sept.
June
Aug.
Apr.
Mar.
Feb.
Apr.
June
Mar.
Sept.
June
Oct.
July 17
Oct. 14
Oct.
Oct.
July
Oct.
Apr.
Apr.
July
May
July
Jan.
Aug.
Jan.
May
May
Aug.
May
1921
1923
1923
1924
1924
1924
1922
1924
1924
1922
1924
1923
1923
1923
1924
1923
1924
1923
1924
1921
1922
1924
1923
1921
1923
1924
1924
191S
1924
1922
1924
1924
1922
1924
1922
1924
1922
1924
1922
1924
1921
1924
1924
1921
1921
1924
1921
1924
1924
1922
1922
1924
1919
1922
1923
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
39
Country to
which
accredited.
Fiance — Con ,
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Germany....
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Great Britain
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Greece
Do
Do
Do
Guatemala...
Do
Do
Haiti
Do
Honduras
Do
Do
Hungary
Do
Name and rank
Maj. Carlyle H. Wash, Asst. Mil. Att
Maj. Charles B. Moore, Asst. Mil. Att
ist Lt. Joseph M. Glasgow, Asst. Mil. Att
Com. John H. Towers, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. William E. Eberle, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. (C. C.) J. C. Hunsaker, Asst. Nav. Att. .
Com. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Asst. Nav. Att.
Com. Claud A. Jones, Asst. Nav. Att
Lt. Com. Jules James, Asst. Nav. Att
Alanson B. Houghton, Amb. E. & P
Warren D. Robbins, i Coimselor
Matthew E. Hanna, i ist Secretary
Hugh milliard, i 3d Secretary
Carl A. Fisher, i 3d Secretary
Charles E. Herring, Com'l Att
Fayette W. Allport, Asst. Com'l Att
Col. Arthur L. Conger, Mil. Att
Capt. John V. Klemann, Nav. Att
Maj. Allen Kimberly, Asst. Mil. Att
Maj. Harold Geiger, Asst. Mil. Att
Maj. Henry C. McLean, Asst. Mil. Att
Com. John H. Towers, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. (C. C.) J. C. Hunsaker, Asst. Nav. Att. . .
Com. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Asst. Nav. Att .
Com. Claud A. Jones, Asst. Nav. Att
Frank B. Kellogg, Amb. E. & P
Frederick A. Sterling, i Counselor
Ray Atherton, ' ist Secretary
Frederick P. Hibbard, i 2d Secretarj'
Percy A. Blair, i 2d Secretary
William H. Taylor, i 3d Secretary
J. Holbrook Chapman, i 3d Secretary
Walter S. Tower, Com'l Att
Capt. Luke McNamee, Nav. Att
Lt. Col. Kenyon A. Joyce, Mil. Att
Com. John H. Towers, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. (C. C.) J. C. Hunsaker, Asst. Nav. Att. .
Com. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Asst. Nav. Att.
Com. Claud A. Jones, Asst. Nav. Att
Lieut. J. H. Kyger, Asst. Nav. Att
Maj. Stewart O. Elting, Asst. Mil. Att
Maj. Howard C. Davidson, Asst. Mil. Att
Maj. Earl J. Atkisson, Asst. Mil. Att
Irwin B. Laughlin, E. E. & M. P
Herbert S. Goold, » ist Secretary
James Orr Denby," ' 3d Secretary
Lt. Col. William F. H. Godson, Mil. Att
Arthur H. Geissler, E. E. & M. P
Leon H. Ellis,^ 3d Secretary
Capt. Harry M. Gwynn, Mil. Att
Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, E. E. & M. P
George R. MerrcU, jr., ' 3d Secretary
Franklin E. Morales, E. E. & M. P
Lawrence Dennis,' 2d Secretary ,
Capt. Harry M. Gwynn, Mil. Att
Theodore Brentano, E. E. & M. P
Charles B. Curtis, ^ Counselor
Residence.
Whence ap-
pointed.
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Paris
Berlin
Berlin ,
Berlin ,
Berlin
Berhn
Berlin
Berlin
Berlin
Berlin
Berlin
Berlin ,
Berlin ,
Berlin
Berlin
Berlin
Berlhi
London
London ,
London ,
London
London
London
London
London
London ,
London ,
London
London
London
London
London
London
London
London
Athens
Athens
Athens
See Belgrade
Guatemala
Guatemala
Guatemala
Port au Prince.. . .
Port au Prince. . .
Tegucigalpa
Tegucigalpa
Tegucigalpa
Budapest
Budapest ,
Army
Army
Army
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
New York . .
New York . .
Connecticut.
Nebraska . . .
Utah
Date of
coimnission.
Army
Navy
Army
Army
Army
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Minnesota
Texas. ..'.
Illinois
Texas
Dist. Columbia. ,
Pennsylvania . . .
Dist. Columbia.
Navy
Army
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Army
Army
Army
Pennsylvania . .
California
Indiana
Army
Oklahoma
Washington
Army
Louisiana
Missouri
New Jersey ....
Massachusetts. .
Army
Illinois
New York
June
Oct.
Sept.
Feb.
Apr.
Nov.
Apr.
Jime
Apr.
Feb.
Mar.
Mar.
July
Feb.
July
Aug.
Sept.
May
Dec.
Com-
pensa-
tion.
Oct.
Apr.
Nov.
Apr.
June
Dec.
Jime
Oct.
Jan.
Apr.
Feb.
Sept.
Sept.
Aug.
Dec.
Feb.
Nov.
Apr.
Jime
Dec.
Mar.
Apr.
May
Mar.
July
July
Feb.
May
Apr.
Jan.
May
Jan.
Oct.
Oct.
Jan.
Feb.
Oct.
7,
1922
1924
9,
1924
2I7
1923
12,
1923
IS,
1923
12,
1924
27,
1924
26,
1923
10,
1922
I,
1923
10,
1924
17,
1924
4,
1934
">
I92I
14,
1924
29
1924
26,
1924
28,
1922
1924
I,
1924
IS,
1923
12,
1934
27,
1924
II,
1923
18,
1923
9,
1924
8,
1924
27,
1923
3,
1924
27
1924
23
I93I
I,
1934
12,
1923
31
1923
IS,
1923
I2j
1924
27
1934
30
I92I
13,
1923
6
1923
20
•1924
24,
1924
17,
1924
23,
1923
19,
1924
24,
1933
24
1924
31,
1923
22,
I914
4,
1924
34,
I93I
3,
1934
31,
1923
10,
1933
20,
1923
40
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
Country to
which
accredited.
Hungary-
Do..
Italy ....
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
-Con.
Name and rank
H. Freeman Matthews, < 3d Secretarj',
Maj. Henry W. T. Eglin, Mil. Att. . . .
Henry P. Fletcher, Amb. E. & P
George T. Summerlin.c Counselor
Norman Armour.^ i ist Secretary
Copley Amory, jr.,» 2d Secretary
Henry C. McLean, Com'l Att
Do A. A. Osborne, Asst. Com'l Att.
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do.,
Japan. . .
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do.,
Do..
Do.,
Do.
Do.,
Do.,
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Capt. Kenneth G. Castleman, Nav. Att
Lt. Col. E. R. Warner McCabe, Mil. Att
Com. John H. Towers, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. (C. C.) J. C. Hunsaker, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. Claud A. Jones, Asst. Nav. Att
Lt. Com. Henry B. Cecil, Asst. Nav. Att
Maj. Martin F. Scanlan, Asst. Mil. Att
Capt. Walton W. Cox, Asst. Mil. Att
Edgar A. Bancroft, Amb. E. & P
JefiFerson Caflery,' Counselor
R. Henry Norweb," » ist Secretary
Frederic D. K. LeClercq,' 2d Secretary
Eugene H. Dooman,ff« Japanese Asst. Secretary
John Harrison Gray,* 3d Secretary
Egbert B. Rand, S^ud. Int
WilUam T. Tumer,^ Stud. Int
Com'l Att
Halleck A. Butts, Asst. Com'l Att
Nav. Att
Maj. Philip R. Faymonville, Mil. Att
Lt. Com. Herbert R. Hein, Asst. Nav. Att...
Capt. Truman Morris Martin, Asst. Mil. Att.
Maj. Rufus S. Bratton, Lang. 0£fr
Maj. d' Alary Fechet, Lang. 0£fr
Residence.
Do Capt. Warren J. Clear, Lang. Offr.
Do Capt. George O. Clark, Lang. Offr
Do Capt. Harry 1. T. Creswell, Lang. Ofifr
Do ist Lieut. Robert J. Hoffman, Lang. Offr
Do ist Lieut. WilUam K. McKittrick, Lang. Offr .
Do 2d Lieut. Thomas G. Cranford, Lang. Offr
Do Lt. Com. Ellis M. Zacharias, Lang. Offr
Do Lt. Com. Hartwell C. Davis, Lang. Offr
Do Lt. Com. Franz B. Melendy, Lang. Offr
Do Capt. Bernard F. Hickey, Lang. Offr
Do Capt. William B. Sullivan, Lang. Offr
Do Lt. B. L. Hunter, Lang. Offr
Do Ensign Arthur H. McCollum, Lang. Offr
Do Ensign Thomas J. Ryan, jr., Lang. Offr
Do Ensign David W. Roberts, Lang. Offr
Latvia Frederick W. B. Coleman, E. E. & M. P. j... .
Do John Campbell White, « i ist Secretary
Do David B. Macgowan,d C, with rank of ist
Secretary.
Do John Sterett Gittings, jr., « 3d Secretary
Do Earl L. Packer,r \'. C, with rank of 3d Secre-
I tar>'.
Do I Capt. Trevor W. Swett, Mil. Att
Budapest.
Budapest.
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Rome
Tokyo
Tokyo....
Tokyo....
Tokyo....
Tokyo. . . .
Tokyo
Tokyo
Tokyo....
Tokyo....
Tokyo
Whence ap-
pointed.
Tokyo. .
Tokyo..
Tokyo..
Tokyo..
Tokyo. .
Tokyo. .
Tokyo. .
Tokyo..
Tokyo.,
Tokyo. ,
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Riga...
Riga. . .
Riga. . .
Riga.
Riga.
Maryland
Army
Pennsylvania. . ,
Louisiana
New Jersey
New Hampshire
Date of
commission.
Navy
Army
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Army
Army
Illinois
Louisiana
Ohio
South CaroUna.
New York
New York
Louisiana
Georgia
Feb. 2,
Oct. — ,
Feb. 19,
Mar. 5,
Apr. 23,
July 13,
Oct. 22,
June 27,
May 7,
June 6,
Feb. 21,
Nov. IS,
Apr. 12,
June 27,
Sept. 15,
Mar. 26,
Mar. 13,
Sept. 23,
Sept, 5,
Aug. II,
July 23,
July I,
Mar. 20,
Jan. 23,
Apr. 3,
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1922
1920
1921
1924
1924
1923
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1923
1924
1923
1923
1923
1921
1923
1924
1924
Riga.
Army
Navy
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Army
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Navy
Nav'i'
Navy
Minnesota.
Maryland . .
Tennessee .
Maryland . .
Utah
Feb.
16,
1924
Apr.
23)
1924
Feb.
16,
1924
July
19,
1922
Nov.
5,
1923
July
19,
1922
May
2,
1923
July
24,
1924
May
2,
1923
June
27.
1924
June
19,
1923
Oct.
13,
1920
Oct.
13,
1920
Aug.
22,
1924
June
21
1923
June
21
1923
Aug.
25
1924
Dec.
27
1921
Sept.
II
1922
May
14
1924
Sept.
20
1922
June
10
1924
Oct.
14
1922
July 17,1924
Oct. 14, 1922
Army Oct.
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
41
Country to
which
accredited.
Liberia.
Lithuania
Do...
Do...
Do.
Do.
Do
Luxemburg
Name and rank
Solomon Porter Hood, Minister Resident &
Consul General.
Frederick W. B. Coleman, E. E. & M. PJ
John Campbell White, " i ist Secretary
David B. Macgowan.d C., with rank of ist
Secretary.
John Sterett Gittings, jr.,> 3d Secretary
Earl L. Packer.^ V. C, with rank of 3d Secre-
tary.
Capt. Trevor W. Swett, Mil. Att
William Phillips.o E. E. & M. P
Mexico James Rockwell Sheffield, Amb. E. & P
Do I H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld,' Counselor
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Morocco
Do
Netherlands.
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Nicaragua...
Do
Do
Norway
Do
Do
Do
Panama
Do
Do
Do
Paraguay
Do
Do
Do
Persia
Do
Peru
Do
Do
Dor
Do
Poland
Do
Do
Do
Alexander C. Kirk,' ist Secretary
H. Dorsey Newson.J 2d Secretary
Stuart E. Grununon,*' 3d Secretary
Alexander V. Dye, Coni'l Att
Lt. Col. George M. Russell, Mil. Att
Maj. Edward L. N. Glass, Asst. Mil. Att...
Agt. &C. G.
Elbridge D. Rand,' 2d Secretary
Richard M. Tobm, E. E. & M. P
Louis A. SussdorfJ, jr.,' ist Secretary
John Stambaugh, 2d,' 3d Secretary
Com. C. R. P. Rodgers, Nav. Att
Col. Arthur L. Conger, Mil. Att
Com. John H. Towers, Asst. Nav. Att
Com. (C. C.) J. C. Hunsaker, Asst. Nav. Att. . .
Com. Herbert Fairfax Leary, Asst. Nav. Att..
Com. Claud A. Jones, Asst. Nav. Att
John E. Ramer, E. E. & M. P
Walter C. Thurston,' ist Secretary
Capt. Harry M. Gwynn, Mil. Att
Laurits S. Swenson, E. E. & M. P
James G. Bailey, ist Secretary
Col. Arthur L. Conger, Mil. Att
Capt. John V. Klemann, Nav. Att
John Glover South, E. E. & M. P
Stokeley W. Morgan,' ist Secretary
Robert S. Burgher,' 3d Secretary
Capt. Harry M. Gwynn, Mil. Att
E. E. & M. P..
William B. Southworth,' 2d Secretary
Edward F. Feely, Com'l Att
Maj. Ralph W. Dusenbury, Mil. Att
E. E. &M.P..
Wallace S. Murray, f 2d Secretary
Miles Poindexter, Amb. E. & P
Craig W. Wadsworth,' Counselor of Legation. .
John C. Wiley," ' ist Secretary
Paul Mayo,* 3d Secretary
Capt. Elwood M. S. Steward, Mil. Att
Alfred J. Pearson," E. E. & M. P
WiUiam S. Howell, jr.,' ist Secretary
Edward S. Crocker, 2d,'' 3d Secretary
Stanley Hawks,' 3d Secretary
Residence.
Monrovia .
See Latvia.
See Latvia.
See Latvia.
See Latvia.
See Lat\'ia. .
See Latvia...
See Belgium .
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico
Whence ap-
pointed.
New Jersey '.
Minnesota...
Maryland . . .
Tennessee. . .
Maryland.
Utah
Army
Massachusetts. .
New York
Dist. Columbia.
Illinois
New York
New Jersey ....
Arizona
Date of
commission.
Oct. 26,1921
Sept. 20, 1922
June 10, 1924
Oct. 14, 1922
July 17,1924
Oct. 14, 1922
Mexico : Army.
Mexico
Tangier
Tangier
The Hague....
The Hague. . . .
The Hague....
The Hague. . . .
See Germany. .
The Hague
The Hague
The Hague
The Hague
Managua
Managua
Managua
Oslo
Oslo
See Germany. .
See Germany. .
Panama
Panama
Panama
Panama
Asuncion
Asuncion
See Argentina.
See Argentina.
Teheran
Teheran
Lima
Lima
Lima
Lima
Lima
Warsaw
Warsaw
Warsaw
Warsaw
Army.
California. .
CaUfomia. .
New York .
Ohio ,
Navy
Army ,
Navy ,
Navy
Navy
Navy
Colorado. . .
Arizona... .
Army
Minnesota.
Kentucky.,
Army
Navy
Kentucky. .
Arkansas...
Texas
Army
Oct.
Feb.
Sept.
Mar.
July
Jan.
Feb.
Oct.
Sept.
July
—, 1924
29, 1924
9, 1924
S) 1924
17, 1924
24, 1924
5, 1924
15,1923
i8, 1923
19, 1922
Pennsylvania.
Mar. 13, 1923
Mar. 5, 1923
Sept. 27, 192 1
June 3, 1924
May 7, 1923
Sept. 29, 1924
Feb. 21, 1923
Nov. IS, 1923
Apr. 12, 1924
June 27, 1924
Oct. 8, 1921
Jan. 31, 1923
Jan. 31,1923
Oct. 8, 1921
June 7,1921
Sept. 29, 1924
June 30, 1924
Oct. 8,1921
June 10, 1924
June 4, 1924
Jan. 31, 1923
Army.
Jan. IS, 1924
Oct. 22, 1920
Aug. 26, 1924
Ohio
Washington
New York
Indiana
Colorado
Army
Iowa
Texas
Massachusetts. . .
New York
Jan. 7, 1922
Feb. 19, 1923
Dec. 23, 1924
Sept. 1, 1923
Aug. 5, 1924
Feb. 27, 1923
Apr. 2, 1924
July 17,1924
Jan. 7, 1924
Mar. 8, 1924
42
DIPLOMATIC SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
Country to
which
accredited.
Xame and rank
Residence.
Whence ap-
pointed.
Date of
commission.
Poland — Con . .
Do
Portugal
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Rumania
Do
Do
Do
Salvador
Do.
Do
Serbs, Croats,
and Slovenes,
Kingdom of.
Do
Do
Siam
Do
Do
Do
Spain
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do •••
Do
Sweden
Do
Do
Do
Switzerland . . .
Do
Do
Do
Turkey
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Uruguay
Do
Do
Venezuela
Do
Do
Do
Maj. HenrV W. T. Eglin, Mil. Att See Hungary.
Lt. Com. Hugo W. Koehler, Nav. Att i Warsaw
Fred Morris Dearing, E. E. & M, P j Lisbon
Joseph W. Carroll,' 2d Secretary I Lisbon
Charles H. Cunningham, Com'l. Att Lisbon
Capt. Thomas L. Johnson, Nav. Att I Lisbon
Maj. Campbell B. Hodges, Mil. Att , Lisbon
Lt. Com. Jules James, Asst. Nav. Att > See France.
Peter Augustus Jay, E. E. & M. P Bucharest. .
Benjamin Reath Riggs,» 2d Secretary ' Bucharest. .
Robert O'D. Hinckley,' 3d Secretary j Bucharest. .
Lt. Col. Robert C. Foy, Mil. Att Bucharest. .
Montgomery Schuyler, E. E, & M. P .
Benjamin Muse,' 2d Secretary
Capt. Harri- M. Gwynn, Mil. Att
H. Percival Dodge, E. E. & M. P
Gordon Paddock, p ist Secretary'
Lt. Col. WiUiam F. H. Godson, Mil. Att
Edward E. Brodie, E. E. & M. P
Samuel S. Dickson,! 3d Secretary
Lt. Col. Joseph H. Barnard, Mil. Att
Leng Hui, Int
Alexander P. Moore, Amb. E. & P
John F. Martin, «' ist Secretary
Henry I Dockweiler,' 2d Secretary
Charles H. Cunningham, Com'l Att
Capt. Thomas L. Johnson, Nav. Att
Maj. Campbell B. Hodges, Mil. Att
Lt. Com. Jules James, Asst. Nav. Att
Robert Woods Bliss, E. E. & M. P
Cord Meyer,! 2d Secretary
Col. Arthur L. Conger, Mil. Att
Capt. John V. Klemann, Nav. Att
Hugh S. Gibson, E. E. & M. P
Alan F. Winslow.J 2d Secretary
Pierre de L. Boal, « i 2d Secretary
Col. T. Bentley Mott, Mil. Att
Amb. E. & P
Rear Admiral Mark L. Bristol, High Commis-
sioner.
Sheldon L. Crosby, i Counselor
G. Howland Shaw, « ist Secretary ,
Jay Pierrepont Moffat,' ist Secretary
R. A. Wallace Treat, r Consul
JMaj. Sherman ^liles, Mil. Att
Hoffman Philip, E. E. & M. P
^lyron A. Hofer,' ist Secretary
JIaj. Ralph W. Dusenbury, Mil. Att
Willis C. Cook, E. E. & M. P
J. Webb Benton,' 2d Secretary
Wainwright Abbott,' 2d Secretary
Capt. Charles A. Willoughby, Mil. Att
San Salvador.
San Salvador.
San Salvador.
Belgrade ....
Belgrade
Belgrade
Bangkok
Bangkok
See Peking
Bangkok
Madrid
Madrid
Madrid
Madrid
Madrid
Madrid
See France
Stockholm
Stockholm
See Germany...
See Germany...
Berne
Berne
Berne
See Paris
Constantinople .
Constantinople.
Constantinople.
Constantinople.
Constantinople.
Constantinople.
Constantinople.
Montevideo
Montevideo
See Argentina. .
Caracas
Caracas
Caracas
Caracas
Army
Navy
Missouri
New York
Texas
Navy
Army
Navy
Rhode Island. . .
Pennsylvania. . .
Dist. Columbia..
Army
New York
Virginia
Army
Massachusetts. . .
New York
Army
Oregon
New Mexico...
Army
Siam
Pennsylvania .
Florida
California
Texas
Navy
Army • •.•
Navy
New York
New York
Army
Nav>'
California
Illinois
Pennsylvania .
Army
Oct.
Feb.
June
Dec.
June
Mar.
June
Apr.
Mar.
July
Apr.
May
July
Jan.
July
Nov.
Feb.
Oct.
Sept.
July
Aug.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Dec.
May
Mar.
June
Jan.
June
Sept.
Jime
Mar.
Sept.
July
May
1,1924
1921
10. 1922
21. 1923
13,1924
30. 1924
23. 1923
30. 1924
18, 1921
3. 1924
26, 1924
16, 1923
4,1921
18, 1924
31,1923
17,1919
13,1922
19, 1924
8, 1921
29, 1922
30, 1924
27, 1901
3,1923
3, 1924
31,1924
13,1924
17,1924
2J, I92J
30, 1924
30, 1923
22, 1923
29, 1924
30, 1924
18, 1924
27, 1923
1,1924
24, 1922
Navy.
New York
Massachusetts. . .
New York
Ohio
Army
New York
Ohio
Army
South Dakota. . .
Pennsylvania . . .
Pennsylvania . . .
Army
Aug. 12, 1919
Nov. 13, 1924
May 26, 1921
Sept. 12, 1923
Oct. 25, 1924
Sept. 27, 1922
Mar. 23, 1922
Aug. 9, 1924
Oct. 8, 1921
July 12, 1924
Oct. 2, 1924
Apr. s, 1924
CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
43
XI. CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
ARGENTINA.
Buenos Aires.
The Federal Capital and the Provinces of Buenos Aires,
Entre Rios, San Luis, Mendoza. and San Juan.
The Territories of Pampa Central, Xeuquen, Rio Xegro,
Chubut, Santa Cruz, and Tierra del Fuego.
Rosario.
The Provinces of Santa Fe, Cordoba, Corrientes, Santiago de
Estero, Tucuman, Rioja, Catamarca, Salta, and Jujuy.
The Territories of Misiones, Formosa, Chaco, and Los Andes.
BRAZIL.
Bahia.
The States of Piauhi, Sergipe, and Bahia.
Para.
The States of Atnazonas, Para, and Maranhao.
Pemambuco.
The States of Ceara, Rio Grande do Xorte, Parahyba, Per-
nambuco, and Alagoas.
Porto Alegre.
The States of Santa Catharina and Rio Grande do Sul.
Rio de Janeiro.
The States of Rio de Janeiro, Espirito Santo, Minas Geraes,
and Goyaz.
Santos.
The port and municipality of Santos, and the mimicipality
of Sao \'icente.
Sao Paulo.
The State of Sao Paulo, excepting the port and municipal-
ity of Santos and the mimicipality of Sao Vicente, and the
States of Parana and Matte Grosso.
CHINA AND ADJACENT TERRITORY.
Amoy.
That portion of the Province of Fukien comprised in the
prefectures of Ting-Chou-fu, Chang-chou-fu, and Chuan-
chowfu, and the independent subprefecture of Lung-yen-chou.
Antung.
This district corresponds to the intendency of the three
Eastern Marches, and consists of that portion of the Province
of Shengking south and east of a line starting from the sea
west of Chuanghoting, thence north about 30 miles, thence
northeast, crossing the Antung-^Iukden Railway a little north
of Feng-huan-cheng and continuing in the same direction to
the boundary of Shengking and Kirin, thence following this
boundary southeast to the Chosen frontier.
This will give to the consular district of Antung the following
places opened to trade, viz, Feng-huang-cheng, Antung, and
Tatungkow.
Canton.
The Province of Kwangsi and that portion of the Province of
Kwangtung west of longitude 115°.
Changsha.
The Provinces of Hunan and Kweichow.
Chefoo.
The Laichow Prefecture, except the Department of Pingtu
and all of the Province of Shantung lying east and north of a
line drawn from Liachow to the easternmost point in the
boundary of the leased territory of Kiaochow.
Chungking.
The Provinces of Szechwan and all of Tibet south of the
Kokonor region.
Dairen.
The Japanese leased territory of Kwangtung.
CHINA AND ADJACENT TERRITORY-Continued.
Foochow.
The whole of the Province of Fukien except the four pre-
fectures forming the consular district of Amoy.
Hankow.
The Province of Honan south of the Yellow River and the
whole of the Provinces of Hupeh, Kiangsi, Sheusi, Kansu, the
Kokonor region, and Sinkiang (Turkestan).
Harbin.
The Province of Heilungkiang and all that part of the Prov-
ince of Kirin lying to the north of a line drawn between the
cities of Kwangchingtsu (Changchun) and Kirin (which are
included in the consular district of Mukden), and continued
thence eastward to the Russo-Chinese frontier.
It will include the following places opened to trade: Man-
churia, Khailer, Tsitsihar, Aigun, Sansing, and Harbin.
Hongkong.
The British colony of Hongkong.
Kalgan.
All of Mongolia; the administrative districts of Cliahar and
Jehol; that portion of Chihli lying between the parts of the
Great Wall which lie north and south of Kalgan and that
portion of Shansi which lies north of the southernmost part of
the Great Wall crossing the province from east to west.
Mukden.
All of the Province of Kirin that is not included in the con-
sular district of Harbin, and all of the Province of Shengking
that is not included either in the Antung consular district or
the leased territory of Kwangtimg.
Nanking.
The whole of the Province of Anhwei and all of the Province
of Kiangsu north of the Yangtze River, and two prefectures
south of the same (Chiangning and Chui Kiang).
Saigon.
All of French Indo-China.
Shanghai.
The whole of the Province of Kiangsu with the exception of
that part which is included in the Nanking district, the island
of Tsungming, and the whole of the Province of Chekian.
Swatow.
That portion of the Province of Kwangtung east of longitude
lis".
Tientsin.
Those portions of the Provinces of Chihli and Shansi not
included in the Kalgan district and that portion of the Prov-
ince of Honan north of the Yellow River.
Tsinan.
That portion of the Province of Shantung, except the leased
territory- of Kiaochow, not included in the Consular District of
Chefoo.
Tsingtao.
The leased territory of Kiaochow.
Yunnan fu.
The Province of Yunnanfu.
44
CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
COLOMBIA.
BairanquUIa.
The Departments of Atlantico, Huila, Tolima, Caldas, San
tander del Norte, Santander, and Boyaca; the Department
of Antioquia except in the northwestern portion lying in the
basins of the Sinu and .\trato Rivers and along the Caribbean
Sea; the Department of Magdalena, except in the part lying
north of the Sierra de Santa Marta and adjacent to the Santa
Marta Railway as far as the Magdalena River; the Intendencia
of Meta; the Comisarias of Arauca, Waupes, Caqueta, and
Putumayo.
Buenaventura (vice consulate).
The Departments of Nariuo, Valle, and Cauca; and the In-
tendencia of Choco except within the basin of the Atrato River.
Medellin (consular agency).
Cartagena.
The Departments of Bolivar and the Department of Anti-
oquia in the northwest portion lying withing the basins of the
Atrato and Sinu Rivers and along the Caribbean Sea; the In.
tendencia of Choco within the basin of the Atrato River; and the
Comisarias of Uraba and Jurado.
Santa Marta.
The Department of Magdalena lying north of the Sierra de
Sta. Marta and adjacent to the Santa Marta Railway as far as
the Magdalena River, and the Comisaria of Goajira.
FRANCE.
Bordeaux.
Departments of Aricge, Gers, Gironde, Haute-Garonne.
Hautes-Pyrcnees, Landes, Lot-et-Garonne, Tarn, and Tam-
et-Garonne.
Biarritz (vice consulate).
Department of Basses-Pyrenees.
Calais.
Department of Pas-de-Calais.
Boulogne-sur-Mer (vice consulate).
Arrondissement of Boulogne-sur-Mer.
Cherbourg.
Departments of Manche, Calvados, and Ome.
Dunkirk.
Arrondissement of Dunkirk.
Havre.
DepartTnents of Eure and Seine-Infcrieure.
Dieppe (consular agency).
Department of Somme and Arrondissements of Dieppe and
Neufchatel-en-Bray (Department of Seine-Inferieure).
La Rochelle.
Departments of Charente, Charenle-Inferieure, and Deux
Sevres.
Lille.
Departments of Nord (except the Arrondissement of Dun-
kirk) and Aisue.
Limoges.
Departments of Cher, Corrize, Creuse, Dordogne, Haute-
Vienne, Indre, Lot, Nievre, and Viennc.
Lyon.
Departments of Ain, AUier, Doubs, Jura, Rhone, Sajne-et-
Loire. Haute-Savoie, Drome, Isere, Savoie, Cote-d'Or, and
Haute-Saone.
Marseille.
De;)artments of Basses-Alpss, Hautes-Alpes, Bouches-du
Rhone, Gard, Var, Vaucluse, Aude, Herault. Pyrenees-Orien.
tales, and island of Corsica.
Nancy
Depirtments of Ardennes, Meuse, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Haute
Mame, and Vosges.
FRANCE— Continued.
Nantes.
Departments of Indre-et- Loire, Loire Inferieure, Maine-et-
Loire, Vendee, Ille-et-Vilaine, Mayenne, Finistere, Cotes-du-
Nord, and Morbihan.
Nice.
Department of Alpes-Maritimes.
Paris.
Departments of Aube, Eure-et-Loir, Loir-et-Cher, Loiret,
Mame, Oise, Sarthe, Seine, Seine-et-Mame, Seine-et-Oise, and
Yonne.
St. Etienne.
Departments of Ardeche, Aveyron, Cantal, Haute-Loire.
Loire, Lozere, and Puy-de-D6me.
Strasbourg.
Departments of Bas-Rhin, Haut-Rhin, and Moselle; the Terri-
tory of Belfort; and including jurisdiction over the Saar Basin
Territori" as subject to eventual plebiscites.
GERMANY.
Berlin.
The Prussian Province of Brandenburg and the Frontier
District of West Prussia- Posen.
Bremen.
The free State and City of Bremen, the Prussian Pro\'ince
of Hanover, the State of Brunswick and Oldenburg.
Breslau.
The Prussian Provinces of Upper and Lower Silesia.
Coblenz.
The Rhine Province south of theMosel, including Birkenfeld.
Cologne.
The Rhine Province north of the Mosel, the Prussian Prov-
ince of Westphalia, the States of Schaumburg-Lippe, LiQpe,
and Waldeck.
Dresden.
The State of Saxony, with the exception of Kreishaupt-
mannschaft of Leipzig.
Frankfort on the Main.
The Prussian Province of Hesse-Nassau, the State of Hesse,
the Bavarian Palatinate.
Hamburg.
The Free State and City of Hamburg, the Prussian Province
01 Schleswig-Holstein, the States of IMecklenburg-Schwerin,
Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and Lubeck.
Konigsberg.
The Prussian Province of East Prussia and the Prussian
Regierungsbezirk of Marienwerder.
Leipzig.
The ICreishauptmaunschatt of Leipzig, the States of Thu-
ringia and Anhalt, and the Prussian Province of Saxony.
Munich.
The State of Bavaria with the exception of the Bavarian
Palatinate.
Stettin.
The Pnissiau Province of Pomerania.
Stuttgart.
The States of Wurtemburg, Baden, and HohenzoUem.
These districts include all territory within the frontiers
above described .
GREAT BRITAIN.
/Australia— British Isles— India — Jamaica— Malay Peninsula.)
Adelaide.
South Australia, Western Australia, Broken Hill Properties
of New South Wales.
CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
45
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued.
Belfast.
All counties east of and including Leitrim, Cavan, Monaghan
Armagh, and Down.
Birmingham.
From and including Tewkesbury to Hereford (excluded),
Ludlow, Shrewsbury (including both), Stafford, Burton-on
Trent, Market Harborough to county boundary of Bedford
near Wellingborough (excluding all points named), thence by
county boundary to Brackley, Oxford, Didcot, and Burford
(all excluded) to Tewkesbur>'.
Bombay.
Bombay Presidency excepting Sind and including Baroda
and the Rann of Cutch, Central India Agency. Central Prov-
inces with their native States, and including Berar.
Bradford.
Penistone (excluded) to Dewsbury- (excluded) to Richmond
(excluded), thence to Muker (excluded), thence south to
Hawes, Burnley, Todmorden, Glossop, and Buxton (all
excluded) to Penistone.
Bristol.
The coimty boundary of Somerset from the coast at the west
to Meno, Marlborough, Didcot, and Oxford (all towns ex-
cluded) to and including Burford, Tewkesbury (excluded)
and Gloucester (included).
Calcutta.
Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, Assam, United Provinces, comer
of Punjab, including Delhi and Simla, Xepal, Sikkim, and
Bhutan.
Cardiff.
From Porthcaw! to Brecon, Hay, and Hereford (all in
eluded), thence to but excluding Tewkesbury and Gloucester.
Cobh.
All counties west of and including Clare, Tipperary, and
W'aterford.
Limerick (consular agency).
The counties of Limerick, Clare, and Tipperary, and so
much of the county of Kerrj' as is north of an east and west
line drawn through the town of Tralee but including the town
of Tralee.
Dublin.
All cotmties lying between the Cork and Belfast boundaries.
Galway (consular agency).
Beginning with County Sligo and taking in entire the coun-
ties of Sligo, Roscommon, Galway, and Mayo.
Dundee.
The counties of Forfar, Perth, Aberdeen, Kincardine, Banff,
Elgin, Nairn, Sutherland, Caithness, Orkney, Shetland, Ross,
and Cromarty, and the Hebrides or Westward Islands, and that
portion of the county of Inverness north of a line from Rannoch
following the railroad via Tulloch and Spean Brid.ic to Gair
lochy Inn (all excluded) on the Caledonian Canal, thence north,
east as far as the outlet of Loch Arkaig into Loch Lochy,
and thereafter westward to the coast to the mouth of the river
Dessary; all that portion of the county north of Loch Nevis,
Aberdeen (consular agency).
All the mainland of Scotland north of a straight line drawn
from Montrose in Kincardine to Beaully in Inverness, and from
thence to Ullapool in Ross and Cromarty, including the Ork,
ney Islands.
Dunfermline.
The counties of Fife, Kinross, and Clackmannan.
Edinburgh.
The counties of Edinburgh, Linlithgow, Haddington, Pee-
bles, Selkirk, Dumfries, Roxburgh, and Berwick.
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued.
Glasgow.
The counties of Lanark, Renfrew, Dumbarton, Stirling.
Argyll, Bute, Ayr, Kirkcudbright, and Wigtown and, of the
county of Inverness, that portion from and including Ran-
noch following the railroad via Tulloch and Spean Bridge to
Gairlochy Inn (all included) on the Caledonian Canal, thence
northeast to the outlet of Loch Arkaig into Loch Lochy and
thereafter westward to the coast to the mouth of the river
Dessary; all that portion of the county south of Loch Nevis.
Hull.
Whitby (excluded) to Galisdale and Thome (both included)
Thome to northern apex of Nottingham Coimty, and by a line
drawn from thence to Salttleet (included).
Karachi.
Sind, Rajputana Agency, Punjab, excepting a comer cut out
to retain Delhi and Simli in Calcutta district, Kashmir, North
West Frontier Province, Baluchistan Agency, and Afghan-
istan.
Kingston, Jamaica.
All of the island of Jamaica.
Leeds.
Penistone (excluded) to Dewsbury (included), thence to
Richmond (excluded); and thereafter east to Glaisdale, south
to Thome and west to Bamsley (all excluded) to Penistone.
Liverpool.
From Aberystwyth to Ludlow, Shrewsbury (all points
excluded), EUesmere (included), Jliddlewich, Northwich
(both excluded), Warrington (included), Wigan, Preston;
Lancaster, Kendal (all points excluded), to St. Bees Head,
Isle of Man (included).
London.
The western county boundaries of Norfolk (from coast in
Wash), Cambridge, and Ely, Huntingdon, Bedford, and
Buckingham to Brackley (excluding), from thence to Oxford,
Didcot, Reading, and Aldershot to Littleharapton, including
all points named.
Madras.
Madras Presidency, native States of Hyderbad, Mysore,
Travaucore, Cochin, and Coorg.
Manchester.
From and including Buxton to Middlewich (excluded),
Northwich (included), Warrington (excluded), Wigan, Pres-
ton, Lancaster, and Kendal (all included). Kendal to Mulier
(included), thence south to and including Hawes. From
Hawes to Burnley, Todmorden, Glossop, and Buxton, includ-
ing all points named.
Melbourne.
Victoria, Northern Territory, and Tasmania. Papua and
New Guinea, under mandate held by Australia. Islands
under Australia either actually or by mandate.
Newcastle (Australia).
Queensland. That part of New South Wales lying north of
the .5id degree of lattitude and east of the 1.19th degree of
longitude.
Newcastle on Tyne (England).
From St. Bees Head to Kendal, and via Mukcr to Rich-
mond (all points excluded except Richmond). Richmond
(included) to and including Whitby. Northern boundary to
end with Scottish border.
46
CONSUIyAR DISTRICTS.
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued.
Nottingham.
Saltfleet to northern apex of Nottingham County, thence by
county boundary south to Pinxton (included). From Pinxton
to and including Derby, Burton on Trent, and Market Har-
borough; from thence to county boundary of Bedford near
AVellingborough (included) and northeast by county bound-
aries of Bedford, Huntingdon, Cambridge, and Ely, and
Norfolk, to coast.
Penang, Straits Settlements.
The settlement of Penang (including Penang Island, Prov-
ince Wellesley, and the Bindings), the Federated Malay State
of Perak, and the non-Federated Malay States of Kedah and
Perlis.
Plymouth.
The counties of Devon and Comwall and Scilly Isles.
Rangoon.
Burma, Shan, and Karenni States and the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands.
Sheffield.
Burton on Trent to Derby, Pinxton (all excluded), thence
by county boundary to northern apex of Nottingham County,
and Thome (excluded). From Thome to Bamsley (included),
Penistone (included), Buxton, Stafford, and Burton on Trent
(excluding all last named).
Singapore, Straits Settlements.
The Malay Peninsula except that part embraced in the juris-
diction of the Consulate at Penang.
Southampton.
From Littlehampton to Aldershot, Reading, and Didcot (all
excluded) to Marlborough and Mere (both included). From
Mere by western boundary of Dorsetshire to and including
Lyme Regis.
Jersey (consular agency).
Including all of Channel Islands.
Stoke on Trent.
From and including Stafford to Shrewsbury, EUesmere-
Middlewich (included), Buxton to Stafford, all towns excluded
other than Stafford and Middlewich.
Swansea.
From and including Aberystwyth to Ludlow, Hereford, Hay,
and Brecon, to Porthcawl, excluding all points other than
Aberystwyth.
Sydney.
State of New South Wales except the Broken Hill Properties
and the portion of the State north of the 33d degree of latitude
and east of the 149th degree of longitude.
GREECE.
Athens.
The Provinces of Attica, Bocotia, Phthiotis, Phokis, Evry-
tania, Larissa, Magnesia, Trikkala, Carditza, Euboea, the
Cyclades Islands, and in the island of Crete, the Provinces of
Canea, Rettimo, Candia, and Lassithion.
Patras.
The Provinces of Janina, Arta, Preveza, Aetolia, Acamania,
Archaia, Elis, Arcadia, Tryphylia, Corinth, Argolis, the Ionian
Isles, and Zante Island.
Kalamata (consular agency).
The Provinces of Laconia, Messenia, and Lacedemon.
Saloniki.
The Provinces of Fiorina, Cozani, Edessa, .Serres, Drama,
and Saloniki.
HONDURAS.
Ceiba.
Eastern Atlantida (to the Colorado River) Eastern Yoro,
including the city of Yoro, Colon, Mosquitia, and Bay Islands.
Tela (vice consulate).
Western Atlantida (from the Colorado River west). Western
Yoro, and Northern Comayagua.
Puerto Cortes.
Cortes, Santa Barbara, Copan, Ocotepeque, and Gracias.
Tegucigalpa.
Tegucigalpa, Southern Comayagua, including the city of
Comayagua, Intibuca, Lapaz, Choluteca, Paraiso, Valle, and
Olancho.
ITALY.
Catania.
The Provinces of Catania and Syracuse.
Fiume.
The Province of Camaro.
Florence.
Department of Emilia, the Provinces of Florence and Arezzo
in the Department of Tuscany, and the Republic of San
Marino.
Genoa.
Department of Liguria, and Libya.
Leghorn.
Department of Tuscany, except the Provinces of Florence
and Arezzo.
Messina.
The Province of Messina in the island of Sicily and the De-
partment of Calabria.
Milan.
Department of Lombardy.
Naples.
The Department of Campania, Apulia, and Potenza (Batili-
cata).
Palermo.
The island of Sicily, with the exception of the Provinces of
^lessina, Catania, and Syracuse.
Rome.
The Departments of Rome, Perugia (Umbria), Marches,
Abruzzie Molise, and the island of Sardinia.
Trieste.
The Provinces of Trieste, Istria, Friuli, Zara, and the islands
of Lagosta and Pelagosta.
Turin.
Department of Piedmont.
Venice.
Department of Venetia, except the Province of Friuli; and
Tridentine, Venetia (Alto Adige, Trentino, and Ampezzano).
JAPAN.
Kobe.
Prefectures of Shimane, Tottori, Hiroshima, Okayama,
Hyogo, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Wakayama, Kagawa, Toku-
shima, Ehime, Kochi.
Nagasaki.
Prefectures of Yamaguchi, Fukuoka, Saga, Nagasaki, Oita,
Kumamoto, Miyazaki, Kagoshima, Okinawa, including the
Riukiu Islands.
Nagoya.
Prefectures of Miye, Shiga, Fukui, Ishikawa, Toyama, Gifu,
Aichi, Nagano.
Taihoku.
All of Taiwan, and the Pescadores Islands.
CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
47
JAPAN— Continued.
Tokyo.
Prefectures of Yamanashi, Chiba, Tokyo, Saitama, Ibaraki,
Gumma, Tochigi, Niigata, Fukushima, Yamagata, Miyagi,
Akita, Iwate, Aomori, and Hokkaido; the adjacent islands to
the north; and the islands in the North Pacific Ocean to the
administration of which by Japan, pursuant to a mandate of
the League of Nations, the Government of the United States
consented subject to the provisions of the treaty with Japan
concerning the island of Yap concluded February ii, 1922.
Yokohama.
Prefectures of Shizuoka and Kanagawa.
MEXICO.
Acapulco.
The State of Guerrero.
Aguascalientes.
The State of Aguascalientes and that part of the State of
Zacatecas which lies south of the Tropic of Cancer, except that
part which lies south of a line running east and west through
the town of Juchipila, which is not included in this consular
district.
Chihuahua.
That part of the State of Chihuahua lying south of the 29° of
latitude, including the towns of Temosachis, Sauz, Las Varas,
and Madera, in the northwest part of the district, and all that
portion of the State lying south and east of a line from the point
of junction of the 29° of latitude and the 106° of longitude to
the Rio Grande River through San Antonio, Chihuahua
That portion of the State of Durango lying north of a line run-
ning east and west, through and including the town of Inde,
and west of a Une running north and south, through but exclud-
ing the town of Descubridora.
Ciudad Juarez.
That part of the State of Chihuahua bounded on the north
by the United States border, on the west by the Sonora bound-
ary, on the south by the 29° of latitude, and on the east by a
line drawn from the junction of the 29° of latitude and the 106°
of longitude through San Antonio, Chihuahua, to the Rio
Grande River.
Durango.
That part of the State of Durango lying west of the 104° of
longitude and south of a line running east and west, drawn
through but excluding the town of Inde and excluding the
town of Descubridora and the region tributary thereto, in the
northeastern part of the State of Durango, which should be left
in the Torreon district.
Ensenada.
All of Lower California, excepting that portion lying north-
east of a line drawn northwest from the mouth of the Colorado
River to the junction of the United States border and the
Pacific Ocean.
Frontera.
All of the State of Tabasco. That part of the State of Cam-
peachy which lies west of the 91° of longitude. That part of
the State of Chiapas which lies north of a line running easterly
from the Intersection of the State lines of Vera Cruz, Chiapas,
and Tabasco to the boundary of Guatemala.
Guadalajara.
That part of the State of Jalisco lying northeasterly of a line
drawn from the Nayarit boundary passing through and includ-
ing San Marcos and Ameca, and Zapotlan (excluded), and
thence to the border of Michoacan on a line with Los Reyes.
Also that portion of the State of Michoacan bounded by the
Jalisco and Guanajuato boundaries and a line running from
the Jalisco border through and including Los Reyes, Zamora,
and La Piedad. Also that part of the State of Zacatecas lying
south of a line running east and west, just north of the town
of Juchipila.
MEXICO— Continued.
Guaymas.
That part of the State of Sonora lying south of a line drawn
east and west through but excluding the town of Carbo.
Manzanillo.
The State of Colima. That part of the States of Michoacan
and Jalisco UHng southwesterly of a line drawn from the Guer-
rero boundary through and including Zirandaro and Tacam-
baro, and through but excluding Uruapan, Los Reyes, Zapot-
lan (included), Ameca and San Marcos (excluded), to the
Nayarit boundary. Zapotlan and the adjacent territory is
included in this consular district.
Matamoros.
That part of the State of Tamaulipas lying north of the 24°
of latitude to the Rio Grande River and northwest to a Une
drawn from Mier, Tamaulipas; to Paras, Nuevo Leon; the
town of Mier, with the surrounding district, being included in
this consular district.
Mazatlan.
The State of Sinaloa and Nayarit.
Mexicali.
The northeast comer of Lower California; bounded on the
ast by the Colorado River, on the north by the United States
border, on the southwest by a line drawn from the mouth of the
Colorado River northwest to the junction of the United States
border and the Pacific Ocean.
Mexico City.
The States of Guanajuato, Queretaro Hidalgo, Puebla,
Tlaxcala, Morelos, Mexico, Federal District, and that part of
the State of Michoacan lying northeast of a line passing through
La Piedad, Zamora, Los Reyes, Tacambaro, and Zirandaro
(all excluded). Also that part of the State of Oaxaca north of
a line drawn due east from the boundary of Guerrero as far as
San Carlos, passing through and including Ejutla, thence
northeasterly to a point on the State line of Vera Cruz, due
east of Choapam; San Carlos being included in the district of
^Mexico City.
Monterey.
That part of the State of Nuevo Leon lying south of a line
passing through Mier, Tamaulipas; and Paras, Nuevo Leon;
leaving Paras in the district of Nuevo Laredo.
Nogales.
That portion of the State of Sonora lying north of a line drawn
east and west through and including the town of Carbo.
Nuevo Laredo.
That part of the State of Nuevo Leon lying north of a line
passing through Mier, Tamaulipas; and Paras, Nuevo Leon;
and that part of the State of Tamaulipas lying northwesterly
from the line drawn from Mier to Paras. Paras is included in
this consular district but no part of the district tributary to the
town of Mier, Tamaulipas.
Piedras Negras.
That part of the State of Coahuila lying north of a line drawn
east and west, running just south of ^lonclova, excepting the
district lying south of the 28° of latitude, and west of a line
miming north and south through Cuatro Cienejas, which is in-
cluded in this consular district, and diverging westward to the
northwestern point of the Saltillo district.
Progreso.
The State of Yucatan, the Territory of Quintana Roo, and
that part of the State of Campeachy which lies east of the 91*
of longitude.
48
CONSULAR DISTRICTS.
MEXICO— Continued .
Salina Cruz.
That part of the State of Oaxaca lying south of a line drawn
due east from the boundary- of Guerrero as far as San Carlos,
passing through but excluding Ejutla; thence northeasterly to
a point on the State line of Vera Cruz due east of Choapam;
leaving San Carlos in the district of Mexico City. That part of
the State of Vera Cruz lying southeast of a line from Point
Zapotitlan on the Gulf of Mexico to the boundary of Oaxaca
and passing through Achotal. That part of the State of Chi-
apas south of a line rtmning east from the point of intersection
of the State lines of Tabasco, Vera Cruz, and Chiapas to the
Guatemala border.
SaltUlo.
That part of the State of Coahuila lying south of a line run-
ning east and west, drawn just south of Monclova, and east of
a line through but excluding Paras, drawn to Cuatro Cienejas.
That part of the State of Zacatecas lying east of a line rtuming
north and south, through and including Mazapil, but leaving
the town of Cedros in the district of Torreon.
San Luis Potosi.
The State of San Luis Potosi.
Tampico.
That part of the State of Tamaulipas lying south of the 24°
of latitude, and that part of the State of Vera Cruz lying north
of Barra de Cazones; also that part of the State of Vera Cruz
lying west and north of the River Chiflon.
Torreon.
That part of the State of Durango lying east of the 104' of
longitude, including the town of Descubridores and the sur-
rounding district. That part of the State of Zacatecas lying
north of the Tropic of Cancer and west of a line nmning north
and south, drawn through but excluding Mazapil; including
Cedros in the district of Torreon. That part of the State of
Coahuila lying west of a line from and including Paras, hut
excluding Cuatro Cienejas, and thence north to the 28° of
latitude.
Vera Cruz.
That part of the State of Vera Cruz lying south of Barra de
Cazones, and northwesterly of a line running from Point Za-
potitlan on the Gulf of Mexico to the boundary of Oaxaca, and
passing through Achotal; also the town of Tuxtepic and terri-
tory tributary thereto, in the State of Oaxaca.
NETHERLANDS.
Amsterdam.
The Provinces of North Holland, Drenthe, Friesland, Gel-
derland, Groningen, Overyssel, and Utrecht.
Batavia.
All that portion of Java west of the western boundary of
Semarang and Kedoe Residencies, Banka, Billiton, the Resi-
dency of West Coast of Sumatra, except the Province of Tapa-
noeli, the Residencies of Benkoelen, the Lampongs and Palem-
bang, the Dependencies of Riouw and Djambi and Wester-
Afdeeling in Netherlands Borneo.
Medan.
The Government of East Coast Sumatra, the Government
Atjeh, and the Province of Tapanoeli.
Rotterdam.
The Province of South Holland, Limburg, North Brabant,
and Zeeland.
NET HERLANDS— Continued .
Soerabaya.
The Moluccas, New Guinea, Celebes, Bali, Lombok, Soem-
bawa, Soemba, Flores, and all islands east of iJo°; all of
Netherlands Borneo except Wester-Aideeling; and in Java.
the Residencies of Semarang, Kedoe, Djokjakarta, Soera-
karta, Madioen, Rembang, Kediri, Soerabaya, Pasoeroean,
Madoera, and Besoeki.
PORTUGAL.
Lisbon.
The Provinces of Estremadura, Alemtejo, and Algarve, and
that part of Beira south of the 40th degree of latitude.
Oporto.
The Provinces of Tras os Montes, Entre Minho, and Douro ,
and that part of Beira north of the 40th degree of latitude.
SPAIN.
Barcelona.
The Provinces of Barcelona, Gerona, Huesca, Lerida, Zara-
goza, the Repubhc of Andorra, and the Province of Balearic
Islands.
Tarragona (consular agency).
The Province of Tarragona.
Bilboa.
The Provinces of Alava, Burgos, Logrono, Navarra, Vizcaya,
and Guipuzcoa.
Cadiz.
The Province of Cadiz and Ceuta, Morocco.
Madrid.
The Provinces of Avila, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Guadalajara,
Madrid, Salamanca, Segovia, Soria, Toledo, and Valladolid.
Malaga.
The Provinces of Granada, Jaen, Malaga, Almeria, and
Spanish Morocco, except Ceuta.
Santander.
The Provinces of Palencia, Santander, and Oviedo.
Seville.
The Pro\-inces of Badajoz, Caceres, Cordoba, Huelva, and
Seville.
Tenerifie.
The Province of Canary Islands.
Las Palmas (vice consulate).
The East Canary Islands.
Valencia.
The Provinces of Albacete, Castellon, Teruel, and Valencia.
Alicante (consular agency).
The Provinces of Alicante and Murda.
Vigo.
The Provinces of Coruima, Leon, Lugo, Orense, Pontevedra,
and Zamora.
SWEDEN.
Goteborg.
The Provinces of Varmland, Goteborg, Bohus, Alfsborg,
Skaraborg, Jonkoping, and Halland.
Malmo.
The Provinces of Blekinge, Kristianstad, Malmohus, Krono-
berg, and Kalmar.
Stockholm.
The Provinces of Jamtland, Vastemorrland Gevleborg,
Kopparberg, Upsala, Vastmanland, Stockholm, Orebro, Soder-
manland, Ostergotland, Gottland, Norrbotten, and Vaster-
botten.
CONSULAR DISTRICTS. 49
VENEZUELA. VENEZUELA— Continued.
Caracas. Maracaibo.
The States of Anzoategui, Apure, Aragua. Bolivar, Guarico The States ot Merida, Techira, Trujillo and Zulia; and the
Miranda, Monagas, Nueve Esparta, Sucre; the Territories of State of Falcon in that part lying west of a line running north
Axnazonas and Delta Atnacuro; and the Federal District and south through, but including, the town of La Vela deCoro.
except in the Department of Vargas and in the Department
Libertador, the Parish of Alacuto. Puerto Cabello.
La Guaira (vice consulate). The States of Carabobo, Cojedes, Lara, Portuguesa, Vara-
The Federal District in the Department of Vargas and, in guay and Zamora; and the State of Falcon in that part lying
the Department Libertador, the Parish of Macuto. east of a line running north and south through, but excluding,
Ciudad Bolhar (consular agencj-)- the town of La \'ela de Coro.
50
TARIFF OF UNITED STATES CONSULAR FEES.
XII.— TARIFF OF UNITED STATES CONSULAR FEES.
[Revised to take effect November 1, 1906; amended by Executive orders and by act of Congress approved June 4, 1920.]
Tariff of fees prescribed b}^ order of the President to be charged by consular officers of the United
States. All consular charges must be in strict accordance with this tariff and be collected in gold or
its equivalent. No fee or compensation will be collected for any service not covered by this tariff.
The fees in this tariff are not prescribed for American vessels and seamen, because they are exempted
by law from the payment of consular fees. Consular agents will make the fees in this tariff a basis of
collection from the Treasury for services to such vessels. Foreign-built vessels, unregistered, owned
by American citizens, and vessels documented under the laws of the Philippine Islands are not exempt
from the payment of the fees prescribed herein.
Nature of service.
Fee.
Nature of service.
Fee.
Miscellaneous services.
Miscellaneous services — Continued .
I. Certificate to invoice, including declaration, in
9. Verifying an American passport — Form No. 10. .
No fee.
triplicate or quadruplicate, covering either
Visaing passports of aliens:
importations or transit shipments, including
Preparing visa declaration and administer-
any additional declaration or certificate not
ing oath
$1. 00
otherwise provided for which is required by
Visaing passport of an alien
9.00
law or regulations for use in connection with
Exceptions^
the entry of the wares or the forwarding of
(a) Any officer of any foreign Govern-
the same in bond
$2.50
I. 00
ment or member of his immediate
family
2. Invoice of returned American goods
No fee.
3. Extra certificates and declarations as above de-
(6) Any officer of the armed forces of
scribed, including immigrant's oath (Form
any Government or member of
No. 128) or declaration for books and house-
his immediate family
No fee.
hold effects under $100 in value when issued
(c) Any officer of any State, district, or
without an invoice certificate, each
1. 00
I. 00
municipality of any foreign Gov-
ernment or member of his im-
4. Certificate to extra copies of invoices, each
5. Certificate of disinfection, in triplicate or quad-
mediate family
No fee.
ruplicate
2.50
(d) Any alien soldier who was a resident
of the United States, and who
6. Landing certificate, including oaths of master
and mate, and the complete execution of the
having served in the military or
certificate
2.50
naval forces of any country co-
belligerent with the United States
7. Sealing cars coming from Canada or Mexico, for
each manifest in quintuplicate with the con-
or in the Czecho-Slovak, Polish, or
sul's certificate including sealing of each car,
other independent forces attached
vessel, bale, barrel, box, or package
1. 00
to the armed forces of the United
States or its cobelligerent nations.
8. Executing passport application in every case
(no exceptions)
1. 00
who is entitled to reentry into the
Issuing passport Form No. 9
9.00
United States under public reso-
Exceptions—
lution of Oct. 19, 191S (see Cir-
(a) Officers or employees of United
cular No. 650 of Jan. 17, 1919)
No fee.
States traveling on official busi-
Certifying to a copy of visa declaration previ-
ness or members of their imme-
ously taken
1. 00
diate families
No fee.
No fee.
Transit certificates to aliens in transit through
the United States
(6) Seamen
I. 00
(c) Widows, children, parents, brothers.
10. Visaing a Chinese passport or certificate (ex-
and sisters of American soldiers,
sailors, or marines buried abroad.
cept no fee for persons included in (a), (6), (c),
and (</) of fee No. 9)
9. 00
whose journey is for purpose of vis-
II. Marriage certificate, in duplicate. Form No. 87. .
1. 00
iting graves of such soldiers, sailors.
12. For taking into possession the personal estate of
or marines (affidavit of such pur-
any citizen who shall die within the limits of a
pose must accompany applica-
consulate, inventorying, selling, and finally
tion)
No fee.
settling and preparing or transmitting, accord-
Extension of passport
No fee.
ing to law, the balance due thereon, $2 for each
TARIFF OF UNITED STATES CONSULAR FEES.
51
Nature of service.
Miscellaneous services — Continued .
$100 of value or fraction thereof. If part of
such estate shall be delivered over before final
settlement. Si for each $100 of value or fraction
thereof to be charged on the part so delivered
over as is not in money, and $2 for each $100
of value or fraction thereof on the gross amount
of the residue. If among the effects of the de-
ceased are found certificates of foreign stock,
loans, or other property, $r for each Sioo of
value or fraction thereof on the amount there-
of. No charge will be made for placing the
officfal seal upon the personal property or
effects of such deceased citizen, or for breaking
or removing the seals.'
13. For each certificate of protection, semsar, or cer-
tificate of employment issued at Tangier
Services to vessels and seamen.
14. Bill of health, in duplicate -
15. Supplemental bill of health ' (abolished)
16. For receiving and delivering ships' register and
papers, including consular certificates, as pre-
scribed in Forms Nos. 13 and 14, $1 for each
100 tons or fraction thereof, registered measure-
ment (net), of the vessel for which the service
is performed, if under 1,000 tons; but for Amer-
ican vessels running regularly by weekly or
monthly trips, or otherwise, to or between
foreign ports, this tonnage fee will not be
charged for more than four trips in a year; and
tonnage fees shall not be exacted for any vessel
touching at or near ports in Canada on hej
regular voyage from one port to another with-
in the United States, unless some official
service required by law shall be performed.
17. And for every additional 100 tons net or fraction
thereof
18. Shipping or discharging seamen, including the
certificates thereof attached to crew list and
shipping articles and given to seamen
19. Authentication of copies of protests or other
necessary documents for vessels or seamen
not otherwise provided for
Fee.
Nature of service.
Services io vessels and seamen — Continued.
20. Preparation and acknowledgment for vessels or
seamen of any oath or declaration for which a
form is given in the Consular Regulations, or
a similar necessary service not otherwise pro-
vided for 5
21. Preparation and execution for vessels or seamen
of any certificate for which a form is given in
The Consular Regulations, or similar neces-
sary service not otherwise provided for
22. Orders or letters for vessels or seamen for which
forms are given in the Consular Regulations,
or other similar necessary service not other-
wise pro\'ided for
23. Recording, when necessary, for vessels or sea-
men any document covered by the provisions
of the Consular Regulations, for every 100
words or fraction thereof
24. Noting marine protest — Form No. 37
25. Extending marine protest — Form No. 38
If it exceed 200 words, for every additional 100
words
26. Protest of master against charters or freighters —
Form No. 39 ,
27. Clearance when issued by the consul, as at free
ports
28. Attending an appraisement of vessel's goods or
effects, for each day's attendance
29. Attending sale of vessel's goods, for each day's
attendance during which the sale continues.
30. Attendance at a shipwreck, or for the purpose of
assisting a ship in distress, or of saving
wrecked goods or property, over and above
traveling expenses, whenever the consul's
interposition is recjuired by the parties inter-
ested, for each day
Notarial and other services.
3 1 . Administering an oath and certificate thereof ' * ' ,
32. Administering oath and preparing passport ap-
plication ^
33. Acknowledgment of a deed or power of attorney,
or similar service including one or more signa-
tures, with certificate thereof, for each copy ' .
" Executive order of Mar. 29, 1918, prescribes that during the continuance of the war and until further orders, any services
which American consular officers shall be called upon to perform under items 12, 31, 33, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, and 43 of the tariff of
United States consular tees for any person in the military or naval service of the United States, shall be rendered free of charge.
Executive order of May 27,. 1922, prescribes that any services which American consular officers shall be called upon to perfarm
under items 31, 33, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, and 43 of the tariff of United States consular fees for the use of any person in the collection
of claims from the United States or from any State for compensation, pensions, back pay, bounty, bonus, or for property loss
in the military service shall be rendered free of charge.
' Foreign war vessels are exempt from the payment of fees for bills of health.
' Covers service of vise of alien crew list for foreign ship.
* Executive order of Dec. 21, 1906, prescribes that no fee shall be charged for the affidavit of temporary stay of owner of seal-
skin garment entering the United States from Canada.
'■> Executing an affidavit in regard to American birth in connection with application for passport or for registration, no fees.
52
TARIFF OF UNITED STATES CONSULAR FEES.
Nature of service.
Fee.
Notarial and other services — Continued
34. Administering any and all oaths required to be
made by pensioners and their witnesses in the
execution of their pension vouchers, or by per-
sons presenting claims for pensions or increase
of pensions, or claims for insurance or insur-
ance allowances or allotments on certifying
to the competency of a local official before
whom said papers were executed, or for other
services in relation thereto
35. Acknowledgments connected with the transfer
of United States bonds
36. Administering oaths or taking acknowledg-
ments of officials or employees of the United
States Government, or of any corporation in
which the United States or its representa-
tives shall own the entire outstanding capital
stock, in connection with their official busi-
ness or accounts
37. For rendering notarial services to officials of for-
eign governments who render gratuitously
reciprocal courtesies to American diplomatic
and consular officers
38. Certifying to official character of a foreign
notary or other official '
39. For taking depositions, executing commissions
or letters rogatory, Where the record of testi-
mony, Including caption and certificate, does
not exceed 500 words '
For each additional 100 words or fraction thereof,
The foregoing fee shall cover the administration
of the oath and all services of the consul as
commissioner, but shall not include services
of clerk, stenographer, or typewriter, which
shall be additional at the rate prescribed
herein for copying.
40. Copies (carbon copies to be charged for at the
same rate as originals): •
For the first 100 words or fraction
For every additional loo words or less
41. Translations; for every 100 words or fraction i. . .
No fee.
No fee.
No fee.
No fee.
$2.00
10.00
•so
•SO
•25
I. 00
Nature of service.
Notarial and otner services — Continued.
42. Additional fee for all services contemplated by
fees numbered 31, 32,33, 38, 39, when rendered
elsewhere than at the consular office at the
request of the interested parties, for each
hour or fraction thereof ■
In connection with any service rendered out-
side of the consular office at the request of
private individuals, the exact amount of the
expenses actually and necessarily incurred
by the person rendering the service shall be
collected from the persons for whom the
service is performed in addition to the fee or'
fees prescribed therefor, and a note of the
amount shall be made on the margin of the
fee book and fee return opposite the entry of
the service and fee; but no amount in excess
of the fee or fees prescribed and such actual
and necessary expenses shall be charged or
accepted.
43. Recording unofficial documents in consulate
upon request: '
For the first loo words or fraction
For every additional 100 words or less
44. Any and all services indicated in the above
tariff and performed upon written orders of
the Department of State for the official use
of the Government of the United States
45. Any and all services in connection with the
execution of income-tax returns ^
46. License for the practice of pharmacy and the
sale of poisons in the consular districts of the
United States in China
47. Certificate of registration
48. Presenting a bill of exchange or other negotiable
instrument for acceptance, payment, or pro-
test, for each hour or fraction thereof outside
of the consular office
49. Noting and certifying to protest of a bill of ex-
change or other negotiable instrument and
giving notice thereof to drawer and indorsers
when requested to do so
' See footnote i on p. si»
8 This includes State and municipal income taxes.
Consular officers must require all fees to be paid in advance and before the stamps are canceled,
except in case of attendance out of office or of commissions, when the amount can not be determined
tmtil the service is performed. Advance deposits to cover fees in such latter cases may be accepted,
but in no other cases.
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES. 53
XIIL— DISPOSITION OF FEES AND COMPENSATION OF CONSULAR AGENTS AND VICE CONSULS.
The act for the reorganization of the consular service of the United States, approved April 5, igo6,
provides:
"Sec. 8. That all fees, official or unofficial, received by any officer in the consular service for
services rendered in connection ^vith the duties of his office or as a consular officer, including fees for
notarial services, and fees for taking depositions, executing commissions or letters rogatory, settling
estates, receiving or paying out moneys, caring for or disposing of property, shall be accounted for and
paid into the Treasury of the United States, and the sole and only compensation of such officers shall
be by salaries fixed by law; but this shall not apply to consular agents, who shall be paid by one half
of the fees received in their offices, up to a maximum sum of one thousand dollars in any one year, the
other half being accounted for and paid into the Treasury of the United States."
The act for the reorganization and improvement of the Foreign Service of the United States,
approved May 24, 1924, amends the act of April 5, 1906, as follows:
"Sec. II. That the provisions of sections 8 and 10 of the act of April 5, 1906, relative to official
fees and the method of accounting therefor shall include both branches of the Foreign Serv'ice."
The act for the reorganization and improvement of the Foreign Service of the United States,
approved May 24, 1924, amends section 1685 of the Revised Statutes as amended by the act entitled
"An act for the improvement of the Foreign Service, approved February 5, 191 5," to read as follows:
"Sec. 1685. That for such time as any Foreign Service officer shall be la^vfuUy authorized to act as
charge d'affaires ad interim or to assume charge of a consulate general or consulate during the absence
of the principal officer at the post to which he shall have been assigned, he shall, if his salary is less
than one-half that of such principal officer, receive in addition to his salary as Foreign Service officer
compensation equal to the difference between such salary and one-half of the salary provided by law
for the ambassador, minister, or principal consular officer, as the case may be."
XIV.— CONSUUR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS DETAILED AS INSPECTORS.
Name.
Charles C. Eberhardt (for eastern Europe)
William Dawson d (for Central and South America). .
Roger Culver Tredwell / (for Central Asia and Africa)
Nelson T. Johnson g (for the Far East)
Edward J. Norton <*
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Kansas I Sept. s> 1919
Minnesota Nov. 19,1921
Indiana Nov. 23, 1921
Oklahoma Nov. 23,1921
Tennessee Aug. 29,1922
Salary.
$9,000
S.ooo
8,000
8,000
7,000
54 CONSULAR SERVICE OP THE UNITED STATES.
LIST OF SUPERVISORY CONSULATES GENERAL AND THE LIMITS OF THEIR JURISDICTION.
Consulates General.
Supervisory jurisdiction.
Consulates General.
Supervisory jurisdiction.
All of the Netherlands.
All of Belgium.
All of Greece.
All of Spain and the Canary Islands.
All of Syria.
All of Germany.
All of Hungary.
All of Argentina.
All of Egypt.
All of India.
All of Peru.
The Union of South Africa.
All of Turkey.
All of Denmark.
All of Italy.
All of Ecuador.
All of Cuba.
The Maritime Provinces of Canada.
All of Portugal, the Azores, Madeira, and
Cape Verde Islands.
All of the British Isles.
Melbourne
All of Australia.
All of Mexico.
Province of Quebec.
All of Norway.
Province of Ontario.
All of Panama.
All of France.
All of Brazil.
Straits Settlements.
All of Sweden.
All of Morocco.
All of Japan.
All of Chile.
Province of British Columbia and
Yukon Territory.
All of Austria.
All of Poland.
All of New Zealand.
Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchev
and Alberta.
All of Switzerland.
Mexico City
Montreal
Oslo
Beirut
Ottawa
Berlin
Panama
Paris
Buenos Aires
Rio de Janeiro
Singapore
Calcutta
Tokyo
thp
Halifax
Zurich
ARGENTINA— BELGIUM.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
ARGENTINA.
Buenos Aires
Henry H. Morgan
William P. George r
...CO..
C
Louisiana
Alabama
Oct. 3, 1923
Oct. 22, 1924
Apr. 27,1923
Dec. 8, 1924
Feb. 10,1917
Jtily 3.1918
Sept. 2, 1921
Jan. 2, 1924
Oct. IS, 1910
Dec. 20, 1924
$9,000
4,000
2,7SO
2, Soo
Do
Do
E. Kitchel Farrand r
Ronald D. Stevenson /
Louis A. Clausel '^
...v.c.
...v.c.
. V. c
Do
Pennsylvania. . .
Dist. Columbia.
Pennsylvania. . .
Massachusetts...
California
Ohio
Do
Do
Peter J. Houlahan
Sydney H. Banash
Robert Hamden d
Thomas B. Van Home
John M. Vebber
...v.c.
...v.c.
c.
...v.c.
...v.c.
c.
Do
Rosaiio
4,soo
Do
Do
Wisconsin
AUSTRIA.
Vienna
Do
Robert W. Heingartner <* . . .
C. Warwick Perkins, jr.''. . . .
Stephen E. Kendrick
Donald S. White
Thomas R. Flack
c.
...v.c.
...v.c.
...v.c.
...v.c.
. ..C.G..
Ohio
June 4, 1920
Nov. 8, 1924
Dec. 19, 1921
Aug. 29,1923
Aug. 7, 1924
4.000
2.SOO
Do
Maryland
Rhode Island. ..
Do
Do
Do
BELGIUM.
Antwerp
Do
George S. Messersmith <*
Hugh S. Fullerton i"
c.
c.
Delaware
Ohio
May 10, 1919
Oct. 23, 1923
Dec. 17, 1918
May 17, 1923
May s, 1924
Jan. II, 1913
7,000
4,000
Do
Do
Harry Tuck Sherman
JuUan F. Harrington
Dwight W. Fisher
Desire Derulle
...v.c.
...v.c.
...v.c.
....Agt..
Do
Massachusetts. . .
Dist. Columbia.
Luxemburg
Do
Luxemburg, Luxemburg
$6,901.63
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
BELGIUM— CHILE.
55
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
BELGIUM— Continued .
Brussels.
Do...
Ghent. . .
Do...
BOLIVIA.
La Paz.
Do.
Herbert O. Williams <J C.
H. Armistead Smith V. C.
Clinton E. MacEachran C .
Fred H. Houck V. C.
Dayle C. McDonough d C .
Augustus Ostertag V. C.
CaUfomia
Dist. Columbia.
Massachusetts. . .
Dist. Columbia.
Missouri
Pennsylvania . .
BRAZIL.
Bahia
Do
Para
Do
Do
Manaos
Do
Maranhao
Pemambuco
Do
Ceara
Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul
Do
Rio Grande
Rlo de Janeiro
Do
Do
Do
Do
Victoria
Santos
Do
Sao Paulo
Do
Homer Brett <i C.
: V. C.
Jack Dewey Hickerson r C .
R. Frazier Potts V. C.
Edward C. Holden V. C.
James H. Roth V. C.
Gaston A. Coumoyer V. C .
Antonio Jose Tavares Agt. .
Emil Sauerd C
Fred C. Eastin, jr."" V. C. .
George L. MacM aster Agt. .
C
Mississippi.
Oct. 11,1923
Apr. 5, 1924
Apr. 10, 1924
May 27, 1924
June 22, 1922
Aug. 21, 1924
Mar. 30, 1923
$4,000
Texas
Indiana
Massachusetts.. .
California
New Hampshire,
Brazil
Texas
Missouri
Brazil
Aug. IS,
June 21,
May 9,
Mar. 16,
Nov. 3,
June 26,
Oct. 23,
June i6,
Apr. 5,
1924
1924
1912
1923
1924
1923
1924
1924
1919
5,000
2,750
William F. Hoffman V. C
Arthur L. Bowen Agt
Alphonse Gaulin C. G
Robert R. Bradford d c
Howard Donovan ' C
George Tait r y. C
Theodore A. Xanthaky V. C . .
Joseph Hoffay Agt. .
Hemdon W. Goforth r c
Arthur G. Parsloe V. C. .
Arminius T. Haeberle d C
Archer Woodford V. C. .
Pennsylvania . .
Brazil
Rhode Island . .
Nebraska
Illinois
Virginia
New York
New York
North Carolina.
Georgia
Missouri
Kentucky
Oct.
Dec.
Feb.
Aug.
Feb.
Nov.
Sept.
Mar.
Mar.
June
Mar.
Feb.
20. 1920
18. 1923
10. 192 1
II, 1924
29. 1924
19, 1923
24. 1923
2,1923
28, 1923
7> 1923
30, 1923
25,1924
9,000
4,000
3,500
2,500
BULGARLA.
Sofia...,
Do.
CHILE.
Antofagasta
Do
Caldera
Arica
Do
Concepcion
Do
Talcahuano
Iquique
Do
Punta Arenas
Do
Stuart K. Lupton d C
F. Le Roy Spangler/ V. C. .
Stewart E. McMillin d c.
Ben C. Matthews V. C.
Martin N. Gaines Agt .
Egmont C. von Tresckow <* C.
V.C.
C.
Tennessee.
Kansas
Dec. 12, 1923
Apr. 27, 1923
S, 000
2,750
Kansas May 17,1922
South Carolina . . June 16, 1924
Missouri Jan. 26,1922
South Carolina. . July 21, 1921
Robert L. Mosier"- V.C.
Edward Hyde Agt.
Harry Campbell d c.
Wilham H. Vosholl V. C.
George T. Colman r C .
Charies V. Sharp V. C.
Indiana Oct. 22, 1924
Chile Apr. 26,1921
Kansas Sept. ai, 1923
Missouri Mar. 22,1921
New York Aug. is, 1923
United States ... Mar. 26, 1924
2,500
5, 000
3,S0O
'i $ 35. 00
A 369. so
177.26
1,888.76
889.00
56
CONSUIvAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHILE— CHINA.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
CHILE— Continued.
Valparaiso
Do
Do
Do
Do
Coquimbo
Cruz Grande, Coquimbo. .
CHINA.
Amoy
Do
Antung
Do
Canton
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Changsha...
Do
Chefoo
Do
Chungking.
Do
Foochow
Do
Hankow
Do
Do
Do
Harbin
Do
Do
Kalgan
Do
Mukden
Do
Do
Do
Do
Nanking
Do
Shanghai. .
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Swatow
Do
Carl F. Deichman rf C. G..
George A. Makinson/ C. .
Edwin Schoenrich'' V. C. .
John T. Garvin a V. C.l
Camden L. McLain V. C. . 1
June 23, 1920
June 22, 1922
Nov. 8, 1924
Sept. 27, 192 1
Oct. 22, 1924
Edwin Salz Agt..! New York 1 Mar. 30,1921
J. Ckatten Hendra Agt. . Pennsylvania. . . Nov. 14, 1923
Missouri...
California .
Maryland .
Ohio
Virginia...
$7,000
4.S00
2,500
Leroy Webber r
William R. Langdon o 0.
.V. C.
New York.
Aug. 18, 1924
Douglas Jenkins d
Maxwell M. Hamilton 0. .
Culver B. Chamberlain 0.
Robert B. Streeper f
Prescott Childs r
Harr>- E . Stevens S
.V. c.
CO.
...c.
.v.c.
.V. c.
.v.c.
.v.c.
....c.
Massachusetts.
May 10, 1922
South Carolina. .
Iowa
Missouri
Ohio
Massachusetts. . .
California
Mar. 30, 1923
June 3,1924
Aug. 29, 1923
July 31,1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Nov. 20, 1924
7,000
3,Soo
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
Carl D. Meinhardt B...
John R. Putnam d
Alexander G. Swaney.
.V.C.
.V.C.
New York.
Oregon
Montana . . .
Apr. 12, 1920
Jan. 9, 1924
July 19, 1924
3,000
5, 000
Robert Lacy Smyth a 0
Ernest B. Price g
William E. Larkin
P. Stewart Heintzleman 9. ,
Jay C. Huston ?
Flavins J. Chapman, 3d 3.
Gordon L. Burke o
George C. Hanson g
PaulM. Dutko
Charles H. Stephan
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
C.G.
.V.C.
.v.c.
....c.
.v.c.
.v.c.
....c.
California
New York
Massachusetts. . .
Pennsylvania. . .
California
Virginia
Georgia
Connecticut
Pennsylvania. . .
New York
May
Dec.
Apr.
Sept.
Aug.
June
May
Dec.
Nov.
May
13, 1924
27, 1921
14, 1924
8,1919
8, 1924
11,1923
13, 1924
27, 1921
23, 1920
18, 1923
2,500
4,000
7,000
4iS0O
2,500
Edwin F. Stanton e.
Raymond P. Tenney " B..
Samuel Sokobin g
Frederick L. Thomas '"...,
William F. Nason 9
John K. Davis a g
Walter E.Smith
Edwin S. Cunningham 6.
James P. Davis <*
Joseph E. Jacobs g
Howard Bucknell, jr. g...
Charles I. Graham r ,
John B. Sawyer
Paul L. Gross
Walter B. Wilson, jr
Clarence J. Spiker?
.V.C.
.CO.
....c.
.v.c.
.v.c.
.C.G.
..c.
..c.
.v.c.
.v.c.
.v.c.
....c.
.v.c.
California .
Mar. IS, 1924
Massachusetts. .
New Jersey
New York
Massachusetts. .
Ohio
Tennessee
Tennessee
Georgia
South Carolina.
Georgia
Illinois
Oregon
North Carolina.
Dist. Columbia.
Mar.
Sept.
Oct.
Mar.
May
July
Sept.
June
Nov.
Jan.
Feb.
Apr.
Nov.
Nov.
Oct.
12, 1924
12, 1924
23, 1924
IS, 1924
29, 1919
1,1921
8. 1919
28. 1922
19, 1921
28, 1924
27, 1924
12, 1921
3. 1920
22. 1923
30, 1923
4,000
4,500
3,500
2,500
5,000
8,000
4,500
4,500
3,500
3,500
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHINA— CUBA
57
Place.
CHIN A— Continued .
Tientsin. .
Do....
Do
Do....
Do
Tsinan
Do
Tsingtao. ..
Do
Do
Yunnanfu.
Name and title.
Clarence E. Gauss rf C. G.
David C. Berger ff V. C.
Granville O. Woodard <■ V. C.
Clement H. Cornish V. C.
Verne G. Staten V. C.
C.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Connecticut j Mar. 12,1924
Virginia } Jime 13, 1923
California j Apr. 27,1923
New Jersey ] June 23,1921
Illinois Sept. 28, 1923
Salary.
$8,000
3,oco
27 7SO
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
Harvey Lee Milboume »" .
.V. C.
West Virginia. .
Mar. 2, 1923
2,7so
COLOMBIA.
Barranquilla
Do
Buenaventura .
Medellin
Cartagena
Do
Santa Marta
Do
Do
Walter A. Adams ^ C.
Hiram E. Newbill V. C.
Myrl S. Myers g C.
Maurice L. Stafford d C.
.V. C.
.V.C.
,.Agt.
South Carolina .
Virginia
Pennsylvania . .
California.
Jime
Nov.
Dec.
22, 1922
27, 1921
4,500
5,000
Dec. 27,1921 4,000
COSTA RICA.
Port Limon...
Do
San Jose
Do ,
Puntarenas.
CUBA.
AntUla ,
Do
Clenfuegos
Do
Caibarien
Sagua la Grande.
Habana
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Matanzas
Lawrence F. Cotie . . .
Harold B. Maynham.
Lester L. Schnare d. .
Massachusetts.
Colombia
Georgia
Oct. 4, 1924
May 31, 1919
Aug. 3, 1923 3, 500
.V.C.
John McArdlC..
Orlando L. Flye.
.V.C.
.V.C.
Pennsylvania .
John J. Meily d C.
V.C.
Henry S. Waterman d c.
Roderick W. Unckles V. C.
Henry T. Purdy Agt.
Pennsylvania .
Aug. II, 1923
July 9, 1921
May 17,1922
Washington .
New York . .
New York . .
Horace J. Dickinson d C.
V.C.
Arkansas .
Do
Nueva Gerona, Isle of Pines..
Do
Nuevitas j Lawrence P. Briggs d
Do
Frank Bohr / C. .
George B. Starbuck V. C. .
Milton S. Lankford Agt. .
Eugene E. Jcnia n Agt. .
Carlton Bailey Hurst a. C. G. .
Arthur C. Frost d c. .
Thomas R. Owens d c. .
Fletcher Warren r c. .
Sheridan Talbott ^ V. C. .
Harry W. Hargis, jr V. C. .
Ben B. Sampselle V. C. .
WiUiam B. Murray V. C. .
Joseph A. Springer V. C.
V.C.
James V. AVhitfield r c. .
Charles Forman d C. .
George Bentley Tracy V. C. .
C.
V.C.
Kansas
New York
Maryland
United States...
Dist. Columbia ,
Massachusetts. . ,
Alabama
Texas ,
Kentucky
North Carolina ,
Virginia ,
Iowa
Maine
North Carolina
Louisiana
Massachusetts..
Michigan
July 20, 1921
Dec. 22, 1924
Dec, 6, 1921
Feb. 7, 1922
May
Nov.
Nov.
Oct.
Aug.
Mar.
Apr.
Dec.
Nov.
Apr.
Oct.
Oct.
Feb.
10. 1919
15.1915
14, 1921
6, 1922
19. 1920
30, 1923
23( 1924
14. 1921
16. 1923
25,1921
17,1924
17. 1924
6.1915
Dec. 19, 1923
Nov. 26, 1919
Aug. 25, 1920
Mar. 5, 1923
9,000
7,000
4,000
3.S00
3,500
3,500
2, 500
58
CONSUirAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
CUBA— EGYPT.
Place.
CUB A— Continued .
Santiago de Cuba.
Do
Mamanillo
CZECHOSLOVAKIA.
Prague, Bohemia.
Do
Do
Do
Do
DANZIG, FREE CITY OF.
Danzig.
Do.
DENMARK.
Copenhagen .
Do
Do
Do
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Puerto Plata.
Do
Sanchez
Santo Domingo
Do
La Romana
San Pedro de Macoris.
ECUADOR,
Guayaquil
Do
Do
Bahia de Caraquez.
Esmeraldas
EGYPT.
Alexandria.
Do
Do
Cairo
Do
Assiul. . . .
Port Said...
Do
Cyprus...
Name and title.
Francis R. Stewart d C . .
Harry W. Story a V. C. .
Raoul A . Bertot Agt . .
Charles S. Winans C .
Herbert S. Bursley/ C.
Sidney E. O'Donoghue'' V. C.
John L. Calnan V. C.
James K. Angell V. C.
Edwin Carl Kemp d.
Jay Walker
....C.
.V. c.
Marion Letcher d C. G..
Howard F. Withey d C. .
Erland Gjessing n V. C. .
Julius C. Jensen V. C . .
William A. Bickers d C.
Morris A. Peters V. C.
/. Enrique Leroui Agt.
Charles Bridgham Hosmer r C .
Raymond O. Richards V. C.
Eugene J . Lieder Agt .
John IV. Tatem Agt.
C.G.
Richard P. Butrick'' C.
William W. Morse " V. C.
Alberto Santos Agt.
George D. Median Agt .
Ernest L. Ives / C . .
Raymond H. Geisf C.
George C. Cobb V. C. .
North Winship d c . .
William E. DeCourcy V. C.
George Wissa Bey Agt. .
John L. Bouchal r c. .
Walter B. Lowrie V. C.
Lawrence A. Mantovani Agt. .
Whence
appointed.
New York
North Carolina
Cuba
Michigan
Dist. Columbia. .
New Jersey
Massachusetts. . .
New York
Florida
Dist. Columbia. .
Georgia . . . ,
Michigan.. .
New York.
Wyoming. .
Virginia
Massachusetts..
Dominican Re-
public.
Maine
Maine
New York
Dominican Re-
public.
New York .
Missouri
Ecuador. . .
New York .
Virginia
Ohio
Georgia . . . .
Georgia . . . ,
Texas
Egypt
Nebraska. .
Minnesota.
New York .
Date of
commission.
Aug. 3, 1923
Apr. 27, 1923
Apr. 20, 1922
Nov. 9, 1920
Aug. 16, 1924
Jan. 4, 1924
Apr. 14,1921
June 17, 1924
Apr.
May
28, 1923
Sr 1924
Aug. 19, 1920
July 12,1923
May 27,1918
Dec. 17,1923
May 2s, 1918
July 9, 191S
Aug. 29, 1908
Mar. 28, 1923
Nov. IS, 1923
Nov. 14, 1922
Nov. 17, 1924
Dec. 3, 1923
July 15,1919
Sept. 10, 1900
Feb. 19, 1908
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Dec.
Nov.
June
Nov.
Aug.
Dec.
17,1923
20, 1924
23, 1923
2, 1924
20. 1923
25) 1903
22, 1923
26. 1924
21, I92I
Fees, year
Salary. .^""^^^
J , Jung ^o^
1 1924-
$4,500
7,000
3,500
3,000
8,000
3.SOO
5,000
3,000
6,000
2,750
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
ESTHONIA— FRANCE AND DOMINIONS.
59
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
conomission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30.
1924.
ESTHONIA.
Tallinn.
Do.
FINLAND.
Helsingsfors.
Do
FRANCE AND DOMINIONS.
Algiers, Algeria
Do
Oran, A Igeria
Bordeaux
Do
Do
Biarritz
Do
Calais
Boulogne-sur-raer
Cherbourg
Do
Dakar Senegal
Do
Dunkirk
Do...
Gaudeloupe, West Indies. .
Do
Havre
Do
Do
Dieppe
La Rochelle
Do
Do
LUle
Limoges
Do
Lyon
Do
Marseille
Do
Do
Martinique, West Indies
Do
Nancy
Do
Nantes
Do
Nice
Do
32952—25-
HaroldB. Quarton/.
William L. Peck''...
....C.
.V. C.
Iowa
Connecticut.
Joseph F. McGurk r..,
Frank P. S. Glassey r.
C . . New Jersey. . .
. V. C. . Pennsylvania.
Oct. 14, 1932
May 19, 1923
Sept. 9, 1924
Dec. 14,1921
$4»soo
2,500
4,500
2,500
Lewis W. Haskell d. , . .
David C. Elkington
Albert H. El ford
Lucien Memminger /. . .
Walter H. McKinney d.
James D. Child
Roy Mc Williams
Sam Park
Thomas D. Davis d
William W. Corcoran''..
John Corrigan, Jr.d
L. Pittman Springs
WUliam J. Yerby c
.V. C.
..Agt.
...C.
.V. c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
....c.
.V. c.
....c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
.v.c.
South Carolina .
Illinois
Algeria ,
South Carolina..
Michigan ,
Oregon
Illinois
Texas ,
Oklahoma
Massachusetts.. ,
Georgia
Dist. Columbia.
Tennessee
Oct.
Apr.
Nov.
Apr.
Nov.
Aug.
Apr.
Nov.
May
lyiay
Sept.
Dec.
Feb.
23. 1924
S>i9i8
7> 1906
28, 1923
20, 1923
S>I9I9
17, 1920
15. 1920
14, 1931
37) '919
II, 1923
29. 1921
22, 1915
4,Soo
3>SOO
4,000
2,750
4,000
$686. 25
George D. Hopper d.
Kentucky.
Nov. 27, 1923
Shelby F. Strother d
E. St. George Lough
Lester Maynard c
Samuel J. Fletcher r
William G. O'Brien
Frederick C. Fairbanks a.
.V.C.
....c.
.v.c.
..Agt.
Kentucky
New York
CaUf omia
Maine
Massachusetts.
United States.
Davis B. Levis. .
EUsee Jouard n. .
Paul C. Squire r.
.V.C.
.V.C.
....C.
Illinois
New York ....
Massachusetts.
....€.
.V.C.
....C.
Dec. 16, 1921
May 10, 1919
Aug. 17, 1923
July 13, 1923
Sept. 22, 1924
Mar. II, 1916
6,000
3,500
Oct. 23, 1924
May 21, 191S
May 17, 1923
152. 82
Reginald H. WiUiams. . .
Hugh H. Watson d
Cyrus B. Follmer
Wesley Frost <i
Hooker A. Doolittle r
Alfred D. Cameron r
.V.C.
L. Dale Pope
George N.Iflt 6
Joseph I. Touchette r.
Fred D. Fisher
Marcel E. Malige r
Otis A. Glazebrook p.
Walter J. Linthicum.
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
...c.
New York. . . .
Vermont
Pennsylvania .
Kentucky
New York . . . .
Washington...
Jan. 27, 1916
May 17, 1922
Sept. 8, 1924
Feb. 16, 1921
July 19, 1923
Apr. 37, 1933
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
Maryland
Idaho
Massachusetts.
Oregon
Idaho
New Jersey. . .
Maryland
Mar.
Jan.
Jan.
7. 1924
13, 1924
16, 1924
Dec. 27, 1921
Aug. II, 1922
1930
Dec.
Oct. IS, 1924
7,000
4,000
2,500
S,ooo
3,500
6,000
3,000
6,000
6o
CONSULAR SERVICE OP THE UNITED STATES.
FRANCE AND DOMINIONS— GERMANY.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
FRANCE AND DOMIN-
IONS—Continued.
Paris
Robert P. Skinner b C. G..
John F. Simons r C. .
Charles D. Wescott'" C. .
Damon C. Woods d C. .
Raymond Davis d C. .
Donald F. Bigelow r C. .
Joseph A. Marquis r V. C. .
Marc L. Severe V. C. .
John R. Wood V. C . .
William Clarke Vyse V. C. .
David Henry Slawson V. C. .
Harris N. Cookingham d C . .
Augustus M. Kirby V. C. .
Acton Poulet V. C. .
William H. Hunt C
Francis B . Moriarty V. C. .
Chester W. Davis d C. .
Leslie E. Woods r V. C. .
Lewis V. Boyle d C.
Scudder Mersman V. C. .
James G. Carter c C . .
V. C
Ohio
Aug. 6, 1924
Mar. I, 1923
Jime 29, 1920
Sept. 21, 1923
Jan. 2, 1924
Dec. 19, 1923
Sept. 18, 1923
Apr. IS. 1919
Mar. 27, 1922
Dec. 20, 1923
Jan. 2, 1925
Oct. 23, 1924
Aug. 5. 1919
Apr. 5, 1922
Nov. I, 1906
Dec. 6, 1923
Apr. 28, 1923
Dec. 23, 1922
Sept. 21, 1923
Feb. 10, 1922
July 8, 1916
$12,000
4,000
S, 000
4,000
4,000
3,500
3,000
Do
New York
Pennsylvania . . .
Texas
Do
Do
Do
Do
Minnesota
Do
Do
Do
Florida
Do
Dist. Columbia..
Michigan
New York
Kentucky
New York
New York
Dist. Columbia..
New York
Massachusetts . . .
California
Do
Saigon, French Indo-China
4, Soo
Do
Do
St. Etienne
4,000
Do
Strasbourg
4, soo
3,000
3,500
Do
Tahiti, Society Islands
Do
Tananarive, Madagascar
4,000
Do
Tunis, Tunis
Leland L. Smith d c. .
Charles B. Beylard o V. C. .
William Coffin c. C. G . .
Nathaniel P. Davis >• C.
Alfred W. Kliefoth "J C. .
E. Talbot Smith >• C.
Joseph G. Groeninger'' V. C. .
Joseph F. Burf V. C. .
Paul Bowerman/ V. C. .
Albert Forster V. C. .
Leo E.Schumacher V. C.
Leslie E. Reed/ C.
William George Roll V. C.
Carlton Hurst « / V. C. .
John R. Minter r C . .
J. Howard Wetmore V. C. .
c
Oct. 23, 1924
Dec. 5, 1923
Nov. 13,1921
Dec. 19,1923
Sept. 22, 1924
Apr. 27,1923
Nov. IS, 1921
June 18, 1924
Apr. 27,1923
Dec. 8, 1921
July 26, 1924
Aug. 3,1923
Nov. 15, 1921
Aug. 18,1924
June 11,1924
Feb. 21,1922
3.500
Do
United States...
Kentucky
New Jersey
Pennslyvania . . .
Connecticut
Maryland
GERMANY.
Berlin
8,000
3,500
4,500
3,500
3,000
2, soo
2,500
Do
Do
Do
Do
Michigan
Dist. Columbia..
Do
Do
Bremen
Minnesota
California
Dist. Columbia..
South Carolina . .
Ohio
5, 000
Do .. .
2,750
4,000
Breslau
Do
Coblenz
Do
Clarence E. Macy V. C. .
Leland B. Morris g C
Rudolf E. Schoenfeld / C. .
William E. Lane V. C.
Louis G. Dreyfus, jr. / C . .
Christian T. Steger"" C.
John A. Scott V. C . .
Stanley R. Lawson V C
Colorado
Pennsylvania. . .
Dist. Columbia..
New York
California
July 2,1923
Oct. 23, 1924
Oct. IS, 1924
Feb. 14,1922
Nov. IS, 1921
Dec. 19, 1923
Dec. 29, 1921
July 7, 1924
Mar. 28,1923
Aug. 7, 1924
July 16,1924
Aug. 7, 1924
2,750
5, 000
3,500
Cologne
Do
Dresden
7,000
3,500
Do
Do
California
Do.
Frederick T. F. Dumont d C. G. .
Christian M. Ravndal "/ C. .
Leo F. Cochran V. C. .
Charl C. L. B. Wyles V. C. .
Pennsylvania . . .
7,000
3,000
Do
Do
Rhode Island. . .
Oklahoma
Do
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GERMANY— GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— Continued.
6i
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
1
[ Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
GERM ANY— Continued .
Hamburg
Thomas H. Bevan / C. .
Walter A. Foote r C. .
John J. Muccio " f V. C. .
John R. Ives r V. C. .
Frank H. Rediker V. C. .
William E. Beitz V. C. .
•Knowlton V. Hicks V. C. .
Harold D. Clum d C. .
V. C.
Mari'land
Pennsylvania. . .
Rhode Island. . .
Michigan
Minnesota
New York
New York
New York
Oct. 23, 1924
Mar. 11,1924
Jan. 2, 1924
Oct. 21, 1924
Apr. 28, 1923
Apr. 14, 1924
Dec. 17,1924
Apr. 28, 1923
Do . . .
3,Soo
1
Do
j
Do
' '^ \
Do
Do
Do
Eonigsberg
5, 000
Do
Leipzig
Hernando de Soto « / . ..C California 1 Nov. i=r. 1021
6,000
4,000
2,7SO
8,000
3,500
Do
Don S. Haven'' C. . Pennsylvania. . .
Mar. 1, 1923
Nov. 19, 1923
Mar. 30, 1923
Dec. 19, 1923
Nov. IS, 1921
Feb. 14, 1922
July 17,1924
June II, 1924
Oct. 17,1922
Sept. 9, 1924
June 18, 1924
Oct. 21,1924
Feb. 10, 1921
Do
Frederik van den Arend nr V. C. .
Tracy Lay / C. G . .
Robert D. Murphy r C
North Carolina..
Alabama
Wisconsin
Munich
Do
Marc Smith V. C
Ohio
Stettin
Cornelius Ferris d C. .
Earl Brennan 'V. C. .
John E. Kehl b C. .
Erik W. Magnuson n >■ V. C.
Conger Reynolds >■ V. C.
Anderson Dana Hodgdon'' V. C. .
Howard C. Taylor >• V. C. .
Henry H. Balch d c. .
V. C
Colorado
New Hampshire
Ohio
6,000
Do
Stuttgart
7,000
3,000
3,000
2,750
2,500
5,000
Do
Do
Maryland
South Dakota.. .
Alabama
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS.
Adelaide, Australia
Frcemantle-Perlh, West Aus-
Aden, Arabia
Alfred E. Morgans Agt. . .
C.
Australia
Apr. 29,1921
$435. 24
James E. Park V. C. .
Arthur G. Watson V. C. .
Karl de G. MacVitty d C. .
Leonard A. Bachclder 'V. C.
John J. C. Watson d c . .
William C. Perkins V. C. .
Henry A . Frampton Agt. .
William Peter Agt. .
Henry P. Starrett d c . .
Russell M. Brooks'- V. C.
Henry O. Ramsey V. C. .
Harold M. Hoff V. C. .
William W. Early d c . .
John H. Biddle V. C. .
John F. Jewell 6 C. .
Thomas H. Robinson'' V. C.
Wilbur Keblhiger v C. .
Curtis T. Everett r V. C. .
WUliam H. Beach' V.C.
Frank C. Lee / C. .
George L. Fleming V. C.
Pennsylvania . . .
Massachusetts.. .
Illinois
May 27, 1924
Aug. 17,1923
Dec. 6, 1921
Feb. ' 6, 191S
Oct. 19, 1920
Mar. 28, 1924
Nov. 24,1896
Jan. 8, 1873
Mar. 30, 1923
Apr. 19, 1924
Feb. 17,1922
Dec. 27, 1924
Sept. 6, 1919
July 27, 1907
Jan. 18,1922
Aug. 28, 1922
Mar. 30, 1923
Sept. 9,1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Sept. 21, 1923
June 6, 1923
Do
4,000
Do
Massachusetts. . .
Kentucky
Dist. Columbia..
Dominica
St. Lucia
Florida
4,soo
Do
dies.
7,000
2,750
1,004.97
666. 61
Belfast, Ireland
Do
Do
South Dakota...
Pennsylvania. . .
North CaroHna..
New York
Illinois
Do
Belize, British Honduras
3,500
Do
Birmingham, England
6,000
3,000
5, 000
a,7SO
3,500
5,000
New Jersey
Bombay, India
Do
Tennessee
Do
Colorado
Do
62
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS -Continued.
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS— Contd.
Bristol, England
Do
Calcutta, India
Do
Do
Do
Do
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Do
Edmonton, Alberta
Lethbridge, Alberta
Campbellton, New Brunswick. .
Do
Bathurst, New Brunswick
Gaspe, Quebec
Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope
Do
Do
Cardifi, Wales
Do
Do
Charlottetown, Prince Edward
Island.
Do
Summerside, P. E. I
Cobh, Ireland
Do
Do
Do
Do
Limerick, Ireland
Colombo, Ceylon ,
Do
Dublin, Ireland
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Galway, Ireland
Dundee, Scotland
Do
Do
Dunfermline, Scotland
Do
Durban, Natal
Do
Do
Edinburgh, Scotland
Do
Do
Name and title.
Samuel R. Thompson r. .
Joe P. Crockett
Julius G. Lay
William L. Jenkins <*
Ray Fox '■
Cyril L. F. Thielr
De Witt Simonson
Samuel C, Reat d
Henry L. Fitts
Hyatt Cox
Ralph A. Thrall
G. Carlton Woodward d^
.V. c.
.C. G.
... c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
Claude M. Mer sereau.
Kingsley J. Carter
De Witt C. Poole /
James P. Moffitt d
Earl D. Hackett
.V. C.
..Agt.
. Agt.
....C.
.V. C.
..Agt.
..Agt.
.C. G.
James E. Parks ''....
Courtland Christiani .
.V. C.
....C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
....C.
Edwin N. Gunsaulus, jr.
Neil Sinclair
John A. Gamon d
John S. Richardson, jr.''.
Winthrop S. Greene r
Manson Gilbert
Wade Blackard
John A . Dinan
.V. C.
.Agt.
.V. C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
. Agt.
Mason Turner''
Charles M. Hathaway, \r.d.
Orsen N. Nielsen ''
Hiram A. Boucher ''
Harold M. Collins''
Richard R. Willey r
Albion W. Johnson
Robert A . Tennant
Marwell K. Moorhead *
T. Monroe Fisher
William A. Hickey
Howard D. Van Sant *
Bernard F. Hale ''
Harry M. Lakin d
Julian L. Pinkerton''
HuHhS. Hood
Wilbert L. Bonney d
Thomas J. Maleady
Milton S. Eisenhower
.V. C.
.C. G.
.V. c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
..Agt.
...c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
...c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
....c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
Whence
appointed.
California
Tennessee
Dist. Columbia.
Pennsylvania. .
California
Illinois
Kansas
Illinois
Rhode Island . .
Illinois
Minnesota
Pennsylvania . .
Date of
commission.
New Brunswick
Quebec
Illinois
New York
New York
North Carolina.
Dist. Columbia.
Minnesota
P. E.I
Illinois
Massachusetts.
Massachusetts .
Indiana
Tennessee
Ireland
Connecticut
Pennsylvania. . .
Wisconsin
Minnesota
Virginia
New York
Texas
Ireland
Pennsylvania. .
Virginia
Massachusetts. . .
New Jersey
Vermont
Pennsylvania . . .
Kentucky
Tennessee
Illinois
Massachusetts . . .
Kansas
July
Jan.
Aug.
Jan.
June
Nov.
July
May
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Aug.
73,1924
31.1924
IS, 1924
23,1924
14, 1924
8, 1924
14, 1924
25, 1918
21, 1922
23,1915
4,1921
31, 1918
Oct. 25,1915
June 7, 1922
Oct. 1,1923
Mar. 12,1924
Mar. 4, 1924
July 12,1924
Aug. 31,1921
Apr. 7
Oct. 8
Dec. 27
June 23
Oct. 21
Aug. 15
Dec. 18
Dec. 30
Nov.
Oct.
July
Aug.
Dec.
June
Jan.
May
June
Sept.
July
Jan.
Aug.
Sept.
Nov.
Dec.
Jan.
Mar.
Nov.
1924
1907
1921
1924
1924
1924
1924
1914
1923
1924
1924
1924
1921
1924
1923
1901
1924
1924
1924
1910
1924
1924
1923
1909
1924
1923
1924
Salary.
$4,000
9,000
5,000
3,500
2,500
8,000
4,soo
7,000
2,500
2,500
2 1 500
7,000
4,000
3,500
3,000
2,500
6,000
3,000
3,000
4,500
2,500
CONSULAR SERVICE OE THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— Continued.
63
Place.
Name and title.
GREAT BEITAIN AND
DOMINIONS— Contd.
Femie, British Columbia
Do
Fort William and Port Arthur,
Ontario.
Do
Georgetown, British Guiana . . .
Do
Paramaribo, Dutch Quiana. . .
Gibraltar
Do
Glasgow, Scotland
Do
Do
Do
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Do
Do
Do
Fredericton, N. B
Bridgewater, N. S
Lunenburg, N. S
Hamilton, Bermuda
Do
St. George's, Bermuda
Hamilton, Ontario
Do
Gait, Ontario
Hongkong
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Hull, England
Do
Joharmesburg, The Transvaal...
Do
Bloomfontein, Orange Free
State.
Karachi, India
Do
Kingston, Jamaica
Do
Kingston, Ontario
Do
Leeds, England
Do
Liverpool, England
Do
Do
Do
Norton F. Brand d. . . .
George S. Appleyard .
Marshall M. Vance d.
.V. C.
Harry Irving De Lamater.
Gaston Smith d
.V. C.
.V. C.
WTience
appointed.
North Dakota. ,
Minnesota ,
Ohio
New York.
Louisiana. ,
Date ol
commission.
Aug. 3i>i9i8
June 26, 1924
Dec. 12,1924
Oct. 2, 1920
Apr. 28, 1923
Salary.
$2, soo
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
James S. Laivton
Richard L. Sprague a.
George E. Chamberlin d. . .
Scott S. Levisee''
Edward B. Cipriani n
Harry H. Morgan, jr
William H. Robertson d...
Bernard Gotlieb g
William H. Brown
Warren C. Stewart
Frederick C. Johnson <*....
A rthur C. Barnaby
Charles W . Lane
Robertson Honey d
Edwin Clay Merrell
Frederick Joseph Robertson.
Richard F. Boyce r
Davdd Donaldson
James Ryerson
,.Agt.
.V. C.
Illinois
Massachusetts.
Aug. 23,1917
July 18, 1901
.V. C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
C.G.
.V. c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
..Agt.
..Agt.
.V. c.
..Agt.
...c.
New York . .
Virginia
New Jersey. .
New York. . .
Virginia
New York . . .
New Jersey. .
Maryland —
New Jersey. ,
Nova Scotia.
Nova Scotia.
New York . .
Oklahoma . . ,
Bermuda. . .
Sept.
July
June
Mar.
Oct.
Sept.
Dec.
Aug.
Sept.
Dec.
Feb.
July
July
Aug.
Michigan ; June
Algar E. Carleton d
Lynn W. Franklin /. . .
Maurice Walk r
J. Cameron Hawkins"".
William McG. Harlow.
.V. C.
..Agt.
.C.G.
Washington...
United States.
Feb.
Feb.
8, 1919
3i;l924
i6, 1921
29, 1923
3) 1923
8, 1924
28. 1923
30. 1924
19, 1921
3jI9I9
20, 1924
23, 1924
1,1920
17)1917
23, 1924
3)1921
23, 1899
7,000
2,500
9,000
4,000
.V. C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
Vermont
Maryland
Illinois
New York
Dist. Columbia
Albert W. Scott
George K. Donald d . .
Arthur H. Cawston"".
Arthur E. Fickardt . . .
.V. C.
...C.
.V. C.
..Agt.
Aug. 18,1924
July 12, 1924
Jan. 2, 1924
Dec. 15,1924
Sept. 4, 1924
4) soo
3) soo
3,000
2,500
Missouri Sept. 19, 1921
Alabama May 17,1922
Illinois May 16, 1924
South Africa ... . Feb. 26,1907
6,000
2,500
William B. Douglass, jr.
Jose de Olivares e
J. Franklin Points
Felix S. S. Johnson
Alfred P. Lothrop
.V. C.
.V. C.
,...c.
.V. c.
Dist. Columbia.. Sept. 11,1923
Missouri Jime 23,1924
Virginia Mar. 18,1924
New Jersey 'Jan. 10,1910
New York Oct. 20,1922
S, 000
3,500
John Skelton Williams, jr V. C.
Leo J. Keena d C.
Robert R. Patterson r C.
Lawrence S. Armstrong r V. C.
Hugh Watson n V. C.
Virginia 1 July 18,1923
Michigan Aug. 26,1924
Michigan July 21,1921
New York I Nov. 19,1923
New York May 18,1923
8,000
3,500
2,500
$733- SO
293- 32
696. 27
64
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— Continued.
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS— Contd.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
London, England
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do...;
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
London, Ontario
Do
Madras, India
Do
Malta, Maltese Islands
Do
Manchester, England
Do
Do
Melbourne, Australia
Do
Do
Do
Moncton, New Brunswick
Do
Neu'caslle, N. B
Montreal, Quebec
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Do
Nairobi, Kenya, Africa
Do
Nassau, N. P., Bahamas
Do
Newcastle, N. S. W.. Australia .
Do
Brisbane, Queensland
Newcastle on Tyne, England
Do
Niagara Falls, Ontario
Do
Nottingham, England
Do
Horace Lee Washington C. G.
Lowell C. Pinkerton / C.
J. Preston Doughten d C.
Edmund B. Montgomery r C.
Eliot B. Coulter r C.
Robert B. Macatee r
R. Floumoy Howard r. . .
Russell H. Rhodes
John F. Claffey
OlUs B. Ferguson
William C. Young
Frank H. Lamed
Daniel Miller
William N. Carroll
Raymond H. Fisher
G. Russell Taggart d
Charles E. B. Payne V. C.
Alfred R. Thomson/ C.
.V. C.
.V.C.
.V. C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
...c.
.V.C.
.V.C.
Dist. Columbia.
Missouri
Delaware
Illinois
Illinois
Virginia
Georgia
Connecticut.. . .
Cormecticut. . . .
Missouri
Kentucky
New York
Maryland
North Carolina .
California
New Jersey
Michigan
Maryland
Aug.
July
Nov.
Feb.
Mar.
Mar.
June
Sept.
Dec.
Nov.
Jan.
Feb.
Aug.
May
Aug.
Apr.
Feb.
Aug.
6, 1924
7, 1923
2S. 1924
IS) 1924
1. 1923
30. 1923
18. 1924
6, 1919
22, 1922
7, 1921
27, 1922
14. 1922
29. 1923
1. 1924
1,1924
16. 1920
21. 1921
3, 1923
Salary.
$9,000
S,ooo
4,000
4,000
4,000
4,000
2,7So
4,000
5,000
Philip Adams d.
Massachusetts. . .
May 28, 1924
4,000
Ross £. Holaday
Charles W. Lewis, jr.r. . .
Wallace E. Moessner
Maxwell Blake
Norman L. Anderson d,
John E. Moran r
Haskell E. Coates r
Bertil M. Rasmusen
Edward A. Cummings. .
.V.C.
.V.C.
.C.G.
.V.C.
.V.C.
Albert Halstead c
William I. Jackson r, . .
Arthur B. Giroux r. . . .
John R. Barry
Sam J. Warden
Lucius H. Johnson. . . .
G. Bruce Andrews
John H.Clark
Avra M. Warren d
Oscar Thomason
.V.C.
..Agt.
.C.G.
Ohio
Michigan
Oklahoma
Missouri
Wisconsin
Illinois
Wisconsin
Iowa
Pennsylvania.
Feb.
Apr.
Sept.
Nov.
Apr.
June
Dec.
Aug.
Oct.
22,1915
27, 1923
3. 1924
3> 1923
27, 1923
5,1924
1, 1924
31,1918
S>i9i6
6,000
2,750
9,000
4,000
2,500
2,500
4,500
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
Dist. Columbia.
lUinois
New York
Massachusetts..
Tennessee
South Carolina.
Michigan
.V.C.
Maryland . . .
New Jersey.
Nov.
Apr.
Dec.
Jan.
Dec.
July
July
Sept.
Jan.
Jan.
26, 1920
27, 1923
31, 1923
8. 1923
18. 1923
5. 1924
7, 1924
13. 1924
23, 1924
7, 1920
WilUam A. Smale r. .
Robert N. Rankm d .
.V.C.
....€.
.V.C.
California. .
New Jersey ,
Mar. 26, 1924
. Oct. 23, 1924
9,000
3,500
2,750
2,500
3,500
Robert Henry Tanner
Charles Roy Nasmith /. . .
Richard C. Beer
WilUam W. Brunswick d.
Francis M. Sack
Samuel T. Lee nd
Herbert C. Biar/
..Agt.
....€.
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
....c.
.V.C.
Australia...
New York .
New York.
Kansas
New York .
Michigan . . .
Indiana. . . .
Oct. 7, 1918
Apr. 10, 1924
May 21,1924
Oct. 23, 1924
Apr. 23,1921
Mar. 30, 1923
Sept. 2, 1922
7,000
2,500
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— Continued.
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS— Contd .
Ottawa, Ontario
Do
Do
Penang, Straits Settlements
Do
Do
Plymouth, England
Do
Port Elizabeth, Cape of Good
Hope.
Do
East London, Cape of Good
Hope.
Prescott, Ontario
Do
Do
Prince Rupert,British Columbia
Do ,
WhitchoTse, Yukon Territory . . .
Quebec, Quebec
Do
Rangoon, India
Do
Do
Regina, Saskatchewan
Do
Riviere du Loup, Quebec
Do
St. John, New Brunswick
Do
St. John's, Newfoundland
Do
Do
St. Stephen, New Brunswick. . .
Do
Do
St. Leonards, N. B
Samia, Ontario
Do
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
Do
Do
Sheffield, England
Do
Sherbrooke, Quebec
Do
Beebe, Junction Quebec
Singapore, Straits Settlements...
Do
Do
Name and title.
John G. Foster b
Gilson G. Blake, jr. r,
Horace M. Sanford
CO.
.V. C.
.V. c.
Richard Ford <■
George F. Dickins. . .
Ralph C.Busserd...
Franklin B. Atwood.
Reed Paige Clark d..
.V. C.
.V. C.
.V. c.
George C. Star key.
.V. C.
. .Agt.
Samuel E. Green, 3d/
Patrick James McAndrews.
Ernest A. Wakefield b
Frederick S. Weaver
D. August Muirhead
E. Haldeman Dennison
Edmond W. LaRicheliere. .
Charles J. Pisar r
Koyne V. Gram
Howard B. Osborn
Paul H. Cram d
E. Eugene Herbert
W. M. Parker Mitchell d. . .
Knox Alexander ''
Romeyn Wormuth d
Edward H. Carter «
....C.
.V. c.
.V. c.
...c.
.V. c.
..Agt.
....c.
.V. c.
....c.
.V. c.
.V. c.
...c.
.V. c.
....c.
.V. c.
....c.
George H. Barringer..
Timothy V. Hartnett.
.V. C.
....C.
.V. C.
.V. C.
Thomas W. Chilton " d ,
Alphonse P. Labbie.
Fred C. Slater mi...
Ernest L. Monroe . .
...C.
.V. C.
..Agt.
....C.
Herbert W.Carlson.
Edwin J. CoUis
William J. Graced..
Rice K. Evans
.V. C.
....C.
.V. c.
.V. c.
,...c.
Ray Marchand
Hoel S. Beebe
Ernest L. Harris p.
Hughs. Miller "r.
John H . Lord
.V. C.
....C.
.V. c.
.Agt..
.CO.
.V. c.
.V. c.
Whence
appointed.
Vermont
Maryland . . .
Connecticut .
Date of
commission.
Salary.
June 18,1903 $9,000
Oct. 14,1922 3,000
Feb. 6,1915 '
Oklahoma j July 24.1923 ' 2,750
New Hampshire
Pennsylvania. . .
Massachusetts.. .
New Hampshire
South Africa.
Dec. 18. 1923
Sept. 7, 1922
July 21,1924
Jan. 2, 1924
Sept. 4, 1917
Maryland
Massachusetts.
Maine
Washington. . .
Washington.. .
Ohio
Massachusetts.
Wisconsin
Illinois
New Jersey. . .
Maine
Minnesota
Virginia
Missouri
New York
Florida
Virginia
New York.
New York.
Maine
Kansas
Pennsylvania.
Massachusetts.
Michigan
New York
Ohio
Ohio
Vennont
Illinois
Illinois
Massachusetts.
Sept. 5. 1924
May 20, 1920
Aug. 31,1918
May 19, 1923
Mar. 31, 1921
Mar. 15, 1919
Feb. 13,1924
Mar. 12, 1924
Oct. 24, 1924
Aug. 10,1911
Jan. 12, 1924
Oct. 2, 1922
Dec. 31,1923
Nov. 28, 1923
Oct. 23, 1924
Oct. 16,1918
6, 000
4,000
3,000
4,000
May 28, 1924
Jan. 14, 1919
June 30, 1924 I 3,500
Dec. 20,1915
Dec. 12, 1924
Apr. 26, 1924
Apr. 12, 1924 j
Sept. 28, 1918
Oct. 1, 1919 4,000
Apr. 26, 1909
Mar. 31, 1920
Oct. IS, 1909
Feb. 16,1921 I 7,000
Dec. 22,1922 j 3,000
Oct. 18,1921
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
$147. ir
k 136. 50
66
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— Continued.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salarj'.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS— Contd.
Southampton, England
John M. Savage p C
Roy E. B. Bower V. C. .
F. Willard Calder V. C. .
Albert E. Ereaut Agt. .
Renwlck S. McNlece d c. .
V.C..
New Jersey
New York
New York
Sept. 5, 1919
Feb. 17,1921
Nov. 7,1921
Mar. 31,191s
Sept. 9,1924
$4, soo
Do
Do
Jersey, Channel Islands
Stoke on Trent, England
4,000
* $84. so
Utah
Do
Swansea, Wales
Arthur B, Cooke d c. .
V.C.
South Carolina..
Sept. 5,1919
4,000
Do
Sydney, Australia
EzraM. Lawtond C.
W. Maynard Stapleton r V. C. .
Walter T. Costello V. C. .
HaseU H. D ick / C . .
V.C.
Ohio
Mar. 30,1923
Nov. 8, 1924
Aug. 21, 1923
Sept. 22, 1924
7,000
2,500
Do
Pennsylvania. . .
California
South Carolina..
Do
Sydney, Nova Scotia
S,ooo
Do
Alonzo A . Martell Agt. .
John J. Boiirinot Agt . .
c.
Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia
Sept. 25, 1922
May 14,1923
Port Haukesbury, N.S
Toronto, Ontario ....
* 751-00
Do
Harold Shantz r C. .
C. Paul Fletcher'' V. C.
Frederick A. Bohne " V. C. .
Girvan Teall V. C.
New York
Tennessee
United States...
New York
New York
Pennsylvania. . .
Illinois
July 7, 1924
July 11,1924
Nov. 7, 1922
June 27,1924
3,500
2,500
Do
Do
Do
George E. Seltzer nj" V.C.
William McKee Bingham Agt. .
Henry D. Baker d c . .
Alfredo L. Demorest " V. C .
Sept. 17,1923 \
^ 2, 402. 96
Trinidad, West Indies
Do
Dist. Columbia..
Mar. 9,1921
Mar. 23, 1921
June 21, 1920
Apr. 1, 1924
Feb. 12, 1924
Brighton, Island of Trinidad. . .
7,000
3. soo
John McGilchrist Agt. .
Augustus E. Ingram/ C. G..
Harold S. Tewell r c. .
Sidney A. Belovsky V. C.
Grenada
931. 70
Vancouver, British Columbia
California
North Dakota...
New York
Do
Do
Ocean Falls, B. C
Victoria, British Columbia
George A. Bucklin c c..
Robert M. Newcomb V. C.
George W. Clinton Agt. .
Oklahoma
Do
Pennsylvania. . .
Nov. 10, 189S
May 31,1918
Oct. 22, 1924
Apr. 27, 1923
Apr. 1, 1922
Apr. s, 1921
Apr. 6, 1920
Dec. 12,1924
7,000
2,750
1, 236. so
Wellington, New Zealand
Do
Will L. Lowriec C. G..
Joel C. Hudson r V. C .
Marshall I. Mays V.C.
Henry P. Bridge Agt. .
Harmon Reeves Agt. .
Harry F. Hawley d c . .
V. C
Do
Kansas
Chrislchurch. N. Z
New Zealand
New Zealand
New York
4,000
i>43&59
1, 073> 59
Windsor, Ontario
Do .
C.G..
Do
John G. Erhardt d C. .
Roger N. Davis V. C.
Rupert H. Moore Agt. .
Gilbert R. Willson d c. .
Elton Maynard Hoyt V. C .
Jacob M. Owen Agt. .
Jason M. Mack Agt. .
New York
Michigan
July 3, 1924
Nov. 9, 1922
Feb. s, 1918
Aug. 28, 1924
Dec. 23, 1924
Apr. 18,1872
Dec. 28,1895
4,000
Do
4,000
3, 159. 44
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
Texas
Do
Connecticut
Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia
Annapolis Royal, N.S
Liverpool, N.S
633.00
802.00
CONSUIvAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
GREECE— HUNGARY.
67
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
GREECE.
Arthur Garrels d C. G. .
Joseph T. Oilman'- V. C.
Constantine M. Corafa " V. C. .
William R. Morton V. C. .
Alfred W. Donegan / C . .
James G. Finley/ V. C. .
Missouri
Massachusetts . .
New York
New York
Alabama
Dist. Columbia.
Missouri
Maine
Oct. 23, 1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Jan. 3,1922
Jan. 18, 1922
Jan. 29, 1924
Dec. 13, 1923
May 13, 1914
Oct. 23, 1924
Oct. 6, 1924
Mar. 30,1923
Mar. 12,1924
Jan. 8, 1919
$7,000
2,500
Do
Do
Do
Patras
5,000
2,500
3,500
Do
Kalamata
Sotiris Carapateasn Agt..
Robert F. Femald r C . .
$629. so
Do
Herbert F. Pearson V. C.
Philip Holland d C. G. .
Burdette B. Bliss V. C.
Wallace C. Hutchinson V. C. .
Agt..
GUATEMALA.
Tennessee
Michigan
New York
7,000
Do
•
HAITI.
Cape Haitien
Winthrop R. Scott ad c. .
Corey F. Wood V.'C. .
J. William Woil n Agt. .
Charles A begg " Agt . .
C.
Ohio
Sept. 21, 1923
Mar. 2S, 1924
Sept. 8, 1899
May 25, 1921
4,000
Massachusetts . .
Massachusetts . .
New York
Port au Prince
Maurice P. Dunlap d C..
V.C.
Minnesota
Apr. 7, 1924
4,000
Do
New York
Pennsylvania. . .
Alabama
June 15,1903
Oct. 6, 1922
Dec. 22,1923
June 6, 1918
3,500
St. Marc
HONDURAS.
Ceiba
George P. Waller r C . .
Derrill H. McCollough V. C. .
V.C.
Do
Puerto Castilla '.
Do
Willard L. Beaulac C.
Stanley L. Wilkinson V. C. .
Robert C. Purdy V. C. .
Sandy Kirkcannell Agt . .
Rhode Island. . .
Pennsylvania. . .
New York
Honduras
New York
California
Pennsylvania . . .
California
May 12,1923
Mar. 3, 1924
May 9, 1922
June 20, 1906
Aug. 15,1924
Dec. 10, 1924
Jan. 26, 1891
Oct. 22, 1924
3.500
Tela
Do
Bonacca
4,000
h 173.00
Alfred T. Burrid c..
Do
Harold C. HUts V. C. .
J. M. Milckell.jr Agt. .
George P. Shaw r c. .
San Pedro Sula
3,500
154-00
Tegucigalpa
Do
A mapala
Agt..
HUNGARY.
Budapest
C.G .
\
Do
Walter S. Reineck r c
Ohio
Dec. 19,1923
Sept. 21,1923
Dec. 13,1923
3,500
3,500
3,000
Do
Alexander K. Sloan >■ C. .
Harry h. Troutman r V.C.
Pennsylvania. . .
Do
32952—25-
68
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
IRAQ (MESOPOTAMIA)— JAPAN.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
IRAQ (MESOPOTAMIA).
Bagdad . . .
Do
Bassorah.
Catania . .
Do...
Fiume. ..
Do...
Florence.
Do...
Do...
Genoa. . .
Do..'.
Do...
Do...
Do...
Leghorn .
Do...
Messina.
Do...
Do...
Milan . . .
Do...
Do...
Naples...
Do...
Do...
Do...
Do...
Do...
Palermo.
Do...
Do...
Do...
Rome
Do...
Do...
Do...
Trieste . .
Do...
Turin
Do...
Do...
Venice. ..
Do...
ITALY.
John Randolph d C.
Agt.
New York .
Mar. i6, 1923
$4, soo
W. Roderick Dorsey <J.
John W. Henderson . . .
.V. C.
Maryland .
Maryland .
Mar. 30, 1923
July 3, 1923
George P. Wilson
Joseph E. Haven t>
Alan T. Hurd r
Frederick W. Baldwin''.
John Ball Osborne «
IloC. Funk/
Leo. J. Callanan /
Angelo Boragino n
William P. Shockley
Jesse B. Jackson
FrankUn C. Gowen " . . . .
Robert L. Keiser d
Alexander P. Cruger'". . .
E. Kilboume Foote
Clarence Carrigan d
John F. Huddleston »•....
Sylvio C. Leoni
Homer M. Byington/
Harold D. Finley r
Howard K. Travers >■
Julian C. Dorr »■
Adam Beaumont 1
Walter W. King
Edward I. Nathan d
William W. Schotf
Robert E. Leary
Jurgen H. L. Lorentzen.
Leon Dominian n m
Horace RemiUard 9
Ralph A. Boemstein''. . .
Elton N. Gage
George M. Hanson <*....
Howard A. Bowman / . . .
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.CO.
.V.C.
.V.C
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
CO.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
...C.
.V.C.
...c.
Pennsylvania. . .
Illinois
California
Florida
Pennsylvania . . .
Colorado
Massachusetts. . .
California
Delaware
Ohio
Pennsylvania. . .
Indiana
New York
Ohio
California
Ohio
New York
Connecticut
New York
New York
New York
Massachusetts. . .
Michigan
Pennsylvatiia . . .
Kansas
Massachusetts.
Dist. Columbia
New York ....
Massachusetts.
Dist. Colurubia
Missouri
Utah
New York .....
May
Mar.
Dec.
June
Feb.
Jtme
Mar.
Feb.
Feb.
Apr.
Oct.
Oct.
July
Nov.
Dec.
Nov.
Dec.
Mar.
Dec.
Dec.
Mar.
Dec.
Nov.
Nov.
Oct.
June
Jan.
June
Aug.
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
Oct.
7, 1924
30, 1923
13. 1923
23. 1924
10. 192 1
22. 1922
17, 1924
10, 191S
7, 1917
28. 1923
26. 1920
22. 1924
19, 1923
29. 192 1
27. 192 1
19, 1923
13. 1922
28. 1923
19. 1923
19. 1923
1$, 1922
S, 1924
9. 1920
2. 1921
28. 1924
29. 1922
3, 1924
18, 1924
IS, 1924
12. 1923
20, 192 1
30, 1923
6, 1924
S,ooo
2,500
2, soo
7,000
4,000
2, soo
I 5,000
4,000
2, 500
7,000
2, soo
8,000
3, soo
3. soo
2,500
4,500
2,500
6,000
4,000
2,750
4, soo
2,750
JAPAN.
Dairen, Manchuria.
Do
Kob6
Do
Dana C. Sycks / . . . .
James M. Bowcock.
James B. Young d . .
John E. Holler'-. ...
.V.C.
.V.C.
Ohio
Colorado
Pennsylvania . . .
Pennsylvania . . .
Sept. 5, 1919
Oct. 13, 1924
Apr. 16, 1920
June 2, 1923
S,ooo
2,500
Leo D. Sturgeon e V. C.
C.
Erie R. Dickover e C.
Illinois.
Oct. 17,1923
California.
Nov. 23, 1931
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
JAPAN— MEXICO.
69
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
JAPAN— Continued .
Kob6— Continued
Do
Do
Nagasaki ,
Do
Nagoya
Seoul, Chosen
Do
Taihoku, Taiwan
Tokyo
Do
Do
Do
Do
Yokohama
Do
Do
Edward B. Thomas '■ C.
Whitney Young r V. C.
George J. Haering >• V. C.
C.
Illinois
New York .
New York .
Feb. 21,1924
July 31,1924
Nov. 8, 1924
fc,Soo
2, soo
2,500
LATVIA.
Riga.
LIBERIA.
Monrovia .
Do....
LITHUANIA.
Eovno. .
Do.
MEXICO.
Lawrence E. Salisbury g V. C.
Harvey T. Goodier g C .
Ransford S. MUler r C. G.
V.C.
Charles L. De Vault r C.
Nathaniel B. Stewart d C. G.
Joseph W. Ballantine ag C.
Charles R. Cameron ^ C.
Henry B. Hitchcock ff C.
Austin R. Preston, irJ V. C.
Graham H. Kemper d c .
Leonard N. Green / V. C.
Walter S. Ruffner V. C.
Illinois
New York .
New York .
Nov. 8, 1924
Dec. 12, 1924
Sept. 5, 1919
3,000
3,500
7,000
Indiana
Georgia
Massachusetts.
New York ....
New York ....
New York ....
Kentucky
Minnesota
Pennsylvania .
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
12, 1924
13, 1933
13, 1923
28, 1923
8, 1924
13. 1923
13, 1923
13.1923
i3j 1923
3,000
9,000
S,ooo
5,000
4,500
3,000
5,000
2, 750
John P. Hurley d.
John H. Bruins/.
. ...C. New York.
.V.C. New York.
Solomon Porter Hood k C. G.
V.C,
Harry E. Carlson <• C.
Charles M. Gerrity V. C.
New Jersey .
June 23, 1920
Sept. 17, 1924
Oct. 26,1921
4,500
2,500
Acapulco, Guerrero
Do
Do
Aguascalientes, Aguascallentes
Do
Chihuahua, Chihuahua ,
Do
Parral, Chihuahua ,
Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua
Do
Durango
Ensenada, Lower CalUomia. . .
Do
Frontera, Tabasco
Do
Guadalajara, Jalisco
Do
Guaymas, Sonora
Do
Manzanillo, Colima
Do
Eh Taylor V. C. .
Harry K. Pangburn V. C . .
Lee R. Blohm d C..
Harold G. Bretherton" V.C.
Thomas McEnelly r c . .
V.C.
Agt..
John W. Dye / C. .
Oscar C. Harper V. C .
David J. D. Myers d C
Leighton Hope d C . .
Ralph C. Goldsberry V. C.
C.
Harry B. Ott V.C.
Dudley Golding Dwyre nd c..
V.C.
William P. Blocker >• C.
John A. McPherson V. C.
C.
Stephen E. Aguirre V. C .
Illinois
Pennsylvania . .
Jan.
Jan.
2, 1924
3.1924
New York .
Kentucky.,
Arizona. . . ,
Montana . . ,
New York .
Oct. 23, 1924
Sept. 1, 1908
Oct. 18,1921
Nov. 8, 1910
Dec. 22, 1923
3,500
3,500
Minnesota..
Texas
Georgia. . . .
Mississippi.
California . .
Oct. 2, 1923
Aug. 19,1921
Sept. 21, 1923
Oct. 2, 1923
June 18, 1924
5,000
3,500
Texas . . . .
Colorado.
July 17,1924
Jime 23, 1924
Texas , . .
Arizona.
Dec. 17,1923
Oct. 11,1917
4,000
4,500
Texas.
May 25,1921
70
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
MEXICO— NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS.
Place.
MEXICO— Continued.
Matamoros, Tamaulipas
Do
Mazatlan, Sinaloa
Do
Los Mochis, Sinaloa
Mexican, Lower CalUomia
Do
Mexico City
Do
Do
Do
Puebla, Puebla
Monterey, Nuevo Leon
Do
Do
Nogales, Sonora
Do
Agua Prieta, Sonora
Cananea, Sonora
Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas
Do
Piedras Negras, Coahuila
Do
Progreso, Yucatan
Do
Salina Cruz, Oaxaca
Do
Saltillo, Coahuila
Do
San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi
Do
Tampico, Tamaulipas
Do
Do
Do
Lobos, Vera Cruz
Tuzpam, Vera Cruz
Torreon, Coahuila
Do
Vera Cruz, Vera Cruz
Do
Name and title.
Henry G. Krausse
William E. Chapman d ,
....C.
.V. C.
MOROCCO.
Casablanca .
Do
Tangier ....
Do
Harold Frederic Jones
Henry C. von Struve <i
Charles W. Doherty
Alexander W. Weddell d,
Thomas D. Bowman <*. . .
Edward P. Lowry '"
Ernest E. Evans/
William O. Jenkins
Paul H. Fosterd
Joseph P. Ragland''
George D. FitzSimmons .
Henry C. A. Damm d
Stephen C. Worster
William W. Young ,
Jeptha M. Gibbs
Harry L. Walsh d
Earl Wilbert Eaton
Drew Linard e
Ellis A. Bonnet r
.V. C.
..Agt.
.V. c.
.C.G.
.V. c.
.V. c.
..Agt.
.V. c.
.V. c.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Texas
Oklahoma.
July 26, 1924
July 12,1916
Massachusetts. . . Sept.
Texas I Oct.
Mississippi Aug.
Virginia j Aug.
.V. C.
..Agt.
..Agt.
.V. C.
.V. C.
Hernan C. Vogenitz .
Harold C. Wood
.V. C.
....C.
.V. C.
...c.
Thomas S. Horn '
Walter F. Boyle d
James B. Stewart d .
Charles A. Bay r ,.,,
Peter H. A. Flood r ,
Edward S. Maney . .
.V. C.
,...c.
.v.c.
Laurence M. Taylor .
Bartley F. Yost n/ . .
.V.c.
.V.c.
.V.C.
..Agt.
..Agt.
John Q. Wood d .
Willys A. Myers .
.V.C.
.V.C.
NETHERLANDS AND DO-
MINIONS.
Amsterdam
Do
Do
Do
H. Earle Russell/ " C.
V.C.
C.G.
J. Lee Murphy r Q.
William H. Gale c c. G .
Carl O. Spamer d c.
Albert M. Doyle nr v. C.
J.Stanford Edwards V.C.
Missouri
Illinois
New York
Tennessee
Texas
Dist. Columbia. .
Texas
Tennessee
Maine
Arizona
Arizona
Maryland
Texas
Alabama
Texas
Ohio.
Massachusetts.
Missouri .
Georgia .
New Mexico. .
Minnesota....
New Hampshire
Texas
Colorado .
Kansas. . .
Hawaii.
Iowa . . .
Michigan.
New York .
Virginia
Maryland . .
Michigan.. .
New York .
July
Apr.
Jan.
Feb.
Oct.
Nov.
Sept.
Oct.
Sept.
Oct.
Jan.
Oct.
June
Dec.
Oct.
6, 1919
2,1923
3I>I92I
1,1924
18, 1922
12, 1922
2,1923
26,1918
2, 1923
8, 1924
22, I917
2, 1923
22, 1923
II, 1920
30, I918
2, 1923
24, 1924
17, 1923
21, 1924
Salary.
June 9, 1924
Oct. 8, 1923
4,000
8,000
7,000
3,000
2,750
3,500
2,500
3,500
2,500
Dec. 24, 1924
Oct. 2, 1923
Oct. 2, 1923
May 22, 1924
Apr. 18,1923
Oct. 18, 1924
June 18, 1924
Dec. 17,1923
Oct. 2, 1923
Feb. 11,1919
Mar. 12,1924
Dec. 19,1923
Aug. 15,1924
July II, 1924
Aug. 28,1922
June 21, 1922
3,000
4,500
5, 000
3,000
2,750
6,000
8,000
4,000
3,000
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS— PARAGUAY.
71
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
1
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
NETHERLANDS AND
DOMINIONS— Contd.
Batavia, Java
Charles L. Hooverd C. .
Clark P. Kuykendall r C. .
George R. Hukill r v. C. .
Charles A. Stender V. C. .
Thomas W. Voettefi C. .
Missouri
July 21, 1922
Dec. 19,1923
Apr. 28, 1923
Nov. 29, 1924
July 23,1924
June 9, 1924
$5,000
3)Soo
Do
Pennsylvania . . .
Delaware
New York
New Mexico
Do
Do
Curacao, West Indies
4,Soo
Do
Oliver H. Axtell V. C. . ! Nebraska
Medan, Sumatra
c.
Do
Sydney B. Redecker'' V. C.
New York
Nebraska
Aug. 17,1923
Oct. 20, 1924
Nov. 6, 1922
Nov. 7, 1921
Nov. 23,1917
Jan. 5, 1899
3,000
S,ooo
3,000
Rotterdam
Edward A. Dow d c . .
Do
Randolph F. Carroll r V. C. .
Eugene Nabel » V. C. .
Anders C. Nelson » V. C. .
Pieter F. Auer Agt. .
c.
Do
Rhode Island . . .
The Hague
Netherlands
$989. 83
Soerabaya, Java
Do
Rollin R. Winslow r V. C. .
J. Eustace Dpntnark V. C. .
Andrew J. McConnico i C. .
Thomas W. Waters V. C. .
Michigan
Georgia
Apr. 17,1923
July 8, 1924
June 23, 1924
July 13, 1921
July 21, 1921
July 28, 1920
Dec. 4, 1916
Jan. 2, 1924
Apr. s, 1923
Feb. 10, 1921
Jan. 2, 1924
June 18, 1924
Aug. 15,1924
Apr. 28, 1923
May 8, 1919
Oct. 6, 1923
Nov. 20,1923
3,000
Do
NICARAGUA.
Blueflelds
Mississippi
4,000
Corinto
Harold Playter d C. .
Henry H. Leonard V. C. .
William H. De Savigny " Agt..
Maurice C. Pierce d C. .
Georee L. Tolman V. C. .
California
Indiana
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Colorado
West Virginia...
New York
New York
4,000
Do
4,000
NORWAY.
Bergen
Do
Oslo Alban G. Snyder C. G..
7,000
3.S00
3,000
Do S. Bertrand Tacobson/ C. .
Do
Alfred T. Nester'' V. C.
Do
Sigurd E. Roll V. C. .
George K. Stiles d Q. .
Frithjof C. Sigmond V. C. .
Oscar S. Heizer d C. .
J. Rives Childs d C. .
V. C.
Stavanger
Maryland
3,500
Do
PALESTINE.
Jerusalem
5,000
3,SOO
Do
Do
PANAMA.
C.
Do
Odin G. Loren V. C. Washington ....
Thomas J . Mitchell Agt. . Massachusetts . .
Feb. 6, 1920
July 29, 1924
Panama
C.G..
Do
George Orr d C. .
Harry D.Myers V. C.
Digby A. Willson r C. .
New Jersey
Missouri
New York
Aug. a, 1930
Sept. 17,1924
Sept. 21, 1923
Sept. 10, 1924
4.500
Do
PARAGUAY.
Asuncion
4,000
Do
H. Claremont Moses V. C. .! South Carolina. .
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
PERSIA— RUMANIA.
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
PERSIA.
Bushire..
Do..
Tabriz...
Teheran .
Do..
.V.C
.V.C.
George Gregg Fuller''.
New York .
Sept. 2, 1924
$3,000
PERU.
Callao-Lima.
Do
Do
Do
A reguipa . .
La Oroya . .
Mollendo . .
Paila
Salaverry. . .
Claude E. Guyant <l
Nelson R. Park >•
Chauncey B. Wightman.
Gabriel Louis Anciaux . . .
Clyde A . Warne
Thomas Orams
Charles B. G. Wilson ....
Floyd Sears
CO.
.V.C.
.V.C.
. .Agt.
..Agt.
..Agt.
..Agt.
..Agt.
Illinois
Colorado . . .
Oregon
New York.
New York .
Peru
Peru
New York .
POLAND.
Warsaw .
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Do..
Theodore Jaeckel i .
Louis H. Gourley/.
Donald R. Heath r.
Robert Y. Jarvis r, .
Sabin J. Dalferes. . .
Walter J. Pawlak...
C.G.
.V.C
.V.C.
New York .
Illinois
Kansas . . . .
California. .
Louisiana .
New York.
PORTUGAL AND DOMIN-
IONS.
Funchal
Do
Sao Vicente, Cape Verde
Islands.
Horta, Fayal, Azores
Do
Lisbon
Do
Loanda, Angola
Do
Lourenco Marques, East Africa .
Do
Oporto
Do
St. Michaels, Azores
Do
Stillman W. Eells d.
Percy G. Kemp n, . ,
/. B. Guimaraes . ...
....€.
.V.C.
.Agt.
Reginald S. Castleman r.
....€.
.V.C.
C.G.
New York
New York
Cape Verde Is-
lands*
California
July 14,1921
Feb. 12, 1923
Sept. 14, 1923
Jan. IS, 1924
July 3, 1922
July 17,1912
Aug. 1,1908
Oct. 1,1923
Oct. 23,1924
June 22,1922
Dec. 19, 1923
Dec. 14, 1921
Mar. 10, 1920
Nov. 16, 1920
Aug. S>I92I
Mar. 10, 1924
Jan. 23, 189s
Mar. 28, 1923
5,000
3)000
7,000
4,000
3,500
3,500
W. Stanley HoUis..
H. Tobey Mooers r.
Massachusetts.
Maine
July 1, 1920
Apr. 3, 1922
7,000
3,500
Francis H. Styles/....
Cecil M. P. Cross od.
Virginia
Rhode Island .
Nov. 20, 1923
July 7, 1922
3,500
4,000
Samuel H. Wiley d.
William F. Doty ^
Archie William Childs.
.V.C.
...C.
.V.C.
....C.
.V.C.
North Carolina .
Aug. 31,1918
New Jersey .
Ohio
RUMANIA.
Bucharest
Do
Do
Do
Constantza.
Ely E. Palmer/
Edward Caffery r. , . .
John E. McAndrews.
George C. Arnold, jr.
Richard B. Haven r. .
.V.C.
.V.C.
.V.C.
Rhode Island .
Louisiana
Minnesota
Rhode Island .
Illinois
Sept. 9, 1924
June 3, 1924
Aug. 25,1921
Dec. 14,1921
Jan. 7, 1922
Aug. 2, 1924
June 23, 1922
3,500
4,000
7,000
3,500
CONSULAR SERVICE OP THE UNITED STATES.
SALVADOR— SWEDEN.
73
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Fees, year
ending
June 30,
1924.
SALVADOR.
San Salvador
WiUiam J, McCafierty r C. .
V.C.
California
July 12, 1924
$4,000
Do
SERBS, CROATS, AND SLO-
VENES, KINGDOM OF.
Belgrade
Kenneths. Patton/ C.
Henry R. Brown r V. C. .
Leslie A. Davisd C. .
Brigg A. Perkins V. C. .
Charles H. Albrecht / C . .
CarlC. Hansen n V.C.
Ralph J. Totten d C. G. .
Frank Anderson Henry <* C .
John S. Calvert d C. .
Roy W. Baker V. C .
Caesar Franklin Agostinia Agt. .
Henry M. Wolcott d C.
V.C.
Virginia
May 27, 1919
June 23,1922
Sent. 0. IQ2A
5,000
3,000
5,000
Do
Minnesota
New York
Zagreb
Do
California Feb. s. 102^
SIAM.
Bangkok
Pennsylvania . . .
California
Teimessee
Delaware....
North Carolina..
New York
United States...
New York
May 3, 1923
Feb. 6, 191S
Sept. 30, 1922
Nov. 17, 192a
Nov. 27, 1923
Aug. 26, 1921
Oct. 2, 1914
Sept. 8, 1919
4,500
Do
Barcelona
8,000
5,000
3,soo
Do
Do
Do
4,500
11,463.85
BQbao
Do
Cadiz
Lucien N. Sullivan d C. .
V.C.
Peimsylvania. . .
May I7>i92»
4,500
Do
Madrid
Augustin W. Ferrln d C. .
John J. Coyle V. C .
Austin C. Brady d C. .
Harold L. Smith V, C .
Harry A. McBride V. C .
Leonard G. Dawson d 0. .
V.C.
New York
New York
New Mexico
Pennsylvania...
Michigan
Aug. 1, 1924
May 16,1922
Feb. 4, i9»4
May i7ii9»3
Apr. 4, 1923
Dec. 27,1921
3,SOO
Malaga
4,000
Do
4,000
Do
Seville
William C. Burdett d C. .
Edward E. Silvers »• V.C.
Raleigh A. Gibson r C.
Raymond Phelan o V. C .
V.C.
Teimessee
New Jersey
Illinois
May 17, 1922
Dec. 21,1923
Oct. 22, Z924
Sept. 13,1934
4,500
3,000
4,000
Do
Tenerifie, Canary Islands
Do
California
Do
Julian C. Greenup r C .
Clement S. Edwards d C. .
Manuel J. Codoner V. C .
Henry W. Carey Agt. .
Henry T. WUcox d C. .
V.C.
California
Mmnesota
New York
Dec. 19,19*3
Jan. 2, 1924
Jan. IS, 1917
Feb. 35,1905
Dec. 37,1921
3,500
4,500
Do
4,000
3,a75-38
Vigo
New Jersey
Do
SWEDEN.
Walter H. Sholes d c. .
Clifford W. McGlasson V. C .
Charles H. Helsler r C . .
William Oscar Jones r V. C .
Oklahoma
Dist. Columbia .
Delaware
Pennsylvania...
Mar. 10, 1919
Jime 18,1924
Sept. i7ii934
Nov. 3, 1924
4,500
Do
MaLmo
3,SOO
2,500
Do
74
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
SWEDEN— VENEZUELA.
SWEDEN— Continued .
Stockholm .
Do
Do
Do
Do
SWITZERLAND.
Basel
Do
Berne
Do
Geneva
Do
Do
Lausanne.
St. Gall
Do
Zurich
Do
Do
Do
Lucerne. .
Do
SYRIA.
Aleppo
Do
Beirut
Do
Do
Do
Damascus.
Do
Name and title.
Claude I. Dawson d C. G . .
Walter A. Leonard d C. .
Samuel G. Ebling »■ V. C. .
Benjamin M. Hullej' ^ V. C. .
Per Torsten Berg n V. C. .
CalvmM. Hitch f C
Charles A. Amsden'' V. C
Thomwell Haynes d C . .
Charles W. Allen V. C. .
S. Pinkney Tuck / C. .
Robert Dudley Longyear or C
John W. Bailey, jr V. C. .
Fletcher Dexter V. C. .
Maynard B. Barnes »• C.
R. Barry Bigelow V. C. .
Robert Frazer, jr C. G. .
James R. Wilkinson ^ C. .
George Alexander Armstrong ^ .V. C. .
W. Hehnuth Mathee n V. C. .
V.C.
James J. Murphy, jr. / C. .
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
South Carolina . .
Illinois
Ohio
Florida
Pennsylvania. . .
Aug. 1, 1924
July 24, 1922
June i8, 1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Feb. 6, 1915
Georgia
New Mexico
Alabama
Wyoming
New York
Massachusetts.. .
Texas
Massachusetts. . .
Mar.
Apr.
July
Apr.
Oct.
Dec.
Oct.
July
Iowa \ Nov.
Parker W. Buhrman d C.
Maurice W. Altaffer r V. C.
Paul EInabenshue d C .
Edward M. Groth r C.
Paul H. Ailing r V. C.
Walter H. Ritsher V. C.
C.
Michigan
Pennsylvania .
Wisconsin
New York . . . .
Ohio
July
Oct.
Dec.
Nov.
Jan.
30; 1923
13,1923
1, 1920
5,1924
18,1924
19. 1923
17. 1924
1, 1918
17, 1924
10. 1923
23. 1924
19, 1923
8, 1924
4, 1923
Pennsylvania. . . June 22, 1922
Virginia
Ohio
Ohio
New York
Pennsylvania. .
Wisconsin
Apr. 28, 1923
Aug. 7, 1924
May 2, 1919
Mar. 1, 1923
Nov. 8, 1924
Oct. 31,1924
Salary.
SfS, 000
5,000
2,500
2,500
6,000
3,000
4, 500
5,000
3,500
7,000
3,500
2,500
4,500
2,750
6, 000
4,000
2,500
URUGUAY.
Montevideo.
Do
Do
VENEZUELA.
Caracas
Do
La Guaira
Do
Ciudad Bolivar.
Maracaibo
Do
Puerto Cabello
Do
James Hugh Eeeley, jr."" V. C.
O. Gaylord Marsh d C. .
Raphael A. Manning »■ V. C. .
Howard C. Tinsley V. C. .
Dist. Columbia.
Washington . . .
Massachusetts.
Georgia
Feb.
Oct. 23,1924
Nov. 19, 1923
Dec. 30, 192 1
5,000
2,500
Arthur R. Williams V. C.
V.C.
Delaware.
June 22,1922
Harry J. Anslinger >" C.
William Dalton Henderson a Agt .
Albert H. Gerberich t c.
Charles F. Payne V. C.
William P. Garretyd C.
George R. Phelan V. C .
Pennsylvania . . .
Venezuela
Pennsylvania . . .
Ohio
New York
California
Sept. 22, 1923
Aug. 20,1921
Oct. 23, 1924
Oct. 3, 1923
Sept. 16, 1920
Dec. 10, 1923
3,500
3,500
3,500
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
OFFICES NOT ELSEWHERE LISTED.
75
Place.
Name and title.
Whence
appointed.
Date of
commission.
Salary.
Apia , Western Samoa
c
Do
Quincy F. Roberts/ V. C.
Gabriel Bie Ravndal n d C. G. .
Charles E. Allen/ C. .
Edwin A. PUtt r V. C. .
Samuel W. Honaker d.... C. .
Frederick O. Bird V. C.
Texas
July 8, 1920
Mar. 4, 1919
Feb. 24,1923
Aug. 21, 1922
Oct. 30, 1924
Si, 750
9,000
4,000
3,000
Constantinople
Do
Do
Smyrna, Smyrna District
Do
South Dakota...
Kentucky
Maryland
Texas
New Jersey
STUDENT INTERPRETERS IN CHINA.
Place.
Name.
Peking
Do
Tokyo.
Do
George R. Paschal, jr.
Paul W. Meyer
Whence
appointed.
Florida . .
Colorado.
Date of
commission.
Feb. 26, 1923
Apr. 3, 1924
Compen-
sation.
$1, 500
I, soo
STUDENT INTERPRETERS IN JAPAN.
Egbert B. Rand.. .
William T. Turner '
Louisiana .
Georgia. . .
Jan. 23, 1924
Apr. 3, 1924
Si, 500
1,500
STUDENT INTERPRETERS IN TURKEY.
Name.
Rank.
Status.
Whence
appointed.
Salary.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS ASSIGNED, TEMPORARILY, TO THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE OR ON
LEAVE OF ABSENCE.
Frank D. Arnold Second secretary On leave
Miss Lucile Atcherson Third secretary Assigned
George Atcheson, jr Vice consul I Assigned
F. Lammot Belin : First secretary .
George L. Brandt ! Consul
Charles C. Broy \ Consul
John K. Caldwell Consul general.
Benjamin F. Chase I Consul
Hamilton C. Claiborne
H. Merle Cochran
Felix Cole
Raymond E. Cox
Monnett B. Davis Consul
William Dawson 1 Consul general
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary.
Charles H. Derry
Frederic R. Dolbeare
Coert du Bois
Allen W. Dulles
Carol H. Foster
Gerhard Gade
Waldemar J. Gallman
George A. Gordon I First secretary
Franklin Mott Gunther Counselor of embassy.
Vice consul
First secretary. .
Consul
First secretary. .
Consul
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
On leave
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
of absence
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
of absence
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
Pennsylvania . .
Ohio
California
Pennsylvania. .
Dist. Columbia.
Virginia
Kentucky
Pennsylvania . .
Virginia
Arizona
Dist. Columbia.
New York
Colorado
Minnesota
Georgia
New York
California
New York
Maryland
Illinois
New York
New York
Virginia
85,000
3,500
2,500
6,000
4,000
4,500
7,000
4,500
6,000
4,500
6,000
4,500
4,500
8,000
2,500
7,000
5,000
7,000
5,000
4,000
3,500
6,000
9,000
76
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS ASSIGNED, TEMPORARILY, TO THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE OR ON
LEAVE OF ABSENCE.
Name.
Harry C. Hawkins
William W. Heard
Loy W. Henderson
Frederick W. Hinke
J. Klahr Huddle
Herschel V. Johnson. . . .
John D. Johnson
Robert F. Kelley
Gerhard H. Krogh
Arthur Bliss Lane
Ruf us H. Lane
Richard S. Leach
Irving N. Linnell
Alexander R. Magruder.
J. Theodore Marriner. . . .
Keith Merrill
Dana G. Munro
Edwin L. Neville ,
Edward J. Norton
Mahlon Fay Perkins . . . .
Edward L. Reed
Thomas Saramons
WinfieldH. !5cott
Addison E. Southard. . .
Richard B. Southgate. .
Arthur F. Tower
George Wads worth
Post Wheeler
Francis White
Harold L. Williamson. .
Edwin C. Wilson
Hugh R. Wilson
Orme Wilson, jr
Thomas M. Wilson
Evan E. Young
Rank.
Vice consul
Consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Consul
Second secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
First secretary. .
Vice consul
Consul
Counselor of legation . .
First secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul general
Consul
Second secretary
Consul general
Vice consul
Consul
First secretary ,
Vice consul
Consul
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary
Third secretary
Second secretary
Counselor of embassy .
Second secretary
Consul
Consul general
Status.
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
On leave
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
On leave
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
On leave
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
Assigned
to department.
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
of absence
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
of absence
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
of absence
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department,
to department.
Whence
appointed.
Michigan
Maryland
Colorado
New York
Ohio
North Carolina..
Vermont
Massachusetts.. .
North Dakota . .
New York
Virginia
Connecticut
Massachusetts.. .
Maryland
Maine
Minnesota
New Jersey
Ohio
Tennessee
California
Pennsylvania . . .
Washington
Dist. Columbia. .
Kentucky
Massachusetts. . .
New York
New York
Washington
Maryland
Illinois
Florida
Illinois
New York
Tennessee
South Dakota.. .
Salary.
$2,S0O
3,500
3.000
2,500
6,000
5)000
4)SOO
3,500
3,500
6,000
1, 500
2,500
6,000
8,000
6,000
5, 000
6,000
7,000
7,000
7,000
5, 000
9,000
2,750
7,000
6,000
2, 500
4,000
9,000
7,000
4,000
5,000
9,000
4,500
5, 000
9,000
XV.~CLASSIFICATION OF THE FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS I (Sg.ooo).
Name.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Date of
entry into
service.
Mo
La
N. Y...
Kans...
Vt
R.I....
Va
D. C...
D. C...
D. C...
Consul general
Counselor of embassy.
Counselor of embassy .
Consul general
Consul general
Consul general
Counselor of embassy .
Consul general
Consul general
Consul general
Nov. 3,1923
Sept. 5, 1923
Nov. 15, 1924
July 1,1924
June 18, 1903
Feb. 10,1921
Mar. 5, 1924
Nov. 26, 1920
Aug. 19, 1920
Aug. IS, 1924
July 1,1924
July 1,1924
July 1, 1924
July 1,1924
July 1, 1924
July 1, 1924
Tokyo
Crosby, Sheldon L
Eberhardt, Charles C. . . .
Foster, John G
Constantinople
On detail as inspector.
Ottawa
Mar. 31,1910
Oct. 29, 1904
June 23, 1897
Gaulin, Alphonse
Gunther, Franklin M
Rio de Janeiro
Mar. 8, 1905
Halstead, Albert
Montreal
Hurst, Carlton Bailey. . .
Habana
July 1,1924 ! July 22,1892
Lay, Julius G
Calcutta
July 1,1924 1 Sept. 1,1893
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS I ($9,000)— Continued.
77
Name.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Date of
entry into
service.
Morgan, Henry H
Ravndal, Gabriel Bie. . .
Robbins, Warren D
Robertson, William H. . .
Samjnons, Thomas
Schoenfeld, H. F. Arthur
Skinner. Robert P
SterUng, Frederick A
Stewart, Nathaniel B . . .
Summerlin, George T. . .
Washington, Horace Lee.
Wheeler, Post
Whitehouse, Sheldon. . . .
Wilson, Hugh R
Young, Evan E
Byington, Homer M
Cofian, William
Cunningham, Edwin S. .
Curtis, Charles B
Dawson, Claude I
Dawson, WilUam
Gale. WilUamH
Gauss, Clarence E
Johnson, Nelson T
Keena, Leo J
Lay, Tracy
Letcher, Marion
Magruder, Alexander R .
Poole, DeWittC
Totten, Ralph J
Tredwell, Roger Culver .
Wadsworth, Craig W
Weddell, Alexander W. .
La
S. Dak.
N. Y...
Va
Wash . .
D. C...
Ohio...
Tex...,
Ga
La
D. C.
Wash..
N. Y..,
lU
S. Dak
Consul general
Consul general
Counselor of embassy ,
Consul general
Consul general
Counselor of embassy ,
Consul general
Counselor of embassy ,
Consul general
Counselor of embassy
Consul general
Counselor of embassy
Counselor of embassy
Counselor of embassy
Consul general
Buenos Aires
Constantinople
Berlin
Halifax
On leave of absence.
Mexico
Paris
London
Tokyo
Rome
London
On leave of absence .
Paris
Department
Department
Oct.
Mar.
Mar.
Oct.
3-1923
4,1919
I, 1922
3,1923
Mar.
Aug.
June
Dec.
Mar.
Aug.
S, 1924
6, 1924
18, 1923
13,1923
5,1924
6, 1924
Apr.
Mar.
Feb.
16, 1921
1,1924
15, 1923
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
I,I9«1
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
Sept.
Jan.
Mar.
Oct.
Mar.
Sept.
Dec.
Mar.
Aug.
Apr.
Oct.
July
Aug.
Feb.
Aug.
22, 1898
2, 1911
28, 1885
8, 190S
17, 1910
18, 1897
2. 1911
15. 1907
7, 1910
I, 1894
21, 1906
4, 1909
1. 1912
12, 1905
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS II ($8,000).
Conn. . . Consul general
Ky Consul general
Tenn . . I Consul general
N. Y. . . Counselor of legation.
S. C. . . . Consul general
Minn. . . Consul general
Va Consul general
Conn. . . Consul general
Okla . . . Consul general
Mich . . . Consul
Ala. . . . Consul general
Ga Consul general
Md Counselor of legation
III Consul general
Tenn . . Consul general
Ind .... Consul general
N. Y. . . Counselor of legation .
Va Consul general
Naples
BerUn
Shanghai
Budapest
Stockholm
Department
Amsterdam
Tientsin
On detail as inspector.
Liverpool
Munich
Copenhagen
Department
Cape Town
Barcelona
On detail as inspector.
Lima
Mexico
Mar.
Nov.
Sept.
Oct.
Aug.
Sept.
Aug.
Mar.
July
Aug.
Mar.
Aug.
July
Oct.
Sept.
July
Dec.
Aug.
28, 1923
IS>I92I
8,1919
20, 1923
1, 1924
16. 1923
15.1924
12. 1924
I, 1924
26, 1924
30, 1923
19, 1920
1,1924
1,1923
30, 1922
I, 1924
23» 1924
1, 1924
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
Sept.
June
Feb.
May
June
Mar.
July
June
Aug.
May
Mar.
June
Aug.
Dec.
June
Apr.
May
Jan.
19, 1900
28, 1906
16, 1898
15,1909
24, 1910
28, 1908
16, 1906
7. 1907
27,1907
31,1909
12, 1912
2, 1909
4, 1909
20, 1910
10. 1908
14. 1909
14, 1920
11. 1910
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS III ($7,000).
Armour, Norman
Atherton, Ray
Bailey, James G
Bowman, Thomas D. . . .
CaldweU, John K
Carrigan, Clarence
Chamberlin, George E . .
Deichman, Carl F
Dolbeare, Frederic R
Dreyfus, jr., Louis G
DuUes, Allen W
Dumont, Frederick T. F,
Frazer, jr., Robert
Frost, Arthur C
Frost, Wesley ,
N. J . . . . First secretary .
Ill First secretary.
Ky First secretary.
Mo Consul
Ky Consul general .
Calif . . . Consul
N. Y... Consul
Mo Consul general .
N. Y. . . First secretary.
Calif... Consul
N. Y. . . First secretary.
Pa Consul general. .
Pa Consul general .
Mass... Consul
Ky Consul
Rome
London
Oslo
Mexico
Department
Milan
Glasgow. . . .
Valparaiso. .
Department
Dresden
Department
Frankfort -on-the-Main
Zurich. .
Habana .
Marseille
Apr.
23.
1
1924
Oct.
9.
1924
Jime
7.
1921
July
18,
1922
June
6,
1924
Dec.
27.
1921
Sept.
8,
1919
June
23,
1920
Oct.
9>
1924
Nov.
IS.
1921
Mar.
3.
1922
Mar.
28,
1923
Oct.
23.
1924
Mar.
30,
1923
Feb.
16,
1921
July
Sept.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
20, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
May
Aug.
June
Dec.
Oct.
Mar.
Jan.
Mar.
Mar.
Dec.
May
Aug.
July
Mar.
Apr.
17, 1916
23,1917
22, 1901
21,1911
8,1906
3.1910
2, 1906
30, 1907
2, 1915
20. 1910
17, 1916
19. 1911
16, 1909
2,191s
5,1912
78
CONSUIvAR SERVICE OE THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS III ($7,000)— Continued.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Gamon, John A
Garrells, Arthur
Haeberle, Anninius T. . .
Hanna, Matthew E
Harris, Ernest L
Haskell, Lewis W
Hathaway,jr., Charles M .
Heintzleman, P. Stewart
Holland. PhiUp
HoUis, W. Stanley
Ingram, Augustus E
Jaeckel, Theodore
Jenkins, Douglas
Johnson, Hallett
Kehl, JohnE
Kirk, Alexander C
Lawton, Ezra M
Lee, Samuel T
Lowrie, Will L
Mayer, Ferdinand L . . .
Messersmith, George S . .
Miller, Ransford S
Morgan, Stokeley W
Neville, Edwin L
Norton, Edward J
Osborne, John Ball
Palmer, Ely E
Peck, Willys R
Perkins, Mahlon Fay. . .
Shaw, G. Howland
Snyder, Alban G
Southard, Addison E. . .
Starrett, Henry P
Sussdorff, jr., Louis A. .
White, Francis
White, John Campbell . .
Winans, Charles S
Ill
Mo
Mo
Conn...
lU
S. C...
Pa
Pa
Tenn . .
Mass . . .
Calif...
N. Y...
S. C...
N.J....
Ohio. ..
Ill
Ohio..,
Mich..
Ill
Ind...
Del...
N. Y..
Ark...
Ohio. .
Tenn . ,
Pa....
R. I...
Calif..
Calif..
Mass . .
W. Va
Ky....
Fla....
N. Y..
Md....
Md....
Mich . .
Constil Cobh
Consul general Athens
Consul Sao Paulo. .
First secretary BerUn
Consul general Singapore . .
Consul Algiers
Consul Dublin
Consul general Hankow . . .
Consul general j Guatemala .
Consul general 1 Lisbon
Consul general I Vancouver.
Consul general I Warsaw
Consul general ' Canton
Paris
Stuttgart...
Where assigned.
First secretary. .
Consul
First secretary i Mexico
Consul j Sydney, Australia.
Consul ] Nottingham
Consul general i Wellington
First secretary . . .
Consul
Consul general ...
First secretary . . .
Consul
Consul general ...
Consul general ...
Consul
Chinese secretary.
Consul
First secretary. . .
Consul general ...
Consul
Consul
First secretary. . .
First secretary. . .
First secretary. . .
Consul
Peking
Antwerp
Seoul
Panama
Department....
Department....
Genoa
Bucharest
Peking
Department....
Constantinople.
Oslo
Department....
Belfast
The Hague
Department....
Riga
Prague
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Dec.
Oct.
Mar.
Mar.
Feb.
Oct.
Dec.
Sept.
May
July
Apr.
Oct.
Mar.
July
June
July
Mar.
Mar.
Oct.
Mar.
May
Sept.
June
Dec.
Sept.
Feb.
Aug.
July
May
May
Feb.
July
Mar.
Sept.
Mar.
June
Nov.
27, 1921
23, 1924
30. 1923
10. 1924
16. 1921
23) 1924
27, I92I
8,1919
30, 1923
1. 1920
1,1924
23) 1924
30. 1923
17,1924
11. 1924
17,1924
30) 1923
30) 1923
22, 1924
8, 1923
10, I9I9
5)1919
10, 1924
16, 1919
26. 1922
10. 192 1
25,1921
1. 1921
10. 1922
26, 1921
10. 1921
24. 1922
30. 1923
27, I92I
t, 1922
10. 1924
9) 1920
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
Aug.
Nov.
July
I July
July
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
Nov.
July
July
July
Sept.
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
8,1924
8, 1924
17,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
8,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
17,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
20, 1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
Date of
entry into
service.
Apr.
June
June
Aug.
May
Jan.
Aug.
Oct.
Mar.
Mar.
May
July
June
Aug.
Oct.
Mar.
Dec.
Aug.
Jan.
Aug.
June
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Mar.
Aug.
Dec.
Oct.
Jan.
May
May
Sept.
Oct.
May
July
May
May
24) 1914
22, 1908
lOf 190S
23)1917
10. 1898
II, 1910
19,1911
25, 1902
7, 1910
18, 1891
IS, 1902
17,1914
22. 1908
22,1912
IS) 1897
2>19IS
22. 1913
IS, 1907
14. 1899
3,1916
2S)I9I4
27, 189s
3>l9i6
27) 1907
30, 1907
22, 1912
20, 1910
8, 1906
14. 1909
3)i9i8
8, 1899
1,1916
3) 1907
22. 1914
28. 1915
22, 1914
21. 1900
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS IV (56,ooo).
Andrews, William W. . .
Belin, F. Lammot
Cable, Philander L
Claiborne, Hamilton C . .
Cole, Felix
Dermison, E. Haldeman
De Soto, Hernando
Dominian, Leon
Donald, George K
Dunn, James Clement . .
Engert, Cornelius Van H.
Ferris, Cornelius
Fisher, Fred D
Glazebrook, Otis A.. .
Ohio.
Pa...
111....
Va. .
D.C..
Ohio.
Calif .
N.Y.
Ala..
N.Y.
Calif.
Colo.
Oreg.
N.J..
First secretary .
First secretary.
First secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
First secretary .
First secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Vienna
Department . .
Sofia
Department...
Department. .
Quebec
Leipzig
Rome
Johannesburg .
Brussels
Habana
Stettin
Nantes
Nice
Apr.
Aug.
July
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
Nov.
July
May
Mar.
Sept.
Feb.
Dec.
Dec.
23) 1924
20, 1923
24) 1923
18, I92I
6, 1924
15)1919
15)1921
21. 1921
17,1922
7)1924
26, 1923
14. 1922
27,1921
2, 1920
July
July
July
Sept.
Aug.
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
I, 1924
1, 1924
1)1924
20, 1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1, 1924
8) 1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
X, 1924
1, 1924
Mar.
Dec.
Aug.
Mar.
Aug.
Nov.
Jime
June
June
Sept.
Mar.
May
Aug.
Feb.
2,1911
20, 1919
23)1917
24) 191S
4)I9IS
7) 1903
2O) 1889
9) 1921
22, 1914
5) 1919
12. 1913
31, 1909
22,1901
18. 1914
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS IV ($6,000)— Continued.
79
Name.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap- Date of
pointment to entry into
present class. , service.
Goold, Herberts
Gordon, George A
Greene, Elbridge Gerry .
Harriman, Oliver B
Hewes, Clarence B
Hitch, Calvin M
Hofer, Myron A
Holaday, Ross E
Honaker, Samuel W . . . .
Howell, jr. , Williamson S.
Huddle, J. Klahr
Jewell, John F
Johnson, Stewart
Knabenshue, Paul
Lane, Arthur Bliss
Linnell, Irving N
Marriner, J. Theodore. . .
Martin, John F
Maynard, Lester
Mofiat, Jay Pierrepont. .
Moorhead, Maxwell K. . .
Munro, Dana G
Norweb, R. Henry
Paddock, Gordon
Scotten, Robert M
Southgate, Richard B . . .
Thaw, jr., Benjamin . . . .
Thurston, Walter C
Wiley, John C
Winship, North
Wlnslow, L. Lanier
Wood, John Q
CaUf . . .
N.Y...
Mass.. .
W. Va.
La
Ga
Ohio . . .
Ohio. . .
Tex . . . ,
Tex
Ohio. . .
Ill
Ill
Ohio . . ,
N.Y...
Mass.. .
Me
Fla . . .
Calif..
N.Y..
Pa
N.J...
Ohio..
N.Y..
Mich . .
Mass..
Pa....
Ariz . .
Ind . . .
Ga....
N.Y..
Hawaii
First secretary .
First secretary .
First secretary .
First secretary .
First secretary .
Consul
First secretary .
Consul
Consul
First secretary .
Consul
Consul
First secretary .
Consul
First secretary .
Consul
First secretary .
Athens July
Department Aug.
Peking July
Copenhagen i July
Peking Apr.
Basel Mar.
Montevideo 1 Aug.
Manchester ' Feb.
Smyrna
Warsaw ....
Department .
Birmingham .
Cairo
Beirut
Department .
Department .
Department .
First secretary I Madrid
Consul
First secretary . .
Consul
Consul
First secretary . .
First secretary ' Belgrade
First secretary ! Rio de Janeiro
Oct.
July
Apr.
Jan.
Mar.
May
Feb.
Mar.
July
Mar.
Aug.
Sept.
Havre
Constantinople. . .
Dundee [ June
Department i Nov.
Tokyo j Aug.
Nov.
Nov.
First secretary Department. .
First secretary Buenos Aires .
First secretary Managua
First secretary Lima
Consul Cairo
First secretary j Santiago
Consul Vera Cruz ....
Aug.
July
Jan.
Sept.
Dec.
Apr.
Oct.
17,1924
20, 1923
17,1924
23) 1923
24,1924
30. 1923
9, 1924
22,1915
30. 1924
17,1924
28, 1923
18,1922
3, 1924
2, I9Z9
26, 1923
30, 1923
23, 1923
3, 1924
17,1923
12. 1923
11. 1924
28, 192 I
11,1923
13,1922
15, 1924
6. 1923
17, 1924
31,1923
1,1923
2. 1924
1,1924
2, 1923
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Sept.
July
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
20, 1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
8, 1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
Oct.
Feb.
May
Oct.
Feb.
Feb.
Sept.
June
July
Aug.
Mar.
June
Mar.
June
Aug.
Sept.
Aug.
July
June
Sept.
June
June
Mar.
Apr.
May
Sept.
Aug.
May
May
June
July
Jan.
, 1916
, 1920
,1914
,1913
i, 1919
,191s
,1919
,1902
,1913
• 1916
,191s
1, 1902
,1915
1, 1906
,1917
,1914
■,1918
;, 1913
,1906
,1919
,1903
,1920
,1917
, 1901
,1916
,1919
,1916
,1918
,1916
, 1910
,191s
,1909
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS V (Ss,ooo).
Amory, jr., Copley
Arnold, Frank D
Balch, Henry H
Ballantine, Joseph W . .
Bevan, Thomas H
Boal, Pierre de L:
Bucklin, George A
Busser, Ralph C
Cameron, Charles R
Campbell, Harry
Clum, Harold D
Davis, John K
Davis, Leslie A
Dick. HasellH
Donegan, Alfred W. . . .
Dooman, Eugene H . . . .
Dorsey, W. Roderick...
Dow, Edward A
du Bois, Coert
Dye, John W
N. H...
Pa
Ala ... .
Mass.. .
Md . . . ,
Pa
Okla..,
Pa
N.Y..
Kans..
N. Y..
Ohio..
N. Y..
S.C...
Ala...
N. Y..
Md...
Nebr. .
Calif...
Minn..
Second secretary ....
Second secretary ....
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary ....
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Japanese Asst. Sec'y .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Rome
On leave of absence .
Adelaide
Tokyo
Hamburg
Berne
Victoria, B. C
Plymouth
Tokyo
Iquique
Konigsberg
Nanking
Zagreb
Sydney, N. S
Patras
Tokyo
Catania
Rotterdam
Department
Ciudad Juarez
July 13, 1922
Feb.
Dec.
Oct.
July
July
Sept.
Dec.
Sept.
Apr.
May
Sept.
Sept.
Jan.
July
Mar.
Oct.
Nov.
Oct.
10, 192 1
13,1923
23, 1924
1,1924
23, 1924
7. 1922
28. 1923
21,1923
28,1923
29,1919
9, 1924
22. 1924
29, 1924
1, 1921
30. 1923
20. 1924
17,1923
2. 1923
Sept. 20
1924
July 1
1924
July I
1924
July I
1924
July I
1924
Aug. 8
1924
July I
1924
July 1
1924
July I
1924
July 1
1924
July 1
1924
July 1
1924
July I
1924
July I
1924
July 1
1924
Aug. 8
1924
July 1
1924
July I
1924
July I
1924
July I
1924
Nov.
Aug.
June
June
Apr.
Dec.
July
May
Sept.
July
Apr.
Apr.
Mar.
Mar.
May
Mar.
Jan.
Oct.
Sept.
July
13,1920
4.1909
22. 1914
2, 1909
24, I912
20, 1919
16, 1906
31,1909
3,1919
14, I9IS
7,1909
14, I9IO
13,1912
10,1911
10, 1905
12, IQ12
14, 1907
18. 1915
S.I919
21, 1906
8o
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS V ($s, ooo)— Continued.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Date of
entry into
service.
Foster, Carol H
Guyant, Claude E
Hanson, George C
Haven. Joseph E
Heizer, Oscar S
Henry, Frank Anderson
Hoover, Charles h ,
Ifft, George N
Ives, Ernest L
Jackson, Jesse B
Jenkins, William L,
Johnson, Herschel V
Josselyn, Paul R
Keblinger, Wilbur
Kemper, Graham H
Lee, Frank C
Leonard, Walter A
Lupton, Stuart K
Macgovvan, David B
Marsh, O. Gaylord
Merrill, Keith
Morris, Leland B
Murray, Wallace S
Myers, David J. D
Myers, Myrl S
Olivares, Jose de
Patton, Kenneths
Pinkerlon, Lowell C
Putnam, John R
Reed, Edward L
Reed, LesUe E
Richard son, Elliott Verne
Sauer, Emil
Stewart, James B
Thomson, Alfred R...
Tuck, S. Pinkney
Warren, Avra M
Watson, Hugh H
Westcott, Charles D..
Wilson, Edwin C
Wilson, Thomas M...
Winslow, Alan F
Young, James B
Md
lU
Conn . . .
Ill
Iowa. . ,
Del...
Mo
Idaho .
Va
Ohio..
Pa
N. C.
Iowa. .
Va
Ky
Colo...
Ill
Tenn .
Tenn . .
Wash..
Minn . ,
Pa
Ohio...
Ga
Pa
Mo
Va
Mo
Oreg . .
Pa....
Minn .
N. Y..
Tex...
N.Mex
Md
N. Y..
Md....
Vt
Pa
Fla
Tenn . ,
111
Pa
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary . .
Chinese Asst. Sec'y
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary. . .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul ,
Consul
Second secretary. .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary. . ,
Consul
Second secretary. . .
Consul
Department
Callao-Lima
Harbin
Florence
Jerusalem
Barcelona
Batavia
Nancy
Alexandria
Leghorn
Calcutta
Department
Peking
Bombay
Yokohama
Bradford
Stockholm
Sofia
Riga
Montevideo
On leave of absence.
Cologne
Teheran
Durango
Yunnanfu
Kingston, Jamaica. .
Belgrade
London
Chefoo
Department
Bremen
Haiti
Pernambuco
Tampico
Madras
Geneva
Nairobi
Lyon
Paris
Department
Department
Berne
Venice
Aug.
July
Dec.
Mar.
Oct.
Nov.
July
Jan.
Aug.
Apr.
Jan.
July
July
Mar.
Dec.
Sept.
July
Dec.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Jan.
Sept.
IJec.
June
May
July
Jan.
Nov.
Aug.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Aug.
Oct.
Jan.
May
June
Feb.
Sept.
Sept.
Apr.
1924
1921
1921
1923
1923
1922
1922
1924
1923
1923
1924
1923
1921
1923
1923
1923
1922
1923
1922
1924
1924
1922
1923
1921
1924
1919
1923
1924
1923
1923
1924
1924
1923
1923
1924
1924
1922
1920
1922
1923
1923
1920
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Sept.
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Oct.
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
Sept.
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
Aug.
July
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Sept.
Sept.
June
Aug.
May
Aug.
June
May
June
Mar.
June
Nov.
Apr.
May
Aug.
Oct.
Aug.
May
Oct.
Mar.
July
Apr.
Mar.
Aug.
Aug.
June
June
Sept.
Mar.
Nov.
Apr.
Mar.
Aug.
July
Mar.
Sept.
June
Dec.
June
Apr.
Sept.
Sept.
July
1919
1908
1909
1904
1906
1913
1909
190S
1909
1905
1914
1920
1910
1914
1911
191S
1907
1905
191S
1915
1917
1910
1920
1912
1907
1906
1908
1917
1915
1920
1 914
1910
1911
1915
1911
1913
1920
1907
1920
1920
1919
1919
1909
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VI ($4,500).
Abbott, Wainwright Pa
Adams, Walter A S. C
Albrecht, Charles H Pa
Benton, J. Webb Pa
Blair, Percy A D. C. . .
Blocker, WiUiam P Tex
Boyle, Walter F Ga
Brett, Homer Miss
Broy, Charles C Va
Second secretary .
Consul
Consul
Tegucigalpa.
Tsingtao. . . .
Bangkok. . . .
Second secretary ' Caracas.
Second secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
London
Guaymas
San Luis Potosi.
Bahia
Department
Oct. 2,
June 22,
May 3,
July 12,
Apr. 27,
Dec. 17,
Oct. 2,
Mar. 30,
Jan. 5,
1924
1922
1923
1924
1923
1923
1923
1923
1923
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
I
1924
8
1924
I
1924
I
1924
I
1924
I
1924
I
1924
I
1924
8
1924
Apr. 7, 1920
Feb. 26, 1916
July 12,1911
Nov. IS, 1920
Aug. 24, 1921
July 18,1913
Apr. 24, 1914
Aug. 19, 1911
July 19,1909
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VI ($4.500)— Continued.
81
Buhrman, Parker W. . . .
Burdett, William C
Carleton, Algar E
Carroll, Joseph W
Chase, Benjamin F
Cochran, H. Merle
Cookingham, Harris N. .
Cax, Raymond E
Damm, Henry C. A
Daniels, Thomas L
Davis, Chester W
Davis James P
Davis, Monnett B
Dennis, Lawrence
Dickover, Erie R
Dockweiler. Henry I . . . .
Edwards, Clement S. . . .
Flack, Joseph
Hall, Barton
Hanson, George M
Hamden, Robert
Haynes, Thomwell
Hibbard, Frederick P. . .
Hitchcock, Henry B
Hurley, John P
Huston, Jay C
Jacobs, Joseph E
Johnson, John D
Jordan, Curtis C
Kemp, Edwin Carl
Kliefoth, Alfred W
Lakin, Harry M
Langdon. William R. . . .
LeClercq, Frederic D. K.
McDonough, Dayle C. . .
McGurk, Joseph F
Makinson, George A
Menuninger, Lucien
Meyer, Cord
Miller, G. Harlan
Moffitt, James P
Muse, Benjamin
Nasmith, Charles Roy. . .
Nathan, Edward I
Newson, H. Dorsey
Orr, George
Patterson, Jefferson
Pearson, Frederick. F. A.
Pisar, Charles J
Quarton, Harold B
Rand, Elbridge D
Randolph, John
Rasmusen, Bertil M
Riggs, Benjamin Reath .
Savage, John M
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Va...
Tenn.
Vt...
N. Y.
Pa...
Ariz..
N. Y.
N. Y.
Tenn.
Minn.
N. Y.
Ga...
Colo. .
Mass.
Calif. .
Calif , .
Minn.
Pa...
Mo...
Utah.
Calif . .
Ala..
Tex..
N. Y.
N. Y.
Calif..
S. C.
Vt...
Calif . .
Fla...
Pa...
Pa...
Mass.
S. C.
Mo. . .
N.J..
Calif . .
S. C.
X. Y.
Pa...
N. Y.
Va...
N. Y.
Pa...
N. Y.
N.J..
Ohio.
R. I..
Wis..
Iowa .
Calif..
N. Y.
Iowa.,
Pa . . .
N.J..
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary
Consul
Second secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretar).-.
Consul
Second secretar>' ,
Consul
Second secretary.
Second secretary',
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary ,
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary,
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Consul
Second secretary.
Consul
Consul Palermo.
Second secretarj' I Mexico. .
Consul i Panama .
Second secretary 1 Bogotd . .
Second secretary j Prague. .
Consul Rangoon
Tallinn .
Tangier .
Whsre assigned.
Aleppo
Seville
Hongkong
Lisbon
On leave of absence.
Department
Saigon
Department
Nogales
Rio de Janeiro
Strasbourg
Shanghai
Department
Tegucigalpa
Kobe
Madrid
Valencia
Santo Domingo
Helsingfors
Trieste
Rosario
Berne
London
Tokyo
Riga
Hankow
Shanghai
Department
Habana
Danzig
Berlin
Durban
Antung
Tokyo
LaPaz
Helsingfors
Valparaiso
Bordeaux
Stockholm
Paris
Cape Town
San Salvador
Newcastle. Eng
Date of
assignment.
Apr.
May
Aug.
June
28. 1923
17, 1922
18. 1924
21,1923
Date ef ap-
pointment to
present.
Consul
Second secretary.
Consul Bagdad .
Consul
Second secretary .
Consul
Moncton
Bucharest
Southampton .
Sept.
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
Apr.
June
Dec.
Oct.
Nov.
Mar.
Jan.
Apr.
July
Mar.
Jan.
July
Jan.
Nov.
June
Aug.
Nov.
Sept.
July
Apr.
Sept.
Sept.
May
July
June
Sept.
June
Apr.
June
July
Mar.
July
Apr.
Nov.
Jan.
Aug.
July
Mar.
Mar.
Oct.
Mar.
Mar.
Aug.
Mar.
Sept.
21, 1923
23> 1924
26. 1923
2, 1923
17,1924
28, 1923
28, 1922
24. 1924
2, 1924
23,1921
31)1924
2, 1924
2, 1924
17.1924
30, 1923
2,1924
1. 1920
8, 1924
8, 1924
23, 1920
8, 1924
19,1921
20. 1922
17,1924
28. 1923
22,1924
22. 1924
10, 1922
23,1923
22, 1922
9,1924
22. 1922
28. 1923
22. 1923
24,1924
12. 1924
18, 1924
10, 1924
2. 1921
24,1924
2, 1920
17,1924
3,1922
12,1924
14,1922
13, 1923
16,1923
31,1918
3»I924
s. 1919
July
July
i July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Date of
entry into
service.
Apr.
Sept.
May
May
June
June
Jan.
Aug.
May
Aug.
June
Sept.
June
Aug.
Apr.
Aug.
Mar.
Aug.
Sept.
Aug.
Nov.
May
Nov.
Mar.
Aug.
Mar.
Oct.
Aug.
Dec.
Apr.
Nov.
Feb.
Apr.
Nov.
Sept.
May
Dec.
Mar.
Nov.
Nov.
Sept.
Apr.
Apr.
Aug.
Nov.
June
Aug.
Sept.
Dec.
Mar.
Aug.
Mar.
Aug.
Dec.
Oct.
X918
82
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VI ($4,500) -Continued.
I Whence
I ap-
pointed.
Schoellkopf, Walter H. . . N. Y. .
Sholes, Walter H Okla. .
Sokobin, Samuel N.J...
South worth, William B.I Pa
Stewart, Francis R ' N. Y..
Sullivan, Lucien N Pa
Swift, Merritt
Tittmann, jr., Harold H.
Voetter, Thomas W
Watson, John J. C
Wilson, jr., Orme
Wilson. Warden McK. . .
Wolcott, Henry M
Rank.
D. C...
Mo
N.Mex.
Ky
N. Y...
Ind
N. Y...
Second secretary
Consul
Consul
Second secretary.
Consul
Consul
Second secretary
Second secretary
Consul
I
Consul I Barbados
Second secretary
Second secretary
Consul
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Buenos Aires July 24,1923
Goteborg i Mar. 10, 1919
Mukden Sept. 12, 1924
Asuncion Jan. 15, 1924
Santiago de Cuba , Aug. 3, 1923
Cadiz May 17,1922
Peking Feb. 27, 1924
Paris May 26,1921
Curacao July 23,1924
Oct. 19, 1920
Department Nov. 2,1923
Vienna i June 20, 1923
Bilbao Sept. 8, 1919
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VII ($4,000).
Adams, Philip
Allen. Charles E
Anderson, Norman L . . .
Barker, W. Roswell
Barnes, Maynard B
Bohr, Frank
Bonney, Wilbert L
Bouchal, John L
Boyce, Richard F
Bradford, Robert R
Brady. Austin C
Brandt, George L
Briggs, Lawrence P. . . .
Burn, Alfred T
Carlson, Harry E
Carter, James G
Chapman. William E. . .
Clark. Reed Paige
Cooke, Arthur B
Corrigan. jr., John
Coulter, Eliot B
Cram, Paul H
Cross, Cecil M. P
Davis. Raymond
Davis, Thomas D
Dawson, Leonard G
Deane, Harold M
Denby. James Orr
Dickson. Samuel S
Doolittle. Hooker A
Doty. William F
Doughten. J. Preston...
Dunlap, Maurice P
Dwyre, Dudley G
Erhardt. John G
Fullerton, Hugh S
Funk. IloC
Gade, Gerhard
George, William P
Mass. . .
Ky
Wis....
Minn. ..
Iowa. . .
Kans. . .
Ill
Nebr...
Mich...
Nebr. . .
N.Mex .
D. C. . .
Mich . . .
N. Y...
lU
Ga
Okla...
N. H...
S. C...
Ga
Ill
Me
R.I....
Me
Okla...
Va
Conn...
Ind....
N.Mex.
N. Y...
N.J....
Del
Minn.. .
Colo....
N. Y...
Ohio...
Colo. . . .
Ill
Ala ... .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary .
Third secretary.
Third secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary .
Consul
Malta
Constantinople
Melbourne
La Paz
St. Gall
Cienfuegos
Edinburgh
Port Said
Hamilton, Ontario.
Rio de Janeiro
Malaga
Department
Nuevitas
Puerto Cortes
Kovno
Tananarive
Mazatlan
Port Elizabeth
Swansea
Cherbourg
London
Regina
Lourenco Marques..
Paris
Calais
Santander
San Jose, C. R
Athens
Bangkok
Marseille
St. Michaels
London
Port au Prince
Guadalajara
Winnipeg
Antwerp
Genoa
Department
Buenos Aires
May
28, 1924
Feb.
24, 1923
Apr.
27> 1923
' Mar.
3i;I924
Nov.
17,. 1924
May
10, 1919
2 , 1924
Nov.
22,1923
June
23,1924
Aug.
11,1924
Feb.
4, 1924
Oct.
29, 1924
Mar.
5, 1923
Aug.
15,1924
Jan.
2,1924
July
8, 1916
July
12, 1916
Jan.
2,1924
' Sept.
S>I9I9
Sept.
11,1922
Mar.
1,1923
Jan.
12, 1924
July
7,1922
Jan.
2,1924
May
27,1919
Dec.
27,1921
July
12, 1924
July
23/1923
1 Sept.
29, 1922
July
19.1923
Sept.
9,1924
Nov.
25, 1924
Apr.
7, 1924
1 June
23, 1924
' July
3, 1924
Oct.
23, 1923
June
22, 1922
July
17,1924
Oct.
22, 1924
Aug.
July
July
Sept.
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Nov.
Aug.
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
20, 1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1.1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
17,1924
8, 1924
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VII ($4.000)— Continued.
83
Gibson, Raleigh A
Gittings.jr.JohnSterett,
Gotlieb, Bernard
Gourley, Louis H
Grace, William J ,
Groth. Edward M
Haven, Don S
Hawley, Harry F
Heingartner, Robert W.
Honey, Robertson
Hopper, George D
Hosmer, Charles Bridg-
ham.
Hunt, William H
Keiser, Robert L
MacEachran, Clinton E. .
MacVeagh, John H
MacVitty, Karl de G
McCafferty, William J . . .
McConnico, Andrew J. . .
McAIillin, Stewart E
McNiece, Renwick S. . . .
Macatee, Robert B
Merrell, jr., George R
Millard. Hugh
Minter, John R
Mitchell. W. M. Parker. .
Montgomery, Edmund
B.
Nielsen, Orsen N
Owens, Thomas R
Pierce. Maurice C
Playter, Harold
Prendergast. Walter T. .
Price, Ernest B
Reat, Samuel C
Remillard. Horace
Scott, Winthrop R
Simons, John F
Smith, Gaston
Spamer. Carl O
Spiker, Clarence J
Spranue. Richard L
Squire, Paul C
Stafford, Maurice L
Sycks, Dana C
Taggart, G. Russell
Taylor, William H
Tenney, Raymond P
Thompson, Samuel R. . .
Treat. R. A. Wallace. . . .
Vance, Marshall M
Whence
ap-
pointed.
von Struve, Henry C. .. . Tex..
111....
Md..
N. Y.
111....
N. Y.
Ga...
Pa...
N. Y.
Ohio.
N. Y.
Ky...
Me...
N. Y.
Ind..
Mass .
N. Y.
111....
Calif.
Miss..
Kans.
Utah.
Va...
Mo...
Nebr.
S. C.
Va...
111....
Wis..
Ala..
Wis..
Calif.
Ohio.
N. t.
111....
Mass .
Ohio.
N. Y.
La...
Md...
D. C.
Mass.
Mass .
Calif.
Ohio.
N.J.
Pa...
Mass.
Calif.
Ohio.
Ohio.
Rank.
Consul
Third secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Teneriffe Oct. 22
Riga July 17
Halifax 1 Sept. 8
Warsaw June 22
Sheffield ! Oct. i
Beirut Mar. i
Leipzig I Mar. i
Windsor Dec. 12
Vienna June 4
Hamilton, Bermuda . . July 23
Dunkirk Nov. 27
Santo Domingo Mar. 28;
St. Etienne .
Messina
Ghent
Habana
Consul I Auckland .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul .
San Salvador... . .
Bluefields
Antofagasta
Stoke-on-Trent...
London
Port au Prince. . .
Berlin
Breslau j June
Riviere du Lovp Dec.
London Feb.
Nov.
Oct.
Apr.
July
Dec.
July
June
May
Sept.
Mar.
Jan.
July
Dublin
Habana
Bergen
Corinto
Brussels
Foochow
Calgary
Rome
Cape Haitien
Paris
Georgetown
Amsterdam
Swatow
Gibraltar
Lille
Barranquilla
Turin
London, Ontario
London
Mukden
Bristol
Angora
Fort William and Port
Arthur.
.Mexicali
July
Apr.
Jan.
July
Nov.
Dec.
May
Aug.
Sept.
Mar.
Apr.
July
Oct.
July
May
Dec.
Sept.
Apr.
Feb.
Mar.
July
Oct.
Dec.
1924
1924
1924
1922
1919
1923
1923
1924
1920
1924
1923
1923
1906
1924
1924
1923
1921
1924
1924
1922
1924
1923
1924
1924
1924
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1921
1922
1921
1918
1924
1923
1923
1923
1924
1923
1901
1922
1921
1919
1920
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Oct. 2, 1923
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
July I
Sept. 20
July I
July I
July I
July 1
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
Aug. 8
July I
July I
July I
Aug. 8
July 1
Aug. 8
July I
July
July
July
Aug.
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
Nov.
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
Nov.
July
July
July
July
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Date of
entry into
service.
May ;
Aug.
Mar. :
July
Apr.
May
Apr.
Sept.
Mar.
Apr.
Sept.
Jan.
May
July
June
Aug.
Aug.
Feb.
May
Sept.
June
Oct.
Dec.
Aug. :
May :
June
Feb. :
Mar. :
Sept.
Sept. :
Sept.
Sept. :
Apr.
June ;
June
June
Jan.
Aug. :
Aug. ;
Apr.
June :
Sept. :
Sept.
Jlay :
Mar. :
Sept. :
June
Feb. :
Mar.
June
1920
1921
191S
1916
1914
1920
1920
1917
1904
1914
1917
1919
1915
1921
1921
1917
1917
1909
1917
1920
1918
1921
1921
1920
1920
1919
1918
1919
1917
1919
1922
1914
1908
1909
1920
1917
1911
1916
1914
1893
1919
1919
1915
1912
1922
1909
1917
1920
1921
July 1,1924 Apr. 24,1914
84
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VII ($4,000)— Continued.
von Tresckow, Egmont
C.
Wadsworth, George
Walsh, Harry L
Waterman, Henry S
Wilcox, Henry T
Williams, Herbert O . . . .
Williamson, Harold L . . .
Willson, Digby A
Willson, Gilbert R
Woods, Damon C
Worniuth, Roraeyn
Yerby. William J
Yost, Hartley F
Anslinger, Harry J
Atcherson, Miss Lucile. . .
Baker, Henry D
Barkalow, Rees H
Beaulac, Willard L
Bigelow, Donald F
Blohm, Lee R
Boucher, Hiram A
Boyle, Lewis V
Brunswick, William W. .
Bucknell, jr., Howard . . .
Burgher, Robert S
Bursley, Herbert S
Caffery, Edward
Calvert, John S
Castleman, Reginald S . .
Childs, J. Rives
Chilton, Thomas W
Colman, George T
Crocker, 2d., Edward S .
Davis, Nathaniel P
de Lambert, Richard M .
Donovan, Howard
Early, William W
Eells, Stillman W
Ellis, Leon H
Fernald, Robert F
Ferrin, Augustin W
Finley, Harold D
Fisher, Carl A
Fletcher, Samuel J
Foote, Walter A
Foster, Paul H
Fox, Ray
Franklin, Lynn W
Gallman, Waldemar J. . .
Garrety, William P
Gerberich, Albert H
Whence
ap-
pointed.
S. C...
N. Y--
Md....
Wash.
N.J...
Calif . .
Ill
N. Y..
Tex...
Tex . . .
N. Y..
Tenn.
Kails..
Rank.
Consul .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Where assigned.
Department • • •
Nuevo Laredo .
San Jose
Vigo
Brussels
Department...
Consul Asuncion.
Consul .
Consul.
Consul .
Consul .
Consul .
Yarmouth
Paris
St. John, N. B.
Dakar
Torreon
Date of
assignment.
July 21,1921
Aug.
Oct.
July
Dec.
Oct.
Nov.
Sept.
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Feb.
Dec.
1, 1924
2,1923
20, 1921
27, 1921
11,1923
8, 1924
21,1923
28, 1924
21, 1923
23,1924
22,1915
17-1923
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
July
1,1924
July
1, 1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
July
1,1924
Date of
entry into
service.
June 9,1921
Nov. 19
Feb. 5
Feb. 6
June 13
June 4
Mar. 14
Dec. 19
Sept. 14
Sept. s
Feb. s
June 28
June 24
1917
1918
1918
1912
1920
1919
1917
1917
1919
1918
1906
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VIII ($3,500).
Pa
Ohio . . .
Ill
N.J....
R. I....
Minn...
Ariz
Minn...
Calif....
Kans...
Ga
Tex .. .
D. C. ..
La
N. C. ..
Calif . . .
Va
N.Y...
N.Y...
Mass.. .
N.J....
N. Max
111
N. C. . .
N.Y...
Wash. .
Me
N.Y...
N.Y...
Utah...
Me
Pa
Tex
Calif . . .
Md . . . .
N.Y...
N.Y...
Pa
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Consul
La Guaira
Department
Trinidad
Peking
Puerto Castilla .
Paris
Aguascalientes.
Dublin
Tahiti
Niagara Falls . .
Shanghai
Panama
Prague
Bucharest
Barcelona
Horta
Jerusalem
St. Stephen . . . .
Punta Arenas . .
Warsaw
Berlin
Quito
Rio de Janeiro .
Belize
Funchal
Guatemala
Saloniki
Madrid
Naples
Berlin
Havre
Hamburg
Monterey
Calcutta
Hongkong
Department
Puerto Cabello .
Maracaibo
Sept.
Dec.
Oct.
Oct.
May
Dec.
Oct.
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Jan.
June
Aug.
Dec.
Nov.
Mar.
Nov.
June
Aug.
Jan.
Dec.
Feb.
Feb.
Sept.
Aug.
Apr.
Oct.
Aug.
Dec.
Feb.
July
Mar.
Oct.
June
July
July
Sept.
Oct.
22,1923
Aug.
8,1924
5,1922
July
1,1924
27, I9I6
July
1, 1924
27,1924
July
1,1924
12, 1923
Aug.
8, 1924
19, 1923
July
1,1924
18, I92I
July
I, 1924
4. 1924
July
I, 1924
21,1923
July
I. 1924
23,1924
July
1,1924
28, 1924
July
I, 1924
4, 1924
July
1,1924
16, 1924
Sept.
20, 1924
14, 1922
Aug.
8,1924
27,1923
July
1,1924
28, 1923
July
1,1924
20, 1923 (
July
1,1924
30, 1924
July
1, 1924
IS, 1923
July
1,1924
7,1924
July
I, 1924
19,1923
July
1,1924
4, 1924
July
1,1924
29, 1924
Aug.
8, 1924
6, 1919
July
1,1924
5,1921
July
I, 1924
24,1924
July
1,1924
23,1924
July
1,1924
1,1924
July
1,1924
19, 1923
July
1,1924
4,1924
July
1,1924
13,1923
Aug.
8, 1924
II, 1924
July
1, 1924
2,1923
July
1,1924
14, 1924
July
1,1924
12, 1924
July
1,1924
24,1923
July
1,1924
16, 1920
July
1,1924
23,1924
July
1,1924
Oct.
Dec.
Aug.
Feb.
Oct.
May
Aug.
May
Sept.
Apr.
Sept.
Dec.
May
Oct.
Sept.
Apr.
Oct.
Nov.
Aug.
Sept.
Feb.
Dec.
Oct.
July
Mar.
Sept.
Apr.
June
Sept.
Dec.
Oct.
Sept.
Nov.
Sept.
Feb.
Sept.
July
Sept.
26, 1921
4,1922
15,1907
3- 1923
26, 1921
25,1921
8. 1919
25. 1921
5,1919
24,1907
8,1919
15,1921
31,1919
26, 1921
24, 1914
14,1919
6, 1923
23. 1921
30. 1918
22. 1922
17, 1921
12,1923
26. 1921
25,1914
20, 1916
22. 1922
5, 1916
3,1924
7. 1920
12,1923
8,1917
8, 1920
24. 1913
7, 1920
12. 1914
22, 1922
18,1918
27. 1919
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VIII ($3.500)— Continued.
85
Name.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Goforth, Hemdon W
Goodier, Harvey T
Graham. Charles I
Gray, John Harrison
Greenup, Julian C
Gross, Christian
Grummon, Stuart E
Hamilton, Maxwell M . . .
Hawks, Stanley
Heard, WiUiam W
Heath, Donald R
Heisler, Charles H
Hickerson, Jack Dewey. .
Hope, Leighton
Jackson, William I
Jacobson, S. Bertrand . . .
Jarv-is, Robert Y
Johnson, Felix S. S
Kelley, Robert F
Kodding, Trojan
Krogh. Gerhard H
Kuykendall, Clark P
Linard, Drew
Longyear, Robert D
McEnelly, Thomas
McKinney, Walter H
Matthews, H. Freeman..
Meily, John J
Mooers, H. Tobey
Murphy, J. Lee
Murphy, jr., James J.. . .
Murphy, Robert D
Pabst, jr., Gustave i
Patterson, Robert R . . .
Rankin, Robert L
Reineck, Walter S
Russell, H. Earle
Schnare, Lester L
Schoenfeld, Rudolf E...
Shantz, Harofd
Shaw, George P
Slater, Fred C
Sloan, Alexander K . . . .
Smith, E. Talbot
Smith, Leland L
Stambaugh, 2d, John...
Steger, Christian T
Stiles, George K
Styles, Francis H
Tewell, Harold S
Thomas, Edward B . . . .
Thomas, Frederick L...
Travers, Howard K... .
Wakefield, Ernest A . . .
Waller, George P
N. C ..
N.Y...
Ill
N.Y...
Calif . . .
Ill
N.J....
Iowa . . .
N.Y...
Md
Kans...
Del ... .
Tex
Miss
lU
N.Y...
Calif...
N.J....
Mass.. .
Pa
N. Dak.
Pa
Ala ... .
Mass.. .
N.Y...
Mich . . .
Md
Pa
Me
N.Y...
Pa
Wis....
Wis....
Mich. . .
N.!....
Ohio . . .
Mich. . .
Ga
D. C...
N.Y...
Calif...
Kans...
Pa
Conn. . .
Oreg . . .
Ohio . . .
Va
Md
Va
N. Dak.
Ill
N.Y...
N.Y...
Me
Ala ... .
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary.
Consul
Third secretary
Third secretary
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consid
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Third secretary
Consul
Consul
Consid
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Consul
Where assigned.
Santos
Nagoya
Shanghai
Tokyo
Las Palmas
Paris
Mexico
Canton
Warsaw
Department
Warsaw
Malmo
Para
Ensenada
Montreal
Oslo
Warsaw
Kingston, Ontario
Department
Tirana
On leave of absence
Batavia
Piedras Negras
Genev^a
Chihuahua
Bordeaux
Budapest
Port Limon
Lisbon
Tangier
Lucerne
Munich
Santiago
Liverpool
Newcastle, Australia..
Budapest
Casablanca
Cartagena
Cologne
Toronto
Tegucigalpa
Sarnia
Budapest
Berlin
Tunis
The Hague
Dresden
Stavanger
Loanda
Vancouver
Kobe
Mukden
Naples
Prince Rupert
Ceiba
Date of
assignment.
Mar.
Dec.
Feb.
Mar.
Dec.
Jan.
Feb.
Oct.
Mar.
June
Dec.
Sept.
Aug.
Oct.
Apr.
Jan.
Dec.
Jan.
May
Feb.
Sept.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Nov.
Feb.
May
Apr.
Dec.
June
Dec.
July
July
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
Aug.
Oct.
July
Oct.
Dec.
Sept.
Apr.
Oct.
June
Dec.
Apr.
Nov.
Feb.
Feb.
Oct.
Dec.
Aug.
Dec.
'. 1923
,1924
, 1924
', 1923
i. 1923
i, 1924
,1924
, 1922
i, 1924
,1924
,1923
, 1924
■ 1924
>I923
. 1923
,1924
. 1921
<, 1910
, 1924
,1924
, 1924
', 1923
. 1923
', 1923
,1923
', 1923
,1924
) 1922
. 1922
■,1923
, 1922
. 1923
, 1924
, 1921
,1924
, 1923
,1924
1 1923
,1924
, 1924
,1924
,1924
,1923
.1923
,1924
,1924
, 1923
; 1923
1, 1923
,1924
,1924
,1924
1 1923
,1918
>I923
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
I, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
I. 1924
Date of
entry into
service.
Sept.
Oct.
May
Sept.
Sept.
Dec.
Dec.
May
Dec.
June
Sept.
June
July
Oct.
Apr.
Aug.
Oct.
Jan.
Nov.
Dec.
Nov.
Sept.
Mar'.
May
Nov.
Oct.
Dec.
Sept.
Jan.
Nov.
Aug.
Sept.
Feb.
May
Sept.
May
Aug.
Feb.
Aug.
Oct.
May
July
Jan.
Oct.
June
Sept.
Sept.
Mar.
May
Oct.
May
Oct.
May
Jan.
Feb.
1919
191S
1921
1922
1919
1923
1923
1920
1923
1912
1920
191S
1920
1916
1920
1916
1921
1887
1922
1923
1911
1920
1907
1921
1918
1923
1923
1919
1919
1919
1916
1920
1923
1921
1919
1921
1916
1916
1916
1921
1920
1909
1921
1921
1921
1922
1919
1915
1920
1921
1918
1921
1921
86
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS VIII ($3,500)— Continued.
Xame.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
Where assigned.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Date of
entry into
service.
Warren, Fletcher
Tex ... .
N. Y...
N. C...
N. C...
Wis....
Mich...
Pa
Consul
Hahana . .
Dec. 14,1921
Aug. 18,1924
Dec. 19, 1923
Aug. 31,1918
Dec. 19,1923
July 12,1923
Aug. 31, 1918
Aug. 8, 1924
July 1,1924
July 1, 1924
Oct. 26,1921
Webber, LeRoy
July 19,1913
WTiitfield, James V
Wilev, Samuel H
Wilkinson, James R. . .
Zurich
Withey, Howard F
July 1, 1924
July 1,1924
Woodward, G. Carlton . .
Camnhelltnn. . .
Oct. 26, 1904
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS OF CLASS IX ($3000).
Butrick, Richard P. . .
De Vault, Charles L...
Geist, RaiTnond H. . .
Hale, Bernard F
Ravndal, Christian M.
Strother, Shelby F. . . .
Van Sant, Howard D.
N. Y.
Ind..
Ohio.
Vt...
Iowa.
Guayaquil .
Taihoku . . .
Consul
Consul
Consul I Alexandria
Consul Dunfermline
Consul I Frankfort on the Main
Ky Consul ! Guadeloupe
N. J . . . i Consul I Dunfermline
Dec.
3.
1923
Dec.
12,
1924
Sept
20,
1924
Aug.
30,
1924
Aug.
7,
1924
Dec.
i6,
1921
Jan.
II,
1910
Aug.
8.
1924
Aug.
8,
1924
Sept.
20,
1924
Aug.
8,
1924
Aug.
8,
1924
July
I,
1924
July
I,
1924
Oct. 26, 192 1
Apr. IS, 1919
Oct. 26, 192X
Mar. s, 1918
Apr. 29, 1922
Feb. s. 1918
Jan. II, 1905
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS, UNCLASSIFIED ($3,000).
Alexander, Knox
Amsden, Charles A
Bay, Charles A
Berger, David C
Blake, jr., Gilson G
Brown, Henry R
Carroll, Randolph F
Collins, Harold M
Doyle, Albert M
Fuller, George Gregg
Groeninger, Joseph G
Haven, Richard B
Henderson, Loy W
Horn, Thomas S
Keeley, jr., James Hugh.
Lowry, Edward P
Magnuson, Erik W
Malige, Marcel E
Marquis, Joseph A
Meinhardt, Carl D
Miller, Hughs
Nester. Alfred T
O'Donoghue, Sidney E. .
Packer, Earl L
Park, Nelson R
PUtt, Edwin A
Preston, jr., Austin R . . .
Redecker, Sydney B
Reynolds, Conger
Robinson, Thomas H
Salisbury, Laurence E. . .
Silvers, Edward E
Sturgeon, Leo D
Troutman, Harry L
Mo.. ..
N.Mex.
Minn . .
Va
Md
Minn...
Va
Va
Mich . .
N. Y...
Md
Ill
Colo . . .
Mo
D. C...
lU
Ill
Idaho . .
Me
N. Y...
Ill
N. Y...
N.J....
Utah...
Colo. . . .
Md
N. Y...
N. Y...
Iowa.. .
N.J....
lU
N.J....
Ill
Ga
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.,
Vice consul..
Vice consul . .
Vice consul.,
Vice consul.,
Vice consul..
Vice consul..
Riviere du Loup.
Basel
Tampico
Tientsin
Ottawa
Belgrade
Rotterdam
Dublin
Amsterdam
Teheran
BerUn
Constantza
Department
Saltillo
Damascus
Mexico
Stuttgart
Nantes
Paris
Changsha
Singapore
Oslo
Prague
Riga
Callao-Lima
Constantinople. . .
Tokyo
Medan
Stuttgart
Birmingham
Nagasaki
Seville
Dairen
Budapest
Nov. 28,
Apr. 13,
May 22,
June 13,
Oct. 14,
June 23.
Nov. 6,
Dec. 14,
Aug. 28,
Sept. 2,
Nov. 15,
June 23,
Dec. 18,
Dec. 24,
Feb. 24,
Apr. 12,
Oct. 17.
Aug. II,
Sept. 18,
Apr. 12,
Dec. 22,
June 18,
Jan. 4.
Oct. 14,
Feb. 12,
Aug. 21,
Dec. 13,
Aug. 17,
Sept. 9,
Aug. 28,
Nov. 8,
Dec. 21,
Oct. 17,
Dec. 13,
1923
1923
1924
1923
1922
1922
1922
1922
1922
1924
1921
1922
1924
1924
1923
1922
1922
1922
1923
1920
1922
1924
1924
1922
1923
1922
1923
1923
1924
1922
1924
1923
1923
1923
July I,
July I,
July I.
July I.
Aug. 8,
July 1,
Aug. 8,
July I,
July I,
Aug. 8,
July I,
July I,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 8,
July I,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 8,
July I,
July X,
Aug. 8.
Aug. 8,
July I,
July I,
July I,
July I,
Aug. 8,
July I,
Aug. 8,
Aug. 8,
July 28,
Aug. 8.
July 28,
Sept. 22,
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Sept. 27,
May 26,
Sept. 7.
May 20,
Feb. 24,
Nov. 14,
Sept. 30,
Oct. 26,
May 26,
Nov. 3,
Oct. 18,
Oct. 14,
May 26,
May 26,
June II,
Oct. 26,
Sept. 30,
May 26,
Jan. IS,
Mar. 12,
Feb. 24,
Nov. 22,
Feb. 2,
May 24,
May s,
Oct. 26,
Sept. 30,
May 2s,
Sept. 30,
May 26,
May 20,
Sept. 27,
Aug. 27,
July 9.
1919
1922
1920
1920
1920
1919
1922
1921
1922
1920
1918
1910
1922
1922
1922
1920
192 1
1923
1921
1912
192 1
1919
1920
1920
1919
1931
1923
1921
1922
1933
1920
1920
1920
1919
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS, UNCLASSIFIED ($3,000)— Continued.
87
Name.
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Rank.
1
Where assigned. ,^,^^4,.
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
Date of
entry into
service.
lU
Mich...
Mass ...
Jan. 2, 1924
Apr. 17. 1923
Dec. 23, 1922
July I, 1924
July I, 1924
Aug. 8, 1924 •
Oct. 26, 1921
Sept. 7, 1920
May 26, 1922
Vice consul
Vice consul
Soerabaya
Woods, Leslie E
Strasbourg
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS, UNCLASSIFIED ($2,750).
Altafifcr, Maurice W
Boernstein, Ralph A
Bowman, Howard A. . . .
Brooks, Russel M
Corcoran, William W
De Courcy, William E. . .
Eastin, jr., Fred C
Evans, Ernest E
Everett, Curtis T
Farrand, E. Kitchel
Flood, Peter H. A
Ford, Richard
Giroux, Arthur B
Green, Leonard N
Hodgdon, Anderson
Dana.
Howard, R. Floumoy. . .
Hudson, Joel C
Hukill, George R
Hurst, Carlton
Lewis, jr., Charles W
McArdfe, John
Macy, Clarence E
Milboume, Harvey Lee. .
Muccio, John J
Roberts, Quincy F
Scott, Winfield H
Seltzer, George E
Spangler, F. Leroy
vanden Arend, Frederik.
Woodard, Granville O. . .
Ohio..
D. C.
N. Y..
Oreg..
Mass . .
Tex. ..
Mo
N. Y..
Tenn..
Ill
N. H...
Okla...
N. Y. . .
Minn. . .
Md
Vice consul Aleppo
Vice consul Rome
Vice consul Trieste
Vice consul Belfast
Vice consul Boulogne-sur-Mer.
Vice consul Cairo
Vice consul Rio de Janeiro. . . .
Vice consul Mexico
Vice consul Bombay
Vice consul Buenos Aires
Vice consul Tampico
Vice consul Penang
Vice consul Montreal
Vice consul Yokohama
Vice consul Stuttgart
Ga
Mo
Del ... .
D. C...
Mich . . .
Pa
Colo....
W. Va.
R. I....
Tex
D. C...
N. Y...
Kans...
N. C...
Calif....
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
London
Wellington
Batavia
Bremerhaven.
Manchester
Santa Marta..
Coblenz
Tsinan
Hamburg
Apia
Department..,
North Bay. . . .
Sofia
Leipzig
Tientsin
Aug.
Oct.
Oct.
Apr.
May
Nov.
Aug.
Jan.
Sept.
Apr.
Apr.
July
Dec.
Dec.
June
June
Apr.
Apr.
Aug.
Apr.
Aug.
July
Mar.
Jan.
July
Sept.
Feb.
Apr.
Nov.
Apr.
7. 1924
12, 1923
6, 1924
19, 1924
14, 1921
20, 1923
15. 1923
2,1923
9,1924
27,1923 I
18,1923 !
24.1923 \
31.1923 I
13.1923
18. 1924
18, 1924
27.1923 I
28. 1923
18. 1924 j
27,1923 !
11,1923 i
2,1923 [
2,1923 1
2,1924
8, 1920
13,1924
12,1924
27,1923
19, 1923
27,1923
Aug.
Aug.
July
July
July
Aug.
Aug.
July
July
Aug.
July
Aug.
July
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
July
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
July
Aug.
July
July
July
July
Sept.
Aug.
8, 1924
8, 1924
I, 1924
I, 1924
r, 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
8, 1924
1,1924
8.1924-
1,1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
I. 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
8, 1924
1, 1924
8, 1924
1, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
22,1924
8.1924
May
Feb.
Sept.
July
May
July
Feb.
Sept.
Jan.
Feb.
July
Feb.
Sept.
Apr.
Oct.
May
Feb.
Feb.
Oct.
Feb.
Feb.
Nov.
Aug.
Aug.
Mar.
Feb.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Feb.
23. 1923
to, 1917
15. 1919
9. 1919
24, 1920
6. 1923
26, 1923
22,1917
7. 1920
26, 1923
26. 1920
26, 1923
7, 1920
23,1921
6, 1923
26. 1922
26. 1923
23.1923
25,1916
26, 1923
26, 1923
15,1921
28,1919
15,1921
24,1915
27. 1922
26. 1921
7.1918
6,1923
26. 1923
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS. UNCLASSIFIED ($2,500).
AlUng,PaulH
Armstrong, George
Alexander.
Armstrong, Lawrence S.
Atcheson, jr., George
Baldwin, Frederick W. .
Beach, William H
Biar. Herbert C
Bickers, William A
Bonnet, Ellis A
Bowerman, Paul
Brand, Norton F
Brtxins, John H
Burt, Joseph F
Callanan, Leo J
Pa...
N. Y.
N. Y.
Calif.,
N. Y.
Va...
Ind..
Va...
Tex..
Mich.
N.Dak
N. Y.
III....
Mass.
Vice consul.
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul
Vice consul .
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Beirut
Zurich
Liverpool
Department
Florence
Bombay
Nottingham
Puerta Plata. . .
Piedras Negras.
Berlin
Fernie
Riga
Berlin
Genoa
Nov. 8, 1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Nov. 19, 1923
June
Nov.
Sept.
May
Oct.
Apr.
Aug.
Sept.
June
Mar.
Oct. 16, 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
23. 1924
8, 1934
2, 1932
25,1918
21, 1924
27,1923
31, 1918
17,1924
18, 1924
17,1924
July
July
July
Oct.
July
July
Oct.
July
July
July
July
July
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
16, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
16, 1934
1,1924
1,1924
1,1924
1.1924
I. 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
Oct,
Aug.
Oct.
Oct.
July
Apr.
Oct.
Feb.
Sept.
Aug.
Nov.
Aug.
6, 1920
27,1923
I, 1920
16, 1924
12, 1911
24, 1914
16, 1924
26, 1923
14,1917
28, 1923
19, 1921
28, 1923
88
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS UNCLASSIFIED ($2,500)— Continued.
Cameron, Alfred D
Cawston, Arthur H
Chamberlain, Culver B. .
Chapman, 3d. Flavins J.
Chapman, J. Holbrook. .
Childs, Prescott
Coates, Haskell E
Cruger, Alexander P
Derry, Charles H
Dickinson, Horace J
Dorr, Julian C
Ebling, Samuel G
Finley, James G
Fletcher, C. Paul
Forman, Charles
Oilman, Joseph T
Glassey, Frank P. S
Gravelle, Arthur J
Green, 3d, Samuel E
Greene, Winthrop S
Haering, George J
Hamlin, John N
Hawkins, Harry C
Hawkins, J. Cameron. . .
Hinckley, Robert O'D..
Hinke, Frederick W
Holler, John E
Huddleston, John F
Hulley, Benjamin ]\I . . . .
Hurd, Alan T
Ives, John R
Jones, William Oscar
Leach, Richard S
Levisee, Scott S
Manning, Raphael A . . . .
Mayo, Paul
Moran, John E
Mosier, Robert L
Nason, William F
Parks, James E
Peck, William L
Perkins, jr., C. Warwick.
Pinkerton, Julian L
Ragland, Joseph P
Richardson, jr., John S. .
Schoenrich, Edwin
Schott, William W
Smale, William A
Smyth, Robert Lacy
Stanton, Edwin F
Stapleton, W. Maynard . .
Stevens, Harry E
Stevenson, Ronald D
Streeper, Robert B
Tail, George
Whence
ap-
pointed.
Wash .
Ill
Mo....
Va....
D. C.
Mass. .
Wis...
N. Y. .
Ga...
Ark . . .
N. Y..
Ohio..
D. C.
Tenn .
La....
Mass. .
Pa
Iowa. .
Md...
Mass. .
N. Y..
Oreg. .
Mich. .
N. Y..
D. C.
N. Y..
Pa....
Ohio . .
Fla....
Calif. .
Mich..
Pa....
Conn .
Va....
Mass . .
Colo...
Ill
Ind...
Mass . .
N. C.
Conn..
Md....
Ky....
D. C.
Mass. .
Md....
Kans..
Calif. .
Calif..
Calif. .
Pa....
Calif. .
Pa....
Ohio..
Va....
Rank.
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Third secretary.
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Third secretary.
Vice consul
Vice consul
Third secretari'.
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Third secretary.
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice counsl
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Vice consul
Where assigned.
JIarseille
Johannesburg. .
Canton
Hankow
London
Canton
Melbourne
Messina
Department
Antilla
Naples
Stockholm
Patras
Toronto
Nueva Gerona.
Athens
Helsingfors
Prescott
Cobh
Kobe
Tirana
Department
Hongkong
Bucharest
Department
Venice
Milan
Stockholm
Florence
Hamburg
Malmo
Department
Glasgow
Montevideo
Lima
Melbourne
Concepcion
Mukden
Cardiflf
Tallinn
Vienna
Durban
Monterey
Cobh
Valparaiso
Palermo
Nassau
Chungking
Kalgan
Sydney, Australia.
Canton
Buenos Aires
Canton
Rio de Janeiro ....
Date of
assignment.
Apr.
May
Aug.
June
Sept.
Nov.
Dec.
July
Oct.
Feb.
Mar.
June
Dec.
July
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
July
Feb.
June
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
Oct.
Nov.
May
July
Nov.
Aug.
June
Oct.
Mar.
July
May
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
June
Nov.
Oct.
Mar.
May
Mar.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
July
Nov.
1923
1924
1923
1923
1924
1924
1924
1923
1923
1922
1922
1924
1923
1924
1919
1924
1921
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1923
1923
1924
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1923
1924
1923
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
I9»3
Date of ap-
pointment to
present class.
July
July
July
July
July
Oct.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
Oct.
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
July
July
July
July
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
Oct.
July
July
July
July
Oct.
Nov.
July
July
July
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
1924
Date of
entry into
service.
CONSULAR SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS' UN'CLASSIFIED ($2,500)— continued.
89
Whence
ap-
pointed .
Talbott, Sheridan
Taylor, Howard C
Thiel. Cyril L. F
Touchctte. Joseph I
Tower, Arthur F ^
Turner, Mason
Willey, Richard R
Young, Whitney
Lane, Ruf us H I
Meyer, Paul W
Paschal, jr., George R. . .
Rand, Egbert B |
Turner, William T i
Ky
S. Dak .
Ill
Mass . . .
N. Y...
Conn.. .
N. Y. . .
K. Y...
Rank.
Where assigned.
Vice consul Habana .
Vice consul.
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Vice consul .
Stuttgart
Calcutta
Nancy
Department.
Colombo ....
Dublin
Vice consul i Kobe.
Date of
assignment.
Date of ap- { Date of
pointment to entry into
present class. service.
Nov. 16,1923
Oct. 21,1924
Nov. 8, 1924
Jan. 16, 1924
Apr. 12, 1923
Nov. 19, 1923
June 23, 1924
July 31,1924
July 1, 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
July
July
July
July
July
1, 1924
1,1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1, 1924
Oct. 6, 1923
Oct. 16, 1924
Oct. 16, 1924
Jan. s>i924
Feb. 26, 1923
Oct. 6, 1923
Oct. 6, 1923
June 13,1924
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS, UNCLASSIFIED (Si.soo).
Va
Colo Student interpreter. .
Fla Student interpreter. .
La I Student interpreter.
Ga Student interpreter. .
Department.
Peking
Peking
Tokyo
Tokyo
Oct.
16
1924 ,
Apr.
3
1924
Feb.
26,
1923
Jan.
23,
1924
Apr.
3.
1924
Oct.
July
July
July
July
16, 1924
1, 1924
1,1924
1, 1924
1,1924
Oct. 16, 1924
Apr. 3, 1924
Feb. 26, 1923
Jan. 23, 1924
Apr. 3. 1924
XVI.
-FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS RETIRED FROM ACTIVE SERVICE UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF THE
.4CT OF MAY 24, 1924.
Name.
State.
Class.
Rank.
Post where last
assigned.
Date of entry
into service.
Date of
retirement.
N. Y....
Mass
N. Y....
Ohio
Ohio
D. C...
Vt
D.C....
S. C
N. H....
W. Va . .
D.C....
Ill
Mass
Ohio....
Ill
D. C...
Wis
Va
Calif....
Wis
Iowa
Mich....
Ind
N. Y....
D.C....
D. C...
Ohio
Me
Conn
Pa
Iowa
Wis
Ind
VI
VIII....
VIII....
Ill
IV
Ill
IX
VIII....
VI
V
IX
VII
Ill
VI
II
Ill
VIII....
Ill
IV
VII
IV
IV
VIII....
VI
V
Ill
IV
VIII....
Ill
I
IX
V
Ill
June
Apr.
Mar.
Oct.
Oct.
June
June
July
Aug.
May
Sept.
June
Feb.
Jan.
Feb.
May
Mar.
May
July
July
July
Dec.
Oct.
Mar.
July
Mar.
May
Sept.
Aug.
Feb.
Apr.
July
Oct.
July
2, 1902
2, 1906
8, 1879
lS>i897
IS) 1897
10, 190S
28. 1897
9, 1889
2, 1906
10, 189S
21, 1901
10, 1908
11,1898
10. 1898
1. 1900
I7>i893
29, 1880
23. 1905
21. 1906
18, 1882
28, 1897
18,1897
15. 1897
I, 1898
23,1902
10, 190S
23. 190S
16. 1898
18, 1892
12, 1890
1, 1897
6. 1901
3. 190S
7, 1898
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
Dec. 13
Oct. II
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July 1
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
July I
1924
Consul general
Culver, Henry S
St. John. N. B
Rome
First secretary
Denison, Frank C
Diederich, Henry W
Dreher, Julius D
Colon
Freeman, Charles M
Sydney, N. S
Garrett, Alonzo B
Consul
St. Stephen
Gassett, Percival
Consul
Leeds
Goding, Frederic W
Consul general
Consul
Guayaquil
Grout, John H
Hull
Gunsaulus, Ed^^■in N..
Consul General
Consul General
Consul
1924
Horton, George
Budapest
1924
Johnson, Henry Abert .
Dundee
Rome
Hamilton, Bermuda . .
1924
Keene, Francis B
Consul general
Consul
1924
Kent, William P
1924
McCunn, John N
Mahin, Frank W
Martin, Chester W
1934
Milner, James B
Niagara Falls
1924
Mitchell, Mason
Consul
Malta
1924
Mosher, Robert Brent
Murphy, Dominic I
Pickerell, George H
Para
,1924
Rairden, Bradstreet S
1924
Ryder, Frederick M
Consul general
Consul general
1924
Thackara, Alexander M. .
Paris
1934
Wallace, Thomas R
Martinique
1924
WiUrich, Gebhard
St. Gall
1924
Winslow, Alfred A
Consul general
St. Johns, N. F
1924
90
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
XVIL— BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT RESPECTING PERSONS SERVING UNDER APPOINTMENT OF THE DE-
PARTMENT OF STATE AT HOME OR ABROAD, AND THE NAMES AND LAST POSTS OF SERVICE OF DIP.
LOMATIC OFFICERS AND CONSULS-GENERAL, CONSULS, VICE-CONSULS DE CARRIERE, CONSULAR
ASSISTANTS, INTERPRETERS, MARSHALS, AND STUDENT INTERPRETERS, WHO HAVE DIED OR RE-
TIRED FROM THE SERVICE SINCE JANUARY 1, 1906.
Persons not in the service on date of issue of this register are marked thus*, and the register in which their biographies
last appear is indicated by date thereof.
Abbott, Wainwright.— Bom in Pittsburgh, Pa., April 27,
1891; home, Pittsburgh; attended St. Pauls School four years
and Yale University two years; employed two years in manu-
facturing companies; in the French Air Service 1917-18; lieu-
tenant in the United States Air Service August, 1918, to Febru-
ary, 1919; appointed, after examination (Jan. 26, 1920), Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four April 7, 1920; assigned to
Stockholm May 26, 1921; to Athens April 13, 1922; appointed a
Secretary of class three September 22, 1922; on detail at Con-
stantinople October 15 to December i, 1923; returned to Athens;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class si.x July i, 1924;
assigned to Caracas October 2, 1924.
Abegg, Charles Henry. — Born in Zurich, Switzerland. April
15, 1864; naturalized in Brooklyn, N. Y., August 23, 1900; con-
nected with various business concerns in New York and Haiti
1881-1905; assistant manager of an American firm in Port de
Paix 1905-1907; manager since 1907; Consular Agent at Port
de Paix 1896-1918; reappointed Consular Agent at Port de
Pai.K May 25, 1921.
Abrams, Belle Jenvy. — Born in Marietta, Ohio; educated in
private and public schools; engaged for several years as a
designer and painter of gowns; appointed a clerk, temporarily,
in the Department of State, February 18, 1915; permanently
at $900 under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i,
1916; at $1,000, temporarily, October 18, 1916; permanently No-
vember I, 1910; class one, August i, 191S; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Ackerman, Ralph Henry. — Bom in West Hoboken, N. J.,
July 23, 1892; educated in the public schools of New Jersey and
in business schools; clerk and stenographer in various law offices
and business concerns 1907-1913; clerk in the Department of
State 1913-14; employed in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, Department of Commerce, 1914-192?; technical ad-
viser to the Delegation of the United States of America to the
Filth International Conference of American States held at San-
tiago, 1923; appointed Commercial Attache and designated for
duty in the American Embassy at Santiago, October 27, 1923.
Ackermann, Marie— Born in Washington. D. C; attended
high school, Washington; clerk in the Department of Agricul-
ture one month ; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules. February i, 1921; at $1,000
September i, 1922; at Si, 100 May 31 effective June i, 1924; at
Si. 500 July I, 1924.
*Adams, Edward Le Grand.—* * * Appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active
service as Consul at Sherbrooke July i, 1924, under the prof-
visions of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Adams, Newton. — Retired as Consul of class seven, on de-
tail at Paris, September, 1921. Register of 1922.
Adams, Philip.— Bom in Honolulu, Hawaii, June 26, 1881;
home, Cambridge, Mass.; graduate of Harvard University
(A. B.), 1903; instructor in Wisconsin University, 1903-1905;
engaged in foreign travel 1905-1908; in artistic and literary work,
1908-1918; employed in Bureau of War Risk Insurance, August
26, 1918, to July 25, 1920; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500,
in the Department of State, July 23, 1920; assigned to duty as
Chief of the Division of Passport Control, July 26, 1920; resigned
August 16, 1922; appointed, after examination (Jan. 16, 1922),
a Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; detailed to Paris August
28, 1922; to Malta May 28, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
Adams, Walter A.— Bora in Greenville. S. C. December 16,
1888; home, Greenville; attended public schools; spent one
year at Clemson College, and graduated from Georgetown
University (LL. B.), 1913; employed as stenographer in Green-
ville, in the civil service at Washington, and in the Philippine
civil service; admitted to the practice of law in the United
States Court for China; appointed clerk in the Consulate Gen-
eral at Shanghai, April i, 1914: stenographer of the United
States Court for China January 19, 1915; also Vice-Consul at
Shanghai, February 36, 1916; Vice-Consul at Batavia, October
4, 1918; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three, December 23, 1919; assigned
to Canton, April 12, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class two, May 24, 1920; assigned to Swatow, November 15,
1920; to Changsha, February 24, i92i;to Tsingtao, October i,
1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one, November
17. 1921; Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained at
Tsingtao on detail; appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; class six
August 8, 1924.
*Agerton, Baylor Lewis.— Retired as Consul of class six, on
detail at Copenhagen, September, 1919. Register of 1918.
Agostinl, Caesar Kranklln.— Born in Tarragona, Spain, of
American parents, August 8, 1884; studied under private tutors
and took electrical engineering course with the National Cor-
respondence Institute of Washington, D. C; manager of a
shipping agency at Tarra gona nine years, which business he
took over in 1914; appointed Consular Agent at Tarragona
October 2, 1914.
Aguirre, Stephen Earnest.— Born in Tucson, Ariz., Novem-
ber II, 1892; attended the grammar schools of El Paso, Tex.,
1906-1909; California School of Mechanical Arts, San Francisco,
1911-1913; employed in various capacities by firn^s in Phila-
delphia, Pa., and El Paso, Texas, 1911-1915; appointed clerk
in the American Consulate at Ciudad Juarez, July 22, 1915;
appointed Vice-Consul at Ciudad Juarez, June s, 1917; at Chi-
huahua April 13. 1920; resigned October 13, 1920; appointed
Vice-Consul at Manzanillo, May 23, 1921.
Ahrens, Gladys Charlotte.— Bom in Two Rivers, Wis.; high-
school education; clerk in a dmg store Febraary-June, 1924;
in The Adjutant General's Office. War Department, June-
September, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules. September 18, 1924.
Ahrens, Philip Hanford.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January
17, 1890; graduated from high school, 1908; employed by com-
mercial concern as oftice assistant and later as office manager,
190S-1918; appointed a clerk of class two in the Passport Bureau
of the Department of State in New York City, September 23,
191S; class three, October 16, 1919; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
♦Albert, Talbot J. — Retired as Consul of class eight, assigned
to Hanover, December, 1916. P>.egister of 1915.
Albrecht, Charles Hahn.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., Febru-
ary 22, 188s; home, Philadelphia; graduate of Central High
School, Philadelphia. A. B. (1902); University of Pennsylvania,
A. B. (1905), LL.B. (1905); M. A. (i9ii);employed in auditor's
office, Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 1906; practicedlaw in Phila-
delphia, 1908-1911; appointed, after examination (January 30,
191 1 ), Consular Assistant July 12, 191 1; Vice and Deputy Con-
suI-General at Barcelona February 21, 1912; detailed for duty
in the Department of State March, 1913; appointed Vice and
Deputy Consul-General at Santo Domingo October 28, 1913;
Vice-Consul at Santo Domingo February 6, 1915; appointed
Consul of class nine July 12, 1916; class eight September 14,
1917; on detail in the Department of State January i, 1915,
to July, 1920; appointed Consul of class six September 5. 1919;
class five June 4, 1920; detailed to Reval June 29, 1920; assigned
to Reval July 28. 1922: to Danzig October 14. 1922; to Bangkok
May 3, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
♦Alden, Austin Craig. — Retired as Consular Assistant; also
Vice-Consul at St. Michaels, November, 1922. Register of 1922.
Alexander, F. Virginia. — Born in Mount Crawford, Va.; has a
public and business school education and was tutored for two
years; employed in several Government offices, in a law and
commercial office and as a private secretary, 1910-1915; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State, De-
cember 7, 1915; permanently a clerk of class one, under Execu-
tive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class two, Sep-
tember I, 1919; class three, March i, 1921; class four, February
I, 1924; at $2,100 July I, 1924.
Alexander, Hugh Frederick.— Bom in Oak Grove, Va.,
March 20, 1907; public-school education; employed in a garage
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
91
two months: appointed a messenger boy at $420 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, September 20, 1923;
at $1,020 July I, 1924.
Alexander, Knox. — Born in Independence, Mo., September
13, 1891; home. Independence; graduated from Independence
High School; Commercial College in Kansas City; University
of California (B. S.); Missouri State University (A.B.). 1915;
Kansas City School of Law (LL.D.), 1916; engaged in the prac-
tice of law in Independence and Kansas City, 1915-1917, and
in court reporting; clerk in Legation at Panama, 1917-1919;
appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three September 27, 1919; assigned to San Luis
Potosi October i, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class two, November 17, 1921; assigned to Puerto Cortes
Februarj' 7, 1932; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
one May 26, 1922; assigned to Quebec December 22, 1922: to
Riviere du Loup November 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Alger, William E. — Died in Guatemala March 10 1917,
while Consul at Femie. Register of 1916.
Allen, Charles Edward. — Born in Foster, Ky., April 13, 1S91;
home, Maysville, Ky.; graduate of Centre College, Danville,
Ky. (B. A.), 1911; principal of high school and teacher o(
German and English at Mount Sterling, Ky., 1911-12; clerk in
Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad ofiice 1912-1914; appointed, after
examination (January 19,1914), Student Interpreter in Turkey
April 4, 1914; Consular Agent at Adrianople September 3, 1915;
Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Constantinople April 28, 1916;
on detail at Algiers July 6, 1917. to January' 12, 1918; ap-
pointed a Consular Assistant July is, iQiS; Vice-Consul at
Nantes July 22, 191S; detailed to Constantinople March 4, 1919;
appointed Consul of class seven .September 5, 1919; remained
at Constantinople on detail; appointed Consul of class six
June 4, 1920; detailed to Damascus April 26. 1921; to Con-
stantinople February 24, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i. 1924.
Allen, Charles W. — Bom in Boulder, Colo., January 21,
1883; attended high school three years; University of Wyoming
one and a half years; business college one year; acted as public
stenographer and substitute court reporter, 1902-1907; clerk in
the United States Laud Office, Lander, Wyo., 1907-1918;
served as Civil Service secretary several years at Lander, Wyo.;
appointed Vice-Consul at Cape Town. October 24, 1918; at Zu-
rich, September 6, 192 1; at Berne April 5, 1924.
Allen, Edgar Poe. — Bom in Sharon, Pa., January 13, 1904;
graduated from high school 1921, and a business college 1922;
student at George Washington University, 1923-1925; employed
as clerk in a steel company 1922-23; appointed a clerk at $900 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, October
8, 1923; at $1,000 January 8, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 192^.
Allen, Percy F. — Born in Allen, Md., February 11, 1879;
attended the public schools of Maryland and graduated from
Goldey Commercial College of Wilmington, Del.; bookkeeper
and cashier for various business houses, 1897-1902; clerk and
bookkeeper department of education, Porto Rico, 1902-1904;
assistant to disbursing officer Porto Rican teachers study trip
to United States, 1904; head bookkeeper, disbursing office, insu-
lar government of Porto Rico, 1905; resigned August i, 1905;
appointed clerk at $840 in the Civil Service Commission Sep-
tember 9, 1905; at $900 October i, 1905; clerk at $900, under Civil
Service rules in the Department of State July 3, 1906; class one
May I, 1907; class two November 2, 1908; class three June 27,
191 1 ; secretary of the board of examiners for the diplomatic
and consular services December 18, 1913, to March 12, 1919;
appointed clerk, class four, April 22, 1914; acting chief clerk
March 22 to April 5, 1918; appointed special assistant at $2,100
December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; drafting officer at
$2,500 June 17, effective July i. 1921; representative of the De-
partment of State in connection with the preparation of the
Official Register of the United States, 1919-1923; appointed
drafting officer at $3,000 May 7, 1924.
Ailing, Paul Henniston. — Bom in Hamden, Conn., July 15,
1896; home, Hamden; graduated from Trinity College (A- B.),
1920. and University of Pennsylvania (A. M.), 1924; served in
the United .States Army July, 191 7, to July, 1919, retiring with
the rank of first lieutenant; member of a foreign-service training
class of a New York banking institution 1920-21; engaged in
resoarcli work for several banking concerns 1921-1924; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, also Vice-Consul of career, October 16,
1924; assigned to Beirut November 8, 1924.
32952—25 7
Allison, Rose Eiailie Archer.— Bom in Minn.; attended high
school, a business college, and several art and accounting
schools; employed as stenographer and bookkeeper eight years;
auditor in connection with war-work campaigns; appointed a
clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, January n, 1924; at $1,140 July i, 1924.
*Allman, Norwood Francis. — Retired as Consul of class six,
detailed to Shanghai, April 7, 1924. Register of 1924.
Allport, Fayette W.— Bom in St. Louis, Mo., January 25, 1890;
attended pubhc and private schools; graduated from Western
Reserve University (A. B.), 191 7; attended Western Reserve
Law School two years; ser\'ed in the United States Army; en-
gaged in publicity work for several firms; appointed clerk to
trade commissioner at Vienna and Warsaw; appointed assistant
trade commissioner and assigned to Vienna March, 1922; to
Berlin April, 1923; appointed Assistant Commercial Attach^ at
Berlin August 14, 1924.
AUpress, Elvia Beatrice.— Bom in Washington, D. C; at-
tended high school and business college; taught in a business
college, 1923-24; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of
State, temporarily, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, November 26,
1924.
Altaffer, Maurice Willard.— Bom in West Unity, Ohio,
May 10. 1S93; home, Toledo; graduated from high school; at-
tended the United States Coast Guard Academy one year, and
the College of the City of New York eight months; public-school
teacher 1912-1914; cadet United States Coast Guard fifteen
months; served in the United States Army, December, 191 7,
to October, 1919, retiring with the rank of lieutenant (junior
grade); engaged in shipping business 1920; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate General at Berlin, Germany, November, 1921,
to January, 1922, and at the Consulate at Stuttgart 1922-23;
appointed Vice-Consul at Stuttgart May 23, 1923: appointed,
after examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three July 6, 1923; assigned to Stuttgart July 10, 1923; to
Frankfort on the Main September 6, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Aleppo
August 7, 1924.
♦Ames, Edward Winslow.— Retired as Secretary of the Le-
gation at Santiago, March, 1906. Register of 1913.
f
Amory, jr., Copley.— Bom in Milton, Mass., November a,
1890; home. New York City; graduated from Harvard Univer-
sity, (A. B.), 1912; Columbia University (LL. B.), 1917; mana-
ger of a natural history expedition to Siberia one and a half
years; assistant to the vice-president of a bank; member of the
New York National Guard, 1913-1917; served as a lieutenant in
the United States Army August, 1917, to August, 1919, part of
the time with the Peace Commission in Paris and the Near
East; a special assistant in the Department of State July-
November, 1920; appointed, after examination (October 18,
1920), a Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, Novem-
ber 15, 1920; assigned to the Department of State, December 13,
1920; to the American Commission at Berlin March 30, 1921; to
Rome July 13. 1922; appointed Secretary of class three Septem-
ber 22, 1922; Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924;
class five September 20, 1924.
Amsden, Charles Avery.— Bom in Forest City, Iowa, August
18, 1899; home, Farmington, N. Mex.; attended the University
of New Mexico, the University of Toulouse, and graduated
from Harvard University (A.B.) 1922; served as cadet and
second lieutenant in the United States Army October, 1917,
to October. 1919: appointed, after examination (January 16,
1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 26, 1922; as-
signed to Marseille August 28, 1922; to Basel April 13, 1923; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of classtwo November 23, 1923;
class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
Anciaux, Gabrifel Louis. — Bom in Barbados, West Indies, of
American parents June 13, 1887; attended the public schools of
Jersey City, N. J., and San Juan, P. R.; pursued courses at an
electrical institute in New York City 1907; employed as an elec-
trical engineer in Porto Rico and Arequipa, Peru, sixteen years;
served in the United States Army 191S; appointed Consular
Agent at Arequipa January 15, 1924.
Anderson, Francis Maurice. — Bom in Providence, R. I.,
July 20, 1885; graduated from Brown University (A. B.). 1907;
New York University (LL. B.), 1912; engaged in cotton manu-
facturing 1908-09; admitted to the New Jersey bar and the
United States courts 1913; practiced law July, 1913, to March,
92
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
1916", settlement officer in a trust company March, 1916, to
Mirch, 1918; counstl for a telegraph and telephone company
iQiS; assistant chief, requisition branch. Quartermaster
G-neral's Office, War Department, August, 1918, to August. 1919;
research work in international and foreiRn laws. Library of
Congress, November, 1919, to August, 1920; lecturer on com-
mercial law at Pace Institute, New York and Washington, since
1916; appointed a special assistant in the Department of State
at $2.?oo September i, 1920; law clerk at $2,000, under Civil
Ser\Mce rules. March i, 1921; at $2,250 September 16, 1922; at
$2,500 November i, 1923; at $3,000 July 1, 1924.
♦Anderson, George B. — Died at his post (Martinique) March
i, 1910. Register of 1913.
*Anderson, George Everett. Retired as Consul General of
class two, assigned to Rotterdam, June 15, 1924. Register of
1924.
♦Anderson, Larz.— Retired as Ambassaaor to Japan June,
1913. Register of 1913.
Anderson, Norman Leonard. — Bom in Minneapolis, Minn.,
May 14, 1889; home, Milwaukee, Wis.; graduated from Harvard
University (A. B.) 1912; attended Wisconsin University (law
department) two and one- half years; Commercial Agent with
the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department
of Commerce, 1917; served in the United States Army; detailed
to the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, and re-
ceived his discharge for duty therewith; appointed Trade
Commissioner at I Copenhagen, Denmark, December 1917; at
Stockholm. Sweden, August 1918; Commercial Attache to the
American Legations in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, June
19, 1919; appointed, after examination (June 26, 1922), Consul
of class six March i. 192,^; detailed to Melbourne April 27, 1923;
appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
♦Anderson, jr., Thomas Hart.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class three, assigned to Copenhagen,
November, 1921. Register of 1918.
Anderson, Walter H.— Bom in Rockford, III.. September 6,
1900; attended granimarschool 1906-1914; high school 1914-1917;
employed in a clerical capacity during summer vacations;
employed as driver and depot man by an express company
1917-1S; as clerk by business concern 1918-19.; Army field
clerk, May-December, 1919; enlisted in the United States Army
March i, 1920; discharged February 28, 192 1; appointed a clerk
at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules.
March 8, 1921; at $1,000, October 7, 1921; at$i,o8o September i,
1922; at $1,140 December i, 1922; class one December 30, 1922,
effective Januarj' i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Anderton, Judith B. — Bom in Charles County, Md.; at-
tended private school in Alexandria, Va.; graded and high
Schools in Washington, D. C, and Milton Business School,
Washington; stenographer in various offices in Washington,
D. C. 1914-1916; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the De-
partment of State May 22, 1916; permanently at $900 under
Executive order October 4, 1916; at $1,000 March 12. 1917;
clerk of class one July 28, effective August i, 1917; resigned
November 15, 1917; appointed a temporary clerk at $1,200
January 30, 19:8; clerk, class one, under Civil Service rules
April I, 1918; class two February i, 1924; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Andrews, George Bruce. — Bom in St. Louis, Mo., Septem-
ber 9, 1899; attended Bishops College School (Lennoxville,
Quebec, Canada) 1907-1916, and a business college one year;
employed by a bridge company one year; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate General at Montreal March 4. 1918;
Vice Consul at Montreal July 7, 1924.
Andrews, William Whiting. — Bom in Cleveland, Ohio, Oc-
tober 17, 1875; home. Cleveland; graduate of Yale University
(A. B), 189S; member of Troop B, First Ohio Volunteer Cav-
alry, April-August, 1898; engaged in management of financial
affairs and in travel, 1898-1911; appointed, after examination
(January 16, 1911), Secretary of the Legation at Panama
March 2, 191 1; Secretary of the Legation at Lisbon August 22,
1912; Secretary of the Legation at Berne February u, 1914;
Secretary of the Legation and Consul-General to Roumania,
Serbia, and Bulgaria October 31, 1914, but did not go to his
post; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three
March a, 1915; assigned to Bucharest September 25, 1915; to
Paris, December 29, 1917; appointed Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class two August 27, 1918; assigned to The Hague
July 25, 1919; to the Department of State March 25. 1920; to
Cairo May 26, 1921: to Vienna April 23, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class four July i , 1924.
Angell, James Knickerbocker. — Bom in Waverly, N. Y.,
October 7, 1897; attended The Cook Academy 1914-1917, and
graduated from Yale University (A. B.) 1923; appointed clerk
in the American Consulate at Prague June 11, 1924; \'ice Consul
at Prague June 17, 1924.
Anslinger, Harry J.— Bom in Altoona, Pa.. May 20. 1893;
home, Altoona; attended high school, business college, and
Pennsylvania State College (or two years; private tutor; em-
ployed in various capacities with the Pennsylvania Railroad
Co. 1906-1916; Pennsylvania State fire marshal 1916-1917;
Assistant Chief of Equipment Inspection, Ordnance Depart-
ment, War Department, 1917-18; clerk in the Legation at The
Hague 1918-1921; appointed, after examination (January 24,
1921), Vice-Consul de carricre of class thiee, October 26, 1921;
assigned to Hamburg November 15, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two February 26, 1923; assigned to
La Guaira September 22, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de
carricre of class one November 23, 1923; Foreign Ser\'ice Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924; class eight, also Consul, August 8,1924.
Anthony, Nicholas.— Bom in Scotland, N. C. July 28, 1877;
employed in a feed store, 1904-1917; appointed laborer in the
Department of State October 15, 1917.
Appleyard, George Seaborne.— Bom inMillis, Mass., October
12, 1892; graduated from St. Johns Military Academy 1912,
and attended the University of Wisconsin 1912-1916; ser\'ed in
the United States Army 1917-1919, retiring with the rank of
captain; bond salesman four years; manager of a branch office
of a bonding company two years; assistant general mangager
of a power company in Femie, British Columbia, one year;
appointed Vice Consul at Femie June 26, 1924.
Armour, Norman.— Bora in Brighton, England, of American
parents, October 14, 1887; home, Princeton, N. J.; is a graduate
of Princeton University (A. B.) 1909; (A. M.) 1915, and of Har-
vard University (LL. B.) 1913; employed in a law office in
Newark 191.3-14; admitted to the New Jersey bar 1914; served
in the Embassy in Vienna for three months in 19 12 and in the
Embassy in Paris for eight months in 1915-16; appointed, after
examination (April 10, 1916), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class five May 17, 1916; assigned to Petrograd May 22, 1916;
appointed Secretary of class four August 3, 1916: Secretary of
class three July 13, 1917; assigned to Brussels, December 17,
1918; to The Hague June 14, 1920; appointed a Secretary of
class two, June 28. 1920; assigned to Montevideo August 3,
1921; to the Department of State September 29, 1922; detailed
as Assistant to the Undersecretary of State December 22, 1922;
to May II, 1924; appointed Secretary of class one January 23,
1924; assigned to Rome April 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Armstrong, George Alexander. — Bom in Nyack, N. Y.,
September 15, 1887; home. New York City; graduated from the
Allen-Stevenson School 1905, and Princeton University (A. B.)
1909; employed by a bonding house 1910-1912, and by an insur-
ance company 1912-1916; engaged in insurance brokerage
business 1916-17; served in the United States Army 1918-19,
retiring with the rank of second lieutenant; employed by an
American oil company in Australia 1919-1923; appointed, after
examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclass-
ified, also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to
Zurich November 8, 1924.
♦Armstrong, James. — Retired as Consul of class seven, as-
signed to La Guaira, October, 1921. Register of 1922.
♦Armstrong, jr., John Samuel.— Retired as Consul of class
six, assigned to Venice. March, 1920. Register of 1918.
Armstrong, Lawrence Sheppard. — Bom in Perm Yan, N. Y.,
July 6, 1895; home, Rochester, N. Y.; attended a preparatory
school 1910-1913, and graduated from Williams College (A. B.)
1917; served in the United States Army 1917-1920; employed
in a bank six months, and by a wholesale paper company,
1920-1923; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three October 6, 1923; assigned to
Liverpool November 19, 1923; appointed P'oreign Service Offi-
cer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Armstrong, Marvil G.— Captain, United States Army; as-
signed to duty as Language Officer at Peking May 2, 1923.
♦Arnell, Charles Jonathan.— Retired as Japanese Secretary
and Interpreter to the Embassy to Japan August, 1917.
Register of 1916.
Arnold, Frank Dundore.— Bora in Reading, Pa.. May 24,
1881; home, Reading; graduate of the University of Pennsyl-
vania (B. S.) 1902 (LL. B.) 1905; spent one year in the Univer-
sity of Munich; admitted to the bar of Reading, Pa. ; appointed
after examination (May 17, 1909) Secretary of the Legation at
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
93
Guatemala City August 4, 1909; Third Secretary of the Em-
bassy at Mexico City August 12, 1910; Third Secretary of the
Embassy at Tokyo August 22, 1912; Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class five by act approved February s, 1915; Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class three March 2, 1915;
assigned to Tokyo March 6, 1915; to Bangkok July 28, 1915;
directed, January 30, 191S, to report to Washington for another
post assignment; assigned to San Salvador, May 15, 1918; to
Peking May 26, 1921; appointed Secretary of class two August
24, 1921; unassigned from July 16, 1922; appointed Foreign
Service OfBcer of class five July i, 1924.
Arnold, jr., George Carpenter. — Bom in Providence, R. I.,
November 6, 1896; attended Providence public schools; Dart-
mouth College (A. B.) 1918; physical director, American Y. M.
C. A., Milan, Italy. 1919-20; served in the United States Naval
Reserve Force, student flight officer, July 3, 1918, to January
18. 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Seville, April 37, 1920; at
Corunna May 16, 1921; at Madrid June 2s, 1921; at Barcelona
May 16. 1922; at Corunna August 16, 1922; at Bucharest August
27, 1923; at Constantza August 7, 1924; at Bucharest August
22, 1924.
Arnold, Julean. — Born in Sacramento, Calif., July 19, 1876;
home, Sacramento; educated in the public schools and the Cali-
fornia State University; engaged in teaching; appointed, after
examination (July, 1902), Student Interpreter in China July 18,
1902; also Vice and Deputy Consul at Dalny February 4, 1904;
appointed Deputy Consul-General at Shanghai July 13, 1904;
Vice and Deputy Consul at Foochow March 7, 1906; assigned to
duty in the Consulate-General at Shanghai May 5, 1906; ap-
pointed Consul at Tansui June 22,1906; Consul at Amoy May I,
1908; Consul at Chefoo March 8, 1912; Consul-General at Han-
kow July 29, 1914; appointed Commercial AttachJ, Department
of Commerce, September 25, 1914, and designated for duty in
the American Legation at Peking October 12, 1914.
Arnold, Marion. — Bom in Carbondale, Pa.; educated in the
Carbondale grammar and high schools; stenographer for a
glass company in Rosslyn, Va., 1915-1917; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $900 in the Department of State, July 16, 1917;
at $1,000 October i, 1917; at $1,200 March i. 1918; at $1,330
March i, 1919; reappointed at $1,^20, under Civil Service rules,
September i, 1919; appointed clerk of class two January i,
i92o;.class three March 15, 1921; at Si, 860 July i, 1924.
♦Arnold, Olney.— Died at Lisbon, Portugal, March 5, 1916,
while Agent and Consul General at Cairo. Register of 1915.
*Asbury, Charles Emery.— Retired as Consul of class five,
assigned to Cardiff, August ,1921. Register of 1932.
Ashenden, Vivian Marie.— Bom in Clarence, Mo.; attended
Quincy (lU.) High School 1919-1922, and Long Beach (Calif.)
Polytechnic High School 1923; stenographer in real-estate
office one year, and a pubUc stenographer three months; ap-
pointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, May 12, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Atcherson, Lucile. — Bom in Columbus, Ohio. October ii,
1894; home, Columbus; graduated from Smith College (A.B.)
1913; took a secretarial course at the University of Chicago in
1916; employed as a secretary to a university president in 1917;
with American committee for devastated France 1917-1931,
and was general secretary of committee 1918-1921; appointed,
after examination (July 10, 1922), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four December 4, 1922: assigned to the De-
partment of State December 5, 1922; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Atcheson, jr., George.— Bom in Denver, Colo., October 30,
1896; home Berkeley, Calif.; graduated from the University of
California (A. B.) 1919; employed in various lines of newspaper
work; instmctor. United States School of Military Aeronautics,
seven months; appointed, after examination (June 38, 1930),
Student Interpreter in China August 27, 1920; appointed Vice-
Consul and Interpreter at Changsha March 31, 1923; Consular
Assistant February 28, 1924; detailed to Department of State
March 7, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
Atberton, Edwin Newton.— Bora in Washington, D. C'
October 13. 1896; attended the public schools of Washington
eight and one-half years; Central High School, four and one-
half years; Georgetown Law School, four months; appointed
clerk in the American Consulate General at Genoa, February,
1916; Vice-Consul at Genoa, March 13, 1918; at Palermo July
31, 1919: at Trieste April 17, 1920; at Sofia June 23, 1933; at
Jerusalem July 17, 1933; at Vancouver July 5, 1924.
Attaerton, Ray.— Bora in Brookline, Mass., March 38, 1883
home. Chicago, 111.; graduate of Harvard University (B. A.)
1905; spent four years in Paris studying architecture; member;
Massachusetts volunteer militia three years; employed in bank-
ing business in Boston 1907-08, and in an architect's office in
Chicago 1914-1916; appointed, after examination (June 35, 1917),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, August 23,
1917; assigned to Tokyo, September 6, 1917; appointed Secre-
tary of class three March 14, 1919; assigned to Peking, July 30,
1919; on detail with the Philippine Commission April-October,
1921; assigned to the Department of State March i, 1932; ap-
pointed Secretary of class two September 22, 1922; assigned to
Athens March 20, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class four July i, 1924; assigned to Department of State July
17, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class three Sep-
tember 20, 1924; assigned as First Secretary of Embassy at
London October 9, 1924.
Atkisson, Earl J.— Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant MiUtary Attache at London May 20, 1924.
*Atwell, William P.— Died at his post (Ghent) July 28. 191 1.
Register of 1913.
Atwood, Franklm Bailey.— Bom in Nantucket, Alass., Jan
uary 20, 1900; attended high school 1913-1915; graduated from
Massachusetts Nautical School 1917; served as an officer in
merchant marine 191 7-1923; clerk in the American Consulate
at Plymouth February, 1924; appointed Vice Consul at Ply-
mouth July 21, 1924.
Auer, Pleter Frangois.- Born in the Netherlands in 1866;
shipbroker; appointed Consular Agent at Flushing January
5. 1899.
♦Austin, Richard Wilson.— Retired as Consul at Glasgow
November 23, 1907. Register of 1913.
♦Authier, Joseph M.— Retired as Consul at Guadeloupe
October, 1909. Register of 1913.
♦Awerill, Henry.— Retired as Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three, assigned to Port au Prince, September, 192 1. Register of
1933.
*Avery, William Lester.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
unassigned, December, 192 1. Register of 1918.
Axtell, Oliver Henry.- Bom in Fairbury, Nebr., November
12, 1896; graduated from high school 1914; attended a business
college 1915-16, and the University of Nebraska 1919-20; served
in the United States Army 1917-1919; employed by commercial
concerns as stenographer and salesman three and one-half
years; appointed Vice Consul at Curacao June 9, 1924.
Ayers, Ezekiel Jarman.— Bora in Hopewell Township, N.
J., October 14, 1866; attended public schools of Hopewell
Tovimship, and South Jersey Institute; engaged in commercial
business from i888 to 1S96; employed in Legal Division of Pat-
ent Office in 1896; transferred to the General Land Office;
appointed Assistant Purchasing Officer, Division of SuppUes,
Office of Secretary of Interior, 1901 ; representative of Depart-
ment of Interior in the establishment of General Supply Com-
mittee June, 1910; appointed Chief Clerk, Department of In-
terior, and Superintendent of Buildings, and Acting Assistant
Secretary of Interior 191 1; representative of tlic Department of
Interior before the various committees of Congress in regard to
legislation and appropriations for the establishment of Govern-
ment Storage and Distribution Fuel Yards; member of Com-
mittee on Supplies, Council of National Defense; chairman of
committee for securing subscriptions to Liberty bonds from
Government employees; organizer and president (for three
years) of Central Savings Bank; active in war work, and was
offered a commission in the Army by Secretary of War but could
not be released by Secretarj' of Interior; member of Committee
on Food Supply and Conservation of the District Council of
Defense July, 1917; member of Clearance Committee of War In-
dustries Board May, 1918; member of United War Work Cam-
paign November, 1918; member of Interdepartmental Com
mittee for the opening of proposals received from responsible
asylums and sanitariums and of recommending award of con-
tracts for the care and custody of persons adjudged to be insane;
by authority of Secretary of Interior, had complete charge of the
liquidation of the Fuel Administration in 11)19; representative
on Interdepartmental Corrunittee on policy for the disposition
of raw materials, etc., June, 1920; returned toBridgeton, N. J., to
enter commercial enterprise in connection with fruit farming,
having active interests in agricultural and horticultural activ-
ities of the State of New Jersey; appointed Administrative
Assistant, Department of Commerce, October, 1933, and
served in that capacity until appointed Chief Clerk of the
Department of State July 10, 1924.
94
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Ayers, Inez Adelaide. — Boni in Alexandria, Va.; attended
high school and business college; employed in Post Office De-
partment 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, November 10,
1924.
♦Aymfe, Louis H. — Died at his post (Lisbon) May 16, igu.
Register of 1913.
♦Babcock, Lester. — Retired as Marshal at Foocho-w May,
1916. Register of 1915.
Bachelder, Leonard A.— Bom in Salem, Mass., in 1855; in
business in Auckland since 1891; appointed Consul at Zanzibar
April 23, 1880; Vice-Consul April 24, 1880; retired February 3,
1883; appointed Vice-Consul at Auckland October 10, 1891;
Vice-Consul-General July 15, 1903; Vice-Consul February 6,
191S.
♦Bacon, Robert. — Retired as Ambassador to France, April,
1912. Died in New York City May 29, 1919. Register of 1913.
♦Bader, Ralph Hedrick.— Retired as Consul of class six, un-
assigned, July, 1923. Register of 1922.
Bading, Gerhard Adolph. — Bom in Milwaukee, Wis., August
31, 1S70; attended Northwestern University: graduate of Rush
Medical College (M. D.) 1896; member of faculty Milwaukee
Medical College and Wisconsin College of Physicians and
Surgeons; member of light horse squadron, Wisconsin National
Guard, 1890-1893; commissioner of health, Milwaukee, 1906-19 10;
mayor of Milwaukee 1912-1916; Medical Corps, United States
Army 1917-1919, retiring with the rank of major; served with
the Chinese Expedition; regent of Marquette University; ap-
pointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to
Ecuador March 9, 1922.
♦Baehr, Max Joseph. — Retired as Consul of class six, assigned
to Berne, October, 1915. Register of 1914.
Baer, Beulah G. — Bom in Singer's Glen, Va.; attended
Shenandoah Collegiate Institute; appointed a clerk, tempo-
rarily, in the Department of State, August 7, 1914; permanently
at $1,000, imder Executive order, June 22, to be effective July
1,1916; class one December 7, 1917; class two in the Passport
Bureau in New York City October 16, 1919; class three March
10, 1921; at $i,S6o, July i, 1924.
Bagby, Nettle Neale. — Bom in Staunton, Va.; graduate of
public and business schools; stenographer and bookkeeper in
law and other offices; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the
Department of State, January 11, 1915; permanently at $1,000,
under Executive order, Jime 12, to be effective July i, 1916;
class one August 23, 1917; class two May i, 1920; at $1,680 July
I. 1924.
Batar, Clarence Leo. — Bom in Verdon, S. Dak., December 17,
1901; attended Northern Normal and Industrial School, Aber-
deen, S. Dak., 1920-1923, and Georgetown University Law
School, 1923-24; employed by private firms 1919-1923; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service roles, October 20, 1924.
♦Bailey, Everett E.— Retired as Consul at Ensenada Sep-
tember, 1909. Register of 19 13.
Bailey, James G.— Bom in Salyersville, Ky., April 7, 1868;
home, Salyersville; educated at Lebanon University; studied
law at Northern Indiana University of Law; member of Ken-
tucky legislature, 1895-1897; practiced law; in United States
Census Office, 1900-1901; appointed Secretary of the Legation
to Guatemala and Honduras June 32, 1901; Secretary of the
Legation to Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Salvador June 5, 1903;
Secretary of the Legation at Stockholm August 6, 1907; Secre-
tary of the Embassy at Mexico City August 4, 1909; retired
August, 19 10; appointed Secretary of the Legation at Beme
March 2, 1911; Secretary of the Legation to the Netherlands
and Luxemburg February i, 1912: Honorary Delegate to the
adjourned meeting of the International Congress for the Pur-
pose of Promoting Uniform Legislation Concerning Letters of
Exchange held at The Hague June, 1912; Secretary of the Lega-
tion at Lisbon February 11, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three by act approved February s, 1915; ap-
pointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two Novem-
ber s, 1915; assigned to Petrograd December 6, 1916; assigned
for duty in the Russian Section of the Division of Near Ea? t-
ern Affairs, Department of State, June 24, 1918; appointed Sec-
retary of Embassy or Legation of class one August 37, 1918;
assigned to Berne November i, 1919; to Bucharest June 10,
1920; unassigned from November 10, 1920; designated and
assigned as Counselor of the Legation at Christiania June 7,
192 1 ; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class three July i,
1924.
Bailey, jr., John William.— Bom in Bonham, Tex., April 20,
1894; graduated from high school 1912; attended a business
college, and the University of Texas two years; clerk in a post
office 1914-15; served in the United States Army 1917-1919, re-
tiring with the rank of second lieutenant; canteen secretary
overseas 1919-1921; engaged in real estate business in Mexico
1921-1924; clerk in American Consulate at Geneva March, 1924;
appointed Vice Consul at Geneva October 17, 1924.
Bailey, Stuart Randolph.— Born in Charlottesville, Va., Decem-
ber 13, 1876; educated in the public schools; clerk, 1896-1898;
telegraph operator twelve years; proprietor of grocery store
seven years; clerk in the Na\'y Department September, 1917 to
January, 1920; transferred to the War Department, Signal Corps,
June, 1920; transferred to the Department oi State and appointed
a clerk of class three, under Civil Service rules, June 22, 1921;
at $1,860 July I, 1924.
Bailly-Blanchard, Arthur.— Born in New Orleans, La., October
I, 185s; home, New Orleans; educated at Lavender's College,
New Orleans, in Paris and Dresden, and law department,
University of Louisiana; in business in New Orleans, 1875-1878;
clerk to Board of Louisiana State Assessors, 1S78-1880; assistant
editor, "Le Courrier de la Louisiana," 187S-79; assistant editor,
"Le Petit Journal," New Orleans, 1880-S1; with Mexican Cen-
tral Railway, 1S82-83; private, Le Gardeur's Battalion, 1877;
lieutenant and assistant quartermaster, Louisiana National
Guard, 1879; captain and chief quartermaster, 1880; acting
adjutant, 1880-1882; captain of ordnance, 1S80; colonel and aid-
de-camp to the governor of Louisiana, 1885; private secretary
to Minister to France, 1885-1889; assistant to the special agent
of the Department of State, French Spoliation Claims; secre-
tary. United States Commission to Paris Exposition, 1889;
an American juror at exposition; private secretary to Minister
to France, 1890-1893; a secretary, Bering Sea Tribunal of Arbi-
tration, 1893-1895; a secretary, bimetallic mission to France,
1896; secretary to Hon. John W. Foster, Special Ambassador
to Russia, 1897; attache, American Peace Commission, Paris,
1898; private secretary to Ambassador to France, 1899-1900;
assistant secretary of the American Delegation at The Hague
Peace Conference, and a secretary of the conference, 1907; ap-
pointed Third Secretary of the Embassy at Paris July 9, 1900;
Second Secretary June 17, 1901; Secretary of the Embassy at
Paris August 4, 1909; representative to the International Con-
ference for the Discussion of the Suppression of the Interna-
tional Traffic in Obscene Literature, Paris, April, 1910; Dele-
gate, with the personal rank of Minister Plenipotentiary, to
the International Sanitary Conference at Paris November 7,
191 1 ; Secretary of the Embassy at Tokyo February i, 191a;
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Haiti,
May 22, 1914; assigned for duty in the Department of State in
connection with the Conference on the Limitation of Armament
November 11, 1921; assigned for special duty in the Department
of State, temporarily, March i, 1923.
♦Baker, Edward Carleton.— Retired as Consul of class three,
assigned to Bombay, December, 1919. Register of 1918.
Baker, Henry Dunster. — Bom in Attleboro, Mass., February
26, 1872; home, Chicago, 111.; educated in the public schools
of Chicago and the Harvard School of Chicago; graduated from
Yale in 1896; employed as reporter on the Chicago Tribune and
several years financial editor; assistant financial editor of the
New York Evening Post; associate editor of the Commercial
West of Minneapolis until 1904; since 1904 engaged in special
literary work and as correspondent of the Financial Times of
London and other papers; appointed, after examination (July
7, 1907), Consul at Hobart August 15, 1907; detailed as Vice-
Consul-General in charge at Sydney, Australia, February 23,
1910; detailed for special duty in New Zealand to investigate
trade conditions February 10, 191 1; Consul at Nassau August
22, 1912; on special detail to investigate the opportimities for
the extension of the commerce of the United States in India
February 15, 1913; Consul at Bombay November 24, 1913;
appointed Commercial Attach'-, Department of Commerce,
October 3, 1914, and designated for duty in the American Em-
bassy at Petrograd October 12, 1914; appointed Consul of class
six September 6, 1916; assigned to Trinidad October 27, 1916;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Baker, Joseph Richardson. — Bom in New Hartford, N. Y.,
February n, 1872; graduated from Utica Free Academy, 1889;
Hamilton College (A. B.), 1S93; admitted to New York State
bar, 1896; appointed law clerk at $1,500 to Commission to the
Five Civilized Tribes, Department of the Interior, February
I, 1902; clerk at $1,000 in the Post-Office Department, under
Civil Service rules, June 26, 1903; at $1,200 February 10, 1904;
transferred and appointed clerk of class one in the Department
of State August 6. 1906; class two July i, 1908: class three June
BIOGRAPHICAI, STATEMENT.
95
I, 1909; special agent of the Department ot State to investigate
the claims of American citizens in Samoa April 15, 1911; also
Vice and Deputy Consul at Apia April 2$, 191 1; services in
Samoa ceased August 25, 1911, and returned to the Deijartment
of State; appointed clerk class four November 20, 191 1; law
clerk December i, 1913; an assistant solicitor at $3,500 June 32,
to be effective July i, 1916; at $3,000 August i, 1916; agent of
the Department of State in Panama, 1917; assistant to the
Solicitor, at $4,000, December 31. 1919, effective January i,
1920; appointed drafting officer atS4.ooo July i, 1920: at $4,500
June 17, to be effective July i, 1921; appointed a member of the
United States-Panama Commission to negotiate an arrange-
ment to take the place of the Taft Agreement February 11, 1924;
drafting officer at Ss,20o July i, 1924; Commissioner of the
United States on the General Claims Commission, United
States and Mexico August 19, 1924.
♦Baker, Orlando Harrison. — Died at Nagasaki, Japan, Au-
gust 6, 1913, while Consul at Sandakan. Register of 19 13.
Baker, Roy William.— Born in Buffalo, N. Y., March 11. 1883;
attended the Ogden (Utah) High School 1900-1902; Lafayette
College, Easton, Pa., 1903-1906 (A.B.); employed in the account-
ing department of the United States Steel Corporation, Duluth,
Minn., 1906-07; about two years' experience in oil production in
Ohio and Pennsylvania; engaged in various branches of news-
paijer work in several cities in the United States, 1910-1918; with
the Committee on Public Information. Washington, D. C. 1918;
appointed Vice Consul at Edinburgh February 15, 1919; at Hull.
April 17, 1920; at Barcelona, August 26, 1921.
Balch, Henry H. — Bom in Madison, Ala., January 6, 1877;
home, Madison; graduated from the State Normal College of
Alabama (1899); principal of a public school at Carbon Hill,
Ala., 1899-1901; census enumerator Jime, 1900; teacher in the
insular service in the PhiUppines 1901-1912; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at St. Stephen June
22, 1914; Consul of class nine by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul of class eight June 8, 1915, and assigned to
Yarmouth; Consul of class seven October 27, 1916. and assigned
to Asuncion; appointed Consul ol class six September 5, 1919;
class five June 4, 1920; detailed temporarily to the Department
of State January u, 1921; assigned to Adelaide February 10.
192 1 ; appointed Consul of class four November 19,1921; Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Baldwin, Frederick W.— Born in Ansonia, Conn., August i.
1885; home. New York City; attended grade schools of Florence,
Italy; studied in England 1898-99; under private tutor two
years; in a Swiss institution, 1903-1906; at Ansonia Normal
School one year and studied medicine 1906-1908; special courses
at Rome University 1909; employed in a minor capacity by a
banking house in New York three years; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate at Florence, October i, 1916; Vice-Consul
at Florence, October i, 1920; appointed, after examination
(January 14, 1924), Vice Consul de carriere of class three June
13, 1924; assigned to Florence June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Baldwin, George E.— Retired as Consul at Nuremberg
December, 1906. Register ol 1913.
Baldwin, Norman Lee.— Captain, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Language Officer at Peking, July 7, 1921;
Assistant Military Attache July 30, 1924.
Ballantine, Joseph William.— Bom in India of American
parents July 30, 18SS; home, Amherst, Mass.; graduate of Am-
herst College (A. B.), 1909; appointed, after examination (May
5, 1909), Student Interpreter in Japan June 2, 1909; detailed for
duty at the Consulate at Kobe July 25, 191 1; appointed Inter-
preter at Kobe August 3r, 1911; also Deputy Consul December
18, 1911; Deputy Consul General and Interpreter at Yokohama
Junen, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter at Tan-
sui November 6, 1912; Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter
at Yokohama October 7, 1913; \'ice and Deputy Consul- General
at Yokohama June 25, 1914; Assistant Japanese Secretary to the
Embassy to Japan August i, 1914; Japanese Secretary of the
Embassy to Japan August 15, 1917; appointed Consul of class
five July 6, 1921, and assigned to Dairen; detailed to Yokohama
October 17, i923:to Tokyo December 13. r923; appointed Consul
of class four December r9, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class
five July I, 1924.
Banash, Sydney H.— Born in Boston, Mass., May 13, 1888;
attended high scliool; in business in Concepcion, Chile, 1904-
1918; appointed Vice-Consul at Buenos Aires, September 2, 1921.
Bancroft, Edgar A.— Bom in Galesburg, 111.. November 20,
1857; home, Chicago, 111.: graduated from Knox College (A. B.)
1878 (A. M.), 1881 (Ph. D.), 1912, and Columbia University
(LL. B.) 1880; practicing attorney, 18S4-1924; president of the
Illinois State Bar Association and the Chicago Bar Association;
author of several monographs; appointed Ambassador Extra-
ordinary and Plenipotentiary to Japan September 23, 1924.
Barclay, Hugh.— Captain, United States Army; assigned to
duty as .Alilitari" Attache at Rio de Janeiro March 12, 1924.
*Bardel, William.— Retired as Consul of class six, assigned
to Curacao, March, 1920. Register of 1918.
Barkalow, Rees Hagy.— Bom in Freehold, N. J., June 8,
1897; home, Freehold; graduated from the University of Penn-
sylvania (B.S.) 1920; studied law at Harvard University 1920-
1922; admitted to the bar; served in the United States Army
1917-1919; employed as clerk in a law office; appointed, after
examination (July 10, 1922), Secretari' of Embassy or Legation
of class four February 3, 1923, and assigned to the Department
of State; assigned to Panama March 22, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i. 1924; detailed to the De-
partment of State July 22, 1924; assigned as Third Secrctarj- of
Legation at Peking October 27, 1924.
Barker, Blanche Agnes.— Bom in Washington, D. C; has
a public-school education; stenographer with various business
concerns in Washington, 1908-1914; appointed a clerk, tempo-
rarily, in the Department of State, August 7, 1914; perma-
nently at Si. 000, under Executive order, June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; class one, temporarily, July 29, to be effective
August I, 1916; permanently September i, 1916; class two De-
cember 31, 1919, effective January- i, 1920; at Si, 680 July i, 1924.
Barker, Clifford Oman.— Bom in Newport, R. I., Septem-
ber 24, 1904; graduated from high school 1923; appointed a clerk
at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
July 23, 1923; at Si, 000 November i, 1923; at $1,100 May 31,
effective June i, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Barker, William Roswell. — Born in Buffalo, N. Y., June
24, 1900; home, Alinneapolis, Minn.; graduated from Harvard
University (A.B.) 1921; appointed, after examination (July 11,
1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four August 24,
1921; assigned to the Department of State September 8, 1921; to
Belgrade October 22, 1921; to La Paz March 31, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; class seven
September 20, 1924.
Bamaby, Arthur C— Bom in East Port Midway, Nova Scotia,
June 16, 1869; attended public schools of Halifax and Bridge-
water, Nova Scotia; Acadia College, Wolfville. Nova Scotia;
member of a grocery firm; acting American Consular Agent
at Bridgewater, Nova Scotia, on several occasions during the ab-
sence of the agent; appointed Consular Agent at Bridgewater
December 3, 1919.
Barnard, Joseph H. — Lieutenant colonel. United States
Army; assigned toduty as Assistant Military Attache at Peking
March 13, 192 -; asMilitarj* Attache- at Peking; also at Bangkok
July 30, 1924.
Barnes, Charles Maurice. — Born in Winchester, Va., Feb-
ruary 14, 1879; graduated from the Staimton (Va.) high school,
1897; attended Washington and Lee University, Lexington,
Va., 1897-1899 and 1903-04, and graduated from George Wash-
ington University (A. B.), 1910; (LL. B.) 1922, (LL. M.) 1923;
teacher in public and private schools in Virginia, Alabama,
and Tennessee; principal. New Hope Graded School. New
Hope, Va., 1S99-1900; instructor in Greek, Latin, and Gciman.
Starke's University School, ^lontgomery, Ala., 199:^-1003 and
1904-05, and in Clay Hill Academy, Millwood, \ a., 1905-06;
instructor in Latin, English, and history, Baylor's University
School, Chattanooga, Tenn., 1907; special agent in ihc Bureau
of Labor, Department of Commerce and Labor, 1907-0S, and in
the United States Immigration Commission, 1909; clerk in the
Bureau of the Census, 1909-1912; appointed clerk of class three
in the Department of State January 5, 1912; reappointed Au-
gust 24, 1912, under the provisions of Executive order of Au-
gust 24, 1912; appointed clerk class four June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; special assistant, at 82,500, December 31, 1919,
effective January i, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500 July i. 1920:
assistant solicitor, at $3,000, July 19, 1920; drafting officer at
83,500 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at S3. 800
July I, 1924.
Barnes, Maynard Bertram.— Born in Le Roy, Minn., July 28,
1897; home, Vinton, Iowa; attended Vinton High School
1911-1913; Tilford (lowa) Collegiate Academy 1913-1915; Water-
loo (Iowa) College of Commerce, 1915; graduated from Grin-
nell College (A. B.) 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Patras,
Greece, August 26, 1919; appointed, after examination (June
28, 1920), Vice Consul de carrii-re of class three. May 25, 1931;
assigned to Patras, June 11, 1921; to Smyrna, October 18, 1921;
appointed Vice Consul de carritre of class two May 26, 1932.
96
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
assigned to Constantinople December 6, 1922; appointed Vice
Consul de carriere of class one February 23, 1923; Consul of
class seven March i, 1923; remained at Constantinople on detail;
appointed Foreign Serv'ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924;
class seven August 8, 1924; assigned to St. Gall November 17,
1924.
Bamhart, Eva Sylvia.— Born in Washington, D. C; gradu-
ated from Business High School; attended a preparatory school
and George Washington University; stenographer for a Con-
gressman 1912-13; clerk in the Division of Valuation of the
Interstate Commerce Commission at Boston, Mass., 1914-
1917, and with the War Trade Board in Washington 1917-
1919; employed by a New York publishing house 1919-1923;
appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under
Civil Ser\-ice rules, January 2, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Barrett, David D.— First lieutenant. United States Army;
assigned to duty as Language Officer at Peking June 27, 1924.
♦Barrett, John. — Retired as Minister to Colombia January
1907. Register of 1913.
Barringer, George Hannah.— Born in Davidson N. C, July
I, 1889; attended private school; University of Virginia,
1906-07; Columbia University Summer School, 1915; em-
ployed as clerk by a lumber company in the South and by a fiber
company in New York City, five years; department manager for
shipbuilding madiinery importers, Tokyo, Japan, eleven
months; sergeant in the United States Army Quartermaster
Corps, 1918; second lieutenant. Quartermaster Corps, Officers
Reserve Corps, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Belfast, July 8,
1919; at Campbellton April 26, 1924; at St. John's May 28, 1924.
Barry, John Robert. — Bom in Boston, Mass., December 14,
1877; attended grammar schools in Lynn, Mass.; studied under
private tutors two years; attended Tufts Medical College, Bos-
ton, two months; completed course at a business college;
attended McGill University, Montreal, Canada 1917-1919; em-
ployed in various capacities in Lynn, Salem, and Boston, Mass.,
traveling salesman four months; stenographer for a manufac-
turing concern in Sagamore, Mass., one and one-half years;
stenographer and clerk in the Bureau of Ordnance, War Depart-
ment, ten months; in the American Consulate General at
Montreal since August, 1918; appointed Vice-Consul at Mon-
treal May 3, 1919; at Campbellton October 18, 1922; at Montreal
January 8, 1923.
Barry, Mary Esther.— Bom in Findlay, Ohio; graduated
from the Wellsville (N.Y.)High School i909;Wellsville Business
College. 1910; clerk and stenographer in insurance office 191J-
1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in the Depart-
ment of State, October i, 1918; at $1,000, under Civil Service
rules, February i, 1919; class one May i, 1919; class two Decem-
ber 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,680 July 1, 1924.
♦Bartleman, Richard M. — Retired as Consul of class four,
unassigned, 1917. Register of 1916.
Barton, John Louis.— Bom in Brown County, Wis., May 28,
1893; graduated from a business college, and attended college
one year; employed in a clerical capacity in Chicago, 111., 1916-
17; clerk in the Navy Department (Departmental Service) 1917-
1919, and at the United States Naval Training Station, Great
Lakes, 111. (Field Service), 1919-1922; transferred from the Navy
Department and appointed a clerk of class three in the Passport
Bureau of the Department of State in Chicago, under Civil
Service rules, June 27, 1922; at $1,680 August i, 1924.
Bas3ett, Jane Bartholomew. — Born in New Britain, Conn.;
educated in the high school at New Britain and business col-
lege at Hartford, Conn.; stenographer for manufacturing and
law firms in New Britain and New York City from 1893 to
1907; appointed clerk in the office of Naval Intelligence, Navy
Department, under Civil Service rules, October i6, 1907; stenog-
rapher for Tariff Board October, 1910, to April, 1912; trans-
ferred to the Department of State and appointed clerk at $900
March 29, 1912; at $1,000 December t, 1913; class one May i,
1916; class two June aa, to be effective July i, 1916; class three
August I, 1918; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Bates, Marie Alice. — Bom in Washington, D. C; graduated
from high school; attended Stanford University two years and
the University of North Dakota one year; clerk in the Depart-
ment of State 1914-1920, serving in the American Embassy
at London, 1915-1917; reinstated as a clerk at $900 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, December 30,
1923; at $1,000 May i, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
*Baugh, Hubert Gordon.— Retired as Consul at Saigon Feb-
ruary, 1913. Register of 1913.
Baukhages, Mitma Emily.— Born in Anne Arundel County
Md.; graduated from high school, 1920; attended George Wash-
ington University one year; clerk in War Department,
1918-19; various Government bureaus, 1919-1931; aprwinted
a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, January 26, 1921; at $1,000, August 16, 1921; at $1,080,
September i, 1922; at $1,140, October 16, 1922; class one Decem-
ber 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
♦Baxter, John Kirkman.— Retired as Consul at Maracaibo,
March, 1914. Register of 1913.
Baxter, Ruth Helen.— Bom in Erie, Pa.; high-school graduate
and took course at a business college; stenographer for an in-
surance company 1920-1922; appointed a clerk of class one in
the Department of State, under Civil Service niles, April 1.
1923; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
Bay, Charles Alexander.— Born in Columbus, Ohio, June?.
1886; home, St. Paul, Minn.; public-school education; spent one
year at Ohio State University and five months at the Sorbonne,
Paris; employed as stenographer in a railway office, 1905-1907;
city passenger agent, 1917-18; with Fuel Administration in
Pittsburgh in 1920; served in the United States Army, March,
1918, to September, 1919, retiring as a first Ueutenant; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class three, September 7, 1920; assigned to Dublin
October 18, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two May 26, 1922; assigned to Casablanca October 12, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one February 26,
1923; assigned to Port au Prince March 30, 1923; to Tampico
May 22, 1924: appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
Beach, William Hall.— Bora at Concord Wharf, Va., May 20,
1893; home. Concord Wharf; graduated from high school 1912,
the University of Virginia (A. B.) 1916, and Harvard Univer-
sity (A. M.) 1920; took summer courses at the Universities of
Virginia and Grenoble 1920-21, and Middlebury College 1922-23;
served in the United States Ambulance Corps June, 191 7, to
April, 1919; instructor in a private school 1919-1924; appointed,
after examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned
to Bombay November 8, 1924.
Bean, J. Hubbard.- Born in Shepherdstown, W. Va., Feb-
ruary I, 1881; educated in public schools of Washington, D. C;
telegraph operator; appointed clerk in the Department of State
at $900, under Civil Service rules, October 18, 1907; class one
July I, 1908; class two October n, 1910; class three April it,
1914; class four June 23, to be effective July i, 1916; special agent,
at $2,400, in connection with telegraph and code work, Jan-
uary 17, 1919; at $2,160 July I, 1919; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
Beasley, Eugene.— Born in Boston, Mass., February i,
1903; attended Washington public school; temporary employee
in the Department of State September 9, 1918, to June 30, 1930;
appointed a messenger boy at $420 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service niles, December 13, 1920; at $1,020 July 1,
1924.
Beaulac, WiUard Leon.— Born in Pawtucket, R. I., July »s,
1899; home Pawtucket; graduated from Brown University
(A. B.) 1921; served in the United States Navy April, 1918, to
September, 1919; clerk. Bureau of Internal Revenue, igai;
appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three October 26, 192 1; assigned to Tampico
December 14, 193 1; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two February 26, 1923; assigned to Puerto Castilla May 13, 1933;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 33.
1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; class
eight, also Consul, August 8, 1924.
Beaumont, Adam. — Bom in England, January 34, 1890;
home, Methuen, Mass.; attended Boston University 1914-
1916, and a business college 1916-1918; employed as a clerk ten
months in 1917-iS; clerk in War Department nine months 1918;
clerk in the Diplomatic Service (Port au Prince) November,
1918, to July, 1920; with shopping bureau for Latin American*
July, 1920, to August, 192 1 ; clerk with public accountants in
Boston; appointed clerk in the Consulate at Saloniki in ApriL
1922; Vice-Consul at Saloniki August 25, 1022; at Patras Sep-
tember II, 1923; at Saloniki September 22, 1923.
♦BeauprS, Arthur M. — Retired as Minister to Cuba June,
1913. Register of 1913.
Beck, William Hopkins.— Born in Washington, D. C, Sep-
tember 8, 1892; high-school graduate; secretary to a Member
of Congress one year; employed in the Institute of Industrial
Research three and a half years and with the National Geo-
graphic Societv; served in the United States Army December,
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
97
1917, to January, 1920; detailed for a year with the American
Peace Mission; appointed a special assistant in the Depart-
ment of State at $2,500, January 13, 1920; private Secretary to
the Secretary of State at $2,500, June i, 1920; drafting officer at
$3,000, November i, 1920; detailed to accompany the Secretary
on his mission to South America, November 22, 1920; appointed
drafting officer at $3,500 July 16, 1923.
Becker, Clayton S. — Born in Lancaster, Pa., September 29,
1882; received a high-school education and took course in ste-
nography and typewriting; telegrapher for the Western Union
Telegraph Co.. the Associated Press, and various business
6rnis, 1905-1915; appointed clerk in the Department of State
at $900, under Civil Service rules, October 4, 1915; class one
June 22, to be effective July i. 1916; class two, December 13,
1917; class three, May i, 1920; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Beebe, Hoel S. — Bom in Vermont March 4, 1851; received
an academic education; in mercantile business; appointed
Consular Agent at Lineboro June i, 1893; Consular Agent at
Stanstead Junction March 31, 1908; Consular Agent at Beebe
Jimction October is, 1909.
*BeeIer, A^el Dale. — Retired as Consular Assistant; also Vice-
Consul at Paris, October 1921. Register of 1918.
Beer, Richard Cameron. — Born in Yonkers, N. Y., October
8, 1893; attended Mackenzie School, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.,
four years; Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y., two years;
Princeton University, 1914-15; George Washington Univer-
sity, March-May, 1915; employed in the engineering depart-
ment of the du Pont Powder Co., Wilmington, Del., 1915-16;
practiced law with his father in New York City, July-October,
1916; appointed Vice-Consul at Nassau July 3, 1917; Vice-
Consul at Ottawa September 11, 1918; at Habana January 31,
1919; at Bradford October 23, 1919; at Liverpool July i, 1920; at
London, September 27, 1921; at Budapest April 12, 1922; at
Birmingham December 13, 1923; at Belfast February 29, 1924;
at Newcastle-on-Tyne May 21, 1924.
Beitz, William Edward. — Bom in North Tonawanda, N. Y.,
August 17, 1890; graduated from Cornell University (C. E.) and
attended Cornell Graduate School three years; instructor of
structural cnc;ineering at Cornell University 191 2-191 7; served
in the United States Army August, 1917, to October, 1921, re-
tiring with the rank of captain; clerk in the American Consu-
late at Hamburg May, 1923. to April, 1924; appointed V^ice
Consul at Hamburg April 14, 1924.
*Belden, Perry. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of cldss two, unassigned, June 30, 1924. Register of 1924.
Belin, Ferdinand Lammot.— Bom in Scranton, Pa., March
15, i88i; home, Waverly, Pa.; graduated from Yale Univer-
sity (Ph. B.) 1901; employed as manager, treasurer, and vice
president of several manufacturing concerns 1901-1916; was a
councilman and a commissioner of Scranton, 1909-1914; served
as private secretary to the American Minister at Peking and as
an assistant in the Legation at Peking 1917-1919; in the Depart-
ment of State October-December, 1919; appointed, after exam-
ination (May 12, 1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class four December 20, 1919, and assigned to the Department
of State; assigned o Constantinople March 10, 1920; to Paris,
May 26, 192 1 ; appointed Secretary of class three March 23, 1922;
assigned to the Department of State August 20, 1923; appointed
secretary of class two January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class four July i, 1924.
*Belisle, Eugene L. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Limoges July i, 1924, imder the provisions of the
Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Bell, Edward. — * * * Appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer
of class one July i, 1924. Died at his post, Peking, while serv-
ing as Counselor of Embassy October 28, 1924. Register of
1924.
Bell, Margaret Bradley. — Bom in Belle Mina, Ala.; educated
in the grammar and high schools of Alabama; two years Ala-
bama Womans' College; appointed a clerk, at $1,000. in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, Feljraary 3.
1922; at Si.oSo, September i, 1922; at $1,140, October 16, 1922;
class one December 30, 1922, etTective January i, 1923; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Belovsky, Sidney Arthur.— Bom in New York City August 3,
1901; public-school education; employed by a .typewriter com-
pany as clerk 1917-1S, and by a railroad corripany 191S-1921;
clerk in the American Consulate at Prince Rupert March, 1921,
to September, 1923, and Vancouver September, 1923,
to August, 1924; appointed X'ice Consul at Van.ouver .•Vugiist
16, 1924.
♦Belt, John William.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three, assigned to Guatemala, December, 1921.
Register of 1922.
♦Benedict, James S.— * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Windsor, Ontario July i, 1924 under the provi-
sions of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Benesh, Ella A.— Born in Tyndall, S. Dak.; graduated from
the State Normal School, Springfield, S. Dak., 191 2; completed
a commercial course, 1917; teacher in the public schools of South
Dakota, 1912-1915; stenographer and bookkeeper in Grand
Island, Nebr., 1917-18; clerk in the War Department, 1918-
1920; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, September 20, 1920; class two Sep-
tember I, 1922; at $i,68o July i, 1924.
Bennett, Margaret Vincent.— Bora in Augusta. Ga.; high-
school graduate; employed as secretary to the superintendent
of the Georgia Railroad at Augusta 1901-1906; clerk and ste-
nographer in various offices in Augusta and Macon 1906-1918;
with the United States Shipping Board in Baltimore June-
September. 1918; appointed a clerk, at J1.200. in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, September i6, 1918;
at $1,320, November 1, 1919; class two January i, 1920; class
three November 5, effective November i, 1920; class four April
I, 1921; at $2,100 July I, 1924.
♦Benson, Alexander. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
T.egation of class two, unassigned, July, 1920. Register of 191 1.
Benton, James Webb.— Born in Fort Afeyer, Va., July 9,
1892; home. Pen Ryn, Cornwell Heights, Pa.; graduated from
Cambridge University, (A. B.) 1914; six months with British
Red Cross in 1915 and private secretary to a war reHef society in
New York, six months, 1916-17; served as a heutenant in the
United States Army October, 1917, to October, 1919, and was
assistant to the Military Attach^ in Tokyo one year; appointed ,
after examination (October 18, 1920), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four, November 15, 1920; assigned to Rio de
Janeiro, January 5, 1921; to Montevideo September 29, 1922;
appointed Secretary of class three January 23, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as Second
Secretary of Legation at Caracas July 12, 1924.
Berg, Per Torsten.— Bora in Sweden July 30, 1853; natural-
ized in Pittsburgh, Pa., July 11, 1885; educated in public and
technical schools in Sweden; employed by the Carnegie Steel
Company; chief engineer at the Homestead Steel Works; en-
gineering representative of the United States Steel Corporation
in Europe; appointed Vice-Consul-General at Stockhohn June
18, 1909; Vice-Consul at Stockholm February 6, 1915.
Berger, David C— Bora in Gretna, Va., July 26, 1S96; home,
Gretna; high school graduate; attended Roanoke College, one
half year; Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service:
employed as clerk witli several coal companies in West Vir-
ginia and Kentucky and as a machinist with a locomotive
company, Richmond, Va.; served in the United States Navy,
May 9, 1917, to September 5, 1919; employed as clerk in the Civil
Service Commission, Washington, D. C; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1920), a Student Interpreter in China
May 20, 1920; Vice-Consul at Changsha, February 19, 1921;
returned to Legation at Peking May, 1921; appointed X'ice-
Consul and Interpreter at Tientsin October 9, 192:; at Shang-
hai May 18, 1923; at Tientsin June 13, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Bergh, Robert S. S.— Died at his post (Stavanger) while a
Consul of class seven February 17, 1923. Register of 1922.
*Bergholz, Leo Allen.— Retired as Consul-General of class
four, assigned to Canton April, 1922. Register of 1922.
♦Berliner, Solomon. — Died in Washington, D. C, November
14, 19 10, while Consul at Teneriffe. Register of 19 1.1.
Berrey, Naimie Weldon.— Bom in StafTord, Va.; grade-school
education; clerk in a law office 1916-191S, and in the Zone
Finance Office, War Department, 1919-20; served as an Army
Field Clerk, Adjutant General's Office, 1920-21; employed in a
law office 1921-1923; Income Tax Unit, Treasury Department,
January-May, 1923, and United States Employees' Compensa-
tion Commission May-November, 1923; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, January 10, 1924; permanently April i, 1924; at
$1,320 July I, 1924-
Bertot, Raoul Armando. — Bom in Manzanillo, Cuba, Janu-
ary 9, 1884; received equivalent of high-school education in
Cuba; pursued a course in English in England four years; em-
98
BIOGRAPHICAI^ STATEMENT.
ployed on sugar plantation and by the dty of Manzanillo as
clerk ten years; assistant to the Consular Agent at Manzanillo
and later Acting Consular Agent; appointed Consular Agent at
Manzanillo April 20, 1923.
Betts, Thomas J.— Captain, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Language Officer at Peking June 27, 1924.
*Beutelspacher, Gustave.— Retired as Consul at Moncton
May, 1908. Died in Delaware, Ohio, October 9, 1916. Regis-
ter of 1913.
Bevan, Thomas Horatio. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., January
39, 1887; home, Arlington, Md.; attended Marston's Univer-
sity School, Baltimore, six years and Johns Hopkins University
two and one-half years; employed by the United States Geo-
logical Survey during the summer of 1906; private secretary to
a United States Senator, 1908-1910; clerk in the American Con-
sulate at Tampico 1910-1912: appointed, after examination
(January 31, 1912), Consular Assistant April 24, 1912; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Tampico June 27, 1912; Vice-Consul at Tam-
pico by act approved February 5, 191s; appointed Vice-Consul
at Berne May 3, 1916; Vice-Consul at Glasgow January 10,
1917; Consul of class eight February 19, 1918; remained at
Glasgow on detail; appointed Consul of class six September 5.
1919; assigned to Bahia December i, 1919; appointed Consul
of class five November 23, 1921; class four March i, 1923; assigned
to Montevideo March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924; assigned to Hamburg October
23. 1924-
Beylard, Charles Brashears.— Bom in Cannes, France, of
American parents, September 15, 188S; attended the Public
College of the city of Nice, France, nine years and a private
college in Switzerland two years: studied under private tutor
in London, England; employed in a bank in Nice one year,
clerk in the American Consulate at Nice five years; appointed
Vice-Consul at Tunis, May 5, 1917; at Bizerta August 29, 1923;
at Tunis December s, 1923.
Biar, Herbert Carlson.— Bora in Chicago September 22, 1884;
home, Indianapolis, Ind.; studied in Stockholm and Lausanne,
1895-1903; student in George Washington University, 1909-
10; employed in offices of various concerns in Berlin, Stock-
holm, London, Chicago, and Indianapolis, 1903-1909; clerk,
Librarj' of Congress, 1910-11; appointed, after examination
(June 27, 1910), Consular Assistant July 12, 1911; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Naples December 5, 1912; Vice-Consul at
Naples by act approved February 5, 1915; at Glasgow June i,
1920; at Birmingham May 27, i92i;at Nottingham September 2,
1922; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Bickers, William Andrew.— Bora in Madison County, Va.,
February 29, 1880; home, Culpeper, Va.; graduate of University
of Virginia (B. A.) and (M. A.), 1901; professor of Latin, Ger-
man, and English, Jeter Institute, Bedford, Va., 1901-02; en-
gaged in farming, 1902-1914; editor of the Culpeper News, 1908-
1911; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul
at Hobart April 24, 1914; Consul of class nine by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Adelaide July 5, 1917; on detail at
the American Consulate at Melbourne for one month from
November 26, 191 7; assigned to Puerto Plata May 25, 1918; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified. July i, 1924.
*Bickford, George Fremont.— Died in Centralia, Wash.,
July 22, 1923, while a Consul of class six, unassigned. Register
of 1922.
Biddle, John Henry.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 26, 1871;
educated at Fort Lee Military Academy; in mahogany-export-
ing business in Belize since 1888; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul at Belize July 27, 1907; Vice-Consul at Belize by act
approved February s, 1915.
Bigelow, Donald F.— Bora in St. Paul, Minn., November 10,
1896; home, St. Paul; attended Princeton University two years;
L'Ecole des Sciences Politiques (Paris) one year; attended the
School of Business Administration, Harvard University, 192&-
21; served as first lieutenant in the United States Army, 1918;
with the American Red Cross in Poland 1918-19; appointed,
alter examination (January 24, 1921) Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three, May 25, 1921; assigned to Bucharest July 21, 1921;
appointed \'ice-ConsuI de carriere of class two May 26, 1922;
class one February 26, 1923; assigned to Paris August 17, 1923;
appointed Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained
at Paris on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
Bigelow, Robert Barry. — Bora in Leipzig, Germany, of Ameri-
can parents, February 22, 1898; graduated from the University
of Michigan (A. B.) 1922; served in the United States Navy
19x7-1919, retiring with the rank of ensign; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at St. Gall, Switzerland, March-July, 1923; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at St. Gall July 10, 1923.
♦Blnda, John Louis. — Retired as Interpreter, also Deputy
Consul-General, at Cairo May, 1913. Register of 1913.
*Bingham, Rutherlurd.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, unassigned, July, 1920. Register of
1918.
Bingham, William McKee.— Bom in Detroit, Mich., March
27, 186S; attended the University of Notre Dame and Jesuit
College (San Francisco, Calif.); connected with several com-
mercial concerns for a number of years as Canadian representa-
tive; appointed Consular Agent at Peterborough September
17. 1923-
*Birch, David Rsbert.- Retired as Consul at Bahia March,
1914. Register of 1913.
Birch, Mary Nedetta.— Bora in Falls Church, Va.; was edu-
cated in the public schools and a business college; served as
stenographer and clerk in a law office and in several Govern-
ment departments; appointed a clerk, temporarify, in the De-
partment of State July 28, 1915; permanently at $1,000, under
Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class one,
temporarily, September 20, 1916: permanently October 10, 1916;
class two, June 11, 1919; class three November 5, 1921; at $1,860
July I, 1924.
*Birch, Thomas Howard.- Retired as Minister to Portugal
March, 1922. Register of 1918.
Bird, Frederick C— Born in New York City, October 14, 1896;
attended high school one year; Drake's Business College one
year; privately tutored two years; employed in general insur-
ance work, 1912-1917; served in the Norton Harjes Ambulance
Service June-October, 1917; lieutenant in American Red Cross
October, 1917, to September, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at
Beirut March 8, 1920; at Smyrna April 4, 1923.
♦Bishop, Crawford Morrison.- Retired as Interpreter, also
Vice-Consul, at Shanghai November, 1915. Register of 19x5.
♦Bishop, William Henry.- Retired as Consul at Palerme
July, 1910. Register of 19x3.
Blackard, Wade. — Born in Jackson, Tenn., July iS, 1896;
attended Jackson High School; University of Tennessee, 1914-
15; Union University, 1915-16; University of Virginia. 1916-17;
ser\-ed in the United States Army, August, 1917 to May, 1919;
employed as supercargo, by the United States Shipping Board,
August I, 1919, to February 15, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul
at Calgary May 5, 1920; at Singapore June 14, 1931.
Blackwood, Elizabeth Bowcock. — Born in Clarksburg, Va.;
graduate of Broaddus Female College; employed as a teacher
in public and private schools of West Virginia and District of
Columbia, and as a bookkeeper and secretary; appointed a
temporary clerk at $960 in the Department of State. May g,
1919; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules, February i. 1921;
at $1,000, August 16, 1921; at $1,100 December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Blair, Percy Alexander.— Bom in St. Louis, Mo., December
9, 1883; home, Washington, D. C; attended Harvard Univer-
sity two years; Columbia University, and Beaux Arts School,
Paris, one year each; engaged in banking and estate manage-
ment; in the American ambulance service with French Army
December, 1915, to September, 1916; in the United States
Army September, 191 7, to November, 1919, retiring as major;
with the Reparations Commission May, 1920, to March, 1921;
drafting officer. Department of State, May to August, 1921;
appointed, after examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four August 24, 192 1; assigned to
the Department of State September i, 1921; to Buenos Aires
March i, 1922; to London April 27, 1923; appointed Secretary
of class three May 3 1924; Foreign Service Officer ol class six
July I, 1924.
Blake, jr., Gilson Grant.- Bom in Buffalo, N. Y., February
7, 1893; home, Mt. Washington, Md.; attended Friends School,
Baltimore, Md.; Swarthmore College (A. B.) 1915; Harvard
University, February-September, 1919; salesman for a com-
mercial concern in Philadelphia; ensign in the United States
Navy, April, 1917, to January 15, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul
at Newcastle, Australia, February 24, 1920; at Adelaide Feb-
ruary II, 1921; at Newcastle April 27, 1921; at Melbourne
December 28, 192 1; appointed, after examination (January 24,
1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 30, 1922;
assigned to Ottawa October 14. 1922; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class two November 23, 1923; Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAI< STATEMENT.
99
Blake, Marwell. — Bom in Kansas City, Mo., November 15,
1877; home, Kansas City; educated in public schools, St. John
Military Academy, Scarett College, Missouri State University,
and under a private tutor abroad; engaged in ranching and
subsequently in real estate and bonding business; appointed,
after examination (January 27, 1906), Consul at Funchal Feb-
ruary 2, 1906; Consul at Dunfermline December 21, 1907; Consul-
General at Bogota January 11, 1910; Coasul-General at Tangier
December 14, 1910; in charge of the American Legation at Tan-
gier April 4 to 16, 1912, and Chargj d'Affaires from September
2, 1912, to July 20, 1917; American member of International
Board of Ta.Ke Urbaine, 1911; American representative on the
International Sanitary Council of Morocco, 191 3, and president
of the Council in 1914 and 1916; American delegate on the In-
ternational Commission of Public Works. 1912; American
representative on the International Commission of the Cape
Spartel Lighthouse, 1912; appointed Consul- General of class
five February 22, 1915, to be effective February 5, 1913; Agent
and Consul-General at Tangier July 20, 1917; attached to the
American Commission to Negotiate Peace at Paris from Decem-
ber 31, 191S to January 28, 1919; Consul-General of class two
February 14, 1922; detailed for duty as Commissioner in Al-
bania April 27, 1922, directed to proceed to the United States
November 25, 1922; imassigned from January 5, 1923; directed
to proceed to Gibraltar to await further assignment February
IS, 1923; detailed to Angora as Delegate to the American High
Commissioner to Turkey April 25, 1923; assigned to Melbourne
November 3. 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
one July i, 1924.
Blandford, Alice Middleton.— Born in Washington, D. C;
educated in public schools and Waverly Seminary of Wash-
ington; appointed clerk. Inspector General's OlBce, War De-
partment, July 14, 1898; clerk in Adjutant General's Office
May 7, 1903; transferred to the Department of State as clerk
of class one June 11, 1913; appointed clerk class two November
28, to take effect December 19, 1913; class three September 22,
1914; acting representative in charge of the exhibit of the De-
partment of State at the Panama- Pacific International Expo-
sition, San Francisco, February 20 to August 31, 1915; appointed
clerk of class four March i, 1919; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Bliss, Burdetie B.— Boru in Augusta, Alich., July 23, 1S94;
attended Battle Creek High School and Albion College 1916-
1918; employed as shoe salesman and store manager four years;
served in the United States Army October-December, 1918;
Vice-Consul at Singapore June 30, 1919. to April 15, 1920;
appointed Vice-Consul at Puerto Barrios March 8, 1923; clerk
in the American Consulate at Guatemala 1923; appointed Vice-
Consul at Guatemala March 12, 1924; at Puerto Barrios April
23, t■32^.
Bliss, Robert Woods.— Born in St. Louis,Mo., August 5,1875;
home. New York City; graduate of Har\ard University ,1900;
served in office of secretary of Porto Rico, 1900-1901; private secre-
tary to governor of Porto Rico, 1901-1903; appointed, after exam-
ination. Consul at Venice June 18, 1903; Second Secretary of
the Embassy at Petrograd October 10, 1904; Secretary of the
Legation at Brussels January 10, 1907; delegate to the inter-
national coaference to consider revision of the arms and ammu-
nition regulations of the General Act of Brussels of July 2,
1890, April 8, 1908; Secretary of the Legation at Buenos Aires
August 4, 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at Paris February
I, 1912; attended and reported the proceedings of the Inter-
national Conference for the Consideration of the Question of
the Relief of Aliens held at Paris in June, 1912; Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved February
S, 1915; designated and assigned as Counselor of the Embassy
at Paris July 17, 1916; detailed temporarily from Paris as
charge d'affaires at The Hague September-November, 1918;
assigned to the Department of State and designated Chief of
the Division of Western European Affairs April 26, 1920; ap-
pointed Third .\ssistant Secretary of State, March 15, 1921;
designated to have charge of and direct all matters relating to
ceremonials, protocol, etc., in connection with the Conference
on the Limitation of Armament September 17, 192 1; appointed
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Sweden
January 30, 1923.
Blocker, William P.— Born in Hondo. Tex., September 30,
1892; home, Hondo; attended the public schools ol Hondo eight
years; teacher in the public schools of Hondo, 1910-11; traveling
salesman, 1911-12; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at
Ciudad Porfirio Diaz July 18, 1913; Vice-Consul at Piedras
Negras February 6, 1915; appointed, after examination (May
12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carricre of class three September 27,
1919; assigned to Piedras Negras October 21, 1919; appointed
Consul of class seven April 5, 1902; assigned to Piedras Negras
April 14. 1920; appointed Consul of class six November 21, 1921:
assigned to Guaymas December 17, 1921; appointed Consul of
class five June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class six July i,
1924.
32952—25 8
Blohm, Lee R. — Born in Virginia. III., January 31. i386;
home, Beardstown; attended Beardstown (111.) High School
four years; University of Illinois four years (A. B.) 1908; teacher
and superintendent of schools in Illinois and Arizona 1909-1919;
appointed, after examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of class
eight, August 8, 1919: assigned to Frontera, October 21, 1919;
appointed Consul of class seven, December 18, 1919; assigned to
Aguascalientes, October iS, 192 1; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
■"Blumenthal, William.— Retired as Second Secretary of the
Embassy at Constantinople April, 1909. Register of 1913.
♦Bluthardt, Theodore J.— Died at his post (Barmen) Jaau«
ary 14, 1906. Register of 1913,
Boal, Pierre de Lagorde.— Bora in France, of American
parents. September 29, 1S95; home, Boalsburg. Pa.; educated
in pubUc and private schools, and passed entrance examina-
tions for Harvard University in 1914; served in the French
Army, cavalry and air service, January, 1915, to May, 1917;
captain in the Air Service, United States Army, May, 1917, to
JMarch, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 26. 1919),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, December 20,
1919; assigned to Mexico City, December 27, 1919; to the De-
partment of State, March 19. 1920; to Belgrade, December 6,
1920; appointed Secretary of class three March 23, 1022; assigned
to Warsaw November 13, 1922; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as Second Secretary of
Legation at Berne July i, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five August 8, 1924.
*Boardman, Frederic Alexander.— Retired as Marshal at
Chef 00 September, 19 11. Register of 1911.
Boasman, John Nicholas.— Bora in New Kent County, Va.,
October 30, 18S5; in private employ 1905-1916; porter in War
Department 1917-1921; appointed chaulTeur at S720 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, June 5, 1924;
at $1,020 July I, 1924.
Bocock, Annabelle Holmes. — Bora in Appomattox County,
Va.: educated in private schools and by tutors; clerk in the
Census Bureau two and one-half years; secretary to a member
of the faculty of the George Washington University three
years; stenographer for a Member of Congress four years;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at S900 in the Department of
State August 15, 1916; at $1,020. July i, 1918; at $1,080 Janu-
ary I, 1919; at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, November 22,
1920; at Si, 100 April i, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Boernstein, Ralph Augustus.— Bom in Washington. D. C,
February 13, 1893; home, Washington, D. C; business high
school graduate and took courses in a private school and with
a tutor; stenographer in a private company and to a Member
of Congress 1914-1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Fiume, Feb-
ruary 10, 1917; Vice-Consul at Christiania June 11, 1917; at
Port au Prince November s, 1919; at Barbados August 20, 1920;
at Rome March 5. 1921; appointed , after examination (June 25,
1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 6, 1923;
assigned to Rome October 12, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Boggs, Samuel Whittemore. — Boni in Coolidge, Kans.,
March 3. 1S39; graduated from Berca College (B. L.) 1909; at-
tended Yale University 1912-13; grailuatcd from Columbia
University (A. M.) 1924; Fellow of Royal Geographical Society
of London; secretary to a college president 1909-1912; employed
in a secretarial capacity 1914-1919; engaged in geographic
research and map compilation for various concerns 1919-1924;
appointed a drafting officer at S3. 800 in the Department of
State October i, 1924; designated as the representative of the
Department of State on the United States Geo.graphic Board
November 18, 1924.
Bohne, Frederick Albert.- Born in Toronto. Canada, of
American parents, December 6, 1898; attended grade school
1905-1914, and Parkdale Collegiate Institute 1914-1917; em-
ployed as clerk by two concerns in Toronto 1917-18; clerk in
the American Consulate at Toronto, January 16, 1920, to No-
vember 5, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Toronto November
7, 1922.
Bohr, Frank. — Bom in Wathena, Kans., October s, 1S77;
home, Edna, Kans.; graduate of the public schools, of the Kan-
sas State Normal School, 1904, and of the University of Mich-
igan (A. B.), 1907; taught school and farmed four years; ap-
pointed, after examination (April 7, 1908). Consular Assistant
June 24, 1908; Deputy Consul-General at Berlin March 16, 1911:
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Santo Domingo August
38, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Zurich August
29, 1913; Vice-Consul at Zurich February 6, 1915; detailed to
lOO
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
the Department of State October s, igtS; appointed Consul of
class eight October 24, 1918; assigned to Cienfuegos May 10,
1919; appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; class
six June 4, 1920; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i.
1924.
Bolds, Harry H.— Bom in Spangle, Wash., August 4. 1894;
educated in public schools and business college; bookkeeper
and stenographer in Spokane and Portland 1914-1918; ai>-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in the Department of
State, April 18, 1919; at $1,320, January i, 1930; clerk of class
two, under Civil Service rules, August 14, 1920; appointed
Assistant Passport Agent in the Passport Bureau of the De-
partment of State in Chicago at $2,000 June i8, effective July
t, 1921.
I'Bond, Wallace C— Retired as Consul-General at Copen-
hagen January, 191 1. Register of 1913.
Bonnet, Ellis A. — Bom in Eagle Pass, Tex.. January 13, 1900;
home, Eagle Pass; graduated from high school, 1916; University
of Texas (A. B.) 1920; post-oftice clerk two months; teller in
brokerage house one year; appointed Vice- Consul at Piedras
Negras, October 31, 1921; at Torreon September 20, 1923; at
Piedras Xegras October 18, 1923; at Torreon December 21,
1923; at Piedras Negras February 25, 1924; appointed, after
examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied; also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to
Piedras Xegras, October 21, 1924
Bonney, Wilbert L. — Born in Fairmont, Miim., May so,
1872; home, Chicago, 111.; attended the Fairmont high school
three years, Hamline University (St. Paul) four years (receiv-
ing the degree of Ph. B.), the Leipzig University one year, and
read law two years; correspondent in bank in Minneapolis,
:890-i89s; employed by packing house in Chicago, 1897-98;
engaged in the real-estate business in Chicago three years;
clerk in the United States Engineer's Office, War Department,
1899-1910; appointed, after examination (July 7, 1908), Consul
at San Luis Potosi Jime 24, 1910; Consul of class eight by act
approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of cla,s seven
September 17, 1915; assigned to the Department of Slate July
3, 1916; to Rosario March 20. 1917; appointed Consul of class
six, September s, 1919; assigned to Edinburgh January 2, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Booker, Burnett.— Born in King William, Va., July 2, 1870;
attended public schools; employed as butler in private family
1S89-191Q. and as an assistant messenger in the War Depart-
ment 1918-19:2; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed an assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules.
May I, 1922.
Booth, Guy B. — Born April :, 1872; appointed assistant mes-
senger in the Department of State December 3, i9iv3 reap-
pointed, temporarily, under Civil Service rules, Au ;ust 24,
1912; permanently, October 11, 1912, under the provisions of
Executive order of August 24. 1912; resigned July 10, 1922;
reinstated March 16, 1923.
Bopp, Jennie Cook. — Bom in Perry, N. Y.; educated in
public schools of Lacon, 111.; clerk in United States lederal
clerk's office. Council Bluffs, Iowa, 1885-1892; appointed clerk
in the Department of State at $900 July 2, 1906, unde the pro-
visions of legislative act approved June 22, 1906; at $1,000 Octo-
ber 5, 1907; class one July i, 1908: class two June 22. to be eflfec-
tive July i, 1916; class three December 31, 1920, effective Jan-
uary I, 1921; at $1,860 July I, 1924.
Boragino, Angelo. — Bom in Italy May 30, 1864; naturalized
in San Francisco February 7, 1898; educated in Genoa common
school, and at technical school; bookkeeper and purser, 1889-
1900; clerk in Genoa Consulate since 1900; appointed Deputy
Consul at Genoa August 9, 1901; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General October 6, 1908; Deputy Consul-General May 10, 1909;
Vice-Consul at Genoa February 16, 1915.
♦Bordewich, Henrs'.— Died at his post (Christiania) March
19, 1912. Register of 1913.
Borjes, Clara Louise— Born in Norfolk, Va.; high school
graduate; attended George Washington University for a short
time; employed as a stenographer in business houses igog-
1914; clerk in the Department of Agriculture August i, 1914,
to August 31, 1920; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules, Septem-
ber I, 1920; class two February i, 1924; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
*Botkln, Theodoslus.— Died at his post (Campbellton) May
27, 1918. Register of 1917.
Bouchal, John L. — Bom in Wilber. Nebr.. August 28, 1888;
home, Wilber; attended the public schools of Nebraska; gradu-
ated from the Nebraska School of Business and from the Uni-
versity of Nebraska (LL.B.) 1912; teacher in Nebraska four
years; clerk in the American Consulate at Prague July- August,
1912; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Prague August 29,
1912; Vice-Consul at Prague by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed a cleik, temporarily, at $1,000 in the Department of
State July 2, 1917; at $1,200 March i, 1918; at $1,400; August 15,
1918; at $1,600 March i, 1919; Vice-Consul at Prague March 15.
1919; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three, October 9, 1919; assigned to Prague
October 22, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carricre of class two
May 24, 1920; class one November 17, 1921; Consul of class seven
June 22, 1922; assigned to Port Said November 22, 1923; ai>
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i. 1924; class
seven August 8, 1924.
Boucher, Hiram A.— Bora in Eureka. S. Dak., December 14.
1896; home, Minneapolis, >Iinn.; attended the University of
Minnesota 1914-15; George Washington University Law School
1915-16, (commerce) half year 1919; Northwestern College of
Law one-half year 1916-17; secretary to a Member of Congress
1915-16; abstract clerk for commercial firm 1916-17; served in
the United States Army June, 1917, to March, 1919; clerk of
House Subcommittee on War Expenditures, May, 1919, to
June, 1920; appointed, after examination (January 24, 1921),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 23, 1921; assigned to
Barcelona June 11, 1921; to Bilbao July 13, 1922; to Barcelona
August 3, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
February 26, 1923; class one November 23. 1923; Consul of class
seven June 3, 1924; remained at Barcelona on detail; detailed
to Belfast June 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i, 1924; detailed to Dublin August .;. 1924.
Bourinot, John Joseph.— British subject; bom in Port Hawkes-
bury, Nova Scotia, December 8, 1888; graduated from Mount
Alhson Academy (Sackville, New Brunswick), and attended
Mount Allison University two years; clerk in a railroad office
1913, and engaged in business 1914-15; served in the Canadian
Amiy 1915-1918; employed by a steel company 1919-20, and
clerk in a general merchandise store 1921-22; acting Consular
Agent at Port Hawkesbury, June, 1922, to May, 1923 ; appointed
Consular Agent at Port Hawkesbury May 14, 1923.
Bourke, Constance Eloise. — Bom in Savannah, Ga.; edu-
cated in public and normal schools; employed in department
store as stock clerk. 19x5-1918; appointed a printer's assistant
at $600 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
April 6, 1921; at $1,020 July i, 1924.
*Boutell, Henry Sherman.— Retired as Minister to Switzer-
land July, 1913. Register of 1913.
*Boutell, Roger Sherman Gates.— Retired as Secretary of the
Legation to the Netherlands and Luxemburg April, 1907.
Register of 1913.
Bowcock, James M.— Born in Clarksburg. W. Va., November
9, 18S4; educated in United States, Germany, France, and Italy;
clerk in Hanover Consulate. 1907; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul at Hanover March 31, 1908; clerk in the Legation at Ma*
drid February 9, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul at Berne July
22, 1914; Vice-Consul at Berne by act approved February 5,
1915; Vice-Consul at Leghorn May 18, 1915; Vice-Consul at Cairo
January 17, 1916; Vice-Consul at Rome, October 2S, 1916; at
Munich January 7, 1924; at Turin October 13. 1924.
Bowen, Arthur Llewellyn.— British subject; bom in Swansea,
Wales, July 3. 1885; educated in schools in England, Argentina,
and Brazil; cable operator in London 1898-1910, and clerk in
Rio de Janeiro 1910-11; branch manager of an oil company at
Rio Grande, Brazil, 1911-1921; agent for an oil company in Rio
Grande, 1921-22, and engaged in private business igia-as;
served as Acting American Consular Agent at Rio Grande in
1918 and in 1923; appointed Consular Agent at Rio Grande De-
cember 18, 1923.
*Bowens, G. Jarvis. —Retired as Consul at Guadeloupe July,
1906. Register of 19x3.
Bower, Roy E. B.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., June 9, 1894;
attended high school in Spokane, Wash.; University of Cali-
fornia (A. B.) 1917; University of Montpellier (France) several
months, 1919; served in the United States Army June, 1917, to
August, 1919; research assistant with the Interchurch World
Movement August. 1919, to July, 1920; appointed Vice-Ccnsul
at Southampton, February 17, 1921.
Bowerman, Paul. — Born in Muskegon, Mich., September 16,
1898; home, Detroit, Mich.; attended Detroit Central High
School 1912-1916, and graduated from Dartmouth College
(A. B.) 1920; served in the United States Army September 16,
1918, to December 21, 1918, retiring with the rank of second
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
lOI
lieutenant; instructor in Robert College, Constantinople, 1920-
21; contributed travel sketches and general articles to maga-
zines, 1921-22; appointed, after examination (January 15, 1923),
a Consular Assistant February' 26, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul
at Berlin April 27, 1923; Foreign Service OflScer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
Bowers, Blanche. — Bom in Lapeer, Mich.; graduated from
the Coldwater (Mich.) High School 1894, and from the Ypsilanti
State Normal School 1896; pursued courses in languages and
literature in Paris, Florence, and Barcelona, three years; clerk
in the Department of Commerce 1918-1922; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, November i, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Bowman, Howard Arthur. — Born in Clyde, N. Y., January
11, 1894; home, Clyde; graduated from University of Pennsyl-
vania (B. S.) 1917; employed as a bank clerk in 1913 and time-
keeper's clerk in a factory during vacations; in the Army Am-
bulance Service in Europe June, 1917, to April, 1919; appointed,
after examination (May 12, 19 19), Consular Assistant, Septem-
ber IS, 1919; Vice-Consul at Danzig, January 29, 1921; Vice-
Consul de carricre of class three, November 17, 1921, and as-
signed to Danzig; assigned to Saloniki November 19, 1923;
appointed V'ice-Consul de carriere of class two May 10. 1924;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Trieste October 6, 1924.
Bowman, Thomas De Witt. — Born in Pacific, Mo., March 14,
18S6; home, Smithville. Mo.; attended the public schools of
Missouri seven years; Marvin Collegiate Institute, Frederick-
town, Mo., two years, and William Jewell College, Liberty,
Mo., three years (A. B.); printer, two years; newspaper pub-
lisher, three years; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at
Nogales December 21, 1911; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1914), Consul at Femie December 29, 1914; Con-
sul of class nine by act approved Febn.iary 5, 191 5; assigned to
Frontera December 27, 1915; appointed Consul of class eight
September 14, 1917; class six September 5, 1919; assigned to
Monterey October i, 1919; appointed Consul of class five June
4, 1920; class four November 23, 1921; detailed to Mexico City
July iS, 1922; appointed Consul of class three March i, 1923;
Consul General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Boyce, Richard Fyfe. — Born in Lansing, Mich., March 24,
1896; home, Lansing; graduated from Harvard University
(A. B.) 1918; served with the Canadian expeditionary forces
May, igiS-July, 1919; appointed, after examination (January
19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three. May 24, 1920;
assigned to Kingston, Jamaica, August 2, 192c; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two, November 17, 192 1; assigned to
Nassau March 24, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carricre of
class one May 26, 1922; Consul of class seven March i, 1923;
remained at Nassau on detail; detailed to the Department of
State March 26, 1924; appointed Consul of class six June 3,
1924; assigned to Hamilton. Ontario, June 23, 1924; appointed
Foreign Ser\'ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Boyle, Lewis Vincell.— Bom in Obion, Tenn., August 31,
18&6; graduate of Stanford University (A. B.) 1909, (A. M.)
1910; Harvard Graduate School of Administrative Business
(M. B. A.) 1917; employed as a statistical expert, California
State Board of Health, 1911-1915; served in the United States
Army 1917-1919; commissioned lieutenant August, 1917, and
captain November, 1918; appointed, after examination (May
12, 1919), Consul of class seven, September 5, 1919; detailed to
Havre, November 4, 1919; assigned to Durban, November 19,
1920; on detail at Lourenco Iklarques July 10-19, 1922; assigned
to Tahiti September 21, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
Boyle, Walter Fabien.— Bora in Augusta, Ga., December 14,
1875; home, Atlanta; educated in the public schools of Georgia;
clerk in post office six months; railway I'ostal clerk seven years,
volunteer soldier in Spanish-American War; postmaster, Phil-
ippine service, three years; clerk in the Post Office Department,
1907-1914; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914),
Consul at Ceiba April 24, 1914; Consul of class nine by act ap-
proved February s, 1914; Consul of class eight September 17,
1915, and assigned to Puerto Cortes; assigned to Mcxicali April
IS, 1918; appointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; class
five June 4, 1920; detailed to San Luis Potosi February 7, 1922;
assigned to San Luis Potosi October 2, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Bradbury, Craig Eames.— Bom in Washington, D. C, Octo-
ber 20, 1899; attended George Washington University 1919-
1922; employed by private firms 191 7-1920 and 1923-24; in Gov-
ernment Departments 1920-1923; appointed a clerk at $1,320,
temporarily, in the Department of State, under Civil Serv'ice
rules, October 15, 1924.
Bradford, John Percy.— Bora in Warrior, Ala., January
31, 1899; attended high school two years; took course at busi-
ness school; attended Emerson Institute, Washington, D. C;
stenographer for Louisville and Nashville Railroad Co., 1918-
19; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, February 3, 1919; class one. May i,
1920; resigned January 26, 1924; stenographer for a private con-
cern Februar>'-May, 1924; reappointed a clerk of class one May
5, 1924; at $1,300 July I, 1924.
Bradford, Robert Ransom. — Born in Omaha. Nebr., Sep-
tember 6, 1885; home. South Omaha; received his early
education in public and private schools of Omaha. Dresden,
and Andover, and graduated from Harvard University (A. B.)
1907; engaged in lumber business in South Omaha, 1907-1913;
appointed, after examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of class
eight, September 14. 1917; detailed to Havre November 3,
1917; assigned to Catania July 26, 1918; appointed Consul of
class six September 5, 1919; assigned to Casablanca December
27, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July
I, 1924; detailed to Rio de Janeiro August 11, 1924.
*Brad!ey, John Robins.— Retired as Consul of class six. as-
signed to Porto Alegre, June 9, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Bradley, William Harrison.— Retired as Consul General of
class three, assigned to Montreal March, 1917. Register of
1916.
Bradshaw, Charlotte.- Bom in Washington, D. C; cradu-
ated from high school; employed in private concern 1913-1918,
and in Government Departments, 191S-1924; transferred from
Rent Commission and appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, December i, 1924.
Brady, Austin Cogan.— Born in Topeka. Kans., May 8, 1877;
home, Santa Fe, N. Mex.; attended public schools and took
special instruction preparatory to entering Washbum College;
reporter on newspapers in Topeka and Kansas City six years;
managing editor of newspaper in IMonterey, Mexico, one and
one-half years; part owner and later ov.ner of newspaper,
o^\-ner of paper and printing concern, correspondent of the
Associated Press and American Publications, Guadalajara,
^lexico, eleven years; in the editorial department of newspaper
in Santa Fe, N. Mex., 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Man-
zanillo November 26, 191 7; appointed after examination (June
18, 191 7), Consul of class eight February iS, 191S; assigned to
^Manzanillo March 6. igiS; detailed to Department of State;
August 31, 1918; assigned to Punta Arenas, Chile, March 15,
1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed
to Saltillo July 27, 1923; assigned to Saltillo October 2, 1923;
unassigned from January i, 1924; assigned to Malaga February
4, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July
I, 1924.
*Bragg, Edward Stuyvesant.— Retired as Consul-General at
Hongkong May, 1906. Died in Fond du Lac. Wis., June jo,
1912. Register of 1913.
Brand, Norton Franklin.— Born in Faribault, Minn., May s,
1869; home, Grandin, N. Dak.; high-school graduate; at-
tended a divinity school for two and one-half years and is a
graduate (LL.B.), 1S96, of University of Minnesota; practiced
law in Minnesota six years; chief inspector Forestry .Strxicc
two years, and editor of Official Gazette in the Philippines four
years; field manager for a nursery company in Alberta four
years; law editor in St. Paul and Chicago, i9ii-i9if>; served
•as a pastor in Roosevelt, Minn., two years; appointed, after
examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of class eight. Si ntcmber
14, 1917; assigned to Salina Cruz November 5, 1917; to Fernie
August 31, 191S; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924.
Brandt, George Louis. — Bora in Washington, D. C, Sep-
tember 23, 1892; home, Washington; attended M'ashington
graded schools eight years; Business High School two years;
studied under private tutors and at George Washington Uni-
versity; stock clerk in a clothing house in Washington; steno-
grapher to the commandant of the Washington Navy Yard,
1907-191S; appointed, after examination (January as, 191s).
Student Interpreter in Turkey March 24, 1915; on duty at
Cairo March 13, 1916 to 1919; appointed a Consular .Assistant
March 33, 1919, and detailed to the Department of State; ap-
pointed Vice Consul de carriire of class three, December 31,
1919, and assigned to Alexandria; appointed Vice Consul de
carriere of class twoMay 24, 1920; class one November 17, 1921;
Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; detailed to Messina Septem-
ber 5, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924: class seven August S, 1924; detailed to Depart-
ment of State, October 29, 1924.
I02
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Bratton, Rufus S. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Lancuage Officer at Tokyo July 19, 1923.
*Brauer, Robert.— Retired as Marshal at Changsha, April,
X916. Register of ipij.
Braxton, Virginia C— Bern in Birmingham, Ala.; high-
school graduate; employed by law firm, Knoxville, Tenn.,
1912-1917; clerk with the War Trade Board 1917-1S; appointed
a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, January 28, 1919; class two December 30, 1923,
effective January i, 1923; at $i,6So July i, 1924,
*Bray, John P. — Died at his post (Johannesburg) December
10, 1917. Register of 1916.
Breen, Mary Agnes. — Born in Washington, D. C; attended
private and public schools and is a graduate of Notre Dame
Academy; employed in a real estate office and a law office for
nearly two years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the De-
partment of State, February 19, 1915; permanently at $1,000,
under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916;
class one, December i, 1917; class two, November 5, 1921; at
$i,6So July I, 1924.
Brennan, Earl. — Bom in Westmoreland, N. H., November
11, iSgg; graduated from National University Law School,
Washington, D. C. (LL. B.), 1920, (LL. M.), (M. P. L.); ad-
mitted to the Bar of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire
June, 1921; assistant secretary Keene (N. H.) Chamber of
Commerce 1917-18; clerk in the War Department 19x8-1921;
clerk in the Consulate at Florence 1921-22; appointed Vice-
Consul at Florence April 29. 1922; at Stettin July 17, 1924.
Brentano, Theodore. — Bom in Kalamazoo, Mich., March
29, 1854; home, Chicago, 111; graduate of National University
(LL. B.) (LL. M.); assistant city attorney, Chicago, 1888;
judge and chief justice, Superior Court, Cook County, 111.,
1890-1921; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
I'lenipotentiary to Hungary February 10, 1922.
Bresnahan, Nellie.— Bora in Washington, D. C; educated
in private schools and a business college; employed in various
private and Government offices ten and a half years; appointed
a temporary clerk at $1,200 in the Department of State, April s.
1919; clerk, at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, November i,
1920; at $1,260 July I, 1924.
Bretherton, Harold George.— Born in Flinton, Ontario, Can-
ada, January 1, 1876; father naturalized during his minority;
attended the public schools of Montana twelve years and
studied assaying and chemistry; profession, assayer and chem-
ist; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Aguascalientes
November S, 1910; Vice-Consul at Aguascalientes by act ap-
proved February 5, 1915.
Brett, Homer. — Born in Scooba, Miss., September i, 1877;
home, Meridian, IMiss.; educated at public and private schools
and at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Mississippi '
served in the First ^Mississippi Volunteer Infantry during '^..^
Spanish-American War; in the United States postal service
ten years, and the postal service of the Isthmian Canal Com-
mission 1907-1911; appointed, after examination (June 27,
1910), Consul at Maskat August 19, 191 1; Consul at Teneriffe
September 18, 1913; Consul of class eight by act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 1915: appointed Consul of class seven March 2. 1915,
and assigned to La Guaira; resigned June 3, 1919; ap*
pointed Consular Agent at Caracas October 21, 1919; resigned
March 31, 1920; reinstated as Consul of class seven Slay 18, 1920;
detailed to Department of State May 25, 1920; assigned to Tacna
July I, 1920; to Arica October 9, 1920; to Iquique June 14, igji;
appointed Consul of class six November 21, 192 1; class five
March i, 1923; assigned to Bahia March 30, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Ofiicer of class six July i, 1924.
♦Brewer, Andrew Jackson.— Retired as Interpreter, also
Vice-Consul, at Tientsin, August 1920. Register of 1918.
*Brickwood, jr., Albert William.— Retired as Consul at Tapa-
chula March, 1912. Register of 1913.
Bridge, Henry Poynton.— Bora in Wanganui, New Zealand,
December 22, 1874; attended Wanganui Boys' School; em-
ployed with the New Zealand Railways Department in various
executive positions, nineteen years; in business as public
accountant, auditor and trade assignee fourteen years; ap-
pointed Consular Agent at Christchurch, April 5, 1921.
♦Brldgman, George Herbert.— Retired as Consul at Kingston,
Jamaica, December, 1906. Register of 1913.
Briggs, Lawrence Pahner.- Born in Manton, Mich., October
17, 1880; home, Manton; graduate of University of Michigan
(A. B.), 1905, University of Chicago (A. M.), 1908; superin-
tendent of public schools at Grand Marais and St. Ignace,
Mich., 1900-1903; instructor in history and government at
Muskegon, Mich., 1905-06, and Seattle, Wash., 190S-1910; teach-
ing fellow. University of California, 1910-11, and a traveling
fellow of that university in Europe, 191 1-12; instructor Penn-
sylvania State College, 1912-1914; appointed, after examina-
tion (January 19, 1914), Consul at Saigon April 27, 1914; Consul
of class nine by act approved February' s, 1915; appointed Con-
sul of class eight April 16, 1917; assigned to Rangoon April
21, 1917; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; as-
signed to Riviere du Loup August 10. 1920; to Nuevitas March
S, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July
I, 1924.
♦Bright, Frederick I.— Retired as Consul at Huddersfield
April, 1912. Register of 1913.
*Brissel, Charles Frederick.— Died at his post (Bagdad)
October 31, 1916. Register of 191 5.
Brist, George Louis.— Born in Hill Settlement, Wis., June
29, 1878; attended public school, business college, and law
school; employed as manager of a general merchandise store;
appointed map distributer in Weather Bureau, Department
of Agriculture, July i, 1S96; laborer. Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, March 2, 1897; clerk at $900 November i,
1899; class one October ir, 1901; class two June 15, 1904; class
three March 4, 1907; class four November 2, 1908; Special As-
sistant, at $2,000, December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920;
assigned as Acting Chief, Division of Passport Control Jime 9,
1920; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500, March i, 1921; at
$3,000, June 17, effective July i, 1921; designated Acting Chief
of the Division of Passport Control August 17, 1922; Chief,
November i, 1922; at $3, 300 July i> 1924.
Bristol, Mark L. — Bora in Glassboro, N. J., April 17, 1868;
graduated from tlie United States Naval Academy in 1887;
appointed ensign. United States Navy. May 19, 1889; advanced
through various grades to captain, July i, 1913; temporary
rear admiral July, 1918; served on U. S. S. Texas during
Spanish-American War; in charge of aeronautical development
of United States Navy 1913-1916; commanding U. S. S. North
Carolina April 6, 191 7, convoying troops to Europe; command-
ing U. S. S. Oklahoma, Battleship Division No. 6, in European
waters July, 1918; commanded United States naval base,
Plymouth, England, October, 191S, to January, 1919; member
International Armistice Commission in Belgium November,
1918; commanded United States naval forces in Turkey Jan-
uary-August, 1919; appointed High Commissioner to represent
the President of the United States in Turkey August 12, 1919;
member International Commission of Inquiry into Greek
Occup'''~n of Smyrna September-October, 1919.
♦Bnstow, John Andrew.- Retired as Interpreter, also Vice-
Consul, at Shanghai, April, 1915- Register of 1914.
*^rittain, Joseph I. — ***Appointed Foreign Service Officei
of class three July i, 1924. Retired from active service as
Consul General at Winnipeg July 1, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Brodie, Edward Everett.— Born in Fort Stevens, Oreg.,
March 12, 1S76; home, Oregon City, Oreg.; educated in public
schools and at the University of Oregon; publisher and owner
of the Morning Enterprise of Oregon City; president. National
Editorial Association; vice president, Oregon State Chamber of
Commerce and of Oregon City Commercial Club; director.
Pacific Northwest Tourist Association; former president,
Oregon State Editorial Association; appointed Envoy Ex-
traordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Siam, October 8,
1921.
Brooks, Russell Mott. — Born in Salem, Oreg., August 23,
1890; home, Salem; graduated from Salem High School; at-
tended Oregon Agricultural College, one-half year; University
of Oregon, two years; graduated from Willamette College of
Law, (LL. B.); employed in paving and road construction in
Sacramento, CaUf., and Silverton, 1911-1914; employed by the
Oregon State Fair, Salem, 1915-16; member of the Oregon
National Guard 191 7-18; sergeant of Infantry of the IntelUgence
Police Corps, United States Army, 1918-19; appointed Vice-
Consul at Rotterdam, July 9, 1919; Vice-Consul at NewcastJe-
on-Tyne, December 24, 1920; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May
26, 1922; assigned to Newcastle-on-Tyne June 23, 1922; to
Dresden September 7, 1922; to Belfast April 19, 1924; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
103
*Broomall, Hannan Lusher. — Retired as Interpreter, also
Vice-Consul, at Kobe, February 20, 1924. Register of 1924.
Broomfleld, Edmond Lee. — Bom in Winthrop, Ark., January
24, 1903; attended high school one year; employed on a farm;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Ser\'ice rules, June 21, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
*Browii, Charles Inness. — Retired as Consul of class seven,
unassigned, June, 1922. Register of 1922.
♦Brown, F. Harold.— Retired as Consul of class seven, on de-
tail at Marseille, August, 1922. Register of 1922.
Brown, Henry Rhodes. — Bom in Jackson, Mich.. January 14,
1894; home, Minneapolis, INIinn.; academic and business educa-
tion; five years study of violin; billing agent for National Biscuit
Co. six months; engaged in private and public stenographic
work one year; sen'ed in United States Army as sergeant during
World War; entered American ReUef Administration, >Iay 16,
1919, and was released, August 15, 1919, to enter Belgrade Con-
sulate as clerk; appointed \'ice-Consul at Belgrade, November
14, 1919; appointed, after examination (January 16. 1922), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Bel-
grade June 23, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two February 26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Brown, Philip Marshall. — Retired from the diplomatic serv-
ice in 1910. Register of 1913.
Brown, Robe'rt West.— Bom in LjTichburg, Va., September
14, i88i; attended public schools; general helper in tea store
1897-1901, and in restaurant, 1901-1917; employed as a laborer
(unsktiled) at the navy yard, Washington, D. C, 1917-1921;
appointed a laborer (unskilled) in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, August 13, 1921.
♦Brown, Walter Duval. — Retired as Consul of class six, as-
signed to La Paz, July, 1921. Register of 1918.
Brown, William Harris.— Bora in South Plainfield, N. J.,
December 25, 1890; attended puVjlic schools and business college
in Plainfield; employed as stenographer and assistant freight
claim agent in New York City and Jersey City, 1908-1916; sec-
retary to the manager of an aircraft corporation in New York;
in the military ser\'ice at Camp Dix, N. J., 1918-19; Army field
clerk, 1919-1921; appointed clerk in the Consulate at Port au
Prince; Vice-Consul at Port au Prince, December 27, 192 1; at
Halifax April 17, 1923; retired September 10, 1923; reappointed
Vice-Consul at Halifax December 28, 1923.
Broy, Charles Clinton.— Bom in Sperryville, Va., July 26,
1887; home, Sperri-ville; attended the public schools of Virginia;
graduated from Roanoke College, Salem, Va. (A. B.), 1906,
(A. M.), 1907; scholarship to Princeton, graduate course in
politics (A. ]\I.) 1908; employed as clerk by railway company
during the summers of 1906 and 1907; appointed, after examina-
tion (November 10, 190S), Consular Assistant July 19, 1909;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Boma September i, 1909;
Vice and Deputy Consul at Milan Alarch 16, 1911; detailed to the
Department of State September 5, 1913, and entered on duty
November 15, 1913; appointed Vice-Consul at Dublin May 25,
1916; Consul of class eight July 12, 1916; assigned to Karachi
August 3, 1916, but did not proceed to that post; on detail at
Dublin to October, igiS; detailed to London October 19, 1918;
appointed Consul of class six September 5. 19 19; resigned effec-
tive November 16, 1919; reappointed Consul of class six Novem-
ber 15, 1920; assigned to Lille December 13, 1920; to Cherbourg,
July 21, i92i;directed September 9, 1922 to proceed to Washing-
ton; reported January 5, 1923, for duty in the Department of
State; appointed Foreign Sen'ice Officer of class seven July i,
1924; class six August 8, 1924.
Brubaker, John Thomas. — Bom in Flintstone, Md., January
6, 1903; attended public schools; graduated from the United
States Navy Yeoman School, Ne^vport, R. I., September 16,
1920; served in the United States Navy January 10, 1920 to
August s, 1921; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, November 15, 1921; at $1,000,
October 16, 1922; at Si, 100 May 31, effective June i, 1924; at
ti.soo July I, 1924.
Bruffey, Marion Lipscomb. — Bom in Charlottesville. Va.;
educated in public and business sckools; employed as a ste-
nographer and bookkeeper; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
$990 in the Department of State March 16, 1918; at $1,080 July
I, 1918; at $1,140, February i, 1920; at $1,000, under CivilServ-
ice rules, October 16, 1920; class one January 16, 1922; at $1,500
July I. 1924.
Bruins, John Herman.— Bora in Coopersville, Mich., May s.
1896; home, Voorheesville. N. Y.; graduated from Hamilton
College (A. B.) 191S; served in the United States Army, retiring
with the rank of second lieutenant February, 1919; employed as
financial and credit reporter in several cities 1919-1923; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), a Consular Assistant
August 28, 1923; detailed to the Department of State September
5, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924; assigned to Riga September 17, 1924.
♦Brumer, Samuel. — Retired as Consular Assistant, unas-
signed, September, 191 7. Register of 1916.
♦Brunot, Hilary S.— Retired as Consul at Jerez de la Fron-
tera March, 1908. Register of 1913.
Brunswick, William Washington. — Bora in New York City
October 17, 1872; home, Emporia, Kan.; graduate of Kansas
State Normal School and National School of Elocution, Phila-
delphia; school-teacher, reporter, and clerk for seven years;
assistant secretar>' American Association of Commerce and
Trade, Berlin, for two years; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul
at Barmen April 24, 1907; Vice and Deputy Consul at Chemnitz
Fenruary 10, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul at St. Etienne
December 21, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul at Limoges March
18, 1914; Vice-Consul at Limoges by act approved February $,
1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Havre January 2-, 1916; ap-
pointed Consul of class eight February 19, 1918; assigned to La
Rochelle February 23, 191S; appointed Consul of class seven
September 5, 1919; Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class eight July i,
1924; assigned to Niagara Falls October 23, 1924.
*Bryan, Charles Page.— Retired as Ambassador to Japan
November, 1912. Died in Washington, D. C. March 12, 1918.
Register of 1913.
Bryan, Henry Lewis.— Bora in Washington, D. C, Febru-
ary 25, 1853; attended public schools and graduated from
Georgetown University (LL. M.), 1889; served in the United
States Army, 1871-1874; clerk in War Department, 1S74-1876;
clerk to Senate Committees on Finance, Private Land Claims;
and Engrossed Bills, 1877-1885; private secretary to the Secre-
tary of State, 18S5-86; editor Statutes at Large, 1886-1889;
clerk to Senate Judiciarj' Committee, 1890; secretary Bureau
of American Republics, 1891-1893; editor Statutes at Large,
1893-1S97; clerk Senate Judiciary Committee; secretary Phila-
delphia Commercial ^luseum; Chief of Information, Bureau of
American Republics, 1S97-1899; practiced law in Washington,
D. C, 1899-1902; appointed assistant law clerk in the Depart-
ment of State December i, 1902; law clerk November i, 1909.
*Bryce, Lloyd.— Retired as Minister to the Netherlands and
Luxemburg September. 1913. Died in New York April j,
1917. Register of 1913.
♦Buckler, WllUam Hepburn.— Retired as Secretary of Lega-
tion at Madrid June,i909. Register of 1918.
Bucklln, George Augustus.— Bora in West Hartford, Mo.,
October 5. 1S75; home, Norman, Okla.; attended Southwest
Kansas College; graduated from the University of Oklahoma
(A. B.) and Yale University (A. M.); registrar of the Oklahoma
State University for three years and instructor for two years;
in law office two years; notary' public; appointed, after exami-
nation (July 9, 1906), Consul at Glauchau July 16, 1906; Consul
at San Luis Potosi June 10, 1908; Consul-General at Guatemala
June 24. 1910; Consul at Bordeaux February 6, 1914; Consul of
class five by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul
of class four November 18, 1918; detailed to Paris October 6,
1919; to Coblenz October 4, 1920; to Acapulco December tj,
1921; assigned to Acapulco October 2, 1923; to Sault Ste. Mane
May 8, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Oflicer of class five
July I, 1924; assigned to Victoria July 23, 1924.
Bucknell, jr., Howard,— Bora in Philadelphia, Pa., Febru-
ary 17, 1899; home, Atlanta, Ga.; attended public schools, a
school in Switzerland for a year. University of Georgia lor a
year and a half, and the Southern Business College for several
months; lieutenant of Infantry in the United States Army
August-December, 1918; appointed, after examination (May
13. 1919), Student Interpreter in China, September 8, 1919;
appointed Vice-Consul at Chungking May 10, 1921; returned to
Peking November 3, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul and In-
terpreter at Changsha December 8, 1921; at Canton November
13, 1922; Consul of class seven December 19. 1923; remained at
Canton on detail; detailed to Shanghai (Assistant Mixed Court
Assessor) January 28, 1934: appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
♦Buckner, George Washington.— Retired as Minister Resi-
dent and Consul-General to Liberia August, 1915. Register
of 1914.
I04
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Budd, Helen L.— Bom in Washington D. C; attended
Washington public schools and took course at a business college;
stenographer with an advertising company 1911-1915; stenog-
rapher to a Member of Congress 1913-1917; clerk in the United
States Food Administration 1917-1919; statistical assistant in
the Central Bureau of Planning and Statistics, Washington,
January-July, 1919; appointed a clerk of class one in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, October S, 1919;
class two December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,860
July I, 1924.
Buhrman, Parker Wilson.— Bom in Gala. Va., September
S, 1SS5; home. Gala, Va.; attended Randolph-Macon Academy
IQ04-1906; Randolph-Macon College 1906-1910 (A. B.); Wash-
ington and Lee University Law School 1Q14-1916 (LL. B.);
admitted to the Bar of Virginia, 1916; clerk in a hardware store
at Eagle Rock, Va., 1900-1902; manager of same store 1902-1904;
teacher in the >Iartinsburg (W. Va.) High School 1910-1912;
in the Selma (Ala.) High School 1912-1914; practised law, 1916-
1918; appointed, after examination (June iS, 1917), Consul of
class eight April 30, 191S; assigned to Malmo August 31, 1918;
detailed to Helsingfors April 25, 1919; member Inter-Allied
Trade Commission for Finalnd; appointed Consul of class
seven September s, 1919; assigned to Ceiba September 16, 1920;
to Soerabaya February 10. 1921; appointed Consul of class six
August 23, 1922; assigned to Aleppo April 28, 1923; appointed
Consul of class five June 3, 1924: Foreign Service '^'ficer of class
six July I, 1924.
Bunch, Mary Wright.— Bom in Cardonia, Ind.; attended
high school and business college; stenographer in private con-
cerns 1920-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, October 27, i924»
*Bundy, Richard Carlton.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
orLegationof class two, unassigned, June 30, 1924. Register of
1924.
Burdett, William Carter.- Born in Nashville, Tenn., Febru-
ary 3,1884; home, Knoxville; attended University of Tennessee
one year; served in the United States Army in the Philippines
1900-1903, part of the time in engineering work; engineer and
manager of mines in South America 1903-1906; engaged in ex-
ploration work 1907; member of a mining company with ofifice
in Greeneville, Tenn., 1908-1917; served in the United States
Army 1917-1919, and was commissioned a captain; appointed,
after examination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven Septem-
ber 5, 1919; assigned to Ensenada November i, 1919; appointed
Consul of class six November 19. 1921; assigned to Seville
May 17, 1922; appointed Consul of class five December 19, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Burdon, Hugh E. — Born in Salem, Oreg., August 2. 1892; at-
tended grammar school, and high school one year; Pacific Chi-
ropractic College one and one-half years; LaSalle Extension
University two years; employed by private commercial con-
cerns nine years; served in the United States Army eleven
months: appointed Consular Agent at Ocean Falls. British
Columbia, January 12, 1930.
Burg, Joseph Paul. — Bom in HoUidaysburg, Pa., November
36, 1S68; attended high schools of Wlieeling, W. Va., 1876-1881;
spent one year in Grand Duchy of Baden; attended Catholic
College, now Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1882-1885;
Georgetown University (LL.B.), 1894; private secretary to
Members of Congress, 1891-1911 and 1912- i9.;o; appointed Vice
and Deputy Consul at Reichcnberg. January 12. 1911; resigned,
August, 1912; apf)ointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, December 31, 1920, effective
January i. 1921; class one. December 12, 1921; class two April i,
1924; at Si, 380 July i, V)2a.
Burge, Roy Lester.— Bom in Osceola, Iowa, June 25, 1899;
graduated from Winfield (Iowa) High School 1918; attended
Monmouth College one semester and graduated from a business
college 1923; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service mles. May 26, 1924; at $1,^20 July i,
1924.
Burgher, Robert Stephen.— Born in Dallas, Tex., December
3, 1899; home, Dallas; graduated from Princeton University
(A. B.) 1921; in Students' Army Training Corps of Princeton
University September-December 1918; appointed, after exami-
nation (July II, 1931), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class four December 15, 1921; assigned to the Department of
State January 3, 1933; to Panama, March i, 1922; to Guatemala,
March 24, 1923; to San Jose, Costa Rica, May 23, 1923; to Panama
June 4, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924.
Burke, Gordon Lee. — Bom in Shanghai, China, cA American
parents, December 16, 1S93; studied under private tutor in
China 1905-1908, and graduated from Branham and Hugkes
Preparatory School (Tennessee) 191 1; graduated from Vander-
bilt University (A. B.) 1915; served in the United States Army
August 37, 1917, to July 7, 1919, retiring with the rank of second
lieutenant; employed by two hardware firms 1919-1921; clerk
in the American Consulate at Changsha, June, 1921, to Novem-
ber, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Changsha November 23,
1922; at Swatow March 3, 1923; at Hankow May 13, 1924.
^Burlingham, Lloyd. — Retired as Consul of class six, assigned
to Salina Cruz, October, 1931. Register of 1918.
*Bumell, Albro L.— Died at his post (Lille) while a Consul of
class five, March 19, 1921. Register of 1932.
Burnell, Lucy Elizabeth. — Bora in St. Albans, Vt.; at-
tended public schools and high scjiool 1918; employed as a
clerk in St. Albans, Vt., and in the War Department, Wash-
ington, D. C. ; appointed a clerk at $ i ,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, January 17, 1919; class one,
December 31, 1920, effective January' i, 1921; at $1,500 July i,
1924.
Burnett, Rufus Ross.— Born in North Carolina, March 8,
1837; attended public schools; janitor; employed in the Treas-
ury Department, 1883-1893; appointed, temporarily, at $720,
in the Department of State, October 9, 1918; laborer, under
Civil Service rules, November 16, 1918.
Burri. Alfred Theodore.— Bom in Mount Vemon, N. Y.,
December ii, 1890; home, Mt. Vernon, attendAi High School
of Commerce, New York, 1903-1903; Mount Hermon School,
1911-1914; Harvard University, 1914-1916; clerk in a business
office in Is'^ew York two years; bookkeeper and teller in New
York banks four years; financial secretary of the Young Men's
Christian Association in Russia two years; appointed Vice
Consul at Moscow, May 13, 191S; at Odessa January 23, 1919; at
Tiflis May 7, 1919; transferred to the jurisdiction of the Con-
stantinople office May 3, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul at
Constantinople July 21, 19:0; appointed after examination (Jan.
24, 1921), Consul of class seven, June 9, 1921; remained at Con-
stantinople on detail; detailed to Tiinanarive February 10, 1922;
to Constantinople February 28, 1923; appointed Consul of class
six March i, 1923; detailed to the Department of State October
16, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i.
1924; assigned to Puerto Cortes August 15, 1924.
Burroughs, Anna V. — Bom in Cleveland, Ohio; pubUc-school
education; employed as multigraph operator by private con-
cerns several years and by the Quartermaster Corps, War
Department, 191S-1920; appointed a multigraph operator at
$1,320 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
July 14, 1924.
Bursley, Herbert S.^Born in Washington, D.C., September
25, 1S96; home, Washington; high-school graduate; attended
George V/ashington University 1914-1916; employed in several
Government Departments 1915-16; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate General at London, November, 1916; Vice-
Consul at London May 31, 1919; appointed, after examination
(June 24, 1918), Consular Assistant, September 8, 1919; Vice-
Consul at Bradford, December S, 1919; at London, December
31, 1919; at Dublin, April 22, 1920; at Sofia, January 27, 1921;
at Constantinople January 30, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Constan-
tinople March 2, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class two November 23, 1923; class one May 10, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; class nine, also Ccwisul,
August 8, 1924; assigned to Prague August 16, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight Septebmer 20, 1924.
Burt, Joseph Floyd. — Bom in Fairfield, 111., December 12,
1896; home, Fairfield; attended high school 19x1-1913, and a
business college 1913-14; employed as stenographer 1914-1917;
clerk in the Central Department Headquarters, War Depart-
ment, May-July, 1917; civihan employee at Camp Sheridan,
Ala., and Fort Sheridan, 111., July, 1917, to August. 1918; served
in the United States Army 191S-1920; clerk in the American
Mission at Vienna 1920-21; clerk in the American Consulate at
Vienna 1921; Vice Consul at Vienna 1921-1923; appointed, after
examination (June 25, 1923), Vice Consul de carriere of class
three March 7, 1924; assigned to Vienna March 12, 1924; appointed
Forci'.rn Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Berlin July 18, 1924.
Buskie, Elisabeth Landers. — Bom in Van Bibber, Md.;
graduated from high school and attended business college;
employed in Government Departments 1917-1924; appointed a
clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
mles, November i, 1924-
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
105
Busser, Ralph Co«.— Born in York, Pa., January 3, 1875;
attended the York high school, business college, and graduated
from the University of Pennsylvania; practiced law; resideat
of Philadelphia; appointed, after examination (November 20,
1907), Consul at Erfurt May 31, 1909; Consul at Trieste Sep-
tember iS, 1913; Consul of class seven by act approved Febru-
ary 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six July 12, 1916; assigned
to Almeria July 21, 1917; to Bergen November 30, 1917; detailed
to Trieste March 24, 19 19; appointed Consul of class five Septem-
ber s. 1919; class four June 4. 1920; detailed to Corunna Septem-
ber 3. 1920; assigned to Plymouth September 7. 1922; appointed
Foreign Ser%-ice Officer of class five July 1,4924.
Butler, Dorothy Kilkoff.— Born in De Land. Fla.; has a
public-school and business-school education and is a graduate
of Notre Dame of IMaryland (A. B.); clerk in the Interior
Department, 1900-1908; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the
Department of State, August 10, 1914; permanently a clerk of
class one. under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July
I. 1916; class two August i, 1918; class three December 31, 1920,
effective January- 1, 1921; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
*Butler, Hamilton.— Retired as Interpreter, also Vice and
Deputy Consul-General, at Canton, 1913. Register of 1913.
Butler, John F. — Assigned to duty as Assistant Commercial
Attache at Paris January 4, 1922.
Butler, John L. — Born ^lay 30, 1861; appointed laborer in
the Department of State November 17, 1888; assistant mes-
senger July I, 1902; retired November i, 1905; reappointed
assistant messenger June 22, 1910; reappointed August 24, 1912,
under the provisions of Executive order of August 24, 1912.
Butric'i, Richard P.— Bom in Lockport, N. Y., August 6*
1894; home, Lockport; graduated from high school 1913; from
business college 1914; high-school postgraduate 1915; business
school of Washington, D. C, 191S-19; Georgetown Foreign
Service School 1919-1921; employed in the United States Bureau
of Fisheries two years; clerk in the office of the Auditor for the
War Department, November, 1917, to May, 1921; appointed,
after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three October 26, 192 1; assigned to Valparaiso, December
14, 1921; to Iquique October 6, 1922; appointed Vice Consul de
carriere of class two November 23, 1923; assigned to Guayaquil
December 3. 1923; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class
one May 10. 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924; class nine, also Consul, August 8, 1924.
Butts, Halleck A. — Appointed Assistant Commercial Attache
at Tokyo 1924.
Byars, Winfield Scott.— Bom in Marion County, 111., Janu-
ary r, I.S32: attended public schools and Norman University
(111.) two years; graduate of Brown's Business College, Cen-
tralia. 111., 1905; employed as stenographer in railroad office,
St. Louis, two years. General Land Office three years. Interstate
Commerce Commission, three years; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State and appointed a clerk of class one April 22, 1913;
class two October 10, 1916; appointed a clerk to special mission
to Paris January 2, 1918; on detail as clerk with the American
Commission to Negotiate Peace Deceinber, 1918, to Septem-
ber, 1919; reinstated as clerk of class two in the Department of
State August i. 1919; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
♦Byington, A. Homer. — Retired as Consul at Naples Sep-
tember, 1907. Died in Flushing, L. I., December 29, 19:0.
Register of 1913.
Byington, Homer Morrison. — Born in Washington, D. C,
September 19, 1879; home. South Norwalk, Conn.; educated
in public schools, Wilson's College Institute, and by a tutor;
newspaper correspondent, 1895-1897; clerk in Naples Consulate,
1S97-1900; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Naples Sep-
tember 10, 1900; appointed, after examination (March 4, 1903),
Consular Clerk March 31, 1903; in charge of Consulate at Naples
from September 1 to November 4, 1907; appointed Consular
Assistant July i, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Rome July
3, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Bristol February 8, 1909;
Consul at Bristol May 31, 1909; Consul at Leeds September 18,
1913; Consul of class eight by act approved February s. 191s;
appointed Consul of class seven March 2, 1915; assigned to
Hull May 22, 19:7; appointed Consul of class six September
14, 1917; class five September 5, 1919; assigned to Palermo
September 10, 1919; to Naples March 12, 1920; appointed Consul
of class four Jtme 4, 1920; class three November 23, 192 1; Consul
General of class four March i, 1923; reassigned to Naples March
s8, 1923; appointed Consul General of class three June 5, 1924;
Foreign Ser\"ice Officer of class two July i, 1924.
Cable, PhMander Lathrop. — Bom in Tours, France, of Ameri-
can parents. June 5. 1891; home. Rock Island. 111.: graduate of
Harvard University (A. B.) 1914; instmctor, Lake Placid
School 19:4-15; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1917),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four August 23, 191 7;
detailed to the Department of State September 6, 191 7; assigned
to Paris July 13, 1918; appointed Secretary of class three Decem-
ber 20, 1919; assigned to Habana, September 29, 1920; to Copen-
hagen July 13, 1922; appointed Secretary of class two September
22, 1922; assigned to Sofia July 24, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class tour July i, 1924.
Caffee, Albert Veazey.— Born in Fern Bank, Ohio, Decem-
ber 31, 1S85; educated in public school of Fern Bank and Me-
chanics' Institute and Mueller School of Business, Cincinnati;
employed as stenographer and type\Vriter in various business
concerns in Cincinnati, 1906-1913; appointed clerk in the De-
partment of State at $900, under Civil Service rules, June 13.
1912; at Si,ooo March 3, 1914; class two June 22, to be effective
July I, i9i6;ondetailinconnection with the American-Mexican
Joint Commission September 25 to October 2, 1916; appointed
clerk of class three January 16, 1922; on detail with the Advisory
Committee on Traffic in Opium at Geneva May 12 to June 22,
1923; at $i,S6o July i, 1924.
Caffery, Edward.— Born in Franklin, La., February 14,
1889; home, Franklin; attended Princeton University two
years; University of Virginia one year; operated a cotton
plantation one year; served as first lieuten^^t. United States
Army, November, 1917, to September, 1919; appointed, after
examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three October 26, 1921; assigned to Bucharest December 14,
1921; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class two February
26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924; class eight, also Consul, August
8, 1924.
Caffery, Jefferson.— Bom in Lafayette, La., December i,
1886; home, Lafayette, La.; graduate of Tulane University
(B. A.), 1906; lieutenant colonel and aide-de-camp on the
staff of the governor of Louisiana; appointed, after examina-
tion (January 16, 191 1), Secretary of the Legation at Caracas
March 2, 1911; clerk. Department of State, June 26, 1913,
under the provisions of Executive order of December i,
1910; Secretary of the Legation at Stockholm September 11,
1913; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by act
approved February s, 191 5; assigned to Teheran February 11.
1916; attached to the Special Russian Mission to the United
States May 30, 191 7; assigned to Paris June 30, 191 7; Represent-
ative of the Department of State on the permanent committee
to study questions on the treatment and training of disabled
soldiers and sailors, November 2, 1917; Representative of the
Department at International Conference on same matters,
London, May, 191S, and Permanent Secretary of American
Section thereof February t, 1919; member, Board of Examiners,
Diplomatic Service examination in Paris, May, 1919; appointed
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two, August 27, 1918;
detailed to the Department of State September i, i9i9.in con-
nection with the visit of the King and Queen of the Belgians
and the Prince of Wales to the United States; appointed
Secretary of class one. December 20. 1919; designated and
assigned as Coimselor of the Embassy at Madrid December 20,
1919; assigned to Athens as Charge d'Affaires ad interim Jan-
uary 5, 1922; designated and assigned as Counselor of the Em-
bassy at Tokyo September 5, 1923; Chairman of the American
Red Cross Earthquake ReUef Activities. Japan, October 31,
1923, to March 5, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class one July i, 1924.
Calder, F. Willard. — Bom in Stacy^'ille, Iowa. Decemlier 26,
1S99; home. New York City; educated in public and private
schools and at a business school; employed in New York
fourteen months; with the American Military Mission to
Russia December i, 1917, to March, 1918; in the consulates at
Vologda and Moscow March-August, 1918; in the Embassy at
Archangel September, 1918-October, 1919; appointed Vice-
Consul at Odessa December 6, 1919; at Constantinople Decem-
ber 31, 1920; at Southampton November 7, 1921.
*Caldwell, John C. — Retired as Consul at San Jose, Costa
Rica, August, 1909. Register of 1913.
Caldwell, John K.— Born in Piketon, Ohio, October 16, 1881;
home. Berea. Ky.; graduate of Berea College. i9°SI laboratory
helper in office of Supervising Architect of the Treasury. 1906;
appointed, after examination (October i. 1900). ^tudcnt Inter-
preter in Japan October 8, 1906; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General and also Interpreter at Yokohama April 16. 1.909;
Assistant Japanese Secretary to the Embassy to Japan Decem-
ber 4. 1909; Vice-Consul at Dalny, temporarily, January 17 to
February 17, 1911; Consul at Vladivostok August 1, 1914;
Consul of class six by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed
Consul of class five April 16, 1917; class four September 5,1919;
class three June 4, 1920; assigned to Kobe, July 1,1920; appointed
io6
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Japanese Secretary- of Embassy at Tokyo July i, 1921; on
detail at Chita October, 1921, to February, 1922; detailed to
Department of State June 6, 1924; appointed Consul-Gencral
of class four June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three
July I, 1924.
♦Caldwell, John Lawrence.— Retired as Minister to Persia
May, 1921. Died in Washington, D. C, December 6, 1922.
Register of 1918.
^Calhoun, William James. — Retired as Minister to China
May, 1913. Died in Chicago, 111., September 19, 1916. Register
of 1913.
Callanan, Leo Joseph. — Born in Boston, Mass., January iS,
1900; home, Dorchester, Mass.; graduated from Boston College
(A.B.) 1921; Georgetown University (A. M., C. M. F. S.) 1923;
appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), a Consular As-
sistant, August 28, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Genoa
March 17, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, imclassified, July i,
19:4.
Callicott, Ellen Chaffee.— Bom in Rochester, Vt.; attended
high school 1903-1907, and business college 1914-15; pubhc-
school teacher 1907-1914; stenographer for a private concern two
years; stenographer and clerk in the War Department 191 7-1919,
in the Office of the Comptroller of the Treasury 1920-1922,
and in the post headquarters at Fort Hiunphreys, Va., War
Department (Field Service), 1922-1924; transferred from the
War Department and appointed a clerk at $1,500 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civ'il Service rules, October 8, 1924.
Calnan. John L. — Bom in AUston, Mass., January 25, 1892;
attended Springfield (Mass.) High School, 1906-1908; Worcester
(Mass.) Academy, 1900-1911; Georgetown University Law
School, 1912-1914; Fordnam University Law School, 1916-17;
Georgetown University Law School, 1920; employed as athletic
instructor, Springfield, ^lass., 1914; assistant chief inspector of
rifle magazines, munition factory. Eddystone, Pa., January-
September, 1916; assistant supervisor. United States Shipping
Board, Division of Operations, Washmgton, D. C, May,
1919, to April, 1920; served in the United States Army, June 6,
1917, to April 29, 1919; field clerk, War Department, Washing-
ton, D. C., April, 1920, to April, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul
at Prague, April 14, 1921.
Calvert, John Strong. — Born in Ralei ,N. C, October 19,
1886; home, Wilmington, N. C; attended the public schools of
Raleigh; Homer Military School one year; University of North
Carolina two and one-half years; studied law and is licensed to
practice in North Carolina; worked ih the law department of a
railway company at Wilmington, N. C, five years; member of
the National Guard of North Carolina, 1904-1907; lieutenant of
constabulary in the Philippine Islands, 1909-1912; practiced
law in Raleigh, N. C, 1913; appointed clerk in the Consulate-
General at Buenos Aires, March, 1914; appointed Deputy
Consul-General at Buenos Aires, September 24, 1914; Vice-
Consul at Buenos Aires February 6. 1915; appointed, after ex-
amination (January 25, 1915), Consul of class nine April 16, 1917;
Consul of cla^s eight September 14, 1917; assigned to Nuevitas
November 30, 1917; unassigned from July 13, 1919; appointed
Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; assigned to Guadeloupe
October 30, 1919; to Dunkirk December 16, 1921; detailed to
Barcelona November 27, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924
Cameron, Alfred Dorrance.- Born in Seattle, Wash., No-
vember 3, 1893; home, Seattle; graduated from high school
1910, and pursued postgraduate courses 1911-12; attended the
University of Washington 1913-14; engaged in the insurance
business 1912-1916; served in Federalized National Guard 1916;
clerk three months; served in the United States Army 191 7-
1922, retiring with the rank of captain; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 15. 1923), Vice-Consul de carricre of class three
February 26, 1923; assigned to Marseille April 27, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Cameron, Charles Raymond.— Bora, in York, N. Y., June is,
187s; home, Le Roy, N. Y.; graduated from Cornell Univer-
sity (A. B.), 1898; traveling agent of a food company 1899-1901;
served in the Philippines as a teacher, school superintendent,
assistant to a department governor, and department treasurer,
1901-1917; in the United States Amiy, 1917-1919, as captain
and major in the Air Service; appointed, after examination
(May 12, i9i9),Consulof class seven, September 5, i9i9;assigned
to Tacna October 19, 1919; to Pemambuco July i, 1920; ap-
pointed a Consul of class six, November 23, 1921; class five
March i, 1923; detailed to Hongkong July 23, 1923; to Tokyo
December 28, 1923; appointed Consul of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
♦Campbell, jr., Charles. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, assigned to Lisbon, May, 1918.
Register of 1917.
Campbell, Harry. — Born in Harper, Kans., August 10, 1885;
home, Wichita; attended the public and high schools of Wich-
ita, Kans., twelve years, Fairmount College, Wichita, two
years; University of Kansas, two years (B. A.), 1907; employed
in the collection department of the Wichita Gas Co., 1907-08;
Bureau of Education, Philippine Civil Service, 1908-09; Bureau
of Customs, 1909-1911; Bureau of Education, 1912-1915; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Singapore July 14, 1915; appointed,
after examination (January 25, 1915), Consul of class nine
October 18, 1915; on detail at Singapore to May, 1918; ap-
pointed Consul of class eight September 14, 1917; assigned to
Soerabaya, Java, May 25, 1918; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919, class five June 4, 1920; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State. December 6. 1920; assigned to Asimcion, Febru-
ary II, 192 1 ; appointed Consul of class four August 2^, 1922;
assigned to Iquique September 21, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
♦Canada, William W. — Retired as Consul of class four, as-
signed to Vera Cruz, April, 1918. Died in Winchester, Ind.,
Alay 17, 1921. Register of 1917.
Caplan, Sophie. — Born in Baltimore, Md.; public-school
education; employed by various business houses 1918-1921;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, January 24, 1921; at $1,000, November s,
1921; at $1,080 September i, 1922; at $1,140 November 2, 1922;
class one December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,440
July I, 1924; at $1,500 December 15, 1924.
♦Capps, Edward. — Retired as Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Greece and Montenegro March,
1921. Register of 1922.
Carapateas, Sotiris.— Born in Kalamata, Greece, August 6,
18S0; naturalized in St. Louis, Mo., January 15, 1912; attended
the schools of Kalamata eleven years, and National University
of Greece at Athens one year; studied electricity in schools in
Chicago and St. Louis; employed by the Western Electric Co.,
Chicago, 1905-1907; bookkeeper in the Greek- American Bank,
Chicago, 1907-1909; secretary for a steamship and railroad
ticket agency. St. Louis, 1910-11 ; insurance agent in Chicago
1912; appointed Consular Agent at Kalamata May 13, 1914.
Carey, Elizabeth H. — Bom in Frankford. Del.; high-school
graduate; spent one year in normal school and three summers
in college; employed as teacher in public schools three and a
half years; one month in Zone Finance Office; appointed a
clerk, at $1,000, in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, January 14, 1920; class one, November 9, 1921; class two
October i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Carey, Elsie Marie. — Bom in Washington. D. C; attended
public schools; nurses' training school, Columbia Hospital,
Washington, D. C, eighteen months, and Bellevue Hospital,
New York City, six months; clerk in War Department 1918-
1920; appointed a clerk at $1,000, in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, April 12, 1920; at $1,260 July i, 1924.
♦Carey, Henry Reginald. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class four, assigned to Bucharest, August, 1921.
Register of 1922.
Carey, Henry W. — British subject, born in Spain January
1, 1874; engaged in business at Alicante; appointed Vice-Consul
at Alicante July 12, 1899; Consular Agent February 25, 1905.
Carey, William Patrick. — Born in Pittsfield, Mass., April 16,
1899; graduated from the Pittsfield High School 1916, and pur-
sued a postgraduate course one year; attended Georgetown
Law School 192 1; clerk in a law ofBce three years; served in the
United States Army February, 1918, to June, 1919; clerk in the
Public Health Service 1919-20, and in other Government de-
partments for short periods; appointed a clerk of class one in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December
2, 1922; resigned May 18, 1923; reinstated as a clerk of class two
August 27, 1923; at $1,800 May 20, 1924; at $2,100 July i, 1924;
at $2,400 December 31, effective January i, 1925.
Carleton, Algar E. — Born in Williamstown, Vt., August n,
1872; home, Essex Junction, Vt.; educated at Randolph (Vt.)
high school and Dartmouth College; newspaper reporter,
1895-1899; appointed Cons»lar Agent at Almeria May 11, 1899;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Hongkong April 6, 1910;
Vice-Consul at Hongkong February 6, 1915; appointed, after
examination (November 10, 1908), Consul of class eight Feb-
ruary 19, 1918; detailed to Batavia September 14, 1918; assigned
to Medan February 18, 1919; appointed Consul of class six
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
107
September s, 1919; assigned to Amoy, September 8, 1919;
appointed Consul of class five, November 23, 1921; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned to Hongkong
August iS, 1924.
Carlson, Frances M. — Bom in Duluth, Minn.; graduated
from high school, and attended a business college four months;
stenographer for a legal firm September, 1922, to June, 1924;
appointed a clerk at Si, 500 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, July i, 1924.
Carlson, Harry Edwin. — Born in Morris, 111., March 17, 1886;
home, Lincoln, 111.; attended the public and high schools of
Joliet, 111., 1892-1904; Lake Forest (111.) College, 1904-1908
(B. A.); teacher in the public schools, at Lafayette, La., 1908-
1910; in the high school at Lincoln, 111., 1910-1913; in the Na-
tional Cathedral School for Boys, Washington, D. C; exchange
teacher, Sachsenhiiuser Oberrealschule, F'rankfort-on-the-
Main, Germany, 1913-1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Frank-
fort-on-the-Main January 17, 1916; Vice-Consul at Christiania
June II, 1917; appointed, after examination (Hay 12, 1919),
Vice-Cousul de carriere of class three September 7, 1920, and
assigned to Christiania; appointed \^ice-Consul de carriere of
class two November 17. 1921; assigned to Stavanger January 7,
1922; to Christiania February 20, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class one j\Iay 26, 1922 ; Consul of class seven March
I, 1923; remained at Christiania on detail; assigned to Kovno
January 2, 1924; appointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Carlson, Herbert Wesley.— Born in Lowell, Mass., May 9,
1895; attended high school, 1910-1913; Burdett College, Boston,
1917-18; employed as laborer, 1915-14; as clerk, 1914-1917;
served in the United States Army March 16, 1918, to July 22,
1919; appointed Vice Consul at Goteborg March 11, i92o;_at
Sault Ste. Marie April 12, 1924.
Carlson, Knute E. — Born in Boxholm, Sweden, January 13,
1882; naturalized in Denver, Colo., February, 1912; attended
North Park College, Chicago; University of Nebraska (A. B.)
191S, (A. M.) 1917; University of Pennsylvania (Ph. D.) 1919;
engaged in religious work during summer vacations; employed
by a lumber concern, 1902-1907; in the Bureau of Research and
Statistics, War Trade Board, July, 1918, to March, 1919; student
and teacher of economics five years, also conducted courses in
political science; appointed a special assistant in the Depart-
ment of State at $2,750 March 6, 1919; adraftingofficer at $2,500,
July I, 1919; at $3,000, January 31, effective February i, 1920;
designated as the liaison officer between the Department of
State and the oflice of the Federal Fuel Distributor in matters
pertaining to applications for permission to export coal August
28, 1922.
♦Carpenter, Fred Warner. — Retired as Minister to Siam
November, 1913. Register of 1913.
Carr, Wilbur J.— Bom near Hillsboro, Ohio, October 31, 1870;
educated in Ohio public schools and commercial college of
Kentucky University; graduated from Georgetown University,
LL. B. (1894), and from Columbian (now George Washington)
University, LL. M. (1899); took a post-graduate course in
international law, political science, and diplomacy; admitted
to practice in the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia; appointed clerk in the Department of
State at $1,000, on probation, underCivil Service rules, June i.
1892; class one August 8, 1893; served as confidential clerk to the
Secretary and several of the Assistant Secretaries of State; ap-
pointed clerk of class two May 11, 1894; class three March 2,1896:
class four April 1. 1899; Chief of the Consular Bureau February
I, 1902; member of the Board of Examiners for the Consular
Service; member of a board to formulate apian for the examina-
tion of candidates for the Consular Service December 6, 1905;
member of the Committee on Business Methods in the Depart-
ment January 28, 1907: Chief Clerk May 8, 1907; chairman of
the Department of State Advisory Committee on Printing and
Publication May 8. 1907; representative of the Department of
State on the United States Board of the Tercentennial Exposi-
tion at Jamestown May 9. 1907; charged with the direction of
the Consular Service August 15, 1907; representative of the De-
partment of State in the International Congress on Tuberculosis
July 6, 1908; representative of the Departmentof State, Alaska-
Yukon-Pacific Exposition at Seattle January 20, 1909; appointed
Director of the Consular Service November jo, 1909; a member
of the Committee to represent the Department of State in the
inquiry ordered by the President into the economy and effi-
ciency of the Executive Departments of the Government Octo-
ber 19, 1910; member of the Board of Efficiency, Department
of State, April 19, 1916-March 24, 1921; Vice Chairman, Division
of Foreign Relations, National Research Council; representative
of the Department of State, Division of Federal Relations.
National Research Council, November 4, 1920; budget officer for
the Departmentof State, June 21, 192 1; member of tlie Foreign
Ser\-ice Personnel Board, of the Board of Examiners for the
Foreign Service, and of the Foreign Service School Board,
under the provisions of tlie Executive Order of June 7, 1924;
appointed an Assistant Secretary of State July i, 1924.
Carrigan, Clarence.— Born in San Rafael, Calif., March 22,
18S0; home, San Francisco, Cal.; graduated from St. Ignatius
College (A. B.), San Francisco, 1S99; clerk in the Subsistence
Department, United States Army, 1900-1901; second heutenant
Artillery Corps, United States Army, 1901-1907; engaged in
the oriental-art business in San Francisco, 1907-1909; ap-
pointed Vice and Deputy Consul at St. John, New Brunswick,
March 3, 1910; Vice and Deputy Consul at Lyon February
27, 1912; appointed, after examination (May 26, 1909), Consul
at Grenoble December 22, 1913; Consul of class nine by act ap-
proved February s, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven
February 22, 1915; and assigned to Nantes; detailed as Vice-
Consul at London and entered on duty October 26, 1915; as-
signed to Belgrade July 14, 1916, but did not proceed to that
post; appointed Consul of class six September 14, 1917; as-
signed to Lyon March 23, 1918; appointed Consul of class five
September 5, 1919; classfour June4, 1920; class three November
23, 1921; assigned to Milan December 27, 1921; appointed Con-
sul General of class four June ;, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class three July i, 1924.
♦Carroll, Benajah Harvey.— Died at Gibraltar while a Consul
of class six; assigned to Cadiz, March 31, 1922. Register of
1922.
Carroll, Joseph William.— Bora in Brooklyn, N. \.. August
9. 1892; home. New York City; graduate of Columbia Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1913, (M. A.) 1915, (LL. B.) 1915; appointed
a clerk in tlie Embassy in London October 25, 191 7; trans-
ferred to Paris April 6, 1918; appointed, after examination
(June as, 1917) a Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class
four May 3, 1918; assigned to Berne July 9, 1918; to Belgrade
November 4, 1919; appointed Secretary of class three Decem-
ber 20, 1919; assigned to Mexico City June 14, 1920; to Rome
August 3, 1921; unassigned from June 22, 1922 to June 20, 1923;
assigned to Lisbon June 21, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice
Officer of class six July i, 1924.
♦Carroll, Philip.— Died at his post (Manzanillo) December
15, 1906. Register of 1913.
Carroll, Randolph Fitzhugh.— Born in Washington, D. C,
February 23, 1901; home, Washington; graduated from high
school 1917; attended George Washington University and Le-
high University one year each; graduated from the University
of Virginia (B. S.) (M. S.) 1922; served in the United States
Marine Corps November to December, 191S; laboratory ap-
prentice, United States Bureau of Standards, two months, and
clerk for the District of Columbia; rodman. United States
Coast and Geodetic Survey, June to September, 1918; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 26, 1922), Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class three September 30, 1922; assigned to Rotterdam
November 6, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two May lo, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924.
Carroll, William Nicholas.— Bora in Clinton, N. C, No-
vember 28, 1884; educated in the public and high schools of
North Carolina; employed in a railroad office in Wilmington,
N. C, 1906; in the Bureau of Pensions, Interior Department.
Washington, 1907-1918; appointed Vice-Consul at London
August 20, 1918: at Dundee June 21, 1923; at London July 18,
1923; at Stoke-on-Trent February 29, 1924; at London May i,
1924.
Carter, Edward Hastings.— Bora in Chester, England.
June 33, 1863; naturalized in Manatee County, Fla., September
14, 1916; instructor and head master in the Freehold (N. J.)
Military School 1903-1907; engaged in farming in Florida
1908-19x3; abstractor of titles and draughtsman for a title
guaranty company in Bradentown, Fla.. 1913-14; held various
county offices in Manatee County, Fla., 1915-1918; appointed
Vice-Consul at St. John, N. B., October 16, 1918.
Carter, Henry.— Bom in Fall River, Mass., May 8, 1894;
graduated from Yale College (A. B.) 1917, and from Yale Uni-
versity (A. M.) 1920; attended Harvard Graduate School
1921-1924; served in the United States Army 1917-1919, retiring
with the rank of first lieutenant; employed in a bank in Paris.
France, six months, 1920-21; instructor of history at Harvard
College 1921-1924; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in the
Department of State May 22, 1924; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
io8
BIOGRAPIIICAIv STATEMENT.
Carter, James Gameth.— Born in Brunswick, Ga., December
IS. 1877; home, Brunswick; educated in the crammar, normal,
and industrial schools of Georgia and Alabama; merchant
tailor, letter carrier, and manager of a newspaper for nine
years; member of local Civil Service Examining Board two
years, and notary public for one year; appointed, after examina-
tion (August 24, 1906), Consul at Sivas September 6, 1906, but
did not go to post; appointed Consul at Tamatave November i,
1906; Consul of class eight by act approved February 5, 1915;
assigned to Tananarive July 8. 1916; appointed Consul of class
six June 4, 1920; Foreign Service OfBcer of class seven July i,
1924.
♦Carter, John Rideely— Retired as Minister to Rumania,
Serbia, and Bulgaria September. 1911. Register of 1913.
Carter, Kingsley James. — British subject, born in Gaspe,
Quebec, February' 28, 1S92; attended Westmount Academy
(Montreal) 1906, and graduated from Herton Collegiate Academy
(Wolfviile, Nova Scotia) 190S; engaged in the coal business ten
years and as steamship agent for various companies in Canada;
acting consular agent at Gaspe November 21, 1919, to June 6,
1922; appointed Consular Agent at Gasp'j June 7, 1922.
*CasHe, Clarence Austin.— Retired as Vice Consul de carriere
of class three, assigned to Buenaventura, April iS, 1924. Reg-
ister of 1924.
Castle, jr., William R. — Bom in Honolulu, Hawaii, June 19.
187S; graduate of Harvard University (A. B.) 1900; instructor
at Han.-ard 1904-190S; assistant dean of Harvard College 1908-
1913; editor Harvard Graduates Magazine 1914-1917; director.
Bureau of Communications, American Red Cross, May, 19 17, to
February, 1919; appointed a special assistant at $3,000 in the
Department of State, March i, 1919; appointed a drafting officer
at $3,000, July I, 1919; designated Acting Chief of the Division
of Western European Affairs, March 16, 1921; appointed a
drafting officer at $3,500. April i, 192 1; at $4,000, June 17.
effective July i, 1921; designated Chief of the Division of
Western European Affairs December 20, 1921; appointed a
drafting ofScer at $4,500 August 16, 1922; at S5. 200 July i, 1924.
Castleman, Kenneth G.— Captain, United States Navy;
assigned to duty as Naval Attache at Rome May 7, 1924.
Castleman, Reginald Saxon.— Bom in Riverside. Calif., De-
cember 2;, 1891; home, Riverside; attended the public schools
of Riverside 189^-1910; University of Chicago 1910-1916 (Ph.
B., 1914); employed as rodman with surve\-inij parties summers
of 1909 and 1912; attached to the Office of the Naval Attache at
Madrid 1917-1919; appointed Vice-Consul at IM ad rid April 14.
1919; after examination (June 2^. 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three October i, 1920, and assigned to Madrid; assigned
to Lisbon December 29, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two November 17, 1921 ; assigned to Horta April 3, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one May 26, 1922;
Consul of class seven iMarch i, 1923; assigned to Horta March 28,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July
I. 1924-
*Caughy, Charles M.— Retired as Consul at IMilan Novem-
ber, 1912. Died in Richmond, Va., August 27, 1913. Register
of 1913.
♦Cauldwell, Frederic Wadsworth. — Retired as Consular
Assistant December, 1913. Register of 1913.
Cawston, Arthur Hamilton.— Bora in Los Angeles, Calif.,
December 28, 1890; home, Chicago, 111.; attended Leland
Stanford University one year. Columbia University one year,
and University of Chicago Law School fifteen months; engaged
in real estate business in Los Angeles and New York City; an
associate editor. National Encyclopedia of American Biography
April, 1915, to June, 1917; served as cadet and first lieutenant
United States Air Service July, 191 7- August, 1919; with a
publishing house several months and an export corporation
1920-21; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three October 26, 1921; assigned to
Cape Town December 14. 1921; lo Johannesburg May 2=;. 1923;
to Port Elizabeth August 30. 1923; to Johannesburg May 16.
1924; appointed Foreign Ser%-icc OlTicer, unclassified, July i.
1924.
Cecil, Henry B. — Lieutenant commander. United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Assistant Naval Attach^ at Rome
September 15, 1924.
*Chabot, Frederick Charles.— * * * Appointed Secre-
tary' of class two January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class five July i, 1924; retired as Second Secretary of Legation
at Caracas December 25. 1924. Register of 1924.
Chalfant, Gladys.— Born in Fern, Ind.; attended high school
one year and graduated from a business college; clerk in the War
Department six months; with a commercial oil company jn
Fort Wayne three years; in the office of the prosecutingattorney
two years; employed by two insurance companies in Wash-
ington three years; clerk in connection with the Conference on
the Limitation of Armament three months, 1921; appointed
clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, December i, 1921; at $1,140 September i, 1922; class one
October 16, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924-
Chamberlain, Culver Bryant.— Bom in Princeton, Ind., July
12, 1900; home, Kansas City, Mo.; high-school graduate; post
graduate work at Emerson Institute; clerk in a railway office;
served in the United .States Army 1918-19, retiring with the
rank of major; appointed, after examination (June 28, 1920),
Student Interpreter in China August 27, 1920; appointed Vice-
Consul at Canton August 29, 1923; also Interpreter September
b8, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
♦Chamberlain, George Agnew. — Retired as Consul-General
of class three, assigned to Mexico City, August, 1919. Register
of 1918.
Chamberlin, George Ellsworth. — Bom in West Woodstock,
Conn., February 17, 1872; home, Oneonta, N. Y.; educated in
private schools and business college; traveling salesman five
years; clerk in Singapore Consulate; appointed Vice and Dep-
uty Consul-General at Singapore January 2, 1906; appointed,
after examination (November 10, 1908), Consul at Swatow
January 10, 1910; Consul at Cork June 24. igio; Consul at George-
town April 24, 1914; Consul of class six by act approved Febru-
ary 5, 1915; Consul of class five September 14, 1917; class four
September 5, 1919; assigned to Glasgow September 8, 1919;
appointed Consul of class three June 4, 1920; Consul-General of
class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three
July I, 1924.
♦Chandler, Charles Lyon.— Retired as Consular Assistant
Alarch, 1915. Register of 1914.
♦Chapln, Albert Clark. — Retired as Interpreter, also Vice-
Consul, at Mukden February, 1919. Register of 191S.
♦Chapman, Charles Henry.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, unassigned, May, 1919. Reg-
ister of 1918.
Chapman, 3d, Flavius J. — Born in Salem, Va., March 23,
1903; home, Baltimore, Md.; attended grammar and high
schools, Salem, Va., 1907-1916; Virginia Military Institute
1916-1918; employed in the engineering department of the
Norfolk & Western Railroad Co.. 1918-19; employed by the
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co., Baltimore, Md.,
September, 1919 to May, 1920; appointed, after examination
(January 19. 1920), Student Interpreter in China May 20, 1920;
appointed Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Harbin October 9,
1922; at Hankow June 11, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Chapman, John Holbrook. — Bom in Irvington, N. J., Decem-
ber 15, 1S91; home, Washington, D. C; attended high school
three years and George Washington University four years;
clerk in the Department of Agriculture 1909-1917; served in
the United States Army 1917-1919; secretary to the American
Delegation from the Commission to Negotiate Peace to the
Baltic Provinces and Finland 1919; secretary to American Com-
missioner at Riga 1919-1922; clerk in the American Legation at
Riga 1922-1924; appointed, after examination (July 9, 1923),
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; Secretary in
the Diplomatic Service July iS, 1924; assigned to London
September 27, 1924.
Chapman, William Edgar. — Bom in Mount Pisgah, Ark.,
February i. 1877; home. AUuwe, Okla.; attended public schools
in Arkansas, institute in the Philippines, and a business college
in Washington, D. C; graduate of Washington College of Law
(LL. B.) 1914, and of National University Law School (LL. M.)
191;; admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in 1915; worked
on farm; member of company B, Thirty-third Regiment United
States Volunteers, in the Philippines 1899-1901; teacher and
school Superintendent in the Philippines 1901-1908; terminal
agent of a railway company and general manager and editor of
a Philippine newspaper 1908-09; clerk in the War Department
1909-10; assistant superintendent State, War and Navy Building
1910-1916; appointed, after examination (January 35. 1915), a
Consul of class eight July 12, 1916, and assigned to Mazatlan;
on detail in Department of State, July-December, 1916; de-
tailed to Nogales, December 30, 1916; to Guaymas, April, 1917;
proceeded to Mazatlan and took charge. May 39, 1917; ap-
pointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
109
Chase, Benjamin Franklin.— Born in Clearfield County, Pa.,
February i, 1869; home, Clearfield; attended the public
schools and high school of Clearfield, Pa., and the law depart-
ment of the University of Michigan; practiced law 1891-1005;
appointed, after examination (June 27, 1905), Consul at Cata-
nia June 30, 1905; Consul at Zanzibar March 30. 1907, but did
not go to post; appointed, after examination (November jo,
1907). Consul at Leeds May 31, 1909; Consul at Leghorn Sep-
tember 18, 1913; Consul at Fiume July 27, 1914; Consul of class
fix by act approved February s, 1915; assigned to San Jose
July 24. 1916; appointed Consul of class five June 4, 1920; unas-
signed from October 15, 1920; assigned to Trondhjem March
J, 1921; to Messina November 10. 1921; appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Chase, Emily Tevis.— Bom in Fort Sam Houston, Tex.;
graduated from the grade schools of Chicago, 111., and from a
private school; attended George Wasbington University and
pursued a summer course at the New York School of Social
Work; clerk in the AirSer^nce, War Department, three months,
with the AmeHcan Red Cross three years, and with the United
States Veterans' Bureau ten months; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State and appointed a clerk of dass one, under Civil
Ser\'ice rules, November i, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Cheever, Elsie Blanchard.— Bom in Andover, Mass.; gradu-
ated from high school 1907; public-school teacher three years;
clerk in the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, Treasury' Depart-
ment. 1918-1920; ser\'cd as an Army field clerk 1920; clerk in
the Department of Agriculture 1920-1923; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, November 26, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
♦Cheney, Arthur Sanford. — Died »t his post (Messina) De-
cember 28, 1903. Register of 1913.
♦Cheney, Elias H. — Retired as Consul at Curacao June, 1914.
Died at Lebanon, N. H., August 26, 1924. Register of 1913.
♦Chesbrough, Ralph Fordyce.— Retired as Consul of class
six, detailed to Constantinople, February, 1910. Register of
1918.
♦Cheshire, Fleming Duncan.— Retired as Consul General of
class four, assigned to Canton, October, 1916. Register of 1915.
♦Chester, Frank Dyer.— Retired as Consul-General at Buda-
pest July, 1908, Register of 1913.
Child, James Dwight. — Bom in Bath, N. H.. May 12, 1875;
attended New Hampton (N. H.) Literary Institution 1895;
graduated from Dartmouth College (A. B.) 1899; employed as
steward by hotels in New Hampshire and New York 1S94-1910;
conducted a restaurant in New York City 1910-1914; engaged
in contracting and builders' supplies business in Georgia, Ten-
nessee, and Oregon 1914-1917; clerk in the American Consulate
at Bordeaux. 1919; sergeant in Company F, Eighteenth Rail-
way Engineers, United States Army, two years; appointed
Vice-Consul at Bordeaux August 5. 1919.
♦Child, Richard Washburn.— Retired as Ambassador to
Italy February, 1924. Register of 1924.
Childs, Archie William.— Born in Wellsboro, Pa., January
I.-5. 1S9S; graduated from Conneaut (Ohio) High School, 191 7;
attended National Radio School, Washington, D. C. 1918;
employed in railroad freight office, 1917-18, and in the Bureau
of War Risk Insurance; appointed Vice-Consul at Porto Alegre
June 12, 1919: at Sao Paulo May 27, 1920; at St. Michael's Septem-
ber 27, 1922; at Horta April 15, 1924; at St. Michael's June 3,
1924.
Childs, James Rives.— Bom in Lynchburg, Va., February 6,
1S93; home, Lynchburg; attended Virginia Military Institute
1909-1911; graduated from Randolph-Macon College (A. B.)
1912, and Harvard College (A. M.) 1915; attended Army War
College 1917; high-school principal 1912-13; ambulance driver
in France 1915; private tutor and assistant master 1916-17;
served in the United States Army, 1917-1919, retiring with
the rank of first Ueutenant; detailed to the American Com-
mission to Negotiate Peace, and to the American Relief Admin-
stration in Serbia and Greece during military service; news-
paper correspondent 1919-1921; district supervisor Kazan dis-
trict, American Relief Administration 192 1-1923; appointed,
after examination (June 25. 1923). Consul of class seven Octo-
ber 6. 1923; detailed to Jerusalem November 20, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Childs, Prescott, — Bom in Holyoke, Mass., December 2,
1898; home, Holyoke; attended a private school 1914-1917;
graduated from Yale University (A. B.) 1922; served in the
United States Army 191S; instructor in private school 1922-23;
connected with two scientific research expeditions abroad
1923-24; appointed, after examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign
Service Officer, imclassified, also Vice-Consul of career, Octo-
ber 16, 1924; assigned to Canton November 8, 1924.
♦Chilton, Robert S.— Retired as Consul at Toronto Septem-
ber, 1913. Register of 1913.
Chilton, Thomas Willshire.— Born in Drummondville. On-
tario, of American parents, December i. 1872; home New York
City; educated in public schools with two years at Rock Hill
College; employed as a clerk and salesman in real estate and
railway offices and in a dry goods house and silk house in New
York 1S92-1915; manager of a New York exporting house
branches in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro 1915-1921; ser\-ed
in the United States Naval Militia 1893-1S98; volunteer in the
Navy, Spanish-American War, and served in Cuban waters
April-.Scptember, 1898; appointed, after examination (June 27,
1921), Consul of class seven, November 23, 1921; detailed to
Barcelona December 14, 192 1; assigned to Penang March 30,
1923; to Durban September 21, 1923; to St. Stephen, N. B.,
June io, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I. 1924.
Christenson, Ethel Grace.— Born in Winamac, Ind.; attended
the public schools and Shortridge High School. Indianapolis;
took special courses in Mrs. Blaker's Kindergarten Training
School, Indianapolis, Temple School of Shorthand and Type-
writing, Washington, Gordon-Detwiler Institute, and Inter-
national Law at George Washington University; teacher in
the schools of Noblesville, Ind.; appointed clerk in the Gov-
ernment Printing Office, under Civil Service rules, January
20, 190S; transferred to the Department of State and appointed
clerk at S900 February 28, 1911; at Si, 000 January 21, 1913;
class one August 5. 1914; class two June 22, to be eflective July
I, 1916; class three December 31, 1919, elTective January r, 1920;
class lour February i, 1924; at $2,100 July i. ig.u; detailed as
clerk to American Delegation to International Narcotics Con-
ference at Geneva November, 1924.
Christiani, Courtland.— Bom in Indianapolis. Ind., May 6,
1891; attended school in Washington, D. C; employed with
various concerns as stenographer imtil 1917; assistant clerk.
Rules Committee, House of Representatives, 1918; appointed
clerk in the Consulate General at Mexico City; Vice-Consul at
Barcelona October i, 1919; at Cardiff August 31, 1921.
Christie, Emerson Brewer.— Bora in Marash. Turkey, of
American parents. ^larch 17. 1878; attended Newton (Mass.)
High School 1892-1894; graduated from Phillip;' Andover
Academy 1896; Yale University (A. B.), igoj; attended Har-
vard Graduate School, Department of Anthropology, one-half
year, 1910; teacher in the Philippine service 1901-1904; assist-
ant in the Bureau of the Ethnological Sur\'ey for the Philippine
Islands 1904-1907; assistant chief of the Division of Ethnology,
Philippine Islands, 1907-1915; instructor in Spanish at the Uni-
versity of Michigan 1915-16; professor of French, Temple Uni-
versity; appointed a special assistant in the Department of
State at $2,000 December 10, 1918; at Si, 800 July i. i9i9;at$2,i6o,
February i, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500, June 17, effective
July I, 1921; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
Cipriani, Edward B.— Born in Port of Spain, Island of Trin-
idad, November 2;, 1871; naturalized in New Jersey Septem-
ber, 1902; employed in lawyer's office in Jersey City, N. J., two
and one-half years; admitted to practice in the United States
district court of New Jersey; newspaper editor in Trinidad
five years; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Trinidad
May 8, 1912: retired November, 1913; appointed Vice and Dep-
uty Consul at La Guaira May 4. 1914; Vice-Consul at La Guaira
by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at
Port Antonio January 18, 1916; at Cardiff June 17, 1919; at
Leeds December 31, 1919' at Glasgow, June 16, 1921.
Clafiey, John F. — Born in Waterbury, Conn., November 13,
i88i; attended St. Mary's Parochial School, Waterbury, six
years, Margaret Croft School two years, Waterbury Business
College one year, and graduated from Villanova College (B. S.);
private in Company G, Second Infantry, Connecticut National
Guard, three years; timekeeper for a manufacturing concern
in Waterbury, 1898-1914; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul
at Dublin June 25, 1914; Vice-Consul at Dublin by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at London January
27, 1921; at Leeds September i, 1922; at London December 32,
1932.
Claiborne, Hamilton Cabell.— Born in Richmond, Va., Octo-
ber 10, 1888; home, Richmond; attended the Episcopal High
School, .\lexandria, Va., two years, and the University of
Virginia three years; employed by life insurance companies in
Richmond, Va., 1911-1914; appointed, after examination (Jan-
uary 35, 1915), Consular Assistant March 34, 1915; Vice-Consul
no
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
at Bradford May i, 1915; Vice-Consul at Swansea October 11,
1915; reappointed Vice-Consul at Bradford April 7, 1916;
appointed Vice-Consul at London April a, 1918; Consul of class
seven September s, 1919; remained at London on detail; ap-
pointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920; detailed to H::vre,
December 24, 1920; detailed to the Department of State, Oc-
tober iS, 192 1 ; appointed Consul of classfive November 19, 1931;
class four Slarch i, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924; class four September 20, 1924.
Clairmont, Grace Cowles. — Bom in Catskill, N. Y.; educated
in private and public schools; appointed a clerk, temporarily,
in the Department of State November 4, 1914; permanently
at $1,000, under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July
I, 1916; class one December 7, 1917; class two July i, 1920; at
$1,680 July I, 1924.
♦Clare, Arthur James. — Died at his post (Port Antonio,
October 22, 1915. Register of 1914.
Clark, George O. — Captain, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo May 2, 1923.
Clark, Henry C. — Lieutenant United States Army; assigned
to duty as Assistant MiUtar>' Attache at Habana February 28,
1924.
Clark, John Henry. — Bom in Spencerport, N. Y., January 3,
1858; employed in various capacities 1877-1900; member of the
New York State Legislature 1S94-95; immigration inspector
1900-1905; Commissioner of Immigration 1905-1924; appointed
Vice Consul at Montreal September 13, 1924.
Clark, Reed Paige. — Bom in Londonderry, N. H., August
19, 1878; home. Londonderry; graduated from Columbian
College (A. B.) 1898, (A. M.) 1901; member of the New Hamp-
shire bar; employed as a tutor and instructor I S96-1901; private
secretary to a Senator 1901-191 1 ; general receiver of customs and
financial adviser to Liberia 1911-1916; executive secretary New
Hampshire Fuel Administration October-December, 1917;
agent of a cocoa house in Africa and New York 1918-19; ap-
pointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven.
September 5, 1919; assigned to Loanda. Angola, October. 28.
1919; appointed Consul of class six, November 23, 1921; as-
signed to Port Elizabeth January 2, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Clarke, James Brent. — Bom in Washington, D. C, Sep-
tember 30, 1S70; attended high school; employed in city post
office, Washington, 1SS8-1911; superintendent of mails at
Dallas, Tex., 1911-1920; employed by an oil company 1921-
1924; transferred from the Post Office Department and ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, October 27, 1924.
Clarke, John Daniel. — Bom in Vienna, Va., June 26, 1897;
high-school education; clerk in the Ordnance Bureau, War
Department, February-August, 1918; served in the United
States Navy September, 1918, to February, 1919; clerk in the
Treasury Department and in the War Department 1919-1922;
employed by a lumber company 1922-23; clerk for a cigar
company 1923-24; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, February 16, 1924, at $1,000
May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Clarkson, Anna Louise. — Bom in Washing;ton, D. C; edu-
cated in the public schools, business college, and by private
tutors; clerk in the War Department 1913-1915; clerk in the
Treasury Department 1917-1919; transferred to the Department
of State and appointed a clerk of class three, under Civil Service
rules, November 21, 1919; class four February i, 1930; secre-
tary to American Commissioner in the Dominican Republic
July 22 to November 9, 1922; March i to June i. 1923; and
September 27, 1923, to June 30, 1924; secretary to Hon. Sumner
Welles, American Delegate to Conference on Central American
Affairs, Washington, December 5, 1922, to February 7, 1923;
at $1,860 July I, 1924.
Clausel, Louis A. — Born in Lima, Peru, Febmary 18, 1883;
naturalized in Washington, D. C, August i, 1910; attended
various schools in Lima and Callao, Peru, ten years; Garrison
School for Officers, Fort Myer, Va., 1908-09, and Draughon's
Business College, Washington, 1909-10; employed in the ord-
nance department, Washington Navy Yard, 1903-1908; first
lieutenant. Second Infantry, National Guard, District of
Columbia, 1907-1912; clerk in lawyer's office and with the Dis-
trict government, Washington, 1910-1912; clerk in the Isthmian
Canal Commission, 191 2; appointed clerk in the American Lega-
tion at Panama August 16, 1912; in charge of the Consulate-
General at Panama April 28, 1914, to May 12, 1914; appointed
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Panama December a,
IQ14; Vice-Consul at Panama February 6, 191s; Vice-Consul at
Habana July 29, 1916; Vice-Consul at Buenos Aires February
10, 1917.
Clauser, Katharine.— Bom in Annville, Pa. ; graduated from
Annville High School. 1913; attended Lebanon Valley College,
1914-15; a business school 1917; clerk in the office of the Provost
Marshal General, War Department, February, 1918, to April,
1919; in the office of the Director of Finance April, 1919, to
June, 1920; in the office of the Shipping Board, June, 1920, to
March, 1921; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, March 16, 1921; class one April
30, effective May i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦Clay, Brutus Junius. — Retired as Minister to Switzerland
March, 1910. Register of 1913.
Clayton, Florence May.— Bora in Washington, D. C; public-
school education; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State, August 7, 1914; permanently, a clerk of class one,
under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916;
class two, August i, 1918; class three, October 18, 1921; resigned
October s, 1923; reinstated as a clerk of class one December s,
1923; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
Clayton, Robert Samuel.— Born in Hannibal, Mo., June 16,
1872; educated in public schools of Paterson, N. J., and Wash-
ington, D. C; appointed messenger in Navy Department Feb-
ruary 3, 1900; watchman. State, War, and Navy Building,
March 31. 1904; clerk in the Department of State at $900,
under Civil Service rules, January 24, 1910; at $1,000 June 37,
i9ii;class one November 20, 1911; class two June 4, 1913; class
three June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class lour December
31, 1919, effective Januari' i. 1920; Special Assistant at $2,000,
January 16, 1922; at $2,300 July i, 1924.
Clear, Warren J.— Captain. United States Army; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo July 19, 1922.
Clinton, George W.— Born in Harrisburg, Pa.. August 15,
1861; high-school graduate; with Canadian Colleries Co. (Duns-
muir), Ltd.; appointed Consular Agent at Union February 8,
1892; Consular Agent at Cumberland November 10, 1898.
♦Cloud, Frederick Douglas.— Retired as Consul at Antung
January, 1910. Register of 1909.
Cloyes, Hazel Leora. — Bom in Cambridge, Mass. ; graduated
from the Sommerville (Mass.) High School 1917; attended
Washington (D. C.) Business College five months; clerk in the
War Department March, 1918, to April, 1920; transferred to
the Department of State, and appointed a clerk of class one,
under Civil Service rules, April 26, 1920; at $1,500 July i, 1924;
at $1,680 August 16, 1924.
Clum, Harold Dunstan.— Born in Saugerties, N. Y., June i,
1879; home, Saugerties; attended the Saugerties high school;
graduated from St. Stephen's College, Annandale, N. Y.
(A. B.), r9or, and from Columbia University (A.M.) 1903;
taught school in various places, and engaged in clerical work,
1901-1909; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at San
Salvador April 7, 1909; appointed, after examination (June 27,
19 10), Consul at Ceiba March 13, 1912; Consul at Corinto Novem-
ber 24, 1913 ; Consul of class seven by act approved February s,
1915; assigned to Calgary September 17, 1915; appointed Consul
of class six September 14, 1917; assigned to Santiago de Cuba
August 31, 1918; appointed Consul of class five September 5,
1919; class four June 4. 1920; assigned to Konigsjaurg April 28,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Coakley, Henry L.— Bom in Philadelphia, Pa., October i,
1889; graduate of St. Pierre College, Switzerland, (A. B.);
Colegio Bartolorae de las Casas, Cuba (M. P.); teacher and
interpreter of English, French, and Spanish, three years;
served in the United States Army September 20, 191 7, to
August 7, 1919: interpreter. Supreme War Council, Versailles,
France, December 26, 1917, to July 2, 1919; clerk in the Bureau
of War Risk Insurance, five months; Passport Clerk at Ameri-
can Consulate General, Habana, Cuba, five months; appointed
a clerk at $1,100 in the Departmentof State, under Civil Service
rules, December i, 1920; class one, August 16, 1921; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Coates, Haskell Eugene.— Bom in Chicago, 111., September
11, 1900; home, Detroit, Mich.; graduated from the University
of Wisconsin (A.B.) 1923: appointed, after examination (J'lme
25. 1923), Vice-Consul de carrier* of class three October 6, 1923;
assigned to Melbourne November 19, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Adelaide
November 13, 1924; to Melbourne December i, 1924.
Cobb, George Calhoun.— Bom in Americus, Ga., August 31.
1883; attended public schools, Americus, and graduated from
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Ill
high school, 1900; four years at New York School of Art; two
years. New York Art Leagrue; employed as clerk by a meat-
packing corporation, Americus, 1901-02; magazine illustrator.
New York City, 1908-1915; secretary, 1915-1917; field clerk,
1918; enlisted in the United States Army, October 15, 1918;
honorably discharged November 20, 1918; Young Men's Chris-
tian Association secretary, 1918-19; appointed Vice-Consul at
St. Michaels October 28, 1919; at Jerusalem, July 13, 1921; at
Alexandria, October 23, 1923.
Cochran, H. Merle.— Bom in Crawfordsvalle, Ind., July 6,
1892; home, Crawfordsville; attended the public schools of Craw-
fordsville until 1909; Wabash College, 1909-10; University of
Arizona, 1910-1914; B. S. (1913), M. S. (1914); appointed Vice
and Deputy Consul at Mannheim, June 19, 1914; Vice and De-
puty Consul at Nogales, December 23, 1914; Vice-Consul at No-
gales by act approved February 5, 1915; detailed to Guatemala,
1916; retired August, 1916; appointed clerk in the American
Legation at Beme, February 12, 191.S; appointed Vice-Consul at
Lugano, October 7, 1918; at Kingston, Jamaica, April 8, 1919;
appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de
carriere, of class three, September 27, 1919; assigned to Kingston,
Jamaica, October 22, 1919; detailed to Port au Prince, February
4, 1920; to Montreal, March 9, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two. May 24, 1920; class one, November 17, 1921;
appointed Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained at
Montreal on detail; appointed Consul of class six August 23,
1922; detailed to the Department 01 State September 21, 1923;
appointed Consul of class five, December 19, 1923; Foreign Ser-
vice Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Cochran, Leo F. — Bom in Framingham, Mass., May i8, 1901;
clerk in the American Embassy at Madrid several years; ap-
pointed Vice Consul at Bucharest March 20, 1924; at Constantza
June 14, 1924; at Bucharest July i. 1924; at Frankfort on the
Main July 16, 1924.
Codoner, Manuel Joseph. — Born in New York City May
19, 1894; high school graduate; served as a private, 83d com-
pany, coast artillery corps; photographer in Valencia; ap-
pointed clerk in the Consulate at Valencia, December i, 1916;
Vice-Consul at Valencia January 15, 1917.
♦Coffin, Henry Peronneau.— Retired as Consul at Rosario
July, 1911. Register of 1913.
Coffin, William.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., October 8, 1877;
home, Middlesboro, Ky. ; educated in private schools in Tennes-
see and Kentucky and St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H.; was
employed in mercantile business; appointed, after examination
(June 26, i9o6),ConsulatMaskat June28, 1906; Consul at Tripoli-
in-Barbary June 10, 1908; Consul at Jerusalem June 24, 1910;
on special duty in the United States in connection with the
Twelfth International Congress of Navigation at Philadelphia
May-June, 1912; Consul-General at Budapest September 18,
1913; appointed Consul-General of class five February 22, 1915,
to be effective February 5, 1915; Consul-General of class four
April 16, 1917; assigned to Christiania July 21, 1917; to Stock-
holm November 5, 1917; detailed to Christiania December 19,
1917; to the Department of State April i, 1918; representative
of the Department of State, Fifth National Foreign Trade
Convention at Cincinnati, April 16-18, 1918; representative of
the Department of State, War Reconstruction Congress of the
Chamber of Commerce, Atlantic City, December 3-6, 1918;
detailed to Berlin November 29, 1919; appointed a Consul-Gen-
eral of class three Jnne 4, 1920; assigned to Berlin November 15,
1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class two July i, 1924.
Cole, Felix.— Bom in St. Louis, :Mo., October 12, 1887; home
Washington, D. C; attended private schools in Washington,
D. C. and graduated from Harvard University (B. A.), 1910;
reporter and editorial writer for tiic Boston Herald, 1911-12;
employed with automobile agent in Petrograd, 1913; with the
Argus Printing and Publishing Co. in Petrograd, 1913-14; clerk
in the American Consulate at Petrograd since January i, 1915;
appointed Vice-Consul at Petrograd August 4, 1915; Vice-
Consul at Archangel October 4, 1917; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 18, 1917), Consul of class eight February 19, 1918;
attached to the American Embassy at Archangel, with the
rank of Acting Commercial Attache, November 26, 1918;
directe<l August 6, 1919, to return to the United States; ap-
pointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed to the
Russian Division, Department of State, October 20, 1919;
designated Acting Chief of that Division, April 6, 1920; assigned
to Bucharest November 20, 1920; appointed Consul of class
five, November 19, 192 1; retired November, 192 1; reappointed
Consul of class five August 23, 1922; detailed to the Department
of State October i, 1922; appointed Consul of class four March
I, 1923; Foreign Service Oflicer of class five July i, 1924; class
four August 8, 1924; assigned to Sydney, Nova Scotia Sep-
tember 26, 1924; detailed to Department of State December 6,
1924.
* Cole, George C— Retired as Consul of class seven, assigned
to Prince Rupert, December, 1915. Register of 1915.
*Cole, Winthrop Ritchie.— Retired as Student Interpreter in
Turkey January, 1913. Register of 1913.
* Coleman, Chapman. — Retired as Consul of class six, as-
signed to Rome, July, 1915. Register of 1914.
Coleman, Frederick W. B.— Born in Detroit, Mich., May 17,
1S74; home, Minneapohs, Minn.; attended public schools of
Detroit, schools in Germany two years, and graduated from
the University of Michigan (A.B.) 1896 (LL.B.), 1899; prac-
ticed law in Detroit 1902-1906, and in Minneapolis 1910-1922;
counsel and representative in London of a French manufac-
turing company 1907-1910; counsel for a coal company, in Nor-
way and Russia 1914-15; served as a captain in the United
States Army 1917-1919; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Esthonia, Latvia, and Lithuania
September 20, 1922.
CoUier, WiUiam Miller.- Bom in Lodi, N. Y., November
11, 1867; home. Auburn, N. Y.; graduated from Hamilton
College (A. B.) 1889, (A. M.) 1892; attended Columbia Law
School, 1889-90; law student and clerk in New York and
Brooklyn offices; admitted to the bar, 1892; clerk, suirogate's
court, Cayuga County, N. Y., 1890-1892; referee in bankruptcy,
northern district of New York, 1898; president New York State
Civil Service Commission, 1899-1903; lecturer on bankruptcy.
New York Law School, 1903-1905; appointed Special Assistant
Attorney General, Department of Commerce and Labor,
March, 1903; Solicitor, 1904; appointed Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Spain March 8, 1905; retired
June 9, 1909; counsel and agent for American corporation in
Europe; delegate. International Conference on Spitzbergen,
1914; president, George Washington University, 1917-1921;
author; appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-
tiary to Chile, June, 29, 1921.
Collins, Harold Moorman. — Bom in Lynchburg, Va., June
27, 1894; home, Marion, Va.; graduated from Washington and
Lee University (A.B.) 1914, and took course in school of journal-
ism, Columbia University; principal of high schools in Virginia,
1914-1916; munitions worker in Glasgow, 1916; second and first
lieutenant United States Array November, 1917, to July, 1919;
o^vner and manager of general insurance agency September,
1919, to October, 1921; appointed, after examination (June 27,
1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three, October 26. 1921;
assigned to Dublin December 14, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class two November 23, 1923; class one May 10,
1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Collins, Herbert B.— Bora in Maroa, III., September 14. 1869;
attended grade and high schools and graduated from National
University Law School (LL. B.) 1914; member of the bar of
the District of Columbia; clerk in the Department of Justice
1902-1914, and in the Department of Commerce 1914-1918; law
clerk of the Department of Justice on duty in the Department
of Labor, 1918-1923; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed an assistant solicitor at 83,000, under Civil Service
rules, January 16, 1923.
ColHs, Edwin J.— Bom in Port Huron, Mich., August 12,
1S64; public-school education; employed by lumber compa-
nies in Gould City. Mich., thirteen years; engaged in the whole-
sale fruit and produce business in Sault Ste. Marie sixteen
years; sales agent in Sault Ste. JIarie since 1915; appointed
Vice-Consul at Sault Ste. Marie September 28, 1918.
Colman, George Tilden.— Bora in Elmira, N. Y.. January 3,
j888; home, Elmira; graduated from Williams College (B. A.)
1908, (M. A.) 1909; University of Chicago (Ph. D.), 1914; teacher
in the Philippine Islands 1911-1913; professor in Hiram (Ohio)
College 1914-15; Mackenzie College, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1915-1917;
private teacher in Sao Paulo, 1917-1S; appointed clerk m the
American Consulate at Sao Paulo July i, 1918; Vice-Consul at
Sao Paulo August 30, 1918; appointed, after examination (May
12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three, December 23,
1919; assigned to Rio de Janeiro January 27, J920; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 24, 1920; class one
November 17, 1921; Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained
at Rio de Janeiro on detail; assigned to Punta Arenas August
iSi 1923; appointed Foreign Service OITicer of class eight July
I, 1924-
*Colson, Everett A.— Retired as Marshal at Canton May,
1909. Register of 1914.
♦Combs, Leslie. — Retired as Minister to Peru February,
1911. Register of 1913.
Compton, Clarence L.— Born in Washington, D. C, April 23,
1891; hieh school education.' bank messenger; appointed tem-
112
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
porarily at $50 a month in the Department of State, July 24,
1917: resigned August 2, 1918; reappointed temporarily at $720
August I, 1919; appointed an assistant messenger, under
Civil Service rules, December 18, 1920.
*Conant, Harry A. — Retired as Consul of class eight, assigned
to Windsor, Ontario. September, 1917. Register of 1916.
Conger, Arthur L. — Colonel, United vStates Army; assigned
to duty as Militarj' Attache at Berlin, Copenhagen, Oslo, The
Hague, and Stockholm September 29, 1924.
Connelly, Edith P. — Born in Manassas, Va.; educated in the
public schools; stenographer for the American National Red
Cross, Washington, D. C, April-December, 1918; in the De-
partment of State, February 10, i9i9,to December 3r, 1920;
appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class two August 16, 1921;
class three September 16, 1922; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
♦Conner, Jacob Elon.— Retired as Consul at Petrograd April,
1913. Register of 1913.
Conover, Margaret Ferguson.— Bom in Adams, Mass.; at-
tended the public and high schools of Adams and took course
at a business college; employed in a bank at Adams one year;
with an automobile company at Pittsfield, Mass., one and one-
half years; with an illustrating company in New York three
and one-half years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at Si, 000,
in the Department of State January 5, 1918; at $1,200 March i,
1918; at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, Jannary 27, 1919;
class one, June 10, 1919; class two, March 15, 1921; class three
February i, 1924; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Conrad, Kathryn H.— Bora in Washington, D. C; educated
in pubhc and private schools; in the employ of a Washington
newspaper 1906-1908 and 1915-1918; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, at $990, in the Department of State February 9,
1918; at $900. under Civil Service rules November 18, 1918; at
$1,000 March i, 1919: class one December jr, 1919, effective
January i, 1920; class two March i, 1924; at Si, 680 July i, 1924.
Constant, Samuel Victor.— Captain, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Language Officer at Peking May 2, 1923.
Cook, Willis C— Born in Gratiot, Wis., in 1874; home, Sioux
Falls, S. Dak.; graduated from the University of Wisconsin
Law School, 1895; county judge of Aurora County, S. Dak..
1901-1903; member of Senate of South Dakota 1905-1909;
served as president South Dakota Society Sons of American
Revolution and as president South Dakota Branch of League
to Enforce Peace; publisher and owner of the Sioux Falls Daily
Press; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni
potentiary to Venezuela October 8, 1921.
Cooke, Arthur Bledsoe.— Born in Meltons. Louisa County,
Va., June 15, 1869; home, Spartanburg, S. C; graduated from
the University of Virginia, receiving the degrees of A. B. (1S95)
and Ph. D. (1901); student at the Universities of Gottingen and
Berlin, 1899-1900; professor of French and German in Woilord
College, Spartanburg, S. C, 1S95-190S; director department of
European civihzation and languages, Throop Polytechnic
Institute, Pasadena, Calif., 1908-1910; director, summer school,
Throop Institute, 1909; author of several books; appointed,
after examination (April 7, 190S), Consul at Patras March 7,
1910; Consul of class nine by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul of class seven March 2, 1915; class six Sept-
ember 5, 1919, and assigned to Swansea; appointed Foreign
Sennce Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Cooke, Bernard Aloysius.— Bora in Washington, D. C, De-
cember 9, 1R95; educated in public schools; garage man and
chauffeur for private individuals 1913-1917 and 1919-1923;
chaufleur in military service 1918; garage man for Post Office
Department December, 1918, to !March, 1919; appointed chauf-
feur at $720 in the Department of State, under Civil .Service
rules, June 24, 1924; at $1,020 July i, 1924.
Cooke, Charles Lee.— Bora in Washington, D. C, July 22,
1867; educated in public and high schools in Washington, and
by private instraction; patent solicitor in Washington, D. C;
transferred from the Patent Office to the Department of State
and appointed clerk at $900 July 9, 1901; at $1,000 July i. 1902;
class one July i, 1903; class two July 2, 1906; class three March
23, 1907; detailed as clerk in the Embassy at London at $1,800
per annum February 27, 1909; appointed clerk class four in the
Department of State August 2, 1909; drafting officer at $2,500
July 1,1919; designated as officer in charge of ceremonials August
8, 1919; appointed drafting officer at $3,000 November i, 1921;
designated to assist in matters relating to ceremonials, protocol,
etc., in connection with the Conference on the Limitation of
Armament September 17, 1921; at $3,800 July i, 1924.
Cookingham, Karris Nicks.— Bom in Red Hook-on-Hudson,
N. v.. November 3, 1883; home. Red Hook; attended the public
schools of Red Hook ten years; Riverview Mihtary Academy,
Poughkeepsie, three years, and graduated from Syracuse Univ-
ersity (A. B.), 1909; correspondent in circulation department of
publishing company; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at
Seville January 7, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at
Barcelona October 6, 1914; Vice-Consul at Barcelona Febmary 6
1915; appointed, after examination (March 11, 1915), Consul of
class eight February 19, 1918; on detail at Barcelona February,
1918, to May, 1919; assigned to Tunis May 27, 1919; appointed
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; class five November 23,
1921; Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned
to Tangier August 23, 1924; to Tunis October 13, 1924; to Saigon
October 23, 1924.
*Coolidge, John Gardner.- Retired as Minister to Nicaragua
November, 1908. Register of 1918.
Cootes, Harry N.— Lieutenant colonel. United States Army;
assigned to duty as Military Attache at Vienna, also at Prague,
January 15. 1923-
Corafa, Constantine M.— Bom in Argostoli, Cephalonia,
Greece, April 18, 1856; naturalized in Brooklyn, N.Y., September
8, 1887; educated at the Lyceum in Argostoli; clerk in the Ameri-
can Legation at Athens October, 1899, to September 3c, 190a;
translator and interpreter; appointed Deputy Consul-General
at Athens February 13, 1911; Vice-Consul at Athens Febmary
10, 1915; at Patras December 21, 1921; at Athens January 3,
1922.
Corcoran, William Warwick. — Born in Washington, D. C,
October 4, 1884; home, Washington; educated by private tutors
and in private, technical, and business schools; studied law at
Georgetown University two years; employed as newspaper
reporter and correspondent ten years; served in the United
States Army, as private and lieutenant, August, 1917, to
October, 1919; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920),
Vice-Consul de carrifere of class three May 24, 1920; assigned to
Calcutta August 2, 1920; to Bombay September 14, 1920; re-
assigned to Calcutta October 19, 1920; assigned to Madras March
28, 1921; to Boulogne-sur-Mer May 14, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two, November 17, 192 1; Foreign
Ser\'ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Cornelius, George Otto.— Retired as Consul at St. John's,
Newfoimdland, September, 1907. Register of 1913.
Cornell, Harry Washington.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
February 11, 1867; messenger in the Court of Claims 1893-1918;
appointed, temporarily, at $720 in the Department of State
December 6, 1918; assistant messenger, under Civil Servic*
rules, March 24, 1919.
Cornes, Emma Elizabeth.— Bom in Watertown, Ohio;
attended Ohio University and George Washington University;
taught school 1915-1918; employed in several Government
Departments 191S-1924; transferred from Treasury Department
and appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, December i, 1924.
Comish, Clement H. — Born in Trenton, N. J., March 8, 1894;
attended high school four years; Cornell University (B. S.)
1916; employed in various capacities during three siunmer
vacations; owned and operated a dairy farm 1916-1920; tutor six
months during 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Tientsin June
23. 1921-
*Correll, Irvin Clement. — Retired as Interpreter, also Vice
Consul, at Nagasaki March 15, 1924. Register of 1924.
Corrigan, jr., John.— Born in Atlanta, Ga., July 25, 1878;
home, Atlanta; attended common schools of Atlanta; Boys'
High School; Southern Shorthand and Business University;
George Washington Law School, six months; University of
Paris, four months; stenographer in a bank, 1897-9S; journalist,
1898-1917; commissioned first lieutenant United States Army,
August 30, 1917; captain, November 16, 1917; battalion com-
mander June, 1918; honorably discharged August 6, 1919; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Havre October 30, 1919; appointed after
examination (January 19, 1920), Consul of class seven Jime 4,
1920; remained at Havre on detail; assigned to Cherbourg
September 11, 1922; appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Cosh, Evelyn Ellen. — Bom in London, Ontario, Canada;
graduated from high school 1920, and from business college
1922; employed as stenographer and bookkeeper for private
firm 1920-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, October 29,
1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
113
Costello, Walter Thomas.— Bom in Saa Francisco, Calif.,
August 12, 1S97; attended the public schools of San Francisco
and the San Francisco High School of Commerce two and one
haM years; employed as stenographer and clerk; appointed
Vice-Consul at Sydney, Australia, January 22, 1921; at New-
castle September 30, 1922; at Sydney, Australia, August 21, 1923.
Cotie, Lawrence Francis.— Born in Ncwburyport. Mass.,
October 5, 1890; attended high school two years and Ijusiness
colleges two years; serv ed in the United States Army 1&0S-1913
and 1917-1919; employed by an express company 1915-1917,
and as a clerk by the city of Boston 1919-20; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Cartagena February-July, 1923; appointed
Vice-Consul at Cartagena July 5, 1923; at Buenaventura October
4, 1924.
Cottrell, Jesse S.— Born in Knoxville, Tenn., October 23,
1878; home, Knoxville; graduated from University of Tennessee
(LL. B.) 1909; Georgetown University (LL. B.) 1914; reporter,
editor, and correspondent of many newspapers; served as a
captain in the United States Army, September i, 1918 to
October 11, 1920; member of Tennessee Legislature 1907-1909;
member of school boards seven years; member of Knox County,
Tenn., Revenue Commission four years; secretary to two
United States Senators 1910-11; financial secretary and gen-
eral secretary, three years each office, of the National Press
Club; member of standing committee, Washington Corre-
spondents, two years; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Bolivia October 19, 1921.
Coulter, Eliot Brewster.— Born in Austinburg, Ohio, May 11,
1892; home, Chicago, 111.; graduate of Princeton University
(Litt.B.), 1914; Harvard University (A. M.), 1915; employed
in two banks in Chicago, September, igis-January, 1917; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 18, 191 7), Consular Assistant
September 4, 1917; Vice-Consul at St. Nazaire November 17.
1917; at Helsingfors March 12, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul
de carricre of class three May 25, 1920, and assigned to Helsing-
fors: assigned to London July 20, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul
decarriireof class two November 17, 192 1; class one May 26, 1922;
Consul of class seven March i, 1923; remained at London on
detail; appointed consul of class six December 19, 1923; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Cournoyer, Gaston Armand. — Bom in Brolin, N. H., April
25, 1S99; attended high school four years and graduated from the
Wharton School (B. S.) 1922; served in the United States Army
October-December, 191S; employed by a shipping company in
Canada 1922-23; clerk in the American Consulate at Bahia
August, 1923, to January, 1924; appointed Vice-Consul at Bahia
January 25, 1924.
Covel, Alice M.— Born in Naples, N. Y. ; graduate of and took
postgraduate course at Naples High School; appointed assistant
telephone switchboard operator. Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, September 25, 1907; appointed clerk at Sgcxs
October 14, 1914, to be effective October i, 1914; class one June
22, to be eftective July i, 1916; class two November 25, 1918; at
$1,680 July I, 1924.
♦Covert, John Cutler.— Retired as Consul at Lyon July,
1909. Register of 1913.
Cowan, jr., John Whitman.— Bom in Crete, Nebr., May 15,
1903: high school education; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Sen.'icc rules, December 15,
1922; at $1,000 Alay i, 1923; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Cox, Hyatt.— Bora in Chicago. 111., September 12, 1876;
educated in Chicago public and normal schools and at Armour
Institute; with various banking and business concerns in
Chicago. 1896-1906; officer in a manufacturing concern in New
York City, 1907-1910; secretary of an investment agency in
Canada; appointed Consular Agent at Edmonton, November
33. 1915-
Cox, Raymond Edwin.— Born in Boston, Mass., October i.
1893; home, New York City; graduated from Yale University
(A. B.) 1915; served in the United States Army, lieutenant and
captain, August, 1917, to August, 1919; employed with a grain
products company in New York, October, 1919, to March,
igai; appointed, after examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four, August 24, 192 1; assigned
to the Department of State September i, 1921; to Lima,
October 22, 1921; to the Department of State July 26, 1923; ap-
pointed Secretary of class three May 3, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924; detailed as Secretary of the
Special Mission to represent the United States at the Celebra-
tion of the Centennial of the Battle of Ayacucho November 17,
1924.
Cox, Walton W.— Captain, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant Military Attache at Rome March 13, 1923.
♦ Coxe, Francis Travis.— Retired as SecreUry of Embassy or
Legation of class three, assigned to Tegucigalpa, March, 1916.
Register of 1913.
Coyle, John Joseph.— Born in Buffalo, N. Y., July 26, 1896;
graduated from Central High School (Buffalo) 1915; employed
by steel corporation 1915-16, and clerk for the New York Cen-
tral Railroad 1916-1918; served in the United States Army
September-December, 1918; employed as deputy collector,
Bureau of Internal Revenue, February-October, 1919, and as
an accountant for the city of Buffalo 1919-1921; clerk in the
American Consulate at Bilbao January, 1921, to May, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul at Madrid May 16, 1922.
Cram, Paul Henry.— Bora in Portland, Me.. January 26. 1879,
home, Portland; graduate of Harvard University; taught school
in Porto Rico two years; studied one year at the University of
Grenoble, France; clerk in Marseille Consulate; appointed Vice-
Consul-General at Marseille April 7, 1905; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General April 15. 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Cairo July n, 1911, but declined and remained at Marseille;
Vice-Consul at Marseille February 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at
Cette October 23, 1917; appointed, after examination (Novem-
ber 10, 1908), Consul of class eight February 19, :9i8; assigned
to Cette March 6, 1918; appointed Consul of class six Septem-
ber s, 1 919; assigned to Nancy October 27, 19 19; to Regina
January 12, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
seven July i, 1924.
Cramer, William Ford,— Bora in Washington, D. C. May
17, 18S6; attended high school in Washington and business
college in New York City; employed in a law office in 1904;
appointed messenger boy in the Department of the Interior at
S360 per annum February 20, 1905; retired April 26, 1906;
employed in New York City, 1907-1909; appointed in the
Department of State in connection with foreign trade and
treaty relations December 22, 1909; clerk class one, temporarily,
under Civil Service rules, August 24, 1912; permanently, under
the provisions of Executive order of August 24, 1912, November
7, 1912; class three June 22. to be effective July i, 1916; class
four, November 25, 1918; special assistant at $2,000 May 31
effective June i, 1924; at $2,300 July i, 1924.
*Crane, Charles Richard. — Retired as Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to China June, 1921. Register
of 1922.
Crane, Maud M.— Bora in Washington, D. C; attended
private school in London, England , public and high school and
young ladies' seminary in Washington, D. C; appointed clerk
in the Department of State at $900, under Civil Service rules,
October 13, 1902; at $i.oob May 24, to take effect June i,
190s; class one July 2, 1906; class two October 5, 1907; class
three, December 13, 1917; at Si,S6o July i, 1924.
♦Crane, Richard. — Retired as Minister to Czechoslovakia
November, 1921. Register of 1918.
Crane, R. Newton.— Born in 1848; educated at Wesleyan
University, Middlctown, Conn.; a founder of Newark Morning
Register, 1869; editor of St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 1873;
appointed American Consul at Mancliester February 20, 1874;
retired April, 1878; became a member of the United States
Supreme Court bar in 1879; chancellor diocese of Missouri, 18S2;
barrister. Middle Temple, 1894; chairman American Society in
London. 1S98; representative of United States Government in
South African Deportation Claims Commission, igoi; agent in
Samoan Arbitration Award, 1903-04; appointed Despatch
Agent of the United States at London April 2, 1904.
♦ Crane, Robert Treat. — Retired as Consul at Rosario July,
1913. Register of 1913.
Cranford, Thomas G. — Second lieutenant. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo June
19. 1923.
Craven, Robert.— Born in Washington, D. C, November 25,
1902; attended Business High School T917-1921, and George
Washington University 1921-1923; clerk in the auditor's office
of the District of Columbia October, 1916, to October, 19x7;
Bureau of War Risk Insurance, Treasury Department, June to
October, 1919; United States Shipping Board June to October,
1920; library assistant in Bureau of Railway liconomics October,
192 1, to September, 1923; clerk in the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission one month, appointed a clerk of class one in the Depart-
ment of State; under Civil Service rules, October 25, 1923; at
$1,440 July I, 1924; at $1,500 September 15, i924-
114
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Crawford, Estelle. — Born in Centerville, Ala.; attended Union
Springs (Ala.) College; graduated from Tuscaloosa (Ala.)
College 1S92; attended University of Tennessee and Student
Teacher's College, New York City; teacher in ;;he schools oi
Alabama, 1S97-1914; taught Latin and German in Florida
high schools, 1914-1917; employed as a correspondence clerk in
the War Department, 1918-1920; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil
Service rules. May 7, 1920; class two December 30, 1922, effec-
tive January i, 1923; at $i,6So July i, 1924.
* Creevey, Edward Allen. — Retired as Consul at St. Michael's
February, 1914. Register of 1913.
Crenshaw, David.— Bora in East Falls Church, Va., April
4, 1899; attended Western High School, Washington, D. C,
three and one-half years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
$900. in the Department of State, December 21, 191 7; at $1,020,
July I, 1918; clerk at S900, under Civil Service rules, January
27, 1919; at $1,000, July I, 1919; class one, May i, 1920; class two,
December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at Sr,68o July i,
1924.
♦Cresson, William Penn. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class two, assigned to Lisbon, August, 1917.
Resigned to accept a Commission as First Lieutenant in the
United States Army. Register of 1916.
Creswell, Harry I. T.— Captain, United States Army; as-
signed to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo July 24, 1924.
Crocker, 2d, Edward Savage. — Born in Fitchburg, Mass.,
December 20, 1895; home Fitchburg; graduated from Princeton
University (A. B.) 1920; studied law at Columbia University;
served in the United States Navy April, 191 7, to May, 1919;
employed six months in a paper manufactory; appointed, after
examination (July 10, 1922), Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class four, September 22, 1922, and assigned to the De-
partment of State; detailed as Assistant Secretary of the Ameri-
can Delegation to the Conference on Central American Affairs
held at Washington, December i, 1922; assigned to San Salva-
dor March 20, 1923; to Warsaw January 7, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Crockett, Joseph Parkes. — Born in Franklin, Tenn., February
13, 1901; attended Ground Academy 1914-1918, and graduated
from Vanderbilt University (A. B.) 1921; clerk in the American
Consulate General at Habana 1921-1923, and in the American
Consulate at Bristol December, 1923, to January, 1924; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Bristol January 31, 1924.
♦Crosby, George Joseph. — Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Charlottetown, December 31, 1922. Register of 1922.
Crosby, Sheldon Leavitt.— Born in New York City November
9, 1S80; home, New York City; educated by tutor and in
English and German schools in Dresden; was in railway office,
trust company, and insurance office in Nev; York twelve years;
appointed, after examination (March i, 1910), Third Secretary
of the Embassy at London March 31, 1910; Secretary of the
Legation and Consul-General at Bangkok August 22, 191a;
Second Secretary of the Embassy at Madrid July 16, 1914; Sec-
retary of Embassy orLegation of class three by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Vienna July 21, 1915; to London
May 22, 1917: appointed Secretary of class two July 13, 1917;
assigned to Rome, February i, 1919; appointed Secretary of
class one, June 28, 1920; assigned to Stockholm, November 13,
1920; to the Department of State October 13, 1921; designated
and assigned as Counselor of Embassy at Rio de Janeiro Oc-
tober 20, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class one
July I, 1924; assigned as Counselor of Embassy at Constanti-
nople November 15, 1924.
Cross, Cecil Meme P. — Born in Rangoon, India, November
2, 1891; home. Providence, R. I.; attended high school. Provi-
dence, R. I.; Brown University (A. B., A. M.) 1915; graduate
work 1915-16; University of Chicago 1916-1 7; employed as clerk
in the Zone Supply Office, War Department; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three, September 27, 1919; assigned to Palermo, December 9,
1919; to Naples, April 17, 1920; appointed Consul of class seven
June 2, 1920; remained at Naples on detail; assigned to Aden,
November 30, 192 1; to Lourenco Marques July 7, 1922; ap-
pointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Cross, Samuel H. — Appointed Commercial Attach^ at
Brussels July 2^, 1924.
Crosse, Murray Lewis.— Born in Duluth, Minn., March 14,
1897; attended a military academy, 1913-14; high school (St.
Paul), 1914-Z916; Emerson Institute, 1919-20: Georgetown
Foreign Service School , 1920-21; served in the United States
Navy, 1917-1921; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, October 34, 193 1;
at $1,140 September i, 1922; class one October 16, 1922; at
$1,680 July I, 1924.
Crowder, Enoch Herbert.— Born in ^lissouri April 11, 1S59;
graduated from the United States Military Academy 1881;
University of Missouri (LL. B.) 1886; served in the United
States Army June, iSSi, to February, 1923, retiring as Major
General and Judge Advocate General; served in the Philip-
pines 1898-1910; inMa nchuria with the Japanese Army 1904-05,
in Cuba under the Secretary of State and Attorney General
1906-1908; was Provost Marshal General May, 1917-July, 1919;
appointed Judge Advocate General February 15, 1919; delegate.
Fourth International Conference of American States 1910;
special delegate centenary celebration of Chile 1910; member of
the American preparatory committee; Third Hague Confer-
ence, 1912; special representative to attend the inauguration of
the President of Cuba May, 1913; consultant of the Cuban
Government on changes of election legislation 1919; personal
representative of the President to Cuban Government 1921-
1923; appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-
tiary to Cuba February 10, 1923.
*Crowninshield, Caspar Schuyler. — Died at his post (Naples)
September 26, 1910. Register of 1913.
Cruger, Alexander Pendleton— Bora in San Antonio, Tex.,
September 21, 1SS6; home, Brooklyn, New York; educated in
private schools and under a tutor; Vice-Consul at Liege Sep-
tember, 1907, to May, 1913; clerk in Legation at Brussels, June,
1913, to November, 1920; appointed, after examination (June
27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 26, 1921;
assigned to Marseilles December 14, 1921; to Messina July 19,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
* Crum, William Demos.— Died at Charleston, S. C, Decem-
ber 7, 1912, while Minister Resident and Consul-General to
Liberia. Register of 1913.
Crump, Grin James.— Born in Lancaster, Mo., September
17, 1903; attended high school four years and a business college
ten months; employed by a milUng company July-November,
1923; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State
under Civil Service rules, Januari' 25, 1924; at Si, 000 May 31,
effective June i, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Culbertson, Paul Trauger.- Born in Greensburg, Pa., April
II, 1897; attended high schools in Emporia, Kans., and in Wash-
ington, D. C, 1912-1916, and the College of Emporia 1916-17;
graduated from Yale College (Ph. B.) 1923; served in the ex-
peditionary forces. United States Army 1917-1919; section
chief in the Bureau of the Census, Department of Commerce,
June-October, 1920, and employed as junior accountant sum-
mer of 192 1 ; clerk in the American Consulate General, Paris,
July-October, 1922; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in
the Department of State July 3, 1923; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
*Culver, Henry S.— * * * Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I. 1924. Retired from active service as Consul at St.
John, N. B., July I, 1924 under the provisions of the Act of May
24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Cummings, Edward Arthur. — Born in Syracuse, N. Y.,
May 9, 1878; attended the Oneida (N. Y.), high school four
years; employed in a clerical capacity by a gas company in
Pittsburgh, Pa., nine years; by the Moncton Tramways Elec-
tricity & Gas Co. three years; appointed Vice-Consul at
Moncton, October 5, 1916.
Cundiff, William L.— Bom in Claysville, W. Va., October
14, 1863; attended public schools and commercial college;
studied law in lawyers' offices in Lincoln, Nebr.; admitted to
practice before the district court 1887 and the Supreme Court
of Nebraska 1889; Territorial and United States courts of
Oklahoma 1894; Supreme Court of Illinois 1897; United States
Circuit and District Court of Illinois 1906; employed in the
Census Bureau 1893; United States Townsite Commissioner
in Cherokee Outlet in Oklahoma 1S93-1895; engaged in the
practice of law at Lincoln, Nebr., Enid, Okla.. and Danville,
111., 1887-1914; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State December 6, 191 5; permanently a clerk of class
one, imder Executive order, Jime 22, to be effective July i,
1916: retired September, 1916; reappointed a clerk, tempo-
rarily, in the Department of State July 18, 1917; reinstated as
clerk class one in the Department of State September 19, 1917;
at $1,500 January 31, effective February i, 1920; class three,
April I, 1921; at $1,860 July i, 1934.
BIOGRAPHICAI, STATEMENT.
115
Cunningham, Charles Henry.— Bom in Dubois. Nebr., May
7, 1885; home, Austin, Tex.; graduated from the University of
California (A. B.) 1909, (A. M.) 1910, (Ph. D.) 1915; teacher in
the Philippine Islands 1910-1913; engaged in study and travel
in Spain and South America 19x5-1917; professor in the Uni-
versity of Texas 191 7-18; clerk in the American Consulate Gen-
era! at Mexico City; appointed Vice-Consul at Mexico City
January 18, 1919; resigned October 19, 1919; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919), consul of class seven April 5, 1920;
decliaed; appointed Trade Commissioner, Department of Com-
merce and designated for duty in Mexico June 26, 1920; Com-
mercial Attache, Department of Commerce, and designated for
duty in the American Embassy at Aladrid October 2;, 1920;
also at the Legation at Lisbon March 29, 192 1; representative of
the Department of Commerce at the Seventh International
Fishery Congress at Santander, Spain, July, 1921; Commercial
Attache at Habana January 28, 1924; at Madrid, also Lisbon,
December 13, 1924.
Cunningham, Edwin Sheddan. — Born in Sevier County,
Tenn., July 6, 1868; home. Maryville. Tenn.; attended public
schools; graduated from the Maryville (Tenn.) College (A. B.),
1889. and the University of Michigan (LL. B.), 1893; employed
as a railway mail clerk, 1889-90; connected with a law pub-
lishing house at Rochester, N. Y., 1894-1896; practiced law at
Maryville, Tenn., 1896-1S98; appointed, after examination
(February 9, 1898), Consul at Aden February 16, 1898; Consul
at Bergen March 3, 1903; Consul at Durban June 22, 1906; Con-
sul at Bombay December 20, 1910; Consul-General at Singa-
pore August 22, 1912; Consul-General at Hankow December
22, 1914; Consul-General of class five by act approved Febru-
ary s, 1915; appointed Consul-General of class four September
14, 1917; assigned to Shanghai September 8, 1919; appointed
Consul-General of class three June 4, 1920; Foreign Service
Officer of class two July i, 1924.
♦ Curtice, Raymond S. — Died in Wilmington, Del., February
15, 1922, while a Consul of class six, unassigned. Register of
1922.
Curtis, Charles Boyd. — Bom in New York City December
6, 1S78; home, Xew York City; attended Berkeley School,
Groton School, and graduated from Harvard University (A. B.) ;
studied law at Columbia University; member of National
Guard of New Y'ork, 1903-1907; clerk in various business houses
in New York City; secretary to the Ambassador at Petrograd,
1907-08; appointed, after examination (June 10, 1908). Third
Secretary of the Embassy at Constantinople May 15, 1909; Sec-
retary of the Legation at Christiania March 31, 1910; Secretary
of the Legation and Consul-General at Santo Domingo Febru-
ary I, 1912; retired from Santo Domingo November 10, 1913,
appointed Second Secretary of the Embassy at Rio de Janeiro
May 22, 1914; Secretary of Embassy of Legation of class three by
act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Bogota !March 6,
1915; assigned to Panama January 3, 1917; to Tegucigalpa Jan-
uary 9, 1918; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class two August 27. 191S; assigned to Managua as Charge
d'Affaires October 7, 191S; to Christiania, March ir, 1919; to the
Department of State June 7, 192 1; appointed Secretary of class
one August 24, 1921; assigned to Guatemala December 15, 1921;
to the Department of State February 24, 1922; designated and
assigned as Counselor of the Legation at Budapest October 20,
1923; appointed Foreig:] Service Officer of class two July i,
1924.
♦ Curtis, James L. — Died en route to Freetown October 24.
1917, while Minister Resident and Consul-General to Liberia.
Register of 1916.
Cusack, Mary H. — Bom in Washington, D. C.; graduate
of a Washington academy; employed as a clerk in the War
Department five months, 191 7-18; appointed a clerk, tcm-
Ijorarily, at $990 in the Department of State April 29, 1918; at
$1,080 November i, 1919; at $900, under Civil Service rules,
December 10, 1920; at $1,000 September i, 1922; at $1,500 July
I, 1924.
Cushing, Earl Arlie. — Bom in Sandy, Utah, November 23,
1896; graduated from high school and attended the University
of Utah three months; pursued a business-college course three
months; employed as ore classifier for a mining company 1916;
served in the United States Anny 1917-1919; clerk in the Salt
Lake City Post Office 1919-1924 and in the Chief Inspector's
Office, Post Office Department. Washington, D. C, 1924;
transferred from the Post Office Department and appointed a
clerk at $1,320 in the Department ol State, under Civil Service
rules, August 23, 1924.
♦ Cutting, Jr., William Bayard.— Retired as Secretary of the
Legation at Tangier July, 1909. Died at Aswan. Egypt, March
10, 1910. Register of 1913.
* Dabney, Thomas Ewing.— Retired as Secretary of the Lega-
tion and Consul-General at San Salvador December, 191 1.
Register of 1913.
DaUeres, Sabin Jean.— Bom in Belle Rose, La., Febmary 16,
1888; attended high school, Donaldsonville, La.; employed as
salesman in general merchandise store three years; manager of
men's department in department store, five years; engaged in
newspaper work in New Orleans, two years; enlisted in the
United States Army. September i, 1917; with American Com-
mission to Negotiate Peace September 3 to December 9, 1919;
appointed Vice-Consul at Warsaw March 10, 1920.
Damm, Henry Christian Augustus.— Born in West Bloom-
field, Wis., January 19, 1S74; home. Sewanee, Tenn.; attended
parochial, public, and normal schools in Illinois; engaged in
orange culture in Florida; taught in Florida public schools
from 1898-1904; taught in the Sewanee (Tenn.) Military Acad-
emy, 1904-1909; B. A. and M. A. of the University of the South;
appointed, after examination (April 7, 1908), Consul at Corn-
wall May 31, 1909; Consul at Stettin April 9, 1912; Consul of
class eight by act approved February 5, 191s; appointed Consul
of class seven February 22, 191s, and assigned to Aix laChapelle;
assigned to Stavanger June s, 1917; detailed to Vardo June 20,
1918; to Kirkens August 10, 1918; to Christiania October 5,
1918; tmassigned from October 28, 1918; returned to Stavanger
April 24, 1919; detailed to Copenhagen August 13, 1919; ap-
pointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; class five June 4,
1920; detailed to Malaga September 23, 1920; assigned to Valen-
cia, June 27, 1921; detailed to Nogales May 17, 1922; assigned
to Nogales October 2, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Daniel, Helen Lane.— Born in Fredericksburg. Va.; attended
a preparatory school in Richmond, Va., and Fredericksburg
College 1910-11; graduated from Fredericksburg State Normal
School 1913; public-school teacher in Charlottesville, Va.,
1913-1918; clerk with the War Trade Board July, 1918, to March,
1919; with the Bureau of the Census, Department of Com-
merce 1919-1922; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules. May 26,
1922; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
* Daniels, Charles N.— Retired as Consul of class six, as-
signed to Sherbrooke, November, 1916. Died in Southbridge,
Mass., December 17, 1916. Register of 1915.
Daniels, Thomas Leonard.— Bom in Piqua, Ohio. July 4,
1892; home, Minneapolis, Minn.; graduated from Yale Uni-
versity (A. B.), 1914; treasurer of a linseed oil manufacturing
company 1915-1921; served in the United States Army, captain
and major, December, 1917, to January, 1919; appointed, after
examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class four August 24, 192 1; assigned to the Department of
State September 9, 1921; designated for duty in connection with
the Conference on the Limitation of Armament September 26,
1921; assigned to Brussels December 17, 1921; appointed Secre-
tary of class three May 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924; assigned as Second Secretary of Embassy at
Rio de Janeiro July 17, 1924.
Darley, Mary Lilian. — Bom in Alexandria, Va.; attended
ArUngton Institute, St. Mary's Academy, and George Wash-
ington University; stenographer for Council of National Defense
191S, and in Government Departments 1919-1924; transferred
from the Veterans' Bureau and appointed a clerk at $1,320 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December
2, 1924.
Davidson, Howard C. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Assistant Military Attache at London April 6, 1923.
* Davidson, James Wheeler.— Retired as Consul at .\ntung
February, 1906. Register of 1913.
Davis, Bertha Sarah. — Born in Gainsboro, Va.; educated
in public schools of Washington, D. C, Hagerstown Normal
High School, and private instruction for two years; typewriter
in Washington. D. C; appointed clerk class one in the Depart-
ment of State July 2, 1906, under the provisions of legislative
act approved June 22, igo6; class two October i, 1913; class
three June 22, to beefifective July i, 1916; class four July i, 1921
at $2,100 July I. 1924.
Davis, Chester Wyman.— Bom in Utica, N. Y., November
6, 1880; home, Utica; attended Hobart College and Cornell
University two and a half years; practiced law in Utica 1904-
1916 and 1919-ao; commissioner of public safety in Utica;
served in the United States Army June, 1916, to August, 1919;
retired as major; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1920), Consul of class seven, June 4, 1920; assigned to Cieorge-
ii6
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
town August 2, 1920; appointed Consul of class six, November
33, 1921; assigned to Strasbourg April 28, 1923; appointed Consul
of class five December 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924.
Davis, De Lyle.— Bom in Price, Utah, August 14, 1896;
graduated from McKinley Manual Training High School,
Washington, D. C, 1916; employed as an electrician in Llano,
Calif., and Washington, D. C, July, 1916, to September, 1917:
clerk in the War Department, February-August, 1918; radio
operator in the Signal Corps of the United States Army, August,
1918, to February, 1919; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, January 27, 1919;
class one March i, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924-
Dafis, Elsie Cornelia.— Bom in Laurel, Md.; educated in the
public schools and at a business college, Washington, D. C;
employed as bookkeeper and clerk by a telephone company
1912-1917; stenographer in the War Department October, 1917,
to November, 1919; transferred to the Departrnent of State and
appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules, Novem-
ber 22, 1919; resigned May 20, 1924; reinstated at $1,320 December
IS. 1924.
♦Davis, George Fleming.— Died at his post (Ceiba) February
13, 1912. Register of 1913.
Davis, Hartwell C. — Lieutenant commandei, United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Assistant Naval Attachd at Tokyo
October 13, 1920.
Davis, James Porter. — Born in Tennille, Ga., August 31,
1889; home, Tennille; graduate of Mercer University (A. B.)
1908, and spent one year in Chicago and Columbia Universities;
teacher in Georgia schools and in boys' camp 1908-1916; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of class eight
September 14, 1917; detailed to Marseille, November 3, 1917;
appointed Consul of class six September s. 1919; assigned to
Bangkok October 20, 1920; appointed Consul of class five
November 19, 192 1; detailed as administrative Consul at Shang-
hai June 28, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
Davis, John Ker. — Bom in China of American parents
March 5. 1882; home, Wooster, O.; attended Pantops Academy
(Virginia) two years, Wooster Academy two years, Wooster
University five years (B. A. and M. A.); private secretary and
tutor in China three years; instructor in Chinese commercial
school; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Nanking Decem-
ber 10, 1909, but declined; appointed Deputy Consul-General
Sit Shanghai April 14, 1910; appointed, alter examination
(January 31, 1912) Student Interpreter in China March 12, 1912;
Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at Shanghai June 7,
1913; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at
Canton September 16, 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul and
Interpreter at Chefoo March 17, 1914; appointed Consul of class
eight June 8, 1915, and assigned to Antung; appointed Consul
of class seven September 14, 191 7; assigned to Nanking May 29,
1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; class five
June 4, 1920; on detail as senior assessor at Shanghai March 3 to
July 22, 1Q23; appointed Consul of class four June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
*Davis, John W. — Retired as Ambassador to Great Britain
liarch, 1921. Register of 1918.
Davis, Laurie A. — Bom in Union Springs, N. Y.; attended
Oakwood Seminary 1880-1889; George Washington University
one semester 1919; private instruction in French and Spanish;
employed as stenographer and general office assistant with
various commercial concerns 1894-1918; clerk in the Finance
Office, War Department, August, 1918, to February, 1921;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed a clerk
of class one, under Civil Service rules, March 3, 1921; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
Davis, Leslie Ammerton.- Born in Port Jefferson, N. Y.,
April 29, 1876; home, Port Jefferson; graduated from Cornell
University (Ph. B.), i89!»; Columbian (now George Washing-
ton) University (LL. B.), 1904, and took a one year's course
in international law at the New York University law school;
engaged in business, 1898-1901 ; engaged in the practice of law in
New York City, 1904-1912; appointed, after examination (June
27, 1910), Consul at Batum March 13, 1912; Consul at Harput
April 24, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved Febru-
ary s. 1915; appointed Consul of class six July 6, 1918; detailed
to Archangel December 31, 1918; to Helsingfors April 15, 1919;
appointed Consul of class five September s. 1919; class four
June 4, 1920; Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class five July i, 1924;
assigned to Zagreb September 9, 1924.
Davis, Marianna. — Born in Ohio; educated in public schools
of Jackson, Ohio, a normal school, and the Bartlett Commercial
College of Cincinnati; stenographer and typewriter in Cincin-
nati; appointed clerk class one in the Department of State
July 2, 1906, under the provisions of legislative act approved
June 22, 1906; class two July i, 1908; class three June 22. to be
effective July i, 1916; at Si,S6o July i, 1924.
Davis, Monnett Bain. — Bom in Greencastle, Ind., August
13, 1S93; home, Colorado Springs, Col.; attended business college
1908-09; Argentine High School, Kansas City, Kans., 1909-1912;
Baker University, Baldwin, Kans., 1912-1914; University of
Colorado, 1914-1917, (A. B.); employed in the export de-
partment of a comraercial concern, Peoria, 111.; clerk in the
American Consulate Cartagena, Colombia, 191 7; served in the
National Guard of Colorado, 1916; United States Army, August,
1917, to December, 191S; appointed, after examination (January
19. 1920), Consul of class seven June 4, 1920; assigned to Port
Elizabeth, Febraary 15, 1921; appointed Consul of class six
March i, 1923; assigned to Saltillo January 2, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; class six
August S, 1924; detailed to the Department of State December
24, 1924.
Davis, Nathaniel Penlstone.— Bom in Princeton, N. J.,
May i, 1895; home, Princeton; attended Lawrenceville School
1912; graduated from Princeton University (A. B.) 1916; post
graduate course at the University of Pennsylvania, and at the
University of Neuchatel, Switzerland; graduated from the Air
Service Radio Officers' School, Columbia University, 1918;
employed as a clerk by the Young Men's Christian Association
1916-17; served in the United States Army, retiring as second
lieutenant, December, 1917, to January, 1919; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, at $1,800 in the Department of State, Janu-
ary 20, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three, February 17, 1921; detailed to
the American Commission at Berlin, July 21, 1921; assigned to
the Consulate General at Berlin, November 15, 1921; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; class one
February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923
remained at Berlin on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
Davis, Raymond. — Bom in Portland, Me., September 5, 1883;
home, Portland; graduated from Bowdoin College (A. B) 1905;
Yale Forest School (M. F.) 1907; employed in forestry work
1907-1911; in fruit ranching and road construction in Washing-
ton and Oregon 1911-1917; in railway freight sheds in San Fran-
cisco, 1917; served in United States Army July, 1917, to Novem-
ber, 1919, retiring as a first lieutenant; transportation ofiScer
for the Serbian Relief Commission in Serbia and Greece, 1920;
appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Consul of class
seven November 23, 1921; detailed to Aden, December 14, 1921;
assigned to Aden, October 2, 1922; detailed to Paris January 2,
1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i,
1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
*Davls, Robert Beale.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three, assigned to Guatemala, August, 1920.
Register of 1922.
Davis, Roger Neil.— Bora in Pittsford, Mich., February 26.
1900; graduated from the Hyde Park (Mich.) High School 1918;
attended the University of Michigan and the Hyde Park
Junior College one year each; served in the United States Army
October-December, 1918; employed as machine operator and
with a newspaper company; clerk in the American Consulate
at Quebec November 4, 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul at Winni-
peg November 9, 1922.
Davis, Roy Tasco.— Bom in Ewing, Mo., June 14, 1889; home,
Columbia, Mo.; graduated from La Grange College (A. B.) 1908;
Brown University (Ph. B.) 1910; served in the Missouri State
Bureau of the Census i9ii-i2,and with the State Capitol Com-
mission of Missouri, 1912-1914; vice president and business
manager. Stephens College, 1914-1921; appointed Envoy Ex-
traordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Guatemala, Oc-
tober 8, 1921; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-
tentiary to Costa Rica, February 10, 1922.
Davis, Thomas Dick.— Bom in Macedonia, Miss., March 7,
1879; home, McAlester, Okla.; graduate of the University of
Mississippi (A. B.), 1899, (LL. B.) 1901; lawyer; police judge
in McAlester, 1904-1906; clerk, county court of Pittsburg
County, 1908; city attorney of McAlester, 1910-1913; appointed,
after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul of class nine
Febmary 22, 1915, and assigned to Grenoble; appointed Consul
of class eight September 14, 1917; assigned to Calais May 27,
1919; appointed Consul of class six September 3, 1919; ForeigTi,
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
117
Dawson, Claude Ivan.— Born in Burlington, Iowa. October
»S. 1877; home, Anderson. S. C; attended the graded schools
and Eastern High School, Washington, D. C, and studied one
year at the Georgetown University law school; member of the
District of Columbia militia two years; sergeant. Company G,
First District of Columbia Volunteers, May to November, 1898;
employed in various positions in the treasury department of
the insular government of Porto Rico, 1899-1904; secretary of
traction company in South Carolina, 1904-1908; examiner in
Interstate Conxmerce Commission, 1908-1910; appointed, after
examination (July 7, 1908). Consul at Puerto Cortes June 24,
1910; Consul at Valencia August 22, 1912; Consul of class eight
by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class
seven March 3, 1915; Consul of class six October 18, 1915, and
assigned to Tampico; appointed Consul of class five September
5, 1919; class three June 4. 1920: Consul-General of class four
November 19, 1921; detailed to Mexico City January 16, 1922;
appointed Consul-General of class three March i, 1943; assigned
to Mexico City October 2, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class two July i, 1924; assigned to Stockholm August
I, 1924-
Dawson, Leonard Geedlng.— Bom at Staunton, Va., Janu-
ary 19, 1882; home, Staunton; educated in public and business
schools; bookkeeper in Staunton, 1902-03; deputy provincial
treasurer and provincial treasurer in the Philippines, 1903-
1916; appointed, after examination (June iS, 1917), a Consul of
tlass eight February 5, 1918; detailed to Barcelona October 8.
1918; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned
to Madras September 8, 1919; to Santander December 27, 1921;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1934.
•Dawson, Tbomas Cleland.— Died in Washington. D. C,
May 1, 1912, while Resident Diplomatic Officer, Department
of State. Register of 1913.
Dawson, William.— Bom in St. Paul, Minn., August 11, 1S85;
home, St. Paul; educated at the University of Minnesota and
rficole Libre des Sciences Politiques, Paris; appointed Vice
and Deputy Consul-General at Petrograd March 28, 1908; Vice
and Deputy Consul July i, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Barcelona August 24, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Frankfort September 26, 1910; appointed, after
examination (June 27, 1910), Consul at Rosario November 24,
1913; Consul of class eight by act approved February s. 1915;
appointed Consul of class six March 2, 1915; assigned to Monte-
video March 20, 1917; appointed Consul of class five July 6,
1918; designated as American Commissioner at Danzig October
6, 1919; assigned to Danzig March 29, 1920; appointed Consul of
class three June 4, 1920; detailed to Munich September 19, 1921;
assigned to Munich November 15, 1921; appointed Consul-
General at Large November 19, 1921: detailed to the Depart-
ment of State September 16. 1923; appointed Consul-General of
class three June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class two
July I, 1934.
♦ Day, Erastus Sheldon.— Retired as Consul at Bradford,
England, August 22, 1909. Register of 1913.
• Deal, Charles.— Retired as Consul at St. Johns, Quebec,
August 1909. Register of 1913.
Deane, Harold Merriman.- Bom in Waterbury, Conn.,
October 24, 1S91; home. Providence, R. I.; graduated from
Yale University (A. B.) 1913; teacher in Robert College, Con-
stantinople. 1913-1917; clerk in Legation in Berne, June, 1917,
to December, 1918; with the Peace Commission, Paris, Decem-
ber, 191S, to June, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 26,
1919) , Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, Septem-
ber s, 1919; assigned to Berlin, October 29, 1919; to Quito,
August 3, 1921; appointed Secretary of class three, August
24, 1921; assigned to Tegucigalpa January 3, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned as
Third Secretary of Legation at San Jose July 12, 1924.
Dearing. Fred Morris.— Bora in Columbia, Mo., November
19. 1879; home, St. Louis, Mo.; graduate of the University of
Missouri (A. B.); took post-graduate course in jurisprudence
and diplomacy in Columbian University; taught a district
school in Missouri and in a military academy in St. Louis;
translator in Post Office Department and in the Department of
Agriculture, 1902; private secretary to the Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Cuba, June, 1904; appointed,
after examination, Second Secretary of the Legation at Habana
July 30, 1906; Second Secretary of the Legation at Peking April
6, 1907; Secretary of the Legation at Habana January 14, 1909;
Second Secretary of the Embassy at London February 18, 1910;
Secretary' of the Embassy at Mexico City Augxist 12, 1910; As-
sistant Chief of the Division of Latin-American Affairs Decem-
ber 21, 1911; Secretary of the Legation at Brussels July 2, 1913;
Secretary of the Embassy at Madrid February n, 1914; Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Petrograd February 2, 1916;
designated and assigned as Counselor of the Embassy at Petro-
grad July 17, i9i6;unassigned from November 7, 1916; detached,
temporarily, April i, 191 7; retired April, 1919; with the .Ameri-
can International Corporation 1919-1921; appointed Assistant
Secretary of State, March 11, 1921; Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Portugal February 10, 1922.
*De Billier, Frederic Ogden.— * * * Appointed Secretary
of class one January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class
three July i, 1924. Retired from active ser\-ice as First Secre-
tary of Embassy at Rome July i, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦De Castro, Hector. — Died in Rome, Italy, January 30, 1909,
while 0>nsul-General at Zurich. Register of 1913.
DeCell, Edith.— Bora in Casey ville, Miss.; attended Hill-
man College (Clinton, Miss.), Brenan College (Gainesville,
Ga.), and a business college; employed as high-school music
teacher several years; clerk-stenographer for commercial con-
cerns 1923; clerk in the Department of State March-September,
1923; stenographer for a commercial concern four months;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, January 28, 1924; at $1,000 April 22, 1924;
at $1,320 July I, 1924.
De Courcy, William Earl.— Born at Jackson, Tenn., Febru-
ary 4, 1894; home, Chattanooga; attended Mississippi Heights
High School four years and the University of Texas two years;
employed as traveling accountant by a railroad company 191 1-
191 7; served in the United States Army 1917-1919, retiring with
the rank of second lieutenant; employed as an accountant in
Europe by the Young Men's Christian Association 1920-21;
clerk in the American Consulate at Geneva, Switzerland, 1931-
1923; appointed, after examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three July 6, 1923; assigned to Geneva
July 10, 1923; to Cairo November 20, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1934.
♦Deedmeyer, Frank.— Retired as Consul at Chemnitz Sep-
tember, 1914. Register of 1914.
De Feo, John Donald. — Born in Harwinton, Oinn., June 22,
1900; graduated from high school and attended a business col-
lege; student of languages in Rome, Italy, 1920-21; clerk in the
War Department 1917-18, and in the American Embassy at
Rome, Italy, December, 1918, to June, 1923; transferred from
the Diplomatic Service and appointed a clerk of class one in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, June 25,
1923; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Deichman, Carl Frederick.— Born in St. Joseph, Mo., Novem-
ber 23, 1871; home, St. Louis, Mo.; educated in the St. Louis
public schools, business college, and by private tutors; em-
ployed by the Missouri Pacific Railway at St. Louis, the St.
Louis & New Orleans Anchor Line, and in the Lafayette
Brewery at St. Louis; employed under the United States
Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1899-1907; appointed, after exami-
nation (March 14, 1907), Consul at Manzanillo March 30, 1907;
Consul at Tansui May 4, 1908; Consul at Nagasaki Jlay 31.
1909; Consul at Bombay December 29, 1914; Consul of clasi
five by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Santos Octo-
ber 18, 1915; detailed to Valparaiso June 10, 1919; appointed
Consul of class four September 5, 1919; Consul-General of clas»
four June 4, 1920; assigned to Valparaiso June 23, 1920; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Deike, Mildred Viola.— Born in Guelph, Ontario, Canada;
attended the public and high schools of Guelph and took
special work at the Washington Missionary College, Takoma
Park, Md., one year; employed by a publishing association
i907-i9io;by a correspondence school 1911-1915; in a secretarial
capacity, 1915-1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900
in the Department of State October 22, 1917; at $1,000 December
I, 1917; at $1,200 March i, 1918; at $1,000, under Civil Service
rules, January 6, 1919; class one March i, 1919; class two
August 6, 1920; class three September i, 1922; at $1,860 July i,
1924.
De Lamater, Harry Irving.— Bom in Weedsport, N. Y.,
August 25, 1889; attended high school, and Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology one year; served in the United State*
Army June 29, 1918, to February 29, 1919; employed as account-
ant four years; resident manager, grain corporation, Winni-
peg, Manitoba, two years; marine draftsman. Port Arthur,
Ontario, three years; appointed Vice-Consul at Fort William
and Port Arthur, October 2, 1920.
de Lambert, Richard Marmaduke.— Born in White Plains,
N. Y., June 29, 1893; home. Raton. N. ^fex.; educated at home
and in public schools and took courses in a business college, at
ii8
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT,
American University, and at Georgetown University; em-
ployed as secretary to a mine superintendent; chief clerk of a
sugarite mine; in audit department of a railway company;
clerk in the Axnerican Legation at Teheran 1915-1921; ap-
pointed, after examination (July 9, 1923), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, December 12, 1923, and assigned
to the Department of State; assigned to Quito February 4, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Ollicer of class eight July i, 1924.
Delaney, Thomas James.— Born in Alexandria, Va., July 14,
1892; attended public schools; served in the United States
Navy; appointed an assistant messenger at $720 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, December i, 1919;
resigned November 14. 1921; messenger for the Conference on
the Limitation of Armament November, 1921, to February,
1922; reinstated as assistant messenger in the Department of
State February 16, 1922; appointed messenger August i, 1923.
Delaney, WUliam Francis.— Bom in Naugatuck, Conn.,
November 21, 1901; high-school graduate; attended George-
town Foreign Service School and Georgetown Law School
one year each; served in the United States Army 1920-21;
clerk in the Library of Congress September, 1923, to January,
1924; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State,
under Ci\-il Service niles, February 11, 1924; at $1,000 May 31,
effective June i, 1924; at $1,260 July i, 1924.
de Lashmutt, Rebekah Leiter.- Born in Frederick, Md.; at-
tended private, public, and business schools; two years politi-
cal science, George Washington University, 1917-18; teacher
1908-19 10; clerk and stenographer in lawyers' offices and business
houses 1910-1915; appointed a clerk,temporarily,in the Depart-
ment of State January 15, 1915; permanently, at $1,000, under
Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class
one, temporarily, November i, 1916; permanently, March 12,
1917; class two May i, 1918; class three March i, 1919; class four
November i, 1923; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
De Loy, Florence M.— Bom in New Haven, Conn.; attended
public schools and a business college in New Haven; employed
as a stenographer by various companies in New Haven and
Boston two years; stenographer in the War Department in
Boston and Washington one year; appointed a clerk of class
one in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, July
19. 1919; class two December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923;
at $i,fiSo July I, 1924.
*Demers, Pierre Paul.— Retired as Consul at Bahia October,
1909. Register of 1913.
Demorest, Alfredo L.— Bom in Santiago, Chile, February 13,
1881; attended Colegio "Ygnacio Domeyko" 1888-1890; Insti-
tute Ingles 1891-1895; University of Santiago 1896-1899 (B. A.) ;
University of California 1901-01: author and illustrator:
assistant cjuartermaster 1 or a powder company. New Jersey;
served in the United States Army July 23, 1918, to October
1, 1919, as first lieutenant; Assistant Military Attach^, Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil; appointed Vice-Consul at Trinidad March
9> 1931.
*Denby, Charles.— Retired as Consul-General at Vienna
March, 1915. Register of 1914.
Denby, James Orr. — Bom in Peking, China, of American
parents, August 30, 1896; home, Washington, D. C; graduated
from Princeton University (A. B.) 1920; George Washington
University (M. A.) 1921; served as sergeant in the United States
Army 1917-1919; appointed, after examination (July 11, 1921),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four August 24, 192 1;
assigned to the Department of State September 8, 192 1; desig-
nated for duty in connection with the Conference on the I,imita-
tion of Armament September 30, 1921; assigned to Tokyo Janu-
ary 31, 1922; to Athens July 23, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
♦Denison, Frank C— * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class nine July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Prescott July i, 1924, under the provisions of the
Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Denmark, John Eustace.— Bom in Statesboro, Ga., April
20, 1899; attended Georgia Mihtary College 1918-19; graduated
from University of Georgia (A. B.) 1922; public-school teacher
1922-23; appointed Vice-Consul at Soerabaya July 8, 1924.
Dennett, Tyler.— Bom in Spencer, Wis., June 13, 1883;
graduated from Williams College (A. B.) 1904, and Johns
Hopkins University (Ph. D.) 1924; engaged in secretarial,
Uterary, and social work several years; editor 1915-19x8; cor-
respondent with the Commission to Negotiate Peace, 1918;
engaged in historical research in diplomatic history of the
Far East 1919-1925; lecturer in history at Johns Hopkins
University 1923-24; author of numerous books, monographs,
and magazine articles; appointed a drafting officer at $3,800
in the Department of State and designated Chief of the Divi-
sion of Publications December 22, 1924.
*Dennle, Uatty Wheeler.— Retired as Marshal at Chefoo,
March, 1912 Register of 1914.
Dennis, Lawrence. — Bom in Atlanta, Ga., December 25,
1893; home, Cambridge, Mass.; graduated from Harvard Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1919; served in the United States Army, lieu-
tenant, August, 1917, to March, 1919; clerk in the Legation at
Port au Prince October, 1920, to July, 1921; appointed, after
examination (July u, 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class four August 24, 1921; assigned to the Department of
State September i, 1921; to Bucharest, October 22. 1921; ai>-
pointed Secretary of class three May 3, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class six July, i, 1924: assigned as Second Secretary of
Legation at Tegucigalpa October 2, 1924.
Dennison, Edwin Haldeman. — Born in Colunibus, Ohio, Oc-
tober 28, 1872; home, Columbus; educated in the Harcourt
School, Gambler, Ohio, St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H., and
Yale College; employed in the Indian Service and under the
Department of the Interior; appointed, after examination (No-
vember 4, 1903), Commercial Agent at Rimouski November 7,
1903; Consul at Bombay June 21, 1906; Consul at Dundee De-
cember 19, iqio; Consul of class five by act approved February
5, 1915; appointed Consul-General of class five October 18, 1915,
and assigned to Christiania; appointed Consul of class four
April 16, 191 7, and assigned to Birmingham; assigned to Que-
bec March 15, 1919; appointed Consul of class three, April 13,
1920; Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Derry, Charles Hall. — Bom in Macon, Ga., June 14, 1900:
home, Macon; high-school graduate; clerk with various business
concerns in Macon 1919-1922; appointed, after examination
(January i6, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 26,
1922; assigned to Santa Marta August 28, 1922; appointed Con-
sular Assistant August 14, 1923, and detailed to the Depart-
ment of State; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
DeruUe, Desirfe. — Citizen of Luxemburg, born February 10,
1876; employed in a general insurance, banking, and steamship
ofl&ce; appointed Consular Agent at Luxemburg January 11,
I913-
*De SauUes, John Longer. — Retired as Minister to Uruguay
May, 1914, without having proceeded to his post. Died at
RosljTi, N. Y., August 3, 1917. Register of 1914.
De Savigny, William Horacio. — Born in Quebec, Canada,
September 24, i860; naturalized in Ramsey County, Minn.,
December 10, 1892; educated in the public schools oi Canada;
coffee grower and manager; appointed Consular Agent at Mata-
galpa January 24, 1905; resigned July 3, 1914; reappointed
December 4, 191 6.
De Soto, Hernando. — Born in Jena. Germany, of American
parents, August 9, 1866; educated by private instructors in
Rome, 1R74-1879, and at College in Paris and Jena, 1879-1884;
appointed Deputy Consul at Chemnitz June 20, 1889; Deputy
Consul at Dresden July 3, 1891 ; Deputy Consul-General October
20, 1892; appointed, after examination (February 6, 1902), Consu-
lar Clerk February 7, 1902; also Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Petrograd April 18, 1902; Vice-Consul at Warsaw Novem-
ber II, 1902; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Petrograd
July 17, 1903; retired as Vice and Deputy Consul-General at
Petrograd November, 1903; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul-General at St. Gall December 15, 1903; detailed to the
Consulate-General at Paris December, 1905; appointed Deputy
Consul-General at Paris November 23, 1906; Vice-Consul-
General at St. Gall May 22, 1907; Consul at Warsaw August
IS, 1907; Consul at Riga June 10, 1908; Consul at Palermo
June 24, 1910; Consul at Warsaw April 27, 1914; Consul of class
five by act approved February 5, 1915; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State July 21, 1917; appointed Consul of class four
September s, 1919; class three June 4, 1920; detailed to Berlin
July 12, 1921; assigned to Leipzig November 15, 1921; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924
De Vault, Charles L. — Bom in Columbia City, Ind.. Octo-
ber 22, 1874; home, Marion, Ind.; attended public schools of In-
diana; Chumbusco (Ind). High School; University ot Michigan
(LL. B.), 189s; employed as teacher and school superintendent,
Indiana, 1889-1896; engaged in the practice of law, 1896-1909; roll
clerk, Indiana House of Representatives, 1903; appointed clerk
in the American Embassy at Paris, February 7, 1918; Vice-Con-
sul at Paris, April 15, 1919; at London, November 5, 1920; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-consul de
carriere of class three October 26, 1921; assigned to London
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
119
November 14, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two November 23, 1923; class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer, xmclassified, July 1. 1934; class nine, also Consul, August
8, 1924; assigned to Taihoku December 12, 1924.
de Verteuil, Marc. — British subject, bom in Trinidad March
10, 1894; graduated from St. Marys College; sers^ed in various
capacities with the Trinidad Lake Asphalt Co. (Ltd.), Brigh-
ton, eight years; appointed Consular Agent at Brighton March
as. 1921.
de Wolf, Francis Colt. — Bom in Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany,
of American parents, October 28, 1894: attended primary schools
of Belgium and studied under a tutor three years; graduated
from Providence (R. I.) high school 1914; from Harvard Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1918; and from Columbia Law School (LL. B.)
1922; representative of a New York tmst compiiny abroad one
year; appointed an assistant solicitor at $2,500 in the Depart-
ment of State October iS, 1922; at $3,000 November i, 1923.
Deiter, Fletcher. — Born in Brookline, Mass., February 15,
1885; attended Kaiser Friedrich Wilhelm Gyiiiniisium. Berlin,
three years. La Villa, Lausanne, Switzerland, three years, and
Harvard University two years; professor of languages in Lau-
sanne, Switzerland, four years; appointed Ccnsiilar Agent at
Vevey June 9, 1915; Consular Agent at Lausanne January 4,
1916; Vice-Consul at Lausanne July i, 1918.
♦Dexter, Lewis.— Retired as Consul at Leeds August, 1909.
Register of 1913.
♦D'HauteviUe, Paul Grand. — Retired as Secretary of the
Legation at Berne August, 190S. Register of 1913.
Dick, Hasell Hutchison. — Born in Rock Hill, S. C, June 29,
1S8S; home, Sumter, S. C; educated in public schools of Sum-
ter, and spent two and a hall years at the United States Naval
Academy; member of the National Guard, South Carohna;
appointed, after examination (January 30, 191 1). Consular
Assistant March 10, 191 1; Deputy Consul-General at Yokohama
May 17, 1911; Vice and IDeputy Consul-General at Yokohama
June II, 1913; on detail in the Department of State January 25
to August 3, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Jerusalem July 19,
1915; Vice-Consul at Basel July 13, 1917; Consul of class eight
September 14, 1917; detailed to Basel Jime, 191 7; appointed
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed, temporarily, to
Geneva October 23, 1919; detailed to the Department of State
May 2t, 1920; appointed Consul of class five June 4, 1920; class
four June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i,
1924; assigned to Sydney, Nova Scotia, September 22, 1924.
Dickey, Caroline. — Bom in London, England; completed
course in a private school; operator for Western Union Tele-
graph Co.. Buffalo, N. Y,, two years; operator and assistant
chief, Bell Telephone Co., Buffalo, five years; appointed an
assistant telephone operator, temporarily, at S720 in the Depart-
ment of State November 18, 1918; telephone switchboard
operator at $720, under Civil Service rules, August 3, 1920;
at $1,140 July I, 1924.
Dickins, George Francis. — Bom in Portsmouth, N. H.,
March 18, 1S96; attended Cornell University four years and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology one year; served in
the United States Army, retiring with the rank of heutenant;
general manager for a baking company and junior research
engineer for an electrical mantifacturing company eighteen
months each; engineer for a construction company nine months
and instructor of mathematics two years; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Penang, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at
Penang December 18, 1923.
♦Dickinson, Charles M.— Retired as Consul-General at Large,
October, 1907. Register of 1913.
♦Dickinson, George W.— Retired as Consul at Acapulcojune,
190S. Register of 1913.
Dickinson, Horace Jewell. — Bom in Arkansas City, Ark.-
October 26, 1885; home. Little Rock, Ark.; attended the
public schools of Arkansas and the University of Arkansas
three years; stenographer and typewriter. Bureau of Cus-
toms and Immigration, Philippine Islands, 1905-1909; ap-
pointed ^Marshal of the Consular Court at Canton July 6,
1909; appointed, after examination (March 15, 1915), Consul
of class nine April 19, 1917; assigned to Padang July 21, 1917;
appointed Consul of class eight September 14. 1917; in charge
of the American Consulate at Batavia January 9 to July 9,
1918; detailed to Singapore June i8, 1918; assigned to Antilla
February 7, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924
Dickover, Erie Roy.— Born in Long Beach, Calif., January 20,
1886; home, Santa Barbara, Calif.; attended the public schools of
California ten years, Stanford University one and one-half years.
University of California three years. B. S. (1913); bookkeeper
in a bank 1905-1908 and 1910-n; manager auto livery company
summer of 1909; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1914), Student Interpreter m Japan April 4, 1914; Vice-Consul
at Dairen March 30, 1916 ; Vice-Consul at Kobe June 8, 1916;
also Interpreter at Kobe October 27. 1916; appointed Consul
of class six November 23, 1921: remained at Kobe on detail;
appointed Consul of class five March i, 1923; Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924.
♦Dickson, Almar F.— Retired as Consul at Gaspe June, 1908,
Register of 1913.
Dickson, LllUe Virginia.— Born in Washington, D . C. ; stenog-
rapher in real estate and law offices lor eight years; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State, December 6,
191;; permanently, at $1,000, under Executive order, June 22,
to be effective July i, 1916; class one, temporarily, October i8,
19 16; permanently, March 7, 1917; class two March i, 1919;
resigned March 23, 1920; reinstated as a clerk of class one, March
21, 1921; class two December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923;
at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Dickson, Samuel Stirman.— Bom in Fayetteville, Ark.,
November i8, 1895; home, Gallup, N. Mex.; educated in
public and private schools and spent two years at Washington
a id Lee University; employed in a bank for a year; clerk in
i.TC American Embassy at London, September, 1917-May,
1918; apprinted, after examination (June 25, 1917), Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four May 3, 1918; assigned to
London June 2, 1918; appointed Secretary of class three Decem-
ber 20, 1919; assigned to Asuncion, February 27, 1920; assigned
to Lisbon March i, 1922; to Bangkok September 29, 1922; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
*Diederich, Henry W.— * * * Appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active
service as Consul at Samia July i, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Dietrich, Herman R.— Retired as Consul-General at Guay-
aquil December, 19x2. Register of r;;i3.
♦Dill, Harry P.— Retired as Consul at Orillia January. 1915.
Register of 1914.
♦Dillingham, Frank. — Retired as Consul-General of class five,
assigned to Christiania September, 1915. Register of 1914,
Dillon, Esther May. — Bom in Mishawaka, Ind.; attended
pubhc schools; La Porte (Ind.) High School three years; busi-
ness college six months; stenographer for thresher manufac-
turing company, 1913-1918; clerk in The Adjutant General's
Office, War Department, 1918-1921; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil
Service rules, April 16, 1921; at $1,500 in the Passport Bureau
of the Department of State at Seattle September 10, 1923; at
$i,6So August I, 1924.
Dinan, John A. — British subject, bom in Cork, Ireland,
June 20, 1885; managing directer of a timber, iron, and hard-
ware company at Limerick; appointed Consular Agent at
Limerick December 30, 1914.
Dismon, Frances Naomi. — Bora in New York City; grad-
uated from Hunter College (B. A.) 1916; employed by private
corporation 1916-17; clerk in War Department 1917-1S; en-
gaged in teaching and other educational work 1918-1920; clerk
in the Department of State May-November, 1923, and April-
August, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,140, in the Department
of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, October 27, 1924.
Diven, Frederick Menkert. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., Feb-
ruary 17, 1892; attended the public schools of Baltimore, Md.;
graduated from Frederick (Md.) High School, June, 1909;
University of Virginia (LL. B.), 1912; instmctor of law at the
University of Virginia January, 1913, to June, 1914; practiced
law two years; employed by an advertising company October,
1916, to August, 1917; served in the United States Army
August-November, 191 7; in the United States Navy May,
1918, to February, 1919; appointed a clerk at $900 in the De-
partment of State, under Ci%nl Service rules, March 24, 1919;
at $1,000 July I, 1919; class one, :May i, 1920; class two December
30, 1922, effective January i. 1923; law clerk at $2,000 February
10, 1933; at $2,350 November i, 1923; at $2,500 July i, 1924-
Dix, Adele Emma.— Bora in Baltimore, Md.; has a public
and business school education; spciialized in Ennlish at Gcori;e
Washington University one year; appointed a clerk, tempora-
rily, in the Department of State. August 7, 1914; permanently
at $1,000, under Executive order, June 33, to be effective July
I20
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT
I, 1916; class one October 3, 1917; class two JIarch i, 1919; class
three November i, 1923; at $i,S6o July i, 1924.
Doane, Elizabeth S.— Bora in Earlville. III.; high school
graduate; degree of bachelor of pedagogy from New Mexico
Normal School; attended Illinois State Normal one year,
Kansas State University three years; public school teacher
nineteen years; deputy county treasurer three years; clerk for
publishing company one year; clerk in tlie Bureau ol the
Census 1920-31; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Departmeni
of State, under Civil Service rules, February 10, 1921; at $1,000
September i, 1922; at $1,100 May 31 effective June i, 1924; at
$1,380 July I, 1924.
Dockweiler, Henry Isidore.— Bora in Los Angeles, Cahf.,
May 9, 1893; home, Los Angeles; graduate. University of
Notre Dame (A. B.), 1912; Catholic University of America
(A. AI.), 1913; and took courses in law at University of Cali-
fornia and University of Southern CaUfornia; practiced law
in Los Angeles, 1917-18; clerk in the Department of State,
July-August, 1918; appointed, after examination (June 24,
1918), a Secretari' of Embassy or Legation of class four, August
27, 191S; on detail in the Department of State, July-September,
1918; assigned to Tokyo, September 13, 1918; appointed
Secretary of class three December 20, 1919; assigned to Peking,
February 26, 1920; to Santo Domingo March i, 1922; on detail
as Charge d' Affaires at Port au Prince July 9 to August 14, 1923;
assigned to Madrid March 31, 1924: appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Dodge, H. Percival.— Bora in Boston, Mass., January 18,
1870; home, Boston; graduate of Harvard University (A. B.)
1892, and of Harvard law school (LL. B.) 1895; admitted to
the bar of Suffolk County, Mass., 1895; practiced law in Boston,
1895-1897; studied in Europe, 1897-98; appointed Third Secre-
tary of the Embassy at Berlin February 16, 1S99; Second Sec-
retary of the Embassy July 9, 1900, to take effect September i,
1900; Secretary of the Embassy October 13, 1902; Secretary of
the Embassy at Tokyo August 8, 1906; Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Honduras and Salvador July i,
1907; continued as Minister to Honduras until February 6,
1909; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-
tentiary to Salvador July i, 190S; Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Morocco May 12, 1909; Resident
Diplomatic OiBcer and Chief of the Division of Latin-American
Affairs, Department of State, June 22, 1910; Envoy Extraor-
dinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Panama July 6, 1911;
on May 12, 1912, designated chairman of the committee to su-
pervise the Panaman municipal and presidential elections of
1912; retired from the Diplomatic Service August 25, 1913; des-
ignated secretary to the Special Commission of the United
States at Niagara Falls Mediation Conference May 16, 1914;
special agent of the Department of State to assist the American
Ambassador at Paris, August 4, 19x4; special agent of the De-
partment of State in Serbia June 28, 191 7; Envoy Extraordi-
nary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of the
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes July 17, 1919.
Dodson, Frederick Augustus.— Born in Boston, Mass., April
18, 1898; served in the United States Navy May, 1918, to Sep-
tember, 1919; appointed an assistant messenger in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, December i, 1919.
Doherty, Charles Wylie.— Born in Jackson, Miss., January 5,
1857; attended the public schools of Mississippi and the Uni-
versity of Mississippi one term; telegraph operator sixteen
years; stenographer in Memphis, Tenn., two years; farmed
and engaged in merchandising in Mississippi fourteen years;
member of the state legislature of Mississippi eight years; ap-
pointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Cartagena, August 13, 19 13;
Vice-Consul by act approved February 5, 19x5; retired, 1915;
appointed Vice-Consul at Nogales August 23, 1916; at Mexicali.
August 21, X92X.
Dolbeare, Frederic Russell.— Bora in Oshkosh, Wis., Octo-
ber 8, 188s; home, Hartford, Conn.; graduate of Yale Univer-
sity (A. B.), 1907, and took a year's course at the University of
Munich; instructor at St. Paul's School, 1907-1912; appointed,
after examination (November 30, 1914), Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class five March 2, 1915; assigned to Vienna
March 6, xgxs; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class four July 28, xgis; class three May 10, 1916; assigned to
Berne March 8, 1917; to Warsaw April x6, 1919; to Berlin
October 29, 1919; appointed Secretary of class two December
30, X9X9; assigned to Constantinople November 9, 1922; to
London January 31, 1923: appointed Secretary of class one
January 23. 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i,
1924; detailed to Department October 9, 1924.
Dominlan, Leon.— Bom in Turkey April 13, 1880; natural-
ized in New York November. 19x3; graduated from Robert
College (A. B.) 1898. and studied at University of Liege 1899-
1900; employed as a field assistant. Geological Survey, 1903;
instructor in New Mexico, 1904; engaged in exploration work
in Nevada, Arizona, and Mexico, X9CS-1907; in writing 1908-
1911; editorial writer and geographer, American Geograplucal
Society of New York, 19X2-X9X7; research work for the Depart-
ment of State X9I7-I9I9; attached to American Commission
to Negotiate Peace February 15, 1919; appointed a special
assistant in the Department of State at $3,000, August 12, 19x9;
drafting officer at $3,000, July x. 1920; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 28. 1920). a Consul of class four to assist in ecoaomic
investigational work, June 9, 1921; detailed to Rome July 21,
192X; appointed Consul of class three June 3, 1924; assigned to
Rome June 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I, 1924.
Donald, George Kenneth.— Bora in Mobile, Ala., November
27. X890: home. Mobile; attended the University Military School
of Mobile five years, Phillips Andover Academy one year, Yale
University four years (A. B. 1912); employed in timber export
business during summer vacations, 1912-1914; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at Maracaibo June 22,
1914; Consul of class eight by act approved Febraary 5, 19x5;
assigned to Nuevo Laredo March 20, 19x7; appointed, Consul
of class seven April 16, 19x7; assigned to Aguascalientes Sep-
tember s, 1917: to St. Pierre-Miquelon August 31, 19x8, but
did not proceed to that post; detailed to Sydney, Nova Scotia,
September 23, 1918; assigned to Tegucigalpa, March 15, 19x9;
appointed Consul of class six September 5, 19 19; class five
November 19, X921; assigned to Johannesburg May 17, X922;
appointed Consul of class four March i, 1923; Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, X924; class four August 8, X924.
* Donaldson, Chester.— Retired as Consul of class six, as
signed to Torreon, December, X923. Register of X922.
Donaldson, David.— Bora in Fleming, Mo., March 10, X894;
public and high school education; employed with a mining
company at Extension, British Columbia, 1908-X912; chauffeur-
mechanic, 1912-1916; stenographer and clerk in a railroad
office in British Columbia, 1916-17; appointed Vice-Consul at
Prince Rupert, June n, 1918; at Toronto October 28, 1920; at
Hamilton, Ontario, February 3, 192X.
Donegan, Alfred William.— Bora in Huntsville, Ala., March
3, 1883; home, Mobile, Ala.; attended private schools nine
years, the University of Virginia one year, and the University
of Virginia law school three years; studied in Austria, X904-0S;
appointed Consular Agent at Briinn, Austria, May 10, xgoj ;
resigned June 30, 1907; bookkeeper in bank in Mobile, Ala.,
X907; appointed, after examination (April 7, X908), Consular
Assistant June 24, 1908; Deputy Consul-General at Budapest
September 30, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Algiers April
20, 1909: Deputy Consul-General at Montreal February x, 1910;
Consul at Magdeburg June 24, X910; Consul of class eight by
act approved February s, 19x5; appointed Consul of class seven
February 22, 19x5; detailed for duty in the American Legation
at Berne February 28, 191 7; appointed Consul of class six Sep-
tember 14, 1917; detailed to Zurich January 13, 1919; appointed
Consul of class five Septembers, 1919; class four June 4, 1920;
assigned to Konigsberg November 15, 192X; to Patras April 28,
1923; reassigned January 29, 1924; appointed Foreign Sersnce
Officer of class five July i, X924.
Donovan, Howard.— Bora in Windsor, 111., November la,
1895; home. New YorkCity; graduated from Yale University
(Ph. B.) 1930; served in the United States Army January-
December, 19x8; employed with an express company three
months and a motors export company one year; appointed,
after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carrifere of
class three, October 26, X921; assigned to London, December n,
192 x; appointed Vice-Consul de carricre of class two February
26, 1923; class one Noveinber 23, 1923; assigned to Rio de Janeiro
February 29, 1924, appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July X, X924; class eight, also Consul August 8, 1924.
Doolittle, Hooker Austin.— Born in Mohawk. N. Y., January
27, X889; home, Utica, N. Y.; attended the Utica(N. Y.) Free
Academy and graduated from Cornell University (A.B.) X9xx;
employed in various clerical capacities in Rahway, N. J., and
Utica, N. Y., 19XX-19X3; engaged in automobile accessories
business in Atlanta. Ga., X9X4; with Retail Credit Company
in Atlanta and New Orleans X914-19X6; comxnercial agent in
New York of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
merce, Department of Commerce, x9x6; appointed Vice-
Consul at Tiflis January 19. 191 71 appointed, after examination
(June a8, X920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three Septem-
ber 7, 1930, and assigped to Tiflis; assigned to Madras April
28, X921: appointed Vice-Consul de carri<-re of cla.<!s two Novem-
ber x7, x92x; class one May 26, 1923; Consul of class seven March
i> 1923; remained at Madras on detail; detailed to Marseille
July 19, X9a3; appointed Consul of class six December 19, X923;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
121
Dooman, Eugene Hofiman. — Bom in Osaka. Japan, March
as, 1890; father naturalized during his minority; home. New
York City; attended Trinity School, New York, two years.
Trinity College, Hartford, Conn., four years (B. S.); Columbia
University one year; appointed, after examination (January
31, 1912), Student Interpreter in Japan March 12. 1912; Vice-
Consul and Interpreter at Kobe May 7, 191 = ; Consul of class
eight September 14, i9i7;on detail at Kobe; appointed Consul
of class six September s, 1919; detailed, temporarily, to Taihoku
September 7, 1920; appointed Japanese Assistant Secretary of
Embassy at Tokyo July i, 1921; Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924; class five August 8. 1924.
Doran, Helen Fay.— Born in Washington, C C; attended
the McKinley Manual Training School i904-r9o8; George
Washington University 1908-09; Temple School of Shorthand
1909-10; clerk in the Census Bureau 1910-1512; stenographer
for surety and insurance companies in Washington 1912-1917;
appointed a clerk temporarily in the Department of State
June II, 1917; permanently at Si, 000, under Civil Service rules,
November 23, 1917; class one May i, 1918; class two December
31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; class three September i, 1922;
at Si, 860 July I, 1924.
Dorgan, Stella May.— Bom in Brockton, Mass.; graduated
from the grade and high schools of Brockton and attended a
business college; clerk in the office of the ^^■ar Trade Board
March 22, 1918, to May 27, 1921, and in the Division of Customs,
Treasury Department, May 28, 1921, to September 22, 1923;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed a clerk
of class one, under Civil Service rules, October 13, 1922; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
♦Dorman, Archibald Bland. — Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Deputy Consul-General at Berlin, July, 1911. Register of
1913-
Dorr, Julian Childe.— Bom in Seattle, Wash., October 14,
1896; home. New York City; attended public schools and
Georgetown School of Foreign Service 1919-1921; employed as
a salesman and a newspaper reporter; editorial clerk Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce, one month; served in the
United States Army May, 1917 to August, 1918; appointed
after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carri^re of
class three October 26, 192 1; assigned to Prague December 14,
1921; to Naples March 15, 1922; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Offi-
cer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Dorsey, William Henry. — Born September 5. 1869; employed
in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1906-1911; trans-
ferred to the Department of State as laborer, under Civil Service
rules, November 24, 1911.
Dorsey, William Roderick.— Bora in Newmarket. Md., Octo-
ber 8, 1S6S; home, Baltimore, Md.; graduate of University of
Maryland law school, 1893; practiced law in Baltimore, 1894-
1896; afterwards engaged in various business enterprises in New
York, London, and Shanghai; appointed Deputy Consul-Gen-
eral at Shanghai January 14, 1907; also Marshal August 13, 1907;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General June 25, 1908; retired as Mar-
shal July 31, 1908; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1910),
Consul at Jerez de la Frontera August 22, 1912; Consul at Tri-
poli November 24, 1913; Consul of class eight by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven March 2,
1915; assigned to Rangoon July 14, 1916; to Quebec March 20,
1917; appointed Consul of class six September 14, 1917; detailed
to Shanghai September 11, 1918; appointed Consul of class five
September 5, 1919: assigned to Florence October 22. 1919; ao-
pointed Consul of class four June 4, 1920; assigned to Catania
March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924.
Doty, William Furman.— Bora in Brooklyn, N. Y., Decem-
ber i, 1870; home, Princeton, N. J.; attended the public schools
of Brooklyn and Washington, and the Lawrenceville (N. J.)
Preparatory School, Princeton University, and Princeton Theo-
logical Seminary; page in Senate two years; private secretary,
1886-87; teacher; minister; employed as clerk in the American
Consulate at Tahiti in 1900; appointed, after examination (July
29, 1902), Consul at Tahiti July 31, 1902; Consul at Tabriz June
22, 1906; Consul at Riga June 24, 1910; Consul at Nassau, No-
vember 24, 1913; Consul of class seven by act approved Feb-
ruary s, 1915; appointed Consul of class six September i, 1916;
assigned to Cardiff April 24, 1919; to Stoke-on-Trent IMarch i,
1920; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924; assigned to St. Michael's September 9, 1924.
Dougbten, John Preston. — Bom in Wilmington. Del., May
25, 1886; home, Wilmington; attended the William Penn
Charter School 1903-1905; University of Virginia two years;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Burslem November 9,
1908; Deputy Consul at Kob^ August 23, 1910; Vice-Consul at
Kobe February 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Calcutta April 30, 1015;
appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul of
class eight February 19, 1918; detailed to Moscow February 21 ,
1918, but returned to United States without having reached
his post; detailed to Bordeaux October 8, 1918; assigned to
Liege December 17, 1918; detailed to Brussels May 19, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; returned to
Liege April 9, 1920; assigned to Lemberg May 26, 1920; detailed
to Warsaw July 24, 1920; detailed to the Department of State
February i, 1921; designated Acting Chief of the Visa Office
September 16, 1921; Chief, December 20, 1921; appointed For-
eign Service Officer of class seven July i. 1924; assigned to Lon-
don November 25, 1924.
Douglass, jr., William Boone. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
April 7, 1S9S; attended Cornell University 1916-1918 and 1920-
1922; Columbia University 1919-20; served in the United States
Army six months, 1918; clerk in the War and Agriculture De-
partments three months each; chainman for the public land
survey in New Mexico one season and stenographer for an
oil company in Tampico, Jlcxico, three months; clerk in the
American Consulate General at Calcutta 1922-23; appointed
Vice-Consul at Calcutta September i, 1923; at Karachi Sep-
tember II, 1923.
Dow, Edward A. — Bom in Fort Dodge, Iowa, April 20, 1879;
home, Omaha, Nebr.; graduate of St. Ambrose College and
took a two years' course at St. Paul Seminary; employed as a
railway timekeeper in 1899; in life insurance business in Iowa
and Nebraska, 1900-1907, and in the real estate business, 1907-
1915; appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Consul
of class nine October 18, 19x5; assigned to St. Stephen Novem-
ber 22, 1915; to Fort William and Port Arthur March 20, 1917;
appointed Consul of class eight September 14, 1917, and as-
signed to Ciudad Juarez; appointed Consul of class six Septem-
ber 5, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; assigned to Algiers October
23, 1920; appointed Consul of class four August 23, 1922; Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924; assigned to Rotterdam
October 20, 1924.
Dow, Scott Hersey. — Bom in Smith town, N. H., November
6, 1897; graduated from high school 1914; attended two com-
mercial schools, Maryland University one year, and Boston
University one semester; clerk in The Adjutant General's
Office, War Department, 1917-1920; appointed a clerk at
Si, 320 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rales,
July 28, 1924.
Dowrick, Lillie Belle.— Born in Washington, D.C.; educated
in public schools; employed as stenographer in a business
house 1912-1914, and in the British Embassy, 1916-1910; ap-
pointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, December 22, 1920; class two March i, 1924;
at $i,6So July I, 1924.
Doyle, Albert Martin.— Bom in Chatham, Ontario, Canada,
September 3, 1892; naturalized in 1918; home, Detroit, Mich.;
graduated from Toronto University (A.B.) 1913; University
of Detroit (LL. B.) 192 1; employed as teacher, reporter, real
estate sales agent, and assistant probation officer of the re-
corder's court, Detroit; served in the United States Army
November, 1917, to October, 1919; appointed, after examina-
tion (January 16, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
May 26, 1922; assigned to Amsterdam August 28, 1922; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November 23, 1923;
class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
Doyle, John F.— Born in Paris Hill, N. Y., May 20, 1873;
educated at Clayville (N. Y.) Union School and the Temple
School of .Shorthand and Typewriting in Washington, D. C;
served in the United States Army, 1898-1901 ; with two business
concerns in Chicago, 1901-1906; appointed watchman in the
State, War, and Navy Building at $720 per annum September
I, 1906; appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900,
underCivil Service rules, July 28, 1909; at $1,000 October 5, 191 1;
class one August i, 1913; class two June 22, to be eflfective
July I, 1916; at $i,A8o July i, 1924.
*Dreher, Julius Daniel. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924. Retired from active service as
Consul at Colon July i, 192^, under the provisions of the Act
of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Dresel, Ellis Lorlng.— Retired as Chargd d'Affaires to
Germany, April, 1922. Register of 1922.
♦Drew, jr., Charles Wayland.— Retired as Vice Consul de
carriere of class two, assigned to Amsterdam, November, 1920.
Register of 1933.
122
BIOGRAPHICAI^ STATEMENT.
^
Dreylus, jr., Louis Goethe.— Born in Santa Barbara. Calif.,
November 23, 1889; home, Santa Barbara, Calif.; attended the
Hotchkiss School three years; graduated from Yale University,
B. A. (1910), M. A. (1911); took summer course at the Alli-
ance Franjaise, 1910; appointed, after examination (June 27,
1910), Consular Assistant December 20, 1910; Deputy Consul-
General at Berlin March 16, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul
at Callao May 27, 1912; Consular Agent at Quibdo July 5, 1913;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Berlin February 26, 1914;
Vice-Consul at Berlin February 6, 191s: Vice-Consul at Buda-
pest July 14, 1915; Consul of class eight July 12, 1916; in charge
at Sofia, October lo-Noveinber 30, 1916; assigned to Sivas
March 20, 1917; toMalaga Junes, 1917; detailed to Paris August
>.5. 1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; as-
signed to Palermo March 12, 1920; appointed Consul of class
five June 4, 1920; assigned to Dresden November 15, 1921;
appomted Consul of class four November 23, 1921; class three
March i, 1923; Consul General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign
Service Offtcer of class three July i, 1924.
DriscoU, Edward Eugene.— Born in Fort Sisseton, S. Dak.,
November 13, 1887; educated in the public schools, with two
years in the high school department of Creighton University;
clerk for various business concerns in several cities, 1903-1914;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State
August 25, 1914; permanently at $900, under Executive order,
June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk at $1,000
June 16. 1917; class one November 20, 1917; class two June 16,
1919; class three September S, 1921; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Drissel, Roger S. — Born in Kellers Church, Pa., June 30,
1877; educated in public schools of Pennsylvania, Westchester
State Normal School, Perkiomen Seminary, Schissler Business
College, and Bethany College; teacher in public schools of
Pennsylvania four years; appointed special laborer at $2 per
diem, under Civil Service rules, in the bureau of yards and
docks. League Island Navy- Yard, August 7, 1900; at S2.48
per diem February 19, 1903; transferred to the office of the
United States Superintending Naval Constructor, New York
Shipbuilding Co., Camden, N. J., at $2.80 per diem. May 24,
1906; resigned March 19, 1907; appointed clerk at $900, under
Civil Service rules, in the Department of State, March 19,
1907; at $1,000 September 3, 1907; class one July i, 1908; class
two December i, 1909; class three June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; class four December 31, 1919, effective Januarv i,
1920; special assistant at $2,000 January 16, 1922; drafting
officer at $2,500 September i, 1922; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
♦Droppers, Garrett. — Retired as Minister to Greece and Mon-
tenegro July, 1920. Register of 1918. i
Dryer, Mildred Vema. — Born in Lansing, Mich.; graduated
from Technical High School (Washington, D. C), 1917; at-
tended two business colleges five months; clerk in the Food
Administration one year; with the Shipping Board one year;
with commercial publishing company fourteen months; clerk.
Department of Agriculture, 192 1; clerk of class one in the De-
partment of State, temporarily, under Civil Service rules, Sep-
tember I, 1921, to February 28, 1922; reappointed a clerk of
class one, temporarily, September 30, effective October i, 1922;
appointment terminated March 31, 1923; reappointed a clerk
at $1,000, temporarily, November 26, 1923; permanently at
$903 December 31, 1923, effective January i, 1924; at $1,500
July I, 1924-
du Bois, Coert. — Born in Hudson, N. Y., November 10
i88i, home, San Francisco; graduated from Biltmore Forest
School (B. F.) 1901, (F. E.) 1907; employed in the Forestry
Service as agent, field assistant, inspector, and district forester,
1901-1917; commissioned a major. Engineer Corps, of the
United States Army, August 8, 19 17; lieutenant colonel Sep-
tember 14, 1918, served in the Army until December 1918; rein-
stated in Forestry Service, January i, 1919; appointed, after
examination (May 12. 1919), Consul of class seven, September
5, 1919; detailed to Paris, November 2k. 1919: to Naples, April 15,
1920; appointed Consul of class six, November 23, 192 1; assigned
to Port Said .April 3, 1922; appointed Consul of class five March
I, 1923; detailed to the Department of State November 17, 1923;
designated A.ssistant Chief of the Visa Office April 11, 1924;
appointed Consul of class four June s, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924; designated Chief of the Visa
Office December i, 1924.
♦DuBois, James T. — Retired as Minister to Colombia June,
1913. Died in New York City May 27, 1920. Register of 1913.
♦Dudley, Irving Bedell,— Died in Baltimore, Md., November
27, 1911, while Ambassador to Brazil. Register of 1913.
♦Dudley, L. Edwin. — Retired as Consul at Vancouver June,
1908. Register of 1913.
♦Duffee, George Gillespie,— Retired as Consul of class seven,
detailed to Habana, December, 1923. Register of 1923.
Duffy, Mary Alice.— Bom in Washington, D. C; attended
Notre Dame Academy about twelve years; employed in the
office of a patent attorney, Washington, D. C. December,
1906, to November, 1918; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, November 14,
1918; class one September i, 1919; resigned March 1920; rein-
stated as clerk of class one July 19, 1920; class two September
16, 1922; at $1,860 July I, 1924.
Dugan, Henry P.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., May 3, 1872;
educated in St. Patrick's School, Philadelphia; telegraph
operator; appointed telegraph operator in the Treasury Depart-
ment for three months in 1906; clerk in the Weather Bureau,
Department of Agriculture, January i, 1907, at $1,000 per
annum; transferred and appointed clerk in the Department of
State at $900, under Civil Service rules, January 17, 1910; class
one July i, 1911; class two May i, 1916; class three September
8, 1916; class four December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920;
at $2,100 July I, 1924.
♦Duhaime, Victor L.— Retired as Consul at Saltillo Novem-
ber, 1907. Register of 1913.
Dulles, Allen Welsh.— Born in Watertown, N. Y., April 7.
1893; home. Auburn, N. Y.; graduate of Princeton University
(A. B.) 191S, (A. M.) 1916; taught English for one year at Alla-
habad, India; appointed, after examination (April 10, 1916),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class five May 17, 1916;
assigned to Vienna May 22, 1916; appointed Secretary of
class four August 3, 1916; assigned to Berne April iS, 1917; ap-
pointed Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned to duty
with the American Commission to Negotiate Peace, December
4, 1918; assigned to Prague May 2, 1919; to Berlin October 29
1919; appointed Secretary ot class two June 28, 1920; assigned
to the Department of State August 11, 1920; assigned with the
American High Commission in Constantinople October 15,
1920; assigned to the Departuaent of State March 3, 1922; desig-
nated Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs April 14,
1922; appointed Secretary of class one January 23, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Dumont, Frederick T. Frelinghuysen.— Born in Phillipsburg,
N. J., March 17, 1869; home, Lancaster, Pa.; educated at
public schools and Lafayette College (C. E. and M.S.); engineer,
1889-1901; banker, directing engineer, and manager of estate,
1901-1911; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1910), Consul
at Guadaloupe August 19, 1911; Consul at Madrid August 22,
1912; Consul at Florence April 24, 1914; Consul of class seven
by act approved February s, 1915; appointed Consul of class
six March 2, 1915; class five September s, 1919; assigned to
Dublin September 6, 1919; appointed Consul of class three
June 4, 1920; unassigiied from December 27, 1921; assigned to
Frankfort on the Main February 18, 1922; appointed Consul
General of class four March i, 1923; reassigned to Frankfort
on the Main March 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer
of class three July i, 1924.
Dunbar, Paul. — Born in Washington, D. C, February 15,
1895; educated in the public schools; employed in the Geo-
logical Survey February, 1912. to September, 1916; navy yard
month of October, 1916; Washington city post office November
I, 1916, to September 4, 1917; War Department September 5,
1917, to March 5, 1920: appointed a clerk at $1,100 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, November 27, 1920;
class one December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
Duncan, James L. — Born in Waterbury, Conn., September
II, 1866; attended high school and business college; employed
as clerk in the municipal government of Waterbury, Conn. ;
appointed copyist at $720 in the Patent Office December 7,
1896; transferred to the Department of State and appointed
clerk at $900 April 14, 1900; class one July i, 1901; class two
July I, i903:class three August 22, 191 2; class four March 8, 1915;
appointed Chief of Bureau at $2,100, February i, 1919; drafting
officer at $2,500, June 17, effective July i, 1921; designated as
assistant editor in connection with the Conference on the
Limitation of Armament September i, 1921; representative of
the Department of State to the permanent conference on print-
ing October 5, 1921; at $2,800 July i, 1924-
Dunker, Will F. — Born in Davenport, Iowa, August 16,
1898; high-school graduate; attended George Washington
Law School 1919-1922; executive clerk Washington Aviation
Examining Board, War Department, 1917-1919; clerk in the
office of the Auditor for the Post Office Department, 1920;
appointed a clerk at Si, 100, in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, September 23, 1920; class one September i,
1932; at $1,500 July I, 1924; at $1,860 December 31, effective
January i, 1925.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
123
* Dunlap, Hiram J. — Retired as Consul at Cologne June, 1913.
Register of 19 13.
Dunlap, Maurice Pratt. — Born in Toledo, Ohio, December
9, 1882; home, St. Paul, Minn.; graduate of Princeton Univer-
sity (B. A.), 1912; Columbia University (M. A.), 1913; with
Bowles newspaper syndicate, 1904-1906; traveled around the
world in 1907; in Philippine civil service, 1907-1911; in Depart-
ment of Agriculture, 1913-1915; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1914), Consul of class nine February 22, 1915, and
assigned to Stavanger; detailed to Copenhagen July 13, 1917;
appointed Consul of class eight September 14, IQ17; assigned
to Odense, Denmark, May 27, 1918; detailed to Copenhagen,
June 5, 1919; appointed Consul of class six September s, 1919;
detailed to ^lalino, November 27, 1920; returned to Copenhagen
on detail, January, 1921; assigned to Bangkok June 24, 1922;
unassigued from July :;i, 1923; detailed to Port au Prince April
7, 1924; appointed Foreign Service OtTicer of class seven July
I, 1924.
Dunn, Frederick S.— Born in New York City, June 10, 1893;
attended private schools; Princeton University (Litt. B.)
1914; New York Law School (LL. B.) 1917; attended Columbia
University 1917: admitted to the New York bar 1917; em-
ployed as a law clerk in New York City 1915-16; engaged as a
correspondent by the American Book Co., New York City,
1916-17; served in the United States Army as first lieutenant
Jcne, 1917-April, 1919; law clerk in the War Department five
months; appointed a law clerk at 82,000, in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, March i, 1920; at $2,250, June i,
19:0; drafting ofticer at $2,500, June i, 1921; assistant solicitor
at $2,500, September 19, 1921; assistant counsel and secretary
of the American Agency in the American and British Claims
Arbitration August 24, 1922; associate counsel and secretary
of the agency December 28, 1923.
Dunn, James Clement. — Born in Newark, N. J., December
27, 1890; home. New York City; high-school graduate and
studied law and architecture; architect in New York City
1912-1917; served in the United States Navy, June, 1917, to
February, 1919, and resigned with the rank of lieutenant; aid
to the Naval Attach^ in Habana, September, 1918, to February,
1919: served in the Latin-American Division, Department of
State February-September, 19 19; appointed, after examina-
tion (May 19, 1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class
four, September 5, 1919, and assigned to the Department of
State; assigned to Berne, November 15, 1919, but remained in
Department; assigned to Madrid, February 26, 1920; appointed
Secretary of class three August 24, 1921; assigned to Port au
Prince March i, 1922; appointed secretary of class two January
23, 19-4; assigned to Brussels March 7, 1924; appointed Foreign
Ser\ice Ofticer of class four July i, 1924.
* Dunnin?, James Edmund.— Retired as Consul General at
Large March, 1914. Register of 1913.
Durand, Mildred May.— Bom in Philadelphia, Pa.; attended
high school, business college, and George Washington Univer-
sity; employed in a national bank 1923-24; appointed a clerk
at $1,320, temporarily, in the Department of State, under
Civil Service niles, October 6, 1924.
Durham, Efia H. — Bom in Tennessee; grammar and high
school education; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,140, in
the Department of State September 25, 1918; at $1,200, February
I, 1920; at S900, under Civil Service rules, December 15. 1920;
at $T,ooo September i, 1922; at Si, 100 December 30, 1922, effective
Januari' i. 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924;
at $1,500 September 15, 1924.
* Durkee, Roland Andrews.— Retired as Student Interpreter
in Turkey, 1917. Register of 1916.
Darning, Daniel Joseph.— Born in Spencer, Mass., October
16, 1881; attended high school two years; stock clerk for several
manufacturing companies i89S-i9ig; clerk in the Bureau of
War Risk Insurance, Treasury Department, 1919-1921; in the
navy yard, Washington, DC, three months, and in the Pension
Office one year; transferred from the navy >ard (field service)
and apiinintcd a clerk at S900 in the Department of .State,
under Civil Service rules, December 13, 1923: at $1,000 April
I, 1924; at $1,320 July I, 1924.
Dusenbury, Ralph W.— Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military .\ttache at Buenos Aires, Asuncion, and
Montevideo .August 26, 1924.
Dutko, Paul Michael.— Born in Mayfield, Pa., January 5.
1894; graduated from Dickinson College (A. B.) 1Q17; em-
ployed as a teacher three years; in the Bureau of War Risk
32952—25 9
Insurance May-August, 1917; in the War Department 1917-1S;
appointed a clerk in the Diplomatic Service to proceed to
Japan in war trade work December 18, 1918; appointed
Vice-Consul at Vladivostok August 20, 1919; at Harbin
November 23, 1920.
Duval, Marie Hamilton.— Bom in Baltimore, Md.; attended
Baltimore City grammar schools and high sohod; employed in
The Library Bureau, Baltimore, Md ., one niduth; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, at $1,020, in the Department cf State August
31,1918; at $1,080, January i, 1919; at Si. 140, February i. iqjo;
at $900, under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; at Si, 000,
September i .1922; at $1,100, December 30, 1922. effective Janu-
ary I, 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Duvall, Frank E.— Bora in Washington, D. C, December
25, 1900; has a public-school education; employed in a printing
office and as a clerk in the District government July, 1916-
May. 1918; appointed a temporary clerk in the Department
of State at $840 May 4, 1918, at $1,020; November i, 1918; at $960,
July I, 1919; at $1,020, February i, 1920; at $1,200, October 5,
effective October i, 1920; at $1,000, under Civil Service rules,
February i, 1921; class one, August 16, 1921; at $1,500 July i,
1924.
Dwight, Harry Griswold.— Bora in Constantinople, Turkey,
of American parents, August 6, 1S75; attended St. Johnsbury
(V^t.) Academy two years; graduated from Amherst College
(A. B.) 189S; clerk in American Consulate at \'enice 189S-1901;
appointed Deputy Consul at Venice January 31, 1901; corre-
spondent of the Chicago Record-Herald at Venice 1S9S-1902;
curator of the Authors Club. New York, 1903-1906; appointed a
special assistant at $3,500 in the Depaitment of State March 23,
effective March 16, 1920; drafting officer at $3,500 June 17. effec-
tive July I, 1921; designated Assistant Chief of the Division of
Near Eastern Affairs and assigned, temporarily, to the Con-
ference at Lausanne tor the conclusion of peace in the Near
East, November 15, 1922; appointed drafting officer at $4,000
April I, 1924; designated Chief of the Division of Publications
and Editor of the Department April 16, 1924.
Dwyre, Dudley G.— Bora in London, England, January
30. 1S80; graduated from the State Agricultural College of
Colorado. 1901; attended George Washington University,
Washington, D. C, 1917-18; clerk and stenographer 1901-1904;
chief clerk and assistant superintendent, Indian Agency, Albu-
querque, N. Mex., 1904-1908; chief clerk. United States Inciian
warehouse, St. Louis, Mo., 1909-1917; chief of contracts section,
purchase division. Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of
the Interior, 1917-18; appointed, temporarily, at $1,720 in the
Department of State, November 2, 1918; at $1,600, July i, 1919;
appointed a clerk of class three, under Civil Service rules, Sep-
tember I, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919),
Consul of class seven, September 5, 1919; assigned to Maracaibo,
October 29, 1919; to Fort William and Port Arthur September
21, 1921; appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; assigned
to Guadalajara June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign vService Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
Dwyre, Percy Gelding.- Born in London, England, May, 11,
1878; naturalized; attended public schools, and the Colorado
Agricultural College three and one-half years; clerk in the
Philippine civil service 1902-1907 and 1909-1917; mining pros-
pector 1907-1909; manager of a hemp plantation in the Philip-
pine Islands 1917-1919; clerk in the Department of State May-
December, 1919, and in the War Department 1920-1923; trans-
ferred to the Department of State and appointed a clerk of
class one, under Civil Service rules, .\pril 27, 1923; appointed
clerk class two, November 14, 1923; at Si, 680 July i, 1924; at
$1,860 September 15, 1924.
Dyar, Charles B)wker.— Bom in Cambridge, Mass., .\pril
6, 1884; attended high school 189S-1902, and Harvard College
1902-03; employed in the Department of Agriculture 190.1-1906;
clerk in the American ICmbassy at Berlin 1906-191 7, and in the
American Legation at The Hague 191 7-1919; representative of
the American Commission to Negotiate Peace in Berlin 1919-20;
clerk in the American Commission to Berlin January, 1920, to
July, 1921, and engaged in journalistic work in Berlin 1921-22;
clerk in the American Consulate at Stettin December 19, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul at Stettin May -'. 1923: at Hamburg
January 3, 1924.
Dye, Alexander Vincent.— Bom in Flora, III., February 11,
1S76; home, Douglas, Ariz.; attcndei the public schools of
Kansas, Southwest Kansas Business College; had private in-
struction in languages; graduated fron: William Jewell College
(A. B.) 1901, (A. M.) 1902; attended Chicago University and
graduated from the University of Leipzig (Ph. D.) 1904; em-
ployed as bookkeeper, 1894-1897; professor iii William Jewell
124
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
College, 1904-1909; appointed, after examination (July 7, 1908),
Consul at Xogales May 31, 1909; resigned, to take effect January
I, 1913; assistant general manager of a mining corporation
1913-1917; appointed a Special Assistant of the Department of
State in Norway, November 10, 1917; resigned June i, 1919;
traveled in Europe two years; Trade Commissioner, Depart-
ment of Commerce, on duty in the American Embassy at
London, September, 1921; Assistant Commercial Attache at
London, August. 1923; appointed Commercial Attache, De-
partment of Commerce, and designated for duty in the
American Embassy at .Mexico City October i, 1923.
Dye, John Walter. — Born in Winona, Minn., February 4,
1878; home, Winona; graduate of the University of Minne-
sota (A. B.), 1904; spent one year at George Washington Uni-
versity; occupied various clerical positions; physical director,
Minnesota Agricultural School and the Y. M. C. A. at Terre
Haute; appointed, after examination (July 9, 1906), Consular
Clerk July 21, 1906; Deputy Consul-General at Berlin Decem-
ber 18, 1906; Consular Assistant July i, 1908; Deputy Con-
sul-General at Genoa November 25, 1908; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General May 10, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Boma December 30, 1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Smyrna December 13, 191 1; Consular Agent at Damascus
December 8, 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Cape
Town November 18, 1914; Vice-Consul at Cape Town February
6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Johannesburg October 18, 1915; re-
appointed Vice-Consul at Cape Town November 5, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class eight July 12, 1916; on detail at Cape
Town July 12, 1916, to September 4, 1917; detailed to Port
Elizabeth September 6, 1917; assigned to Port Elizabeth
March 9, 1918; appointed Consul of class six, September 5. 1919;
class five, June 4, 1920; detailed to Ciudad Juarez, February 28.
1921; assigned to Ciudad Juarez October 2, 1923; appointed
Consul of class four June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class five July i, 1924.
*Dyer, Francis John.—* * * appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i, 1924. Died at his post (Coblenz),
December 26, 1924. Register of :924.
♦Eager, George Kugene.— Retired as Consul of class six
assigned to Barmen March, 1917. Register of 1916.
Early, Howard H.— Born in Washington, D. C, June_ 21,
1894; attended public schools ten years; employed in various
Government departments four years; appointed an assistant
messenger in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, November iS, 1921.
Early, William Wallace.— Born in Aulander, N. C, Decem-
ber 2, 1867. home Marietta, N. C; attended Wake Forest Col-
lege (H. A.), the University of Virginia, and the Unive sity of
Pennsylvania (M. D.); practiced medicine 18 years; appointed
Cozisular Agent at Leicester, England, July 25, 1914; retired
June 30, 191S; appointed, after examination (June 18, 191 7),
Consul of class eight July iR, 1919; class seven September 5,
1919; assigned to Belize September 6, 1919; appointed Foreign
Service Offioer of class eight July i, 1924.
Eastin, jr., Fred Clarkson. — Bom in Greenfield, JIo., Novem
ber 8, 1896; home, Greenfield; attended the grade and high
schools of Greenfield 1902-1915, and the New Mexico Military
Institute 1915-1917; graduated from the University of Cali-
omia (B. S.) 1922; employed in the field by the United States
Geological Survey 1913-14; served in the United States Marine
Corps, 1917-191Q, retiring with the rank of captain; appointed,
after examination (January 15. 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Bahia April 27,
1923; to Rio de Janeiro August 15, 1923; to Pemambuco June
16, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, imclassified, July
I, 1924.
Easton, Katherine. — Bom in Bethesda, Md.; attended high
school 1919-1923; employed by a law firm in Washington, D. C,
1923-24; appointed a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, December 23, 1924.
Eaton, Earl Wilbert. — Bom in Robinson, 111.. February 13,
1882: attended Austin College. Effingham, 111., two years;
teacher two years; employed in the post office at San Antonio,
Tex., 1915-1917; in the Customs Service since 1917; appointed
Vice-Consul at Nucvo Laredo December 4, 1918; at Saltillo
July I, 1920; at Nuevo Laredo June 24, 1924.
Eaton, Paul Webster.— Bom in Portland, Me., December 27,
1861; educated in private schools in Washington, D. C, and
at Marietta Academy, and graduated from Marietta College,
1882; appointed clerk class one, War Department. January 2,
1883; resigned July, 1892; reappointed at $1,000 Oc^obpr, 1S92;
class one May, 1893; transferred to General Land Office, De-
jJartment of the Interior, as accountant, April, 1894, and pro-
moted to class two; transferred to Post Office Departmen
March, 1898; transferred to Treasury Department May, 1900;
promoted to class three July i, 1901; transferred to Depart-
ment of State as clerk class four July i, 1904; appointed clerk
class three June 23, to take effect July i, 1909; class four
September 22, 1914; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Eberhardt, Charles Christopher.- Born in Salina, Kans.,
July 27, 1S71; hoine. Salina; educated in public schools of Salina
and at Wesleyari University; engaged in the insurance busi-
ness; clerk in American Embassy at Mexico City November,
1903; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Mexico
City October 29, 1904; Consul at Iquitos May 24. 1906; Consul
at Barranquilla May i, 1908; Consul-General at Large January
12, 1910; Consul-General of class three July 6, 1918; assigned
to Rio de Janeiro September 26, 1918; did not go to Rio de
Janeiro, remained on duty as Consul General at Large; ap-
pointed Consul-General of class two September ?, 1919; con-
tinued on duty, temporarily, as Consul-General at Large;
member of the Foreign Service Personnel Board and Chair-
man of the Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Per-
sonnel Board June 19, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class one July i, 1924.
Eberle, William E.— Commander, United States Navy; as-
signed to duty as Assistant Naval Attach eat Paris April 12, 1923.
Ebling, Samuel Gale.— Bom in Bellefontaine. Ohio, Decem-
ber II, 1S93; home, Bellefontaine; attended University of Cin-
cinnati two years; graduated from George Washington Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1920; stenographer for a private concern 1912-
1915; clerk in the Department of Agriculture and War Trade
Board 1916-1918; served in the United States Army 1918-19;
clerk in the Department of State 1919-1921; clerk in the Amer-
can Consulate at Marseille 1921-1924; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 25, 1923), Vice Consul de carriere of class three
January 5, 1924; assigned to Paris January 16, 1924; to Stock-
holm June 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, July I, 1924.
*Eddy, Spencer Fayette.— Retired as Minister to Roumania
and Serbia and Diplomatic Agent in Bulgaria September,
1909. Register of 1913.
*Edelmaii, Samuel.— Retired as Interpreter at Beirut Feb-
ruary, 1917. Register of 1918.
Edmonds, Walter B.— Bom in New Kent, Va., January 3,
1877; employed one year at Zoological Park. Washington,
D. C; appointed assistant messenger temporarily, in the De-
partment of State August 13, 1918; assistant messenger under
Civil Service rules, June 19, 1919.
♦Edwards, Alanson WiUiam.— Retired as ConSUlOeneral at
Montreal June, 1906. Register of 1913.
Edwards, Clement Stanislaus. — Born in New York City
March 4. 1869; home, Albert Lea, Minn.; educated in schools
of New Brimswick and Minnesota; practiced law in Albert
Lea, several years; city attorney of Albert Lea five years;
member of Albert Lea Charter Commission eight years; cap-
tain Company I, Twelfth Regiment, Minnesota Volunteer In-
fantry, 1S98; in real-estate business; newspaper owner and
editor in Albert Lea for several years; appointed, after exam-
ination (January 16, 191 1), Consul at Acapulco March 2, 191 1;
Consul of class eight by act approved February 5, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class seven March 2, 1915; assigned to Santo
Domingo March 15, 1917; appointed Consul of class six Septem-
ber 5, 1919; detailed to Paris October 23. 1919; attached to
the American Commissioner at Berlin and detailed to Frank-
fort on the Main October 4, 1920; detailed to Hamburg Novem-
ber 20, 1920; to Paris December 16, 1920: to Kovno July 12,
1921: assigned to Kovno July 28, 1922; appointed Consul of class
five August 23, 1922; assigned to Valencia January 2, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Edwards, Isaac. — Born April 26, 1882; appointed temporary
laborer at $660 for a term of three months in the office of the
Secretary of War October 9, 1899; assistant messenger in the
Department of State July 2, 1906; messenger, under Civil
Service rules, December 31, 1920, effective January i, 1921.
Edwards, Joseph Stanford.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
September 4, 1880; educated in the public schools of Washing-
ton, D. C, and pursued special courses at the Brooklyn (N. Y.)
Institute of Sciences; clerk in the Navy Department 1900-1909;
journalist for publishing company in New York City 1909-1915;
ambulance worker for American Ambulance Hospital, foreign
and domestic service, 1915-1917; served in the United States
Army with the rank of captain August, 1917 to October, 1920;
associate editor of New York publishing company Novembef ,
1920 to February, 1921; clerk in the American Consulate at
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
125
Amsterdam March, 1921; appointed Vice Consul at Amster-
dam June 21, 1922.
♦Edwards, Thomas D.— Retired as Consul of class eight,
assigned to Coniwall, September, 1923. Register of 1922.
Eells, Stillman Witt.— Born in Cleveland, Ohio. April 24,
1873; home, Xew York City; attended Brooks Military Acad-
emy, Cleveland, nine years; Taft's School for Boys, Pelham
Manor, N. Y., one year; Yale College lour years (B. A.), 1895;
secretary' of a foundry company in Chicago; president and vice
president of manufacturing companies six years; appointed
Vice-Consul at Hamilton, Bermuda, March 20, 1916; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 18, 1917). Consul of class
eight February 19, 1918; assigned to Mombasa May 25, 1918;
to Nairobi July 30, 191S; appointed Consul of class seven Sep-
tember s, 1919; assigned to Funchal August 5, 1921; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July 1, 1924-
♦ Egan, Maurice Francis. — Retired as Minister to Denmark
May, 1918. Register of 1917-
Eglin, Henry W. T. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military Attache at Budapest and Warsaw October
— , 1924-
Ebrbart, Anna Caroline Mary. — Bom in Washington, D. C;
graduated from high school 1923; employed by a private firm
1924; appointed a clerk at 81,320, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, November 10, 1924.
Eidler, Charles Clements. — Bom in Blue Earth, Minn.,
June 21, 1899; attended high school 1915-1919 and graduated
from National University Law School (LL. B.) 1923, (LL. M.)
1924; clerk in the Department of State six montlis 1920; clerk
in the Depatrment of Commerce 1920-1924; appointed a clerk at
$1,320 in the Department of State, under Ci\'il Service rules,
September 15, 1924.
Einstein, Lewis. — Bom in New York City March 15, 1877;
home. New York City; graduate of Columbia University, 1898;
A. M., 1899; author of several historical books, articles, reviews,
etc.; appointed Third Secretary of the Embassy at Paris
Jime 5, 1903; Third Secretary of the Embassy at London
March 10, 1905; Secretary of the United States Commission
at the Moroccan Conference November 24, 1905; Second Secre-
tary of the Legation at Constantinople March i, 1906; Second
Secretary of the Embassy June 28, 1906; Secretary of the Em-
bassy November 13, 1908; Secretary of the Legation at Peking
December 21, 1909; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-
potentiarv" to Costa Rica July 6, 1911; retired June, 1913; Spe-
cial Agent of the Department of State to assist the American
Ambassador at Constantinople February-September, 191 5;
Special Agent of the Department of State to assist the American
Minister at Bucharest in caring for British interests in Bulgaria
October 27, 1915; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and ^lin-
ister Plenipotentiary to Czechoslovakia October 8, 1921.
Eisenhower, Milton Stover. — Bom in Abilene, Kans., Sep-
tember 15, 1899; graduated from high school and from the
Kansas State Agricultural College (B. S.) 1924; serv'ed in the
Students' Army Training Corps ViAt at Kansas State Agricul-
cukural College three months, 191S; employed by a newspaper
company 1917-18; assistant publicity manager of a merchants'
association one year; clerk in the American Consulate at Edin-
burgh July, 1924; appointed Vice Consul at Edinburgh Novem-
ber II, 1924.
* Eldridge, jr., Francis Reed.— Retired as Interpreter, also
Deputy Consul-General, at Yokohama September, 1912. Reg-
ister of 1913.
Elford, Albert Harry.- British subject, born in England,
March 30, 1870; shipping agent; appointed Consular Agent at
Oran November 7, 1906.
Elkington, David Clement.— Bora in Chicago. 111., Novem-
ber 32, 1891; attended the University of Chicago, 1911-12.
1913-14; employed by various firms in Chicago, 1915-1918;
appointed Vice-Consul at Algiers April 5, 1918.
*Elkus, Abram I.— Retired as Ambassador to Turkey in
1917. Register of 1918.
*Elll8, George W.— Retired as Secretary of the Legation at
Monrovia April, 1910. Died in Chicago, 111., about November
j8, 1918. Register of 1913.
Ellis, Leon Hubbard.— Bom in Rheatown, Tenn., January
a6, 1892; home, Spokane, Wash.; graduated from Leland Stan-
ford University (A. B.) 1914; University of Washington (LL.B)
1921; employed in a trust company three months; an American
assistant, Chinese maritime customs at Canton, ten months;
importer in south China eight months; practiced law in Spo-
kane 1921-22; appointed, after examination (July 10. 1922),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four September 22,
192a, and assigned to the Department of State; assigned to
Peking November 13, 1922; to Guatemala April 24, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i. 1924.
♦Ellsworth, Luther Thomas.— Retired as Consul at Ciudad
Porfirio Diaz (Piedras Negras) July, 1913. Register of 1913.
Elting, Stewart O. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant Military Attache at London, March 13, 1923.
♦Embry, John Augustus.— Retired as Consul of class eight
detailed to Irkutsk, March, 1919. Register of 1918.
*Endicott, Francis Munroe.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class three (unassigned) October, 1916.
Register of 1915.
♦Englebracht, Charles A.— Retired as Marshal at Shanghai
June, 1906. Register of 1914.
Engert, Cornelius Van Hemert.— Born in Vienna, Austria, of
Dutch parents December 31, 1887; naturalized; home, Berke-
ley, Calif.; prepared for college under private tutors, and in
pubUc schools; graduated from University of California, Litt.
B. (1908), Litt. M. (1909); studied law, 190S-1911; Teaching
Fellow in History, University of California, 1909-1911; Le
Conte Memorial Fellow, Harvard University, 1911-12; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 31, 1912), Student Inter-
preter in Turkey March 12, 191 2; Interpreter to the Consulate-
General at Constantinople July i, 1914; in charge of agency
at Dardanelles, November-December, 1914; Vice-Consul at
Constantinople February 12, 1915; Vice-Consul and Interpre-
ter at Bagdad August 4, 1915, but did not go to post; on detail
in Embassy in Constantinople September, 1915-Dccember,
1916; in Syria and Palestine December, 1916-April. 1917;
appointed an assistant in the .American Legation at The
Hague August 18, 1917; appointed, after examination (June
25, 1917). Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
May 3, 1918; assigned to The Hague June i, 191S; appointed
Secretary of class three March 14, 1919; assigned to Teheran
September 9, 1910: to Constantinople, temporarily, November
4, 1919; instructed to return to Teheran March lo, 1920; assigned
to the Department of State October 10. 1922; appointed Secre-
tary of class two December 4, 1922; assigned to Habana Septem-
ber 26, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four
July I, 1924
English, Benedict Michael. — Born in Monona, Iowa. Feb-
ruary 2, 1894; graduated from Creighton University (Ph. B.)
1916, (LL. B.) 1919; served in the United States Na\'y June-
December, 1918; practiced law in Omaha June-November, 1919;
appointed a law clerk at $2,000 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, December 23, 1919; law drafting assistant,
temporarily, at $2,500. June i, 1920; drafting officer, at $2,500,
July I, 1920; Assistant Solicitor, at $2,500, June i, 1921; drafting
officer at $3,000 September 30, 1922.
Ereaut, Albert Edward. — British subject; born in Jersey
Channel Islands, August 2, 1878; solicitor of the Royal Court
of Jersey; appointed Consular Agent at Jersey March 31, 1915.
Erhardt, John George.— Born in Brooklyn, N. V., November
4, 1889; home, Brooklyn; attended public schools of Brooklyn,
1895-1902; preparatorj' school, 1906-1909; Adelphi Academy,
Brooklyn, 1910; Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y. (Ph. B),
1915; Columbia University, New York City (summer course),
1914; Fordham University Law School, New York City,
1916-17; stenographer with law firm, 1906-1909; mercantile
reporter, 191 1; tutor, 1916-17; Young Men's Christian Asso-
ciation secretary at Fort Totten, N. Y.; statistician Council
of National Defense, Washington, D. C; served in the Engi-
neer Corps, United States Army, as private, sergeant, and
master engineer September, 1917, to February, 1919; admitted
to the Bar of New York State, Appellate Division, Second De-
partment, June, 1919; appointed after, examination (May 12,
1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 27, 1919;
assigned to Athens December 22, 1919; appointed Consul ot
class seven April 29, 1920; remained at Athens on detail; ap-
pointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; Foreign Service Offi-
cer of class seven July i, 1924; detailed to Winnipeg July 3, 1924
Erickson, Eric Henry. — Bom in Ogdcn, Utah, January 2,
1891; attended the University of Utah 1910-1912, and two draft-
ing schools one year each; employed in various capacities by
three railroad companies 1916-1923; clerk in the Interstate Com-
merce Commission 1923-24; transferred from the Interstate Com-
merce Commission and appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service mles, September 25,
1924.
126
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Evans, Arthur H.— Bom in Battle Creek, Mich., May 25,
1888; graduated from Union College (A. B.) 1916, and pursued
special courses at Columbia University 191 7; employed by a
mercantile establishment in Denver two years; staff member
of international corporation in New York and abroad 1917-192;^ ,
assistant treasurer and representative of a railway company in
China; appointed Assistant Commerical Attach^-, Department
of Commerce, and designated for duty in the American Lega-
tion at Peking July 18, 1923.
Evans, Ernest Edwin.— Bom in Rochester. N. Y.. April 18,
1891: home, Rochester; attended the public and high schools
of Rochester twelve years; Rochester Business Institute one
year; Ecole Superieure de Commerce, Neuchatel, Switzerland,
six months; employed by a mercantile concern in Rochester,
1907-1912; stenographer in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, Department of Commerce, 1913-14; clerk to the
commercial attaciic, American Embassy, London, 1914-1916;
in office of the Naval Attache, American Embassy, Madrid,
since May 31, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Madrid Septem-
ber 22, 1917; at Tangier January 7, 1919; appointed, alter exami-
nation (May 12, 1919). Consular Assistant May 20, 1920; Vice-
Consul at Gibraltar August 11, 1920; at Tangier August 31,
1920; Vice-Consul de carriJre of class three November 17. 192 1,
and assigned to Tangier; detailed for special duty in Albania
May I, 1922; assigned to Mexico City January 2, 1923; appointed
Vice Consul de carri^re of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Evans, Rice Kemper. — Born in Franklin, Ohio, February 3,
1879; graduate of Miami Medical College, 1902; practiced medi-
cine, 1902-1909; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Shef-
field April 26, 1909; Vice-Consul at Sheffield by act approved
February 5, 1915.
Evans, William Davis. — Born November 30, 1884; appointed
laborer in the Department of State December 23, 1909; assist-
ant messenger June 22, 1910; reappointed August 24, 1911,
under the provisions of Executive order of August 24, 1912.
Everett, Curtis Thomas.— Born in Scottsville, Ky., December
9, 1890; home, Nashville, Tenn.; graduated from Vanderbilt
University (B. S.) 1915, (M. A.) 1916; engaged in surveying
five months; in Red Cross work two months; instructor in
schools in Florida, Tennessee, and North Carolina for nearly
three years; commissioned in the United States Army as
second lieutenant November 27, 1917; as first lieutenant Octo-
ber 19, 1918, and served until August, 1919; appionted a clerk
at $1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
mles, October 8, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Liege January
7, 1920; at Stuttgart December 23, 1921; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three February 26, 1923; assigned to Stuttgart March 2, 1923;
appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Bombay September 9, 1924.
♦Ewart, John Jones. — * * * Appointed Vice Consul de
carriere of class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, July I, 1924; resigned November 13. 1924, while serv-
ing as Vice Consul at Cologne. Register of 1924.
♦Ewing, John. — Retired as Minister to Honduras May, 1918.
Died in Habana, Cuba, June 24, 1923. Register of 1917.
Fairbanks, Frederick Charles.— Bom in Paris, France, of
American parents July 2, 1868; educated under tutors in Nice,
France, and Hamburg, Germany; professor of piano at the
Royal Conservatory of Music, Dresden, Germany, 1897-1S99;
appointed Consular Agent at Dieppe March 11, 1916.
Falck, Leidy James. — Bom in Vienna, Va., November 16,
1903; graduated from Ogden (Utah) High School, 1921; attended
the Utah Agricultural College and a business school one year
each; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, June 18, 1923 ; at $1,000 October i, 1923;
at $1,320 July I. 1924.
Fallon, Douglas. — Boni in Durham, N. C; graduated from
Danville (Va.) High School 192 1, and from a business college
1922; employed as stenographer by private concerns 1922-23;
appointed a clerk of class one, temporarily, in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, January 2, 1924; perma-
nently at $900 per annum April 3, 1924; at 81,320 July i, 1924.
Farrand, Elbridge Kilchel. — Born in Griggsville, 111., No-
vember 15, i89S;home, Griggsville; graduated from the Griggs-
ville High School 1916, and from the University of Illinois
(B. S.) 1922; served in the United States Army 1917-1919;
employed in a bank during summer vacations; appointed, after
examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three February a 6, 1923: assigned to Buenos Aires April
27, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i ,
1924.
Farrell, Thomas Francis.— Bom in Boston, Mass., April 16,
1887; educated in public schools and spent one year each at
Harvard, New York, and George Washington Universities;
manager ol a steel warehouse in Boston 1912-1914; bookkeeper
in the Navy Department 1914-1917; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State as clerk at $900 November 19, 1917; at $1,000,
temporarily. May i, 1918; clerk of class three in the Passport
Bureau of the Department of State in New York July i, 1918;
clerk of class three in the Department of State October 16, 1919;
at $i,S6o July I, 1924.
Fauntroy, Edward.— Born in Washington, D. C, September
7, 1876; attended the public schools of Washington; appointed
temporarily at $720 in the Department of State, March 10,
1919; an assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules, April
12, 1920.
Faymonville, Philip R.— Major, United States Army; as-
signed to duty as Assistant Military Attache at Tokyo April
27. 1923; Militiiry Attache February 16, 1924.
Fechet, d' Alary. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Language Officer at Tokyo November s, 1923.
*Fee, William Thomas.— Died April i, 1919, while Consul
of class three, unassigned. Register of 1918.
Feely, Edward Francis.— Born in Rochester, N. Y., March
6, 1880; Rochester University graduate; traveled in Europe
and Latin America as representative of American manufac-
turers; appointed Trade Commissioner in Mexico September
20, 1918; Commercial Attache in Mexico June 20, 1919; Com-
mercial Attache in Buenos Aires also Asuncion and Monte-
video October 22, 1920.
*FennelI, Charles Buford.— Died in Stockholm October 2s,
1918, while Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, as-
signed to Stockholm. Register of 191 7.
Fennell, Joseph A.— Born in Washington, D. C, November
iJ, 1893; high school andcollegeeducation(A.B., 1916); teacher
in Regis High School, New York City, 1916-17; Loyola High
School, Baltimore, Md., 1917-18; clerk in American Embassy,
Paris, 1918-19; appointed a clerk, temporaril> , at $900, in the
Department of State, September 19, 1919; at $960 November 1,
1919; at $1,000 February i, 1920; clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, November 16, 1920; class two December 30,
1922, effective January i, 1923; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Fenstermacher, Harvey E.— Born near Cressona, Schuylkill
County Pa., March 15, 1892; educated in the public schools of
SchuylkillCounty and the Schissler College of Business, Norris
town. Pa.; teacher in the public schools of Schuylkill County
one term; appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900,
on probation, under Civil Service rules, June 17, 1911; at $i,oco
December 8, to be effective December 15, 1913; resigned April
9, 1914; engaged in farming 1914-15; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, in the Department of State, February i, 1916; perma-
nently, a clerk of class one, imder Executive order, June 22,
to be effective July i, 1916; class two October i, 1917; class
three August is, 1918; detailed for duty with the American
Commission to Negotiate Peace November 30, 1918; appointed
a clerk of class four March 16, 1923; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Ferber, Anna Bertha. — Bom in New York City; attended
the pubUc schools of Washington and graduated from Business
High School 1916; stenographer for patent attorneys in Wash-
ington 1916-1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,140, in
the Department of State August 29, 191S; at $1,200, February i,
1920; appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules,
December 6, 1920; class two December 30, 1922, effective Janu-
ary I, 1923, at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Ferguson, Meta Eichholz.— Bom in Waynesboro, Pa.; at-
tended high school and private school; stenographer in bank
1918; employed in various Government Departments 1918-1924;
transferred from the Department of Commerce and appointed
a clerk at $1,6^^0 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, December 31, 1924, effective January i, 1925.
Ferguson, Ollis B. — Bom in Willow Springs, Mo., Novem-
ber 2, 1897; high-school graduate; worked on farm and as a
clerk in various concerns; assistant postmaster at Willow
Springs; traveled and engaged in agricultural and research
work 1910-1918; organized food and farm clubs in Missouri in
1917; served with Air Service in France; under the Treasury
Department 1919-1921; clerk in the Consulate General at Lon-
don; appointed Vice-Consul at London November 7, 1921.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
127
Fernald, Robert Foss.— Bom in Winn, Me.. October 4, 1890;
home, Ellsworth. Me.; attended Hebron (Me.) Academy four
years; Colby College, Jvlaine, one year; teacher of English
in Porto Rico igio-ii; employed as clerk by an estate in Santo
Domingo, March-July, 1911; employed in various capacities
in Porto Rico 1911-1914; clerk in the office of the quartermaster
general. War Department, Washington. 1914-15; clerk in the
American Consulate at Catania, January 14, 1916; appointed
Vice-Consul at Catania April 5, 1916; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 18, 1917), Vice-Consul de carri^re of class three.
September 27, 1919; assigned to Catania October 22, 1919;
appointed Vice-Consul de carricre of class two May 24. 1920;
assigned to Stockholm, September 15, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class one, November 17, 192 1; Consul of
class seven June 22, 1922; remained at Stockholm on detail;
detailed to Goteborg April ig, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Saloniki October
23. 1924-
Ferrin, Augustin William.— Bora in Little Valley, N. Y.,
September i. 1875; home. Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.; grad-
uated from Yale University (A. B.) 1S97; news editor 189S-190S;
magazine editor 1908-1917; Trade Commissioner. Department
of Commerce. 1917; Acting Commercial Attache in China
1917-1S; Trade Commissioner in Australia 1918-1921; Trade
Commissioner, Department of Commerce. 1921-1924; appointed,
after examination (January 14, 1924), Consul of class seven
June 3. 1924; Foreign Serv'ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924;
assigned to Madrid August i, 1924.
Ferris, Cornelius.— Born in Hillsdale. Mich.. March 26. 1866;
home. Fort Collins, Cclo.; attended Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity, and graduated in law from Harvard University (LL.
B.) in 1893 ; employed as bank clerk; admitted to the Denver
(Colo.) bar in 1892; practiced law; city attorney of Fort Col-
lins four years; appointed, after examination (April 7. 1908),
Consul at Asuncion May 31. 1909; Consul at Port Antonio
November 24. 1913; Consul at Bluefields July 31. 1914; Consul
of class six by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to
Mannheim July 8. 1916; to San Luis Potosi April 19. 191 7; ap-
pointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919; detailed, tempo-
rarily, to Mexico City, November 25, 1919; appointed Consul of
class three June 4, 1920; assigned to Stettin February 14, 1922;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Flchardt, Arthur Emanuel. — British subject, born in Orange
Free State March 9, 1872: president Orange Free State Chamber
of Commerce; justice of the peace; director in several compa-
nies; appointed Consular Agent at Bloemfontein February 26,
1907.
Finley, Harold Danish— Born in Ballston Spa. N. Y., Novem-
ber 4, 1893; home. Saratoga Springs; graduated from Yale
University (A. B.) 1917; served in the United States Army
May 17, 1917 to March 25, 1920, as lieutenant and captain; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de
carricre of class three September 7. 1920; assigned to Havre
October 18, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
May 26, 1922; class one February 26, 1923; assigned to Naples
March 30. 1923; appointed Consul of class seven December 19,
1923; remained at Naples on detail; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, of class eight, July i, 1924.
Finlsy, James Gordon.— Bora in Washington. D. C. January
31. 18S5; home. Washington; attended the public and high
schools of Washington; studied civil engineering at George
Washington University one year; engaged in the real estate
business nine years; employed by a wholesale grocery firm
until July, 1916; appointed Vice-Consul at Lyon September
17, 1917; at Marseille, January 31, 1919; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 24. 1918), Consular Assistant. September 8, 1919;
Vice-Consul at Lille January 13. 1921; at La Rochelle August
20. 1923; at Lille September 25. 1923; at Boulogne-sur-mer
October i, 1923; at Lille November s. 1923; at Patras December
1,1. 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
Fisher, Carl Alvin. — Bora in Salt Lake City. Utah, April 27.
1897; home. Salt Lake City; attended Stanford University, the
University of Pennsylvania, the University of Utah, and
graduated from Georgetown University (B. F. S.) 1924; served
as a seaman and ensign in the United States Navy 1918-19;
employed as an officer in a creamery company in Salt Lake
City May, 1919, to November, 1921; officer in a petroleum com-
pany in Wyoming Fetiruary, 1922, to January. 1923; appointed,
after examination (July 9. 1923), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four December 12, 1923. and assigned to the
Department of State; assigned to Berlin February 4, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of cl?ss eight July i, 1924.
Fisher, D wight Wilton.— Bom in Mount Veraon. Ohio.
September 27, i"S3; educated in the public schools, business
high scliool. and Columbian College, now George Washington
University; clerk to the principal of Central High School,
Washington, two years, and later clerk to the Washington
Board of Education ; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Post Office
Department July 28, 1905; at $1,000 October <;, 1908; transferred
to the Department of State as a clerk at S900, under Civil Service
rules. January 14, 1909; at Si, 000 May 9. 1910; class one April i,
1911; class two Deceinber 3, 1915; class three June 22, to be effec-
tive July I, 1916; resigned January 15, 1918; Washington repre-
sentative of a manufacturing company 1918-1922; clerk in
the American Consulate at Antwerp November. 1922, to April,
1924: appointed Mce Consul at Antwerp May 5. 1924.
Fisher, Fred Douglas.— Bora in Albany. Oreg.. March 13 j
1874; home, Portland, Oreg.; educated in the public schools
andat Albany College, Oregon; was employed as clerk; enlisted
in the Second Oregon Volunteer Infantry; attached to the
Quartermaster's Department, United States Army; appointed
Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Nagasaki August 32, 1901;
Consul at Tansui February 23, 1904; Consul at Harbin June 23,
1906; Consul at Newchwang January 21. 1909: Consul-General
at Mukden August 27. 1909: Consul-General at Tientsin July
28, 1914; Consul-General of class four by act approved Felj-
ruary s. 1915; appointed Consul of class three April 8. 1918; as-
signed to Johannesburg April 9. 1918; to Nantes December 27,
1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i.
1924.
Fisher, Raymond Henry.— Bom in Galveston, Tex., August
24, 1900; attended Stanford University; ser\-ed in the United
States Army October-December, 191S; clerk at Sydney, New
South Wales, and London, 1922-1924; appointed Vice Consul
at London August i, 1924.
Fisher, Theodore Monroe.- Born in Strasburg, Va., October
18, 1891; educated in public and private schools and took a
short course at George Washington University; an assistant
in the library of the Department of Agriculture, 1913-1917;
appointed Vice-Consul at Halifax February la, 1917; Vice-
Consul at Colon January 26, 1918; at Habana, January 37, 1920;
at Dundee September 6, 1924.
Fitts, Henry Lyman.— Born in East Providence. R. I., Jime
2. 1861; attended public schools and a business college; em-
ployed in the grain business in Pawtucket. R. I., seventeen
years, and engaged in business thirteen years; farmed in Cal-
gary. Canada. 1910-1922, and employed by two firms in Calgary;
appointed Vice-Consul at Calgary October 21, 1922.
Fitzgerald, Loretta Elizabeth.— Born in Washington. D. C;
attended the Washington, D. C, public schools; employed as
a clerk by a business house in Washington. D.C., five yean;
clerk in the Treasury Department July, 1918, to March, 1919;
clerk in the War Department March, 1919, to April, 1930; ap-
pointed clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, -April 9, 1920; at $1,100. December 30, 1923, effec-
tive January i, 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,500 July i,
1924.
Fitzpatrick, Francis A. — An American citizen; appointed
Consular Agent at St. Marc October 6. 1923.
Fitzpatrick, John Raymond.— Bora in Dixon, 111.. October
10, 1896; attended high school five years; employed as secretary
to a manufacturer and as an instructor of stenography in a
night school 1915-1917; clerk in the Treasury Department
two months, 1918; in the American Legation at Copenhagen
March-November, 1918, and in the American Embassy at
Archangel November, 1918. to June, 1919; secretary to a com-
mercial attache assigned to the Department of Commerce
and to the Legation at Copenhagen 1919-20; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Toronto February-December, 192 1; employed
in commercial laboratories 1922; appointed a clerk at $1,000
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, May 22,
1922; class one October i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924; at $1,680
September 15, 1924.
*Fitzpatrlck, Ulysses Simon.— Retired as Consul of class
seven, detailed toTampico. December. 1919. Register of 1932.
FitzSimmons, George Dudley.— Born in Corpus Christ!,
Tex., January 7, 1861; attended public schools of Corpus
Christi, and took an engineering course at Vanderbilt Univer-
sity, Nashville, Tenn., 1882- 1884; employed with county
surveyor about four years; storekeeper and accountant on a
ranch in Texas. 18.8.1-1892; engaged in grocery business in
Monterey 1892-1913; appointed Consular Agent at Monterey,
November i, 1893; retired in 1897; appointed Vicc-Consul at
Monterey September 22, 1917.
Flack, Joseph. — Born in Grenoble. Pa., December 5. 1SQ4;
home, Grenoble; graduate of the University of Pennsylvania
128
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
(B. S.), 1916; took post-graduate course 1919-20; employed in
social service work in Philadelphia and with a steamship com-
pany in New York in 1916; appointed, after examination (June
36, 1916), Consular Assistant August 30, 1916; Vice-Consul at
Liverpool May 8, 1917; on leave as Consular Assistant from
September, 1919; appointed, after examination (January 26,
1920), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, April 7,
1920; assigned to Paris, July 29, 1920; to La Paz August 15,
1923; appointed Secretary of class three September 22. 1922;
assigned to Santo Domingo April 2, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class six Judy i, 1924.
Flack. Thomas R.— Bom in Chicago, 111., January 3, 1881;
clerk for Navy Department at Quincy, Mass., 1903-03, and for
the Treasury Department at Marquette, Mich.; clerk. Bureau
of Agriculture, Philippine Islands, 1903-1916; appointed clerk
in the American Consulate General at Moscow, October, 1917;
transferred to the American Embassy in Russia, October, 1918;
appointed clerk in the American Consulate at Tiflis, September,
1919; clerk in the American Consulate at Aleppo, July i, 1921;
Vice-Consul at Aleppo, Septejnber 24, 1921; at Vienna August
7. 1924-
Flaherty, Francis Edward.— Bom in New Britain, Conn.,
March 7, 1906; graduated from high school 1923, and attended a
business college 1923-24; employed as stenographer for a private
concern June-September, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, September
8, I9-'4.
♦Fleming, Alfred John. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
assigned to Yarmouth, June, 1915. Register of 1914.
Fleming, George Lewis.— Born in Louisville, Ky., February
2, 1S92; attended high school, business college, and tutored by
private instructors; employed as an accountant 1909-1913, and
as a salesman 1917-18; served in United States Navy 1918-19;
clerk in the American Embassy at Paris December, 1919, to
July, 1921; clerk in the American Consulate at Basel July,
1921, to February, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Basel Febru-
ary 14, 1922; at Bradford June 6, 1923.
♦Fleming, Rufus.— Died at his post (Edinburgh) April 3,
1920. Register of 1018.
Fletcher, Cassius Paul.— Bom in Ridgefami, 111., April i,
1890; home, Hickory Valley, Tenn.; attended the United States
Militarj- Academy 1911-12, and graduated from the University
of Illinois (B. S.) 1914; engineer with Interstate Commerce
Commission 1914-1917; served in the United States Army
1917-1919, retiring with the rank of captain; employed as engi-
neer on highway construction 1919-20; assistant manager of
plantation 1920-1923; appointed, after examination (January
14, 1924), Vice Consul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924;
Foreign Ser\-ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Toronto July 11, 1924.
Fletcher, Henry Prather.— Bom in Greencastle, Pa., April
10, 1873; home, Greencastle; admitted to the bar 1894; prac-
ticed law until 1898; joined Roosevelt's Rough Riders and
served throughout Cuban campaign; appointed first lieutenant
and battalion adjutant of the Fortieth Infantry and served in
the Philippines until June, 1901; appointed Second Secretary
of the Legation at Habana May 22, 1902; Second Secretary of
the Legation at Peking April 29, 1903; Secretary of the Legation
at Lisbon March lo, 1905; Secretary of the Legation at Peking
April 26, 1907; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-
tiary to Chile December 21, 1909; Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiary to Chile October i, 1914; Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Mexico February 25,
1916; ordered to return to the United States February 20, 1919,
for duty in the Department of State; resigned as Ambassador to
Mexico February 15, 1920; appointed Under Secretary of State
March 7, 192 1; conunissioncd to represent the United States
in the International Conference on Electrical Communications
at Washington March 25, 1921, and was subsequently elected
chairman thereof; appointed a member of the Advisory Com-
mittee to the American Commissioners to the Conference on the
Limitation of Armament, November 2, 1921; Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Belgium, March 6,
1922; also Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
to Luxemburg March 5, 1923; Chairman of the Delegation
of the United States to the Fifth International Conference
of American States held at Santiago, Chile, March, 1923; re-
turned to his post June 23, 1923; appointed Ambassador Ex-
traordinary and Plenipotentiary to Italy February 19, 1924;
Honorary Delegate of the United States to the Meeting of the
General Assembly of the Intemational Institute of Agriculture
at Rome May, 1924.
Fletcher, Samuel Johnson.— Bom in Portsmouth, N. H.,
September 17, 1S91; home, Kittery Point, Me.; attended the
public and high schools of Portsmouth twelve years, Ports-
mouth Business School one year; clerk in a railroad office
one and one-half years; employed in various offices in the
Portsmouth Navy Yard to October, 1917; appointed Vice-
Consul at Barranquilla October 8, 1917; Vice-Consul at Car-
tagena, November 20, 1917; appointed, after examination
(January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May
25, 1921; assigned to Cartagena June 11, 1921; to La Guaira,
September 6, 1921; to Havre July 13, 1923; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two November 23, 1923; class one
May 10, 1924; Foreign Ser\-ice Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924; class eight, also Consul, August 8, 1924.
Flood, Peter Henry Allen.— Born in Nashua, N. H., June 15,
1885; home, Nashua; attended Yale University 1910-1912; em-
ployed as a tutor in Europe and in boys' schools in Connecticut
and New York 1912-1917; served in the United States Army
as a lieutenant 1917-1920; appointed Vice-Consul at Southamp-
ton July 26, 1920; after examination (June 28,1920), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three, September 7, 1920. and assigned to
Southampton; assigned to Queenstown December 24, 1920;
to Bizerta, November s, 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two May 26, 1922; assigned to Singapore June 7, 1922;
to Tampico April 18, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924.
Flournoy, jr., Richard W.— Born in Hampden-Sidney, Va.,
May 20, 1878; attended Washington and Lee University three
years and graduated from Columbian (now George Washing-
ton) University (LL. B.) 1904 and (LL. M.) igoi;; bank clerk
in Washington, D. C, 1896-1898; teacher in Lewisburg, W. Va.,
and Emerson Institute, Washington, D. C, 1899-1903; admitted
to the bar of the District of Columbia July 7, 1904; appointed
clerk in the Department of State at $900, under Civil Service
rules, July i, 1903; at $1,000 May 24, to take effect July i, 1905;
class one, March i, 1906; class two July 8, 1907; class three
July I, 1908; Chief of the Bureau of Citizenship November 27,
1908, to take effect January i, 1909; detailed September 17, 19x5.
to assist the embassies and legations in Europe regarding citi-
zenship matters; appointed an assistant solicitor August i,
1916: on detail as Acting Chief of the Bureau of Citizenship;
appointeddraftingofficer at $3,000 November 12, 1917; assistant
to the Solicitor at $3,300, March 13, 1920; drafting officer at
$3,500. July I, 1920; $4,000, July I, 1922; at $4,400 August i,
1924.
Flye, Orlando L.— Born in Winslow, Me., February 28, 1861;
educated in the public schools of Winslow; employed by tele-
phone company 1882-1886; with commercial soap company
1887-1889; with a telephone company in Santa Marta, Colom-
bia, 1889-1894; engaged in coffee planting in Santa Marta 1894-
1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Santa Marta, July 9, 1921.
Follmer, Cyrus Brown.— Born in Milton, Pa., May 17, 1894;
graduated from Milton High School 191 2, and Bucknell Uni-
versity (B.S.) 1916; attended Georgetown Foreign Service
School 1919-20; employed as chemist by an explosives com-
pany in Emporium, Pa., July, 1916, to March, 1917; served
in the United States Army (ambulance service) May, 191 7, to
June, 1919; clerk in the Bureau of War Risk Insurance two
months, 1919, and in the Department of State January 26-
September 27, 1920; clerk in the American Consulate at Lyon,
October 26, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul at Lyon June 7, 1922;
at Calais April 19, 1924; at Lyon September 8, 1924.
Folwell, Bainbridge Doty. — Born in Buffalo, N.Y., July 33,
1884; attended the Nichols School and graduated from Yale
College (A.B.) 1907; purchasing agent for several railroad com-
panies 1908-1913; employed in banking institutions 1913-1915;
engaged in shipping 1916-17; served in the United States Navy
1917-1919, retiring with the rank of lieutenant, junior grade;
engaged in economic investigations while traveling 1920-1933;
appointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in the Department of
State May 3, 1923; at $3,000 July i, 1924.
Foote, Edward Kilboume.— Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, March
4, 1857; graduated Irom Woodward High School, Cincinnati,
and studied art and allied courses in Paris four years; occupied
for a number of years in travel, study, and art work in Europe
and northern Africa; American Vice-Consul at Tangier, 1887;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Chemnitz December s,
191 2; Vice-Consul at Chemnitz by act approved February s.
1915; retired February 3, 191 7; appointed Vice-Consul at
Genoa July 21, 1917; at Palermo September 30, 1920; at Messina,
Nbvcmber 29, 1921.
Foote, Walter Ambrose.— Bom in Greenville, Tex., June as.
1887; home, Cincinnati, O.; spent five years at East Texas
University and one year in naval school for clerks at Newport;
studied law; employed with an arms company and a New York
building corporation three years; served in the United States
Navy, 1907-1915 and 1917-1920, retiring as a lieutenant; ap-
BIOGRAPHICAI^ STATEMENT.
129
pointed, after examination (June 2S, 1920), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three September S. 1920; assigned to Port Said
October iS, 1920; appointed Consul of class seven June 20, 1921;
assigned to Port Said June 23, 1921; detailed to Prague April
3, 1922; to Hamburg March ii, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
*Forbus, Sample Bouvard.— Retired as Consul of class six,
detailed to Paris, November, 1922. Register of 1922.
Ford, Charles Richard.— Born in IJnwood. Tex., June 20,
1897; home. Oklahoma City, Okla.; graduated from the Uni-
versity of Missouri, and attended the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology; graduated from the United States Jlarine-
Officers' School 1919; served in the United States Marine
Corps, 191S-1920, retiring with the rank of second lieutenant;
employed as State fair assistant secretary 1915-16 and as tim-
ber cruiser and inspector for a logging company 1920-1922:
appointed, alter examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Colombo
April 27, 1923; to Penang July 24, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Ford, Samuel Shivell.— Born in Louisville, Ky., March 13,
1893 ; attended the public schools of Louisville, Hyattsville,
Md.. and Washington, D. C, 1S99-1910; took course at a com-
mercial college; employed as messenger and clerk in various
governmental offices 1910-1920; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December
31, 1920, effective January i, 1921; at Sr,ioo, December 30, 1922,
effective January i, 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Fonnan, Charles. — Born in New Orleans, La., December 8,
1866; home. New Orleans; attended University ot Louisiana
five years, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute two years, and
graduated from Tulane University (LL. B.),i889; practiced law
in New Orleans, 1889-1896; held various positions in customs
service in New Orleans, 1896-1912; appointed, after examina-
tion (April I, 1912), Consul at Turks Island August 23, 1912;
Consul at Moncton November 24, 1913; Consul of class nine by
act approved February 5, 191 5; appointed Consul of class eight
October 18, 1915, and assigned to Bergen; assigned to Christian-
sand November 30, 1917; to Curacao March 15, 1919; to Nueva
Gerona November 26, 1919; appointed Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i. 1924.
Forster, Albert.— Bom in Washington, D. C, December 29,
1878; educated in public schools of Washington; inspector in
the Immigration Service; appointed Vice-Consul at Berlin,
December 8 1921.
*Foss, Harold Richard.— Retired as Consul of class seven, de-
tailed to Constantinople, July 1923. Register of 1922.
♦Foster, Albert D. — Retired as Marshal at Amoy January,
1910. Register of 1909.
Foster, Carol Howe. — Born in Sedgewick, Kans., May 29,
1884; home. Annapolis, Md.; graduated from the University of
Idaho (A. B.) 1905; Rhodes scholar, Oxford University (A. B.)
1908 (A. M.).i9i6; senior fellow in University of Chicago; em-
ployed on a farm; engineer and foreman; instructor in Uni-
versity of Chicago and associate professor in the Naval Academy
at Annapolis, 1909-1919; author of many articles in magazines
and reviews; inspector in a munitions plant in i9i8;Maryland
secretary of the Rhodes scholarship trustees; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919). Consul of class seven September 5,
1919; detailed to Vienna October 29, 1919; appointed Consul of
class six November 23, 1921; class five March i, 1923; assigned
to Vienna December 15, 1923; appointed Consul of class four
June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924;
detailed to the Department of State August 23, 1924; designated
Assistant Chief of the Visa Office, December i, 1924.
Foster, Esther Rebecca.— Born in Pittsburgh, Pa.; high
school graduate; employed in several offices, 1913-14; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State, August 7,
1914; permanently at $1,000, under Executive order, June 23,
to be effective July i, 1916; class one March 12, 1917; class two
August I, 1918; class three December 31, 1919, eflective Janu-
ary I, 1920; at $i,8Ao July i, 1924.
Foster, John G.— Born in Derby Line, Vt., March 9, 1859;
home, Derby Line; graduated from Goddard Seminary, Barre,
Vt., in 1876, and Tuft's College, (A. B.) 1880, and took a law
course at Boston University; admitted to the bar in i88i; direc-
tor ot the National Bank of Derby Line, Vt., 1886-1894; director
of Eastern Townships Bank of Canada, 1894-1898; member of
the Vermont State Legislature, 1892-1894; appointed, after ex-
amination (May ai, 1897), Consul-General at Halifax June aj,
1897; Consul-General at Ottawa Junet 8, 1903; Consul-General
of class three by act approved February s. 191s: appointed
Consul-General of class two April 16, 1917; Foreign Service
Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Foster, Paul Hadley.— Born in Galveston, Tex., April 33,
1868; home, Brownsville, Tex.; attended public and private
schools in New Orleans, La., 1876-1881; Agricultural and Me-
chanical College of Texas, 1884-85; traveUng salesman, 1889-
1913; appointed, after examination (April i, 1912), Consul at
Jerez de la Frontera November 24, 1913; Consul of class eight
by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Bilbao July 8,
1916; appointed Consul of class seven April 24, 1917; assigned
to Vera Cruz, February 28, 1919; appointed Consul of class six
September s, 1919; detailed to j^Ionterey July 18, 1922: assigned
to Monterey October 2. 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
*Fowle, Charles Warren.— Retired as Turkish Secretary of
Embassy at Constantinople October, 1913. Register of 1913.
*Fowler, John.— Retired as Consul of class six, assigned to
Rimouski, October, 1915. Died in Winchester, >Iass., Decem-
ber 31, 1923. Register of 1914.
Fox, Ray.— Bom in Trenton, Mo., October 13, 1S90; home,
Glenn, Calif.; graduated from the University of California
(A. B.) 1920; rancher. 1911-12; served in the French Army 1917;
in the United States Army December 4 to April 22, 1919, retir-
ing as second lieutenant; appointed, after examination (June
2$, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 7,
1920; assigned to Melbourne October 18, 1920; appointed \'ice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; class one February-
26, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at
Melbourne on detail; detailed to Calcutta June 5, 1924; assigned
to Calcutta June 14, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
*Fox, Williams Carlton.— Retired as Minister to Ecuador
July, 191 1. Died in New York City January 30, r924. Regis-
ter ol 1913
Foy, Robert C— Lieutenant colonel. United States Army;
assigned to duty as Military Attache at Bucharest April 16,
1923-
Frampton, Henry A. — Born in England in 1864; appointed
Consular Agent at Roseau November 24, 1896.
* Francis, Charles Spencer.- Retired as Ambassador to
Austria-Hungary April, 1910. Register of 1913.
♦Francis, David Rowland.— Retired as Ambassador to Russia
May, 1921. Register of 1918.
Frank, Laurence ChampUn.— Born in Newport, R. I., July 2,
1904; graduated from high school 1923; employed in various
capacities during vacations; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, July 23, 1923;
at $1,100 March i, 1924; class one May 31, effective Jime i, 1924;
at $1,440 July I, 1924; at $i,6So September 15, 1924.
Frankenhoff, Frances Johanna.— Bom in Atchison, Kans.;
graduated from high school 1922; attended Kansas State Agri-
cultural College two months. 1922, and Mount St. Scholastica's
College 1923-24: attended George Washington University 1924;
clerk in the War Department September-November, 1924;
appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, November i, 1924.
Franklin, Lynn Winterdale.- Born in Ocean Grove. N. J..
June II, iSSS; home, Bethesda, Md.; attended the public and
high schools of Washington, D. C 1895-1906; took business
course 1909-1911; studied under private tutors 1911-1914; em-
ployed in business offices in Denver, Colo., and Washington.
D. C, 1906-1911; appointed clerk in the American Legation at
Tegucigalpa January 9, 191 2; Vice and Deputy Consul at Tegu-
cigalpa February 12, 1914; clerk in the Ameriain Legation and
\'ice-Consul at San Salvador February 25, 1915; appointed,
after examination (January 25, 1915). Consular Assistant
August 5, 1916; Vice-Consul at Callao-Lima August 2-, 1916;
Vice-Consul at Guayaquil July i, 1918; on detail in the Depart-
ment of State January 12 to July i, 1919; Delegate of Depart-
ment of State to Pan American Commercial Conference May,
1919; appointed Vice-Consul at San Salvador July 2, 1919; Vice-
Consul de carriere, of class three, September 27, igig; assigned
to San Salvador October i, 1919; representative of Department
of State to accompany remains of ex-President Melendez of
El Salvador from United States to El Salvador on U. S. S. Cleve-
land October, 1919; representative of President of United
States for selection and acceptance of plot of land offered by
Salvadoran Government for construction of American Legation
at San Salvador; representative of Department of State for
i^^o
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
construction at San Salvador; appointed Vice-Consul de car-
ri^re of class two May 24, 1930; class one November 17, 1921;
Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; assigned to San Salvador
AugUit 15, 1932; attended conference on U. S. S. Tacoma at
Fonseca Bay August, 1922; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer
of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Hongkong July 12, 1924.
Frazer, jr., Robert. — Bom in Philadelphia December 8, 1878;
home, Philadelphia; attended Franklin School, Germantown,
Pa., twc years; studied in Dresden, Germany, one year; at-
tended the Protestant Episcopal Academy, Philadelphia, four
years; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, four
years; employed by banking firm in Porto Rico, 1899-1901;
was town councilman of Salinas, P. R., and assistant super-
visor of elections in Porto Rico; engaged in cane planting in
Porto Rico, 1001-1908; apDoiiited, after examination (Novem-
ber 10, 1908), Consul at Valencia July 16. 1909; Consul at Malaga
Aut;ust 22, 1912; Consul at Bahia April 24, 1914; Consul of class
five by act approved February s. 1915; appointed Consul of
class tiiree July 12, 1916, and assigned to Kobe; appointed Con-
sul-Generai at Large September 5, 1919; Foreign Service Officer
of class three July i, 1924; assigned to Zurich October 23, 1924.
*Frazier, Arthur Hugh. — Retired as Charge d' Affaires pro
tempore to Austria, August, 1922. Register of 1922.
*Freeman, Charles M. — "^ * * Appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class five July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Sydney, N. S., July i, 1924 under the provisions
of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Frei, Irene B. — Boni in Passaic, N. J.; educated in grammar
and high schools, and Drakes Business School 1914; stenog-
rapher in the War Department 1918-1922; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, March 16, 1922; at $1,500 Jidy i, 1924.
Frisby, Florence E.— Born in Washington, D. C; educated
in the public schools and George Washington University
(B. S.) 1901; clerk in various Government bureaus, 1907-1914;
clerk in the Interior Department, 1916-17; in the War Depart-
ment July. 1917, to January', 1921; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State and appointed a clerk of class one. under Civil
Service rules, January 2S, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Frost, Arthur Chester. — Boru in Arlington, Mass., February
4, 1886; heme, Arlington, Mass.; graduate of Harvard Univer-
sity (A. B.), 190S; attended Harvard graduate school of busi-
ness administration 1908-09; George Washington University
Law School 1911-12; secretary to Members of Congress, 1910-
1915; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul
of class eight March 2, 1915; on detail at Genoa 1915-1917; as-
signed to Algiers March 20, 1917; appointed Consul of class seven
April 24, 1917; class six September 5, 1919; class five June 4. 1920;
assigned to Barranquilla October 20, 1920; to Guatemala Feb-
ruary II, 1921; appointed Consul of class four August 23, 1922;
detailed to Habana March 30, 1923; appointed Consul of class
ihree June 3, 1924; Consul General of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of cla=s three July i, 1924.
Frost, Wesley. ^Bom in Oberlin, Ohio, June 17, 188^; home,
Berea, Ky.; graduated from Oberlin College, Ohio (A. B.),
1907, and George Washington University (M. A), 1910; ad-
mitted to the bar of Kentucky July 7, 1917; appointed ste-
nographer in the Bureau of Supphes and Accounts, Navy
Department, 1908; stenographer to the Chief of the Bureau
of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, 1909;
appointed in the Department of State in connection with
foreign trade and treaty relations September 2, 1909; appointed,
after examination (June 27, 1910), Consul at Charlottetown
April 5, 191 2; Consul at Cork April 24, 1914; Consul of class eight
by act approved February 5, 1915; apixjintcd Consul of class
seven March 2, 1915; class six April 24, 1917; detailed to the
Department of State August 14, 1917; appointed Consul of class
four September s, 1919; designated Acting Foreign Trade Ad-
viser March 3, 1920; appointed Consul of class three June 4,
1920; assigned to Marseille February 16, 1921; appointed Consul
General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class three July i, 1924.
Fuerst, Mary A. — Born in Burlington, Iowa; educated in
public schools; clerk in a business house in Keokuk eight
years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at S990 in the Depart-
ment of State, March 7, 1918; at Si,oSo July i, 1918; at 81,140
November i, 1918; at Si, 200 January i, 1919; at $1,020 July i,
1919; at S1.080, February i, 1920; clerk at S960, under Civil
Service rules, December 15. 1920; at $1,020, August 16, 1921; class
one September 6, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
F'jlisr, George Gregg. — Bom in Rochester, N. Y., 1886;
home, Rochester; graduated from Yale University 1910; en-
gaged in business several years; scr\-cd in the War Depart-
ment at Washington during World War with the rank of major:
engaged in business in Europe; employed in Christiania by the
Liberty National Bank of New York; appointed Vice-Consul
at Christiania November 3, 1920; at Troudhjem February 25,
1921; at Malmo July 20, 1921; at Reval August 27, 1921; ap-
pointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in the Department of State
August I, 1922, appointed, after examination (June 26, 1922),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 30, 1922;
assigned to Jerusalem April 27, 1923; to Bushire November 22,
1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November
23. 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924;
assigned to Teheran September 2, 1924.
Fuller, Rose Patricia. — Bom in Washington, D. C; graduate
of the Academy of Notre Dame; clerk in the American Federa-
tion of Labor 1915-1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900
in the Department of State June 30, 1917; at Si, 000. under Civil
Service rules, November 18, 1918; class one December 31. 1919,
effective January i, 1920; class two December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
* Fuller, Stuart Jamieson.— Retired as Consul-General of
class three, assigned to Tientsin, November, 1923. Register
of 1922.
Fullertsn, Hugh Stuart.— Bora in Chicago, 111., April 27,
1892; home, Springfield, Ohio; graduated from Wittenberg
College (A. B.) 1914; Princeton University (A. M.) 1917; em-
ployed as instructor, Wittenberg College, one year; purchasing
agent six months; Young Men's Christian Association secretary
in France December, 1917, to September. 1919; appointed Vice-
Consul and clerk at Geneva, February 25, 1920; after examina-
tion (January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three.
May 24, 1920, and assigned to Geneva; assigned to Huelva Au-
gust 2, 1920; to Lyon March 18, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922;
Consulof class seven March i, 1923; remained at Lyon on detail;
detailed to Havre April 19, 1923; to Calais July 20, 1923; to Ant-
werp October 23, 1923; appointed Consul of class six June 3,
1924; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i. 1924.
Funk, Ilo Clare.— Bora in Trinidad, Colo., October 30, 1889;
home, Boulder, Colo.; attended the public and high schools
of Cripple Creek, Colo., eleven years, State Preparatory
School, Boulder, Colo., one year, and graduated from the
University of Colorado (B. A.), 1912; employed during vaca-
tions in various capacities by mining companies in Colorado
and Mexico, 1907-1911; appointed, after examination (April
I, 1912), Consular Assistant September 3, 1912; assigned to duty
in the Department of State September 27, 1912; appointed
Vice and Deputy Consul at Milan August 29, 1913; Vice-Consul
at Milan by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three, September 27, 1919; assigned to
Lucerne October 20, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two May 24, 1920; assigned to Genoa September 15, 1921;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 17,
1931; Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained at Genoa
on detail; appointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Funkhouser, Charles Franklin.- Bom near Mount Jackson.
Va., September 11, 1S77; educated in public schools and took
a summer course in a normal school; public-school teacher
for eighteen years; mail weigher for three and a half months;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $990 in llie Department of
State February n, 1918; at $1,080 July i, 1918; at $1,140 Febru-
ary I. 1919:1 t $t,ioo, under Civil Service rules, October 16,
1919; class one October i, 1920; at $1,440 July i, 1924; at $1,500
August 30, 1924.
* Furness, Fairman Rogers.— Retired as Third Secretary o(
the Embassy at Petrograd March. 1915. Register of 1914.
* Furntss, Henry Watson.— Retired as Minister to Haiti Sep-
tember, 1913. Register of 1913.
Cade, Gerhard. — Bom in Chicago, 111., September 30, 1898;
home. Lake Forest, 111.; graduate of Grotou School f.nd Har-
vard University (A. B.) 1921, and attended Harvard law school
1921-22; sen/ed as chief yeoman. United States Navy, May,
1918, to February, 1919; appointed, after examination (July 10,
1922), Secretai-y of Embassy or Legation of class four, Septem-
ber 22, 1922, and assigned to the Department of State; as-
signed to Riga, November n, 1922; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assi^.Tied to the Department
of State July 17, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
seven November 17, 1924.
* Gafiney, T. St. John.— Retired as Consul-General of class
five, assigned to Munich September, 1915. Register of 1914.
Gage, Elton N. — Bom in Dunkirk, N. Y.. April 6, 1893; at-
tended grammar, preparatory, and business schools in Ithaca,
BIOGRAPHICAI^ STATEMENT.
131
N. Y.; stenographer with the Union Pacific Railway Co. in
Omaha 1913-14; office manager of a manufacturing company
in Omaha, BufTalo, and Minneapolis, 1914-1919; with American
Expeditionary Forces in Italy in 1919; clerk in the Consulate
General at Genoa 1919-20; employed by a manufacturing com-
pany in Kansas City 1920-21; appointed Vice-Consul at Rome,
December 20, 1921.
* Gage, Henry Tifft. — Retired as Minister to Portugal March,
1911. Register of 1913.
Gaines, Martin Newton. — Bom in Kansas City, Mo., Febru-
ary 27, 1890; graduated from the University of .Michigan
(B. Ch. E.) 1912; ore buyer for the American Smelting &
Refining Co. at Caldera, Chile, 1912-1917 and 1919-1922; served
in the United States Army August, 1917, to December, 1919,
retiring with the rank of captain; appointed Consular Agent at
Caldera January 26, 1922,
♦ Gale, Esson McDowell. — Retired as Interpreter, also Dep-
uty Consul-General, at Shanghai March, 1913. Register of
1913.
Gale. William Holt. — Born in New York City January 26,
1864; home, Leesburg, Va.; educated at the Hopkins Grammar
School, New Haven, Coim.; under a tutor in Europe, and at
Yale University, and George Washington University; served
through the Spanish-American War in the Seventy-first New
York Volunteer Regiment; assistant secretary. Porto Rico,
1902-1904; engaged in dairy farming in Virginia in 1906; ap-
pointed, after examination (July 9, 1906), Consul at Puerto
Plata July 16, 1906; Consul at Slalta December 21, 1907; Consul-
General at Athens January 11, 1910; Charge d'Affaires ad in-
terim at Athens August 22 to October 7, 1910; Consul at Colon
April 24, 1914; Consul of class five by act approved February 5,
rgis; appointed Consul-General of class five September 17, 1915.
and assigned to Christiania, but did not go to post; assigned to
Munich October 7, 1915; to Copenhagen July 12, 1917; desig-
nated as Commercial Adviser to the American Legatiori in
Denmark to rank with but after the Counselor of Legation,
July 20, 191S; appointed Consul-General of class four September
S, 1919; assigned to Hongkong August 19, 1920; appointed
Consul-General of class three November 19, 192 1; Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class two July i, 1924; assigned to Amsterdam
August 15, 1924.
Gallagiier, Edward Clare.— Bom in Anthony, Kans., IMarch
23, 1906; graduated from high school, and attended Friends
University 1923-2.;; employed by a newspaper company
1923-24; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Ser\'ice rules, June 20, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924
Gallant, Alyre Joseph. — Bora in Gardner, Mass., July 17, 1901;
attended high school 1916-1919, and business college 1920-1922;
employed by private concerns 1922-1924; appo-ntcd a clerk at
$1,320 in the Departmen. ot State, under Civil Ser\-ice rules,
December i, 1924.
Gallman, Waldemar John.^ — Bom in Wcllsville, N. Y.,
April 27, 1S99; home, Wcllsville; graduated from Cornell
University {.\. B.) 1921; employed as manager of a grocery
company June-October, 1920; instructor in English, Cornell
University, 1921-22; appointed, after examination (July lo,
1922), Secretary' of Embassy or Legation of class four Sep-
tember 22, 1922, and assigned to the Department of State;
assigned to Habana November 13, 1922; to the Department of
State July 24, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
Galmish, Florine Genevieve. — Bom in Oakland, Calif.; grad-
uated from high school 1920, and pursued postgraduate courses
therein 1920-1922; attended Drexel Institute 1922-1924; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of vState, under
Civil Service rules, December 9, 1924.
Gait, Dorothy Usher. — Bom in Washington, D. C; attended
public and private schools in Maryland and took course at
Steward's Business College, Washington. D. C; clerk and
stenographer in various ofifices in Washington 1915-1917; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900 in the Department of
State September 10, 191 7; at $r, 100, March i, 1918; at $900, under
Civil Service rules, February !•;, 1919; at Si, 000 March i, 1919;
class one May i, 1920; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Gamon, John Arthur.— Bom in Wheaton, 111., Febmary 9.
1882; home. Glen Ellyn, 111.; graduate of Wheaton High
School, 1889. and of the University of Michigan (A. B.), 1905;
employed in railway ticket auditor's office, Chicago. 1899-1903;
on railway survey work in Mexico, 1902-03; salesman veith steel
company. Chicago. 1905-1914; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1914). Consul at Puerto Cortes April 24, 1914;
Consul of class eight by act approved Febmary 5. 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class seven September 17, 1915. and assigned
to Corinto; assigned to Guaymas March 20, 1917; appointed
Consul of class six April 16. 1917; assigned to Acapulco July
12, 1917; appointed Consul of class five September s, 1919; class
four June 4, 1920; assigned to Cobh December 27, 192 1; ap-
pointed Consul of class three JMarch i. 1923; Consul General of
class four June 5 r924; Foreign Service Officer of class three
July I, 1924.
* Gard, Allen.— Died at his post (Ceiba) October 27. 1911.
Register of 1913.
Garrels, Arthur. — Bom in St. Louis, Mo., January 3, 1873;
home, St, Louis; educated in the public schools and Smith
Academy of St. Louis; employed by banking and manufac-
turing firms, 1890-1S98; connected with theatrical and amuse-
ment enterprises in the United States and the Far East. 1898-
1903; employed in brokerage business; appointed, after exami-
nation (November 20. 1907). Consul at Zanzibar June 22. 1908;
Consul at Catania January 11, 1910; Consul at Alexandria
August 33, 1912; Consul of class six by act approved February
5, 1915; appointed Consul of class four March 1, 1915; Consul
of class three July 6, 1918; Consul-General at Large September
>•, 1919; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924; as-
signed to Athens October 23, 1924.
*Garrett, Alonzo B.— * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class nine July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at St. Stephen July i, 1924, under the provisions o
the Act of >Iay 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
* Garrett, John Work.— Retired as Minister to the Netherlands
and Luxemburg August, 1919. Register of 1918.
Garrety, William Plymon.— Bom in New York City April 14,
1878; home. New York City; attended the College of the City of
New York five years (B. S.) 1897; College of Physicians and
Surgeons one year; New York Training School for Teachers two
years; Teacher's College two years; Columbia University (A. M.)
1906; employed as teacher in public schools of New York twelve
years; scientific assistant, Department of Agriculture, seven
years; manager of a hotel; captain in the Sanitary Corps, United
States Army, November, 1917, to JVIay, 1919; appointed, after
examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of class eight July iS,
1919, class seven September s, 1919: assigned to Ceiba October
21, 1919; to Puerto Cabello September 16, 1920; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Garvin, John T. — Bom in Valparaiso. Chile, of American
parents, July 29. 1892; attended the schools of Valparaiso,
Santiago, and Copiapo, Chile, eight years; Pomona (Calif.),
Grammar School one year; Wooster (Ohio) Academy two
years and the University of Wooster one year; employed as
salesman and clerk by a firm of importers and exporters in
Santiago, Chile, r9ii-r9i4; clerk in the American consulate at
Valparaiso, Chile, 1914-15; clerk in the American Embassy at
Santiago April-November, 1915; clerk in the American Con-
sulate General at Valparaiso since December r. 1915; appointed
Vice-Consul at Valparaiso February 29, 1916; resigned October
20, 1920; reappointed Vice-Consul at Valparaiso September
37, 1921.
* Gary, Hampson.— Retired as Minister to Switzerland May,
1921. Register of 1922.
*Gassett, Percival. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i, 1924. Retired from active sers'ice
as Consul at Leeds. July i, 1924, under the provisions of the Act
of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
* Gassett, Walter. — Died in Yokohama July iS, 1915. while
Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Kobe. Register of 1914-
Gales, Louis Earl.— Born in Binghamton. N. Y., December
IS, 18S5; educated in the graded and high schools of Binghamton
and at the United States Naval Acadcjny. 1903-1905; employed
as clerk in various insurance, railway, and business concerns in
Binghamton and New York City, 1905-1913; appointed clerk in
the Department of State at $900, under Civil Service rules, De-
cember 12, 1913; at $1,000 September 22. 1914; class two June 33,
to be efTective July i, 191G; class three September 3. 1919; at
Si, 860 July I, 1924.
Gaulln, Alphonse.— Born in Woonsocket, R. I., May 34. 1874:
home, Woonsocket; graduated from Harvard University law
school in 1896; engaged in the practice of law in Woonsocket,
and served as mayor of that city, 1903-1905; appointed Consul
at Havre March 8, 1905; Consul-General at Marseille May 31,
1909; Consul-General of class four by act approved February s,
1915; appointed Consul General of class three September 14,
1917; on temporary detail at Paris, February 5, 1918-July 3t,
1919; appointed Consul-General of class two June 3, 1930;
32952—25-
-10
132
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMEMT.
assi^ed to Rio de Janeiro February lo, 192 1; appointed Foreign
Ser\'ice Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Gauss, Clarence Edward.— Born in the District of Columbia
Januarj' 12, 1SS6; home, Washington, D. C; educated in the
public and high schools of Washington, D. C, and by private
tutors; employed in attorney's office and stenographer with
Invalid Pensions Committee. House of Representatives 1903-
1906; appointed clerk in the Department of State at S900, under
Civil Service rules, August 2, 1906; class one March 4. 1907;
Deputy Consul-General at Shanghai June 7, 1907; reinstated as
clerk class one in the Department of State June 30, 1909, to take
effect July i, 1909; appointed clerk class two July i, 1910; Vice
and Deputy Consul-General at Shanghai December 16, 1912;
Vice-Consui at Shanghai February 6, 191s; appointed, after
examination (April i, 1912), Consul of class eight March 2, 1915;
on detail at Shanghai June 9, 1915, to July 18, 1916; in charge of
office Jime 26, 19 15, to February 19, 1916; detailed to Tientsin
and took charge there July 22, 1916; appointed Consul of class
six July 14, 1916; assigned to Amoy September 25, 1916; ap-
pointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919; assigned to
Tsinan September S. 1919; appointed Consul of class four June
4, 1920; class three Xovember 23, 1921; Consul General of class
four March i, 1923; assigned to Mukden March 30, 1923; to
Tientsin March 12. 1924; appointed Consul General of class
three June 5, 1924. Foreign Service Officer of class two July
I, 1924-
Geiger, Harold. — Major. United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant Military Attache at Berlin.
Geissler, Arthur H.^Bom in Saxony October 30, 1S77, where
father was a clergyman sers-ing under a British missionary
board: came to Chicago, 111., as a child; home, Oklahoma City,
Okla. ; educated in public schools and by private tutors; studied
comparative jurisprudence and diplomacy at Columbian (now
George Washington) University; made several study trips to
Europe and Latin America between 1907 and 1913; instructor
in Spanish, French, and German in Wichita (Kans.) Commer-
cial College 1S95; admitted to the bar in Wichita 1896; presi-
dent of a bank in Oklahoma 1901-1909, of an insurance com-
pany in Oklahoma City 1904-1923; appointed Envoy Extra-
ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary' to Guatemala May
24, 1922.
Geist, Raymond Herman.— Bom in Cleveland, Ohio, August
19, 1885; home, Cleveland; attended Oberlin College 1906-1909;
Western Reser\-e University (A. B.) 1910; Columbia Univer-
sity 1910-11; Harvard University (A. M.) 1916, (Ph. D.) 1918;
employed in office of a newspaper; with a chemical company;
lecturer in Xew York pubhc schools and elsewhere; served in
the United States Navy June-December, 191 8; with the Peace
Conference in Paris; a food commissioner in Austria and ad-
visor to the Austrian Government in pubhc feeding matters;
lecturer in Harvard University; appointed, after examination
(June 27. io2i), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October
26. 1921: assigned to Buenos Aires December 14, i92i;to Monte-
video December 6, 1922; to Port Said September 6, 1923; to
Alexandria Xovember 22, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two X'ovembcr 23, 1923; class one May 10, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; class nine,
also Constil, September 20, 1924; assigned to Alexandria Septem-
ber 20, 1924.
George, William Perry.- Bom in Gadsden, Ala.. November
25, 1895; home, Gadsden; high-school graduate; spent three
years in Gadsden Training School and two years at the X^aval
Academy at Annapolis; from which he was honorably dis-
charged after resignation; clerk in the Geological Survey and
with a private company eight months; appointed clerk in the
Consulate at Grenofjle October, 1916; Vice-Consul at Grenoble
February 10, 1917; ^'ice-Consul at Athens March 15, 1918; acting
delegate. War Trade Board and acting delegate Interallied Com-
mercial Bureau, Athens, October ii-November sg, 1918; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 18,1917), Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Athens De-
cember I, 1919; Acting Commercial Adviser to the American
Legation, Athens, April 11, to August 4, 1920; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 24, 1920; class one Novem-
ber 17, 1921; assigned to Patras December 20, 1921; to Athens
January- 12 1922; appointed Consul of class seven June 22, 1922;
remained at Athens on detail; assigned to Teneriffc November
17, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i,
1924; class seven August .'<, 1924; assigned to Buenos Aires
October 22, 1924.
♦Gerard, James Watson.— Retired as Ambassador to Ger-
many May, 1917. Register of 1916.
Gerberich, Albert Horwell.— Bom in Williamstown. Pa.,
February 23, 1S98; home, Parkesburg, Pa.; graduated from
Dickinson College (A. B.) i9i8;employed as a newspaper re-
porter and in steel works; served as radio-electrician in the
United States Navy 1918-19; appointed, after examination
(May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September
27, 1919; assigned to Puerto Cortes February 5, 1920; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November 17, 1921; assigned
to Bremerhaven February 7, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class one May 26, 1922; Consul of class seven December
19, 1923; remained at Bremerhaven on detail; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Maracaibo
October 23, 1924.
Gerrity, Charles Mattheu.— Bom in Scranton. Pa., June a.
1899; graduated from Technical High School. Scranton, 1917;
clerk in the War Department 1917-18; clerk in the American
Consulate General at Copenhagen 191S-1920; appointed Vice-
Consul at Prague September 22, 1920; at Bergen November 27,
1923; at Kovno January 3, 1924.
Gibbs, Jeptha Milton.— Born in Navasota. Tex., April 20,
187s; educated in grammar and high schools at Eagle Pass,
Uvalde, and San Antonio, Tex.; clerk in a railroad office at
Eagle Pass, Tex., 1897-98; sergeant. Troop M, First Texas
Cavalry 1898-99; employed by railroad companies in Mexico
and Arizona 1899-1903; director and manager of a wholesale
mercantile business at Cananea, Mexico, since 1903; appointed
Consular Agent at Cananea January 30, 1918.
Gibson, Hugh Simons.— Born in Los Angeles, Calif .August
16, 1883; home. Los Angeles; educated by tutors, at Los Ange-
les Military Academy, and ficole Libre des Sciences PoHtiques,
Paris; appginted, after examination (July 8, 1908). Secretary
of the Legation at Tegucigalpa July 31, 1908; Second Secretary
of the Embassy at London August 4, 1909; confidential clerk to
the Assistant Secretary of State February 10, 1910; clerk class
three January 13, 191 1; Secretary of the Legation at Habana
July 6, 1911; tletailed to accompany the special representatives
of the President at the inauguration of Gen. Mario G. Menocal
as President of Cuba May 20, 1913; detailed to observe the elec-
tions for the Constituent Assembly of Santo Domingo Decem-
ber, 1913; appointed Secretary of the Legation at Brussels Feb-
ruary II, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two
by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to London, tem-
porarily. May 16, 1916; permanently July 15, 1916; assigned to
the Department of State, temporarily, February 28, 1917;
permanently April 9, 1917; attached to the person of the
British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs April 18, 1917;
attached to the Belgian Mission June 12, 1917; appointed
Secretary of class one Atigust 23, 1917; assigned to Paris Feb-
ruary 13, 1918; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary to Poland April 16, 1919; to Switzerland March
18, 1924.
Gibson, Lloyd Leckie.— Bom in Minersville, Pa., May 31,
1901; public school education; delivery boy and employed in
stock room of department store 1916-17; appointed, tempo-
rarily, at $480 in the Department of State September 29, 1917;
at $600 October 1, 191 7; at$72o June i, 1918; appointed a mimeo-
graph operator at $720 in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, January 26. 1921; at $900, October i, 1921; at $1,000
September i, 1922; at $1,260 July i, 1924.
Gibson, Raleigh Augustus.— Born in Indianapolis, Ind.,
October 10, 1894; home. Decatur, 111.; graduated from the Uni-
versity of Illinois (A. B.) 191 7; served as Ueutenant in the
United States Army July, 1917-1919; appointed, after examina-
tion (January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
May 24, 1920; assigned to Buenos Aires August 2, 1920; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two X^ovember 17, 1921;
class one May 26, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven March
I, 1923; remained at Buenos Aires on detail; appointed Consul
of class six June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class seven
July I, 1924; assigned to Teneriffe October 22, 1924.
*Gifford, George.— Retired as Consul at Basel June, 1913.
Register of 1913.
Gilbert, Leo Edward. — Bom in Uncas, Okla., June rS, igoj;
graduated from high school 1922, and attended a business college
eight months; clerk in a drug store one year; appointed a clerk
at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
January 25, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Gilbert, Manson.— Born in Evansville, Ind., May 29, 1883;
attended Racine College, Wis., 1903-1907; architectural
schools, Genoa and Venice, Italy, four years; employed as
manager, firm of architects, Evansville, Ind., nine years;
served in the United States Army November 1917-1919; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Genoa March 23, 1920; at Patras May
10, 1922; at Christiania February 13, 1924; at Cobh August
IS. 1924-
Gilbert, Prentiss Bailey.— Bora in Rochester, N. Y., October
3, 1883 ; attended El Collegio de San Carlos, Cebu, P. I.;Columbia
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
133
University; Yale University (A. B.) 1907; University of Roch-
ester (Ph. B.) and (A. M.) 1916; employed as corporation secre-
tary and mine superintendent 1907-1911; engaged in foreign
travel, study, and writing 1911-1916; director of school of exten-
sion teaching and instructor in English, University of Rochester
1916-17; served in the United States Army during the Philip-
pine Insurrection and as first lieutenant and captain. Military
Intelligence Division, General Staff, United States Army,
September, 1917. to March, 1919; major. United States Reserves;
appointed a special assistant at $3,000 in the Department of
State March n, 1919; drafting officer at $2,500 July i, 1919;
special assistant at $4,000 December 31, 1919, effective January
1, 1920; drafting officer at $4,000 July i. 1920; at $4,400 August
I, 1924.
Giles, Seale Robertson. — Bom in Piano, Ala.; educated in
public schools and took summer teacher's courses; taught
school 1914-1918; in Department of Agriculture September,
1918, to February, 1919; appointed a clerk at $1,100, tempo-
rarily, in the Department of State February 2S, 1919; at S720,
under Civil Ser\'ice rules, February i, 1921; at $900 August i6,
1921; at $1,000 September i, 1922; at $1,100 October i, 1923: class
one Februari' i, 1924; at $1,500 July i. 1924; at $1,680 October
I. 1924-
*GiIl, Joseph Francis. — Retired as Consular Assistant, also
Vice-Consul at Soerabaya, February, 1922. Register of 1922.
Gillette, Glenn M.— Born in Naples, N. Y., February 19,
1897; educated in the public schools; teacher, 1915-16; em-
ployed by commercial concern 1916-17; clerk in the Bureau of
War Risk Insurance May, 1918, to June, 1920; appointed a
clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, August 6, 1920; at Si, 100 April 1, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Gilman, Joseph Thayer. — Bom in New York City ^larch 19,
1898; home, Cambridge, !Mass.; graduated from high school
1916, and from Cornell University (M. E.) 191S; ser\-ed in the
United States Naval Reser^^e Force June, 1918, to March, 1919;
engaged in commercial photography 1919-20; traveled abroad
1920-21; general manager of a photographic business 1921-22;
employed by a bonding company 1922-23; appointed, after
examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to
Athens November 8, 1924.
Girdner, Kermit.— Bom in Humphreys, Mo.. March 18, 1906;
graduated from Central High School, Washington, D. C, 1921-
and attended George Washington University 1921-1924; ap,
pointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Sennce rules, July 14, 1924.
Giroux, Arthur Beck.— Born in Webster, Mass.. August 15,
1893; home. Brooklyn, X. V.: attended Clark College two
years; employed in a library and with several business houses:
served in the United States Army May, 1917, to August, 1919:
second lieutenant; employed by an electric company 1919-20;
appointed, after examinalion (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de
carritre of class three September 7, 1920; assigned to Quebec
October 18, 1920; to Halifax March 16, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; assigned to Char-
lottetown November i, 1922; to Riviere du Loup March 5,
1923; to Montreal December 31, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser-
vice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Gfttings, jr., John Sierett. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., Janu-
ary 16, 1888; home, Baltimore; graduated from Har\-ard
University (A. B.) 1910; studied law at Columbia University,
the University of Maryland, and at Universities in Chile and
Argentina; member of the Bar of 'Mari-land; served as private
secretary to Ministers to Uruguay, Paraguay, and Portugal
1910-1912; secretary' to .\merican Arbitrator in Ecuador 1913-14;
assistant and secretary'. Pan American Financial Conference
1915; commercial representative in Brazil and Chile of an
-\merican bank one year; conducted investigations in Chile and
Argentina for a surety company six months; ser\-cd in the
United States Navy 1917-1919; drafting officer. Department of
State, July, 1919. to August. 1921 ; appointed, after examination
(July II, 1921); Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
August 24, 1921 and assigned to the Department of State;
assigned to Helsingfors October 22, 1921; resigned November i,
1921; with a casualty company 1921-22, appointed, after exami-
nation (July 10, 1922), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class four September 22, 1922; assigned to Santiago November
13, 1922; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class eight July i,
1924; assigned as Third Secretary- of Legation at Riga July 17,
1924; detailed to Stockholm, temporarily September 15, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven September
30, 1924.
Givens, James Riley.— Bora in Atlanta, Ga., January 3. 1889;
attended pubhc schools, a business college, and took a law
course; employed in various capacities 1905-1915; in a law office
1915-1918; in the United States Army September, 1918, to
February, 1919; in the Department of Justice February-May,
1919; Shipping Board May-June. 1910; Railroad Administration
July-December, 1919; appointed a clerk at $r,ioo in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Sers-ice rules, January 7, 1920; class
one October i, 1920; class two March i, 1924; at $i,6So July i,
1924.
Gjessing, Erland. — Bom in Germany March 16, i>:o; nat-
uralized in San Francisco. Calif., 1897; educated at the Ribe
Latin School, Ribe, Denmark; took courses in finance and
accounting at New York University; bookkeeper in San
Francisco 1897-1900; clerk, stenographer, and interpreter in
the Immigration Service in Sail Francisco and Ellis Island
1901-1Q15; employed in a clerical capacity and as French
translator by a banking company in New York 1916-1918;
appointed Vice-Consul at Copenhagen May 27, 1918.
Glasgow, Joseph M. — First Lieutenant, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Assistant Militani- Attache at Paris Sep-
tember 9, 1924.
Glass, Edward L. N.— Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Assistant Military Attache at Mexico, July 19, 1922
Glassey, Frank Patterson Smiley. — Born in Philadelphia,
Pa., November i, 189S; home, Germantown, Pa.; attended
University of Pennsylvania two and a half years and Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology one and a half years; employed
in a hotel, in an oil laboratory, as correspondent and newspaper
reporter; acting corporal Students Army Training Corps
October-December, 1918; appointed, after examination (June
27, 1920), Vice-Consul de carrit re ci class three October 26, 1921;
assigned to Helsingfors, December 14, 192 1; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Glazebrook, Otis Allan.— Born in Richmond, Va , October
13, 1845; home, Elizabeth, N. J.; educated at Randolph-Macon
College, Virginia Military Institute, and ^'irginia Theological
Serninary; served seven years in missionary fields in Virginia,
four years a rector in Baltimore, three years in Macon, and was
rector St. John's P. E. Church, Elizabeth, 1883-1912; chaplain.
University of Virginia, two years, and chaplain of the National
Guard of Maryland, Georgia, and New Jersey, the Southern
Society of New Vork, and the New Jersey Department, Mili-
tary Order of Foreign Wars; founder. Alpha Tau Omega Col-
lege fraternity; appointed, under Executive order of February
10, 1914, Consul at Jerusalem February 18, 1914; Consul of class
seven by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of
class six March 2, 1915; detailed, temporarily, to the Depart-
ment of State Decembers, 1917; directed December 21, 191S, to
return to Jerusalem; appointed Consul of class five September
5, 1919; class three June 4, 1920; assigned to Nice December 2,
1920; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Glennan, Marjorie Denver. — Bom in Washington. D. C;
grammar and high school education; employed by the United
States Food Administration !March 11 to November 25. 1918;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,020. in the Department
of State November 23, 1918; at $960 July i, 1919; at $1,020 No-
vember I, 1919; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules, Decem-
ber 10, 1920; at Si, 000 August 16, 1921; at $1,100 February i, 1924;
class one^Iay 31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Godard, Laura Florence.— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa.; high-
school education; employed as bookkeeper in Bloomsburg
(Pa.) silk mill, 1916-17; typist in War Trade Board, 1917-1919;
appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, January 17, 1919; class one, March i, 1921;
at $1,500 July I, 1924.
*Goding, Frederic Webster. — * * * Appointed Foreign
Service Ofl'icer of class three July 1, 1924. Retired from active
ser\'ice as Consul General at Guayaquil July, 1924, under the
provisions of the Act of ^fay 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Godson, William F. H.— Lieutenant colonel. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Military' .\ttache at Belgrade and
Athens February 19, 1924.
Golorth, Hemdon Ware.— Born in Lenoir, N. C. September
2, 1884; home, Washington, D. C; educated in public and pri-
vate schools, at Rutherford College, summer normal institute,
and George Washington University; engaged as a teacher and
principal of schools 1902-1908; in the Philippines as teacher and
supervisor of schools 1908-1912; clerk in Civil Service Commis-
sion 1913-1916; with Interstate Commerce Commission 1916-1919;
appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Guatemala
October 22, 1919; to Santos, May 14, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriire of class two November 17, 1921; class one
134
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
May 26, 1922; Consul of class seven March i, 1923; assigrned to
Santos >Iarch 28, 1923, appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i, 1924.
Goldsberry, RalphCary.— Born in Cabool, Mo., June 6, 1893;
attended grammar schools in Kansas City, Springfield, and
Mexico; State Normal School Springfield, Mo., 1908; American
high school in Jlexico 1909-10; military academy, Lexington,
Mo., igii-1913; appointed Vice-Consul at Ensenada March
10, 1920; retired December 24. 1922; reappointed Vice-Consul
at Ensenada August 28, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at I^Iazat-
lan March 29, 1924, at Ensenada June iS, 1924.
*GoIdschmidt, Louis.— Retired as Consul at Nantes Octoherj
1913. Register of 1913.
♦Gonzales, William Elliott. — Retired as Ambassador to Peru
October, 1921. Register of 1922.
Goodier, Harvey Treadway.— Born in Utica, N. Y., July 7,
1893; home, Ithaca, N. Y.; attended Cascadilla school and
spent two years at Cornell University; worked on farms and
in a law office; appointed, after examination (August 30, 1915),
Student Interpreter in Japan October 15, 1915; appointed In-
terpreter at Yokohama February 9, 1918; also Vice-Consul at
Yokohama February 12, 1918; at Dairen December 13, 1920;
Vice-Consid and Interpreter at Yokohama January 6, 192 1;
Vice-Consul at Nagoya October 19, 192 1; also Interpreter at
Nagoya October 20, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul and Inter-
preter at Yokohama April i, 1922; Consul of class seven June
22, 1Q22; assigned to Taihoku September iS, 1922; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to
Nagoya December 12, 1924.
* Goodier, James Hurlburt. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
detailed to Cornwall, February, 1922. Register of 1918.
Gcold, Herbert Stewart. — Born in San Francisco, Calif.,
August 10, 1886; home, San Francisco; graduate of Leland
Stanford University (A. B.), 1909; admitted to the bar nf Cali-
fornia 1909; employed as a bookkeeper two years; practiced
law in San Francisco 1911-1916; connected with the legal de-
partment of the Spring Valley Water Co. 1915-16; appointed,
after examination (April 10, 1916), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four October 2, 1916; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State October 19, 1916; to Bucharest December 5,
1916, but did not enter on duty at that post; assigned to Vienna
January 31, 1917; to Santo Domingo June 7, 1917; appointed
Secretary of class three August 23, 1917; assigned to La Paz,
Bolivia, July 11, 1918; to Guatemala City, ]\Iay 11, 1920; to
Bogota January 7, 1921; to Managua August 2, 1921; to London
January 18, 1922; appointed Secretary of class two March
23, 1922; Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924; as-
signed to Athens July 17, 1924.
Gordon, Bartley Patrick. — Bom in South Boston, Mass.,
January 21, 1906; graduated from high school 192^, and from a
business college 1924; employed as typist August-September,
1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State,
under Civil Ser\'ice rules, September 16, 1924.
Gordon, George Anderson. — Born in Huntsville, Ala., No.
vember 19, 1885; home, New York City; graduated from Har-
vard University (A. B.) 1906; Columbia University (LL. B.)
1912; instructor, St. Paul's School, 1906-19C9; practiced law in
New York City 1912-1917; served in the United States Army
June-December, igr6 ,and May, 1917 to October, 1919, as lieu-
tenant and captain; with the Peace Commission in Paris Au-
gust-December, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 26,
1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four February
18, 1920; assigned to Paris February 19, 1920; appointed Sec-
retary of class three March 23, 1922; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State August 20, 1923; appointed Secretary of class two
Januari' 23, 1924; Foreign Sers'ice Officer of class four July i,
1924.
*Gore, John Ashford. — Died at his post (Regina) January
26, 1917. Register of 1916.
Gotlieb, Bernard.— Born in New York City November 7,
1893; home. New York; graduate of Columbia University
(B. A.), 1914; appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915),
Consular Assistant March 24, 1915; Student Interpreter in
Turkey May i, 1915; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Bagdad
August 24, 191 7; on duty in the Department of State April,
1917, to October, 1918; detailed to Cairo October 11, 1918; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Cairo March 10, 1919;
detailed to Teheran September 7, 1921; appointed Vice Consul
and Interpreter at Teheran November 10, 1921; Consul of
class six November 23, 1921; remained at Teheran, on detail;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i. 1924;
assigned to Halifax September 8, 1924.
*Gottschalk, Alfred L. M.— Lost at sea with U. S. S. Cyclops,
1918, while Consul General at Rio de Janiero. Officers and en-
listed men of the Navy and Marine Corps declared officially
dead by the Navy Department June 14, 1918. Register of 1917.
*Gould, Ozro Couse.— Retired as Consular Assistant Sep-
tember, 1917. Register cf 1916.
Gourley, Louis Hill.— Born in Springfield, 111., October 17,
1889; home, Springfield; graduate of University of Illinois
(A. B.), 1912, and George Washington University (M. A.), 1916;
took courses at Alliance Fran.ais, Paris, at Columbia Univer-
sity, and in a business college; instructor in San Luis Potosi,
1912-13; appointed Clerk in the Consulate at Vera Cruz June,
1913; Vice-Consul at Vera Cruz July i, 1916; appointed, after
examination (June 26, 1916). Consular Assistant August 30,
1916; Vice-Consul at Warsaw July 21, 1919; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three, September 27, 1919; assigned
to Warsaw October 22, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two May 24, 1920; class one November 17, 1921; ap-
pointed Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained at War-
saw on detail; appointed Consul of class six December 19, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Gowen, Franklin Crosbie. — Born in Florence, Italy, Decem-
ber 15, 1895: attended elementary schools, Florence, Italy; Sci-
ence School, Leghorn, Italy, three years; college in London,
England, one year, Consigli College, Leghorn, Italy, 1913; em-
ployed as interpreter and correspondent, importing and export-
ing house, Leghorn, Italy, four years; interpreter and corre-
spondent, shipping agent and coal merchant, Leghorn, one
year; clerk, American Consulate, Leghorn, Italy, from January
I, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul at Leghorn, October 26, 1920.
Grace, William Joseph.- Born in San Francisco, Calif ., Janu-
ary 26, 1875; home. New York City; attended the Sacramento
(Calif.) Institute, 1882-1886; St. John's Academy, Syracuse,
N. Y., 1886-1891; Manhattan College, 1891-1893 (A.B.); Catho-
lic University of America, 1903-1906 (LL. B.); engaged in
various lines of business in Durango, Mexico, New York City,
and Mexico City 1895-1899; manager Vacas mines. Durango,
1899-1902; served as United States Vice-Consul at Durango in
1902, and as interpreter in mining disputes and litigation in l^Iex-
ico; practiced law in Syracuse and New York City, 1906-1914;
appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at Aden
April 24, 1914; Consul of class eiglit by act approved February
5, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven October 18, 1915, and
assigned to I/Cghom; appointed Consul of class six September
5, 1919; assigned to Slieffield October i, 1919; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
*Gracey, Samuel L.^Died in West Newton, Mass., August
19, 1911, while Consul at Foochow. Register of 1913.
* Gracey, Wilbur Tirrell.— Retired as Consul of class four,
assigned to Birmingham, February, 1922. Register of 1918.
Graham, Charles I.— Bora in Sioux City, Iowa. October 26,
1891; home, Evanston, III.; graduated from high school 1911;
.-.ttcnded Northwestern University 1913-1921; employed in vari-
ous capacities while attending college; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriCre of class three
May 25, 1921; assigned to Beirut July 21. 1921; to Tangier
July 7, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
February 26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923; assigned to
Shanghai February 27, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924; class eight, also Consul, August 8, 1924 .
Gram, Koyne Virgil. — Bom in Broadwell, 111., February 14,
1896; attended Lincoln College. IJncoIn, 111., 1916-17, Amiy
Young Jlen's Christian Association French School 191 7-18, and
School of Foreign Service, Georgetowni University, 1920-1923
(B. F. S.); employed by a fruit company 1915-16; served in
United States Army 1917-1919; executive secretary in American
Red Cross 1919-20; supervisor in Agriculture Department 1920-
21 and 1922-23; commercial agent, Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce, 1923-24;
appointed a clerk in the American Consulate at Rangoon,
April, 1924; Vice Consul at Rangoon, October 24, 1924.
Grant-Smith, Ulysses.- Born in Washington, Pa., Novem-
ber 18, 1870; ho:ne, Washington, Pa.; educated at Trinity Hall
School, De Veaux College, and St. Paul's School; graduate of
Washington and Jefferson College; took a course at the Harvard
Graduate School; director and military instructor of Trinity
Hall School, 1896-1903; appointed Second Secretary of the Le-
gation at Constantinople September 8, 1903; Third Secretary
of the Embassy at London February 8, 1906; Secretary of the
Legation at Santiago, Chile, June 10, 1908; Secretary of the
Legationat Brussels August 4, 1909; Honorary Commissioner to
the Universal and International Exposition at Brussels, 1910;
Secretary of the Embassy at Vienna September 12, 1912; Secre-
BIOGRAPHICAI. STATEMENT.
135
tary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 1915; designated and assigned as Counselor of the
Embassy at Vienna July 17, 1916; as Counselor of Embassy at
Copenhagen July iS, 1917; Charge d'Aflaires at Copenhagen
1917-IQ19; en dispouibilite September iS, 1919; appointed
American Commissioner in Hungarj' December 4 1919; signed
the treaty of peace between the United States and Hungary
August 29, 19:1; Charge d'Affaires protempore to Hungary De-
cember 2o, 1921; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and ^Minister
Plenipotentiary to Albania September 22, 1922.
Gravelle, Arthur Joseph.— Bom in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, July
24, 1893; home. Washington, D. C; graduated from high school
1911, and from a business college 191 2; graduated from the
National University Law School (LL. B.) 1919; member of the
Bars of the District of Columbia and the State of Illinois;
employed by a newspaper company 1909-10, and district-court
clerk 1912-1914; clerk, in United States Reclamation Service
191s; clerk in the Agriculture and Treasury Departments 1916-
1923; employed as accountant by industrial engineering com-
pany 1923, and as chain-store organizer 1924; appointed, after
examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924.
♦Graves, Charles H. — Retired as Minister to Sweden April,
X914. Register of 1913.
Graves, Florence P. — Born in Titus County, Tex.; educated
in the public and high schools of Bedford, Va.; teacher in pub-
lic school 1909-1911; typist in the office of clerk of the circuit
court, Bedford, Va., 1911-1918; clerkin the Zone Finance Office,
War Department, May, 191S, to July, 1920; clerk for local patent
attorney July, 1920, to February, 192 1; appointed a clerk at
$900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
March 9, 1921; at Si, 000 September i, 1922; at Si, 100 April i,
1924; at Si,soo July i, 1924.
Gray, Edith Myrtle.— Bom in Clinton, Iowa; attended the
grade schools and graduated from Clinton High School, 1S95;
attended an evening business school six months; employed by
structural steel works in Clinton, 1895-1S98, and by two rail-
roads in Chicago, 111., 1898-1901; clerk for an insurance com-
pany in Milwaukee, Wis., 190S-1917; clerk in the War Depart-
ment, September 11, 1917, to July 27, 1922; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, July 28, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Gray, James Moyle.— Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Novem-
ber 24, 1889; graduated from high school and spent two years in
Europe in travel and study; studied law one and a half years.
University of Utah; graduate of the Georgetown University
Law School (LL. B.) 1922 (LL. M.) 1923; member of the bar
of the District of Columbia; employed one year in newspaper
work; deputy clerk city courts of Salt Lake City 1912-1916;
in the Bureau of Citizenship, Department of State, August,
1917, to January, 1918; clerk to the >Iilitar>' Attache at Heme
Januari', igiS-September, 1919; appointed a clerk at $900 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, September
5, 1919; class one, October 16, 1919; class two January i, 1920;
at Si, 860 July x, 1924.
Gray, John Harrison. — Bom in Syracuse, N. Y., September
6, 1898; home, Syracuse; graduated from Princeton Univer-
sity (A. B.), 1920; employed nine months in a shoe manufac-
tory; appointed, after examination (July 10, 1922), Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four, September 22, 1922, and
assigned to the Department of State; assigned to Tokyo, March
20, 1923; appointed Foreign Sers-ice Officer of class eight July i,
1924.
Green, George Anderson. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
September 20. 1901; attended graded schools; appointed,
temporarily, at Sj^c. in the Department of State Si-ptenibcr
9, 1918; appointed messenger boy at $420 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, July i, 1920; at Si, 020 July i,
1924.
Green, Leonard Newell.— Bom in Superior, Nebr.. Jime i,
1893; home, Detroit, Minn.; graduated from Superior High
School 1911; attended University of ^liiincsota 1912-13; Detroit
(Minn.) Business College 1914; graduated from Georgetown
Foreign Service School 1921; employed by a drug company in
Detroit, Minn., 1911-1916; except for nine months while attend-
ing the University of Minnesota; with a lumber company in
Minneapolis Januari'-April, 1917; clerk in the \\'ar Department
April-September, 1917; served in the United States Army
September 4, 1917, to May 22, 1919; reinstated as clerk in the
War Department June 16, 1919; appointed, alter examination
(January 24, 1921), Consular Assistant April 23, 1921; appointed
Vice-Consul de carricre of class three November 23, 1923; as-
signed to Yokohama December 13, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Green, 3d, Samuel Edward.— Bom in Baltimore, Md.,
May II, 1900; attended Notre Dame College 1906-1910. and
Gilman School 1910-1913; graduated from Wenonah Military
Academy, 1917; served in the United States Army, June,
1917, to November, 1919; employed by a dry goods company
in Baltimore, 1919-1921; appointed clerk in the American
Consulate at St. Michael's in August, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul at Rio de Janeiro, July 5, 1922; Consular Assistant
August 28, 1923; detailed to the Department of State September
S, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, imclassified, July i,
1924; assigned to Prescott September 5, 1924.
Green, Victor Edwin. — Bom in Washington, D. C, Novem-
ber 10, 1872; educated in the grade schools of Virginia; clerk
in a stationery store, 1S87-1S94; engaged in the grocery and
meat business, 1S94-1904; managed a truck farm, 1905-1917;
guard in the War Department, designated as foreman of
laborers, January 11, 1918, to July 16, 1922; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed an assistant messenger,
under Civil Service rules, July 17, 1922.
Greene, Elbridge Gerry.— Bora in Dresden, Germany, o(
American parents, August 29, 1888; home, Boston; graduate
of Harvard University (A. B.), 1913; appointed, after exami-
nation (November 17, 1913), Third Secretary of the Embassy
at London May 22, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class five by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class four March 2, 1915; assigned
to London March 6, 19x5; appointed Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three July 28.19x5; assigiied to Caracas August
10, 1916; to Panama April 6, 1918; to Latin-American Division
of the Department of State January 18, 1919; to Budapest
December 12, 1919; appointed Secretary of class two December
20, 19x9. assigned to Bucharest October 8. 1920; to Sofia July
29, 1921; to Paris March i, 1922; appointed Foreign Serv'ice
Officer of class four July i, 1924; assigned as First Secretary of
Legation at Peking July 17, X924.
* Greene, Roger Sherman.— Retired as Consul-General at
Hankow August, 19x4, after having declined appointment
as Consul-General at Large. Register of 1913.
* Greene, William Maxwell.— Retired as Consul at Hamil-
ton, Bermuda, April, 19x5. Register of 19x4.
Greene, Winthrop Stephenson. — Bom in Worcester, JIass.,
May 16, 1891; home, Worcester; graduated from Bowdoin Col-
lege (A. B.) 1913; engaged in the insurance business 19x3-19x7;
served in the United States Army 1917-1919. retiring with the
rank of major; reengaged in the insurance business X919-1922;
served as officer in charge of division. War Department, with
the rank of lieutenant colonel 1922-1924; appointed, after ex-
amination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Ser\-ice Officer, unclassified,
also \'ice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Cobh
October 21, 1924.
Greenup, Julian Cecil.— Bom in Washburn. Mo., November
4, iS9i;home, Long Beach, Cahf.; attended colleges in Nebraska,
Germany, and Switzerland, and graduated from the L'niver-
sity of California (A. B.) 1915, (A. M.) 1917; instructor and
principal in several schools of California 19x5-19x9; appointed,
after examination (May 12, 19x9), Vice-Consul de carricre of
class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Oruro October jx,
X919; to Las Palmas May 14, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922;
Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at Las
Palmas. on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
* Gregory, jr., John Hanaford.— Retired as Second Secretary
of the Embassy at Constantinople February, 19x2. Register
of X913.
* Grevstad, Nicolay A.— Retired as Minister to Umguay
February, 1915. Register of 1914.
Grew, Joseph Clark.— Bora in Boston. Mass.. May 27. 1880;
home. Hancock, N. H.; graduate of Groton School and of Har-
vaid University (1902); appointed clerk in the American Consu-
late General at Cairo and entered upon duties July 19, 1904;
appointed Deputy Consul-General at Cairo November 3, 1904;
appointed, after examination. Third Secretary' of the Embassy
at Mexico City March x. 1906; Third Secretary' of the Embassy
at Petrograd May 7, 1907; Second Secretary of the Embassy
at Berlin June 10, 1908; Secretary of the Embassy at Vieima
January 27, 191 x; Secretary of the Embassy at Berlin Septem-
ber 12, 19x2; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one
by act approved February 5, 1915; designated and assigned
as Counselor of the Embassy at Berlin July 17, 1916; assigned
to Vienna February 14, 191 7; designated as Counselor Feb-
ruary 19, 19x7; assigned to duty in the Department of State
May 23, 19x7; Acting Chief Western European Division
136
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
March 14, 1918; assigned as secretary to the American dele-
gation to the armistice conference of the Supreme War Coun-
cil at Versailles, October 15, 1918; appointed Secrctarj' General
of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace, with rank
of Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, No-
vember 30, 1918; designated and assigned as Counselor of
Embassy at Paris November, 28, 1919; appointed Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Denmark
April 7. 19J0; to Switzerland September 24, 1921; acted as unoffi-
cial observer on the part of the United States at the Lausanne
Peace Conference November 20, 1922, to February 4, 1923. and
April-July, 1923; empowered by the President to negotiate,
conclude, and sign a Treaty of General Relations and an Ex-
tradition Treaty with Turkey April 29, 1923; appointed un-
official representative on the ijart of the United States at the
Ninth Session of the Temporary Mixed Commission for Re-
duction of Armament held at Geneva February 4, 1924; also
at the meeting of the Subcommittee of the Temporary Mixed
Commission for the Reduction of Annament held at Paris
March 24. 1924; appointed Undersecretary of State March 7,
1924; chairman of the Foreign Service Personnel Board and
chairman of the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service,
under the provisions of the Executive Order of June 7, 1924.
Griffin, Ruth Patee. — Bom in St. Joseph, Mo.; graduated
from high school 1915. and attended a commercial college six
months; clerk in the Bureau of War Risk Insurance Septem-
ber, 191S, to December, 1919; appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December i,
1924.
Griffin, Thomas.— Bom in Washington, D. C, February
as. 1877; educatedin the public and high schools of Washington;
appointed clerk in the United States and Chilean Claims Com-
mission October i, 1900; served to October 31, 1901; clerk in the
Spanish Treaty Claims Commission November i, 1901; served
to May 2, 19 10; appointed clerk at $900 in the Department of
State April 26, 1910; at Si, 000 July i, 1910; class one June 27,
1911; class two June 23, to be effective July i. 1916; class three
December 9. 1918; at Si,S6o July i, 1924.
Griffith, Beulah Marie.— Bom in Clifton, Va.; high school
graduate; clerk in gas company 19 13-14; appointed a clerk
temporarily, in the Department of State, August 7, 1914; per-
manently a clerk of class one, under Executive order, June 21,
to be eCTective July i, 1916; class two July 28, to be effective
August I, 1917; class three, August i, 1918; class four Decem-
ber 31. 1919. efTective Januarj- i, 1920; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
* Griffith, P. Merrill.— Retired as Consul of class four, un-
assigned, December, 1917. Register of 1916.
♦Griffiths, John L.— Died at his post (London) May 17, 1914.
Register of 1913.
* Griscom, Lloyd Carpenter. — Retired as Ambassador to
Italy June. 1909. Register of 1913.
Groeninger, Joseph George.— Bom in Baltimore, Md., No-
vember 22, 1884; home Baltimore; attended the public schools of
Maryland and took two years' course in business college in
Baltimore; with Standard Oil Co. two years and a telephone
company four years; was associated with the Public Athletic
League and Children's Playground Association of Baltimore;
appointed clerk in the American Legation at Copenhagen
December 7, 1911; appointed Vice Consul at Copenhagen Octo-
ber iS. 191S; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Vice
Consul de carriere of class three May 24, 1920, and assigned to
Copenhagen; detailed to Berlin September 28, 1920; assigned to
Berlin November 15, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two November 17, 1921; class one November 23, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Gross, Catherine Louise Elizabeth. — Bom in Washington,
D. C; educated in private school; assistant chief telephone
operator in the Treasury Department, 1918-1922; appointed
chief telephone switchboard operator, at $1,260, in the Depart-
ment oi State, under Civil Serv'ice rules, April 3, 1922; at $1,500
July I. 1924.
Gross, Christian.— Bom in Chicago, 111., October 9. 1895;
home, Chicago; graduated from the University of Illinois
(B. S.), 1917; studied at the Universities of Clermont, Greno-
ble, and Algiers; served as a lieutenant in the United States
Infantry', 1917-1920; appointed, after examination (July 9,
IQ23). Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, Decem-
ber 12, 1923; assigned to Paris January 16, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July 1, 1924.
Gross, Paul L.— Bora in Wilkinsburg, Pa., Febmary 14,
1S93; attended grammar schools of Wilkinsburg and Pitts-
burgh; high school and Duff's College in Pittsburgh; employed
as stenographer and typist by various firms in Pittsburgh and
at the United States naval station, Cavite, Philippine Islands;
appointed clerk in the American Consulate General at Shang-
hai May, 1918; Vice-Consul at Shanghai November 3, 1930.
Groth, Edward M.— Bom in New York City, June 14, 1893;
home. New Rochelle, N. V.; attended public schools in Nei(t-
York City, New Rochelle High School, and took a special
course at Columbia University; employed as clerk with a manu-
facturing jew-elr>- firm in New York City 1912-1913, and by the
Childs' Restaurant Co.; appointed, after examination (January
19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 24, 1920;
assigned to Rotterdam, June 11, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class one ]May 26, 1922;
assigned to Belgrade June 23, 1922; to Beirut January 29, 1923;
appointed Consul of class seven March i, 1923; remained at
Beirut on detail; appointed Consul of class six December 19,
1923; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned
to Damascus August i, 1924.
*Grout, John H. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class six July i, 1924. Retired from active service as Consul
at Hull July, 1924, under the provisions of the Act of May 24,
1924. Register of 1924.
Grove, Vivian Edwards. — Bom in Evans, Iowa; graduated
from the Colfax (Iowa), High School, 1917, and attended a
business college in Washington, D. C, 1920-21; teacher in
public schools, 1917-1920; clerk in the Bureau of the Census,
February, 1920, to iMarch, 1922, and in the Federal Trade
Commission three months; stenographer for the Congressional
Committee on Manufactures four months; appointed a clerk
at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
December 5, 1922; at $1,000, May i. 1923; at $1,100, November
12, 1923; class one April i, 1924; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Groves, H. Lawrence. — Bom in Coudersport. Pa., January
21, 1888; attended public and private schools; graduated from
Harvard University (A. B.) 1912; engaged in financial and man-
ufacturing lines for several years; appointed Trade Commis-
sioner in France and Switzerland January, 1919; assigned to
Latvia, Finland, Esthonia, and Lithuania January, 192 1; to
Prague December 13, i9i!2; Commercial Attache at Prague
July 28, 1924.
Gruber, Mabel Utica. — Bom in Elkhart, Ind.; high-school
graduate; employed as stenographer October, 1922, to May,
1923; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State,
underCivil Serv-ice rules, August 7. 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Grummon, Stuart Edgar. — Bom in Newark, N. J., March j8,
1901; home, Newark; graduated from Princeton University
(A. B.) 1923; appointed, after examination (July 9, 1923),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four December 12,
1923, and assigned to the Department ol State; assigned to
Mexico City February 5,1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eght July i, 1924.
* Guenther, Richard.— Retired as Coasul-Geueral at Cape
Town December, 1912. Died in Oshkosh, Wis., April 5, 1913.
Register of 1913.
♦Guild, Curtis. — Retired as Ambassador to Russia June,
1913. Died in Boston, Mass., April 6. 1915. Register of 1913.
Guimaraes, J. B.— Bora in Cape Verde Islands in 1861;
merchant; appointed Consular Agent at St. Vincent, Cape
Verde Islands, January 23, 1895.
♦ Gummere, Samuel R. — Retired as Minister to Morocco
June, 1909. Register of 1913.
♦Gunn, Hugh,— Retired as Marshal at Mukden April, 1908.
Register of 1914.
*Gunsaulus, Edwin Norton. — * * * Appointed Foreign
Service Ofliccr of class two July i. 1924. Retired as Consul
General at Wellington December, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Gunsaulus, jr., Edwin N.— Bom in London, Ohio, Febraary
25, 1894; attended Upper Canada College five years and
Johannesburg College (South Africa) one year; served in the
United States Army 1918-19; clerk American Consulate Gen-
eral, Halifax. 1921-22; appointed Vice-Consul at Windsor.
Ontario, April 11, 1922; at Charlottetown April 7, 1924.
Gunther, Franklin Mott.— Born in New York City February
28, 1885; home, Amherst, Va.; graduated from Harvard
University, 1907; took a year's course at the Ecole Libre des
Sciences Politiques. Paris; served as private secretary to the
Ambassador to Japan, 1908-09; appointed, after examination
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT,
137
(February 26. 1909), Third Secretary of the Embassy at Paris
August 5, 1909; detailed to the Division of Latin-American
Affairs, Department of State, November i, 1910, to January
ji, 191 1 ; appointed Secretary of the Legation at Managua
January 27, 1911; Secretary ot the Legation at Lisbon Feb-
ruary I, 1912; Second Secretary of the Embassy at Rio de
Janeiro August 22, 1912; Secretary of the Legation at Chris-
tiania February 11, 1914; secretary to the American delegation
to the International Conference on Spitzbergen June 16, 1914;
technical delegate to the same conference June 24, 1914; detailed
to the American Embassy in London, with rank of Second
Secretary, September 15, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class three by act approved February 5, 191s; assigned
to London April 17, 1915; appointed Secretary of class two
July 13, 1917; assigned to The Hague, February 6, 1919; ap-
pointed Secretary of class one December 20, 1919; designated
and assitrned as Counselor of Embassy at Rome, June 14, 1920;
assigned to the Department of State jiarch 5, 1924; designated
Chief of the Division of Mexican Affairs June 25, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
♦Guthrie, George Wilkins.— Died in Tokyo March 8, 191 7,
while Ambassador to Japan. Register of 1916.
Guyant, Claude E. — Born in Decatur, 111., February 17, 1S86;
home, Decatur; attended the public schools of Illinois and
took stenographic course in business college; clerk and ste-
nographer Isthmian Canal Commission June i. 1906, to August
31, 190S; resigned to accept position in Consulate-General at
Panama; appointed Deputy Consul-General at Panama City
September 9, 190S; Vice and Deputy Consul-General March
23, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Mexico City
October 20, 1910; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1910),
Consul at Salina Cruz March 8, 191 2; detailed as Vice-Consul
in charge of the Consulate at Ensenada November 9, 1912;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Ensenada October is.
1913; appointed Consul of class seven February 22, 1915, and
assigned to Ensenada; assigned to Progreso October 18, 1915;
on detail at Barranquilla from August i. 1916; assigned to
Barranquilla March 20, 1917; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; assigned to San Jose
October 20, 1920; detailed to Callao-Lima July 14. 1921; ap-
pointed Consul of classfour November 23, 1921; Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Gwynn, Harry M. — Captain, United States Army; assigned
to duty as ^lilitary Attache at San Jose, Costa Rica; also at
Guatemala, Panama, San Salvador, Tegucigalpa, and Managua
January 31, 1923.
Hackett, Earl Dent. — Bom in Clements, Calif., March 26,
189s; attended the University of Michigan 1913-14, and tlie
University of California 1913-1917; served in the United States
Army May, 1917, to April, 1919; employed in various capacities
by several commercial concerns three years; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate General at Cape Town 1922-1924; appointed
Vice Consul at Cape Town March 4, 1924.
Hackworth, Green Haywood.— Born in Prestonburg, Ky.,
January 22, 1SS3; graduate of Willard Normal School, Willard,
Ky., 1902; Valparaiso University (B. A.), 190s; Georgetown
University (LL. B.), 1912; took one-year course in interna-
tional law and diplomacy at George Washington University;
member of the bar of the District of Columbia, and of the Su-
preme Court of the United States; bookkeeper for a wholesale
house, 1905-1909; appointed clerk in the Civil Service Com-
mission April 28, 1909; promoted through the various grades
to class three; transferred, under Civil Service rules, and ap-
pointed a law clerk at $2,000 in the Department of State August
10,1916; at $2,250 October 22, 1917; at $2,500 January 2, 1918;
Assistant Solicitor at $2,500 October i, 1918; at $3,000 July i,
1919; assistant to the Solicitor at $4,000 December 31, 1919,
effective January i, 1920; drafting officer at $4,000 July i, 1920;
Assistant Solicitor at $4,500 August 16, 1922, to also represent
the interests of the United States in all matters or investiga-
tions before the International Joint Commission created by the
treaty of January 11, 1909, between the United vStatcs and
Great Britain; in May, 192s, assisted American Delagation at
Lausanne in drafting treaty with Turkey; from June to
August, inclusive, 1923, assistel Ambassador at Madril in
commercial treaty negotiations with Spain; at S5.200 July i,
1924.
* Hadley, Frank Wright. — Retired as Interpreter, also Vice
Consul-General, at Shanghai June, 1913. Register of igiJ-
Haeberle, Arminius T.— Born in St. Louis, Mo., January 23,
1874; home, St. Louis; educated at Elmhurst College, Elm-
hurst, 111., and in Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.;
instructor at St. Charles College, St. Charles, Mo.; principal
of the public school at Hermann, Mo.; vice-director of the
Institute Ingles at Santiago Chile. 189S-1903; employed by the
Board of Foreign Missions at New York; head of the modern
language department of the McKinley High School, St. Louis,
Mo., 1904-1907; appointed, after examination (November 20,
1907), Consul at Manzanillo June 10, 1908: Consul at Teguci-
calpa January 11, 1910; Consul at St. Michaels November 24.
1913; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul of class five February 22, 1915, and assigned
to Pernambuco; appointed Consul of class four September 14,
1917; detailed to Rio de Janeiro, temporarily, July 29, 1919;
appointed Consul of class three June 4, 1920; assigned t .--ao
Paulo March 30, 1923; appointed Consul General of class four
June 5. 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Haering, George John.— Bom in New York City August 13,
1S95; home, Huntington Station, N. Y.; attended high school
four years, and the University of Michigan three years; served
in the United States Army 1917-1920; employed as supercargo
and assistant to port superintendent one and a half years;
employed by private concerns engaged in steamship operation
three years; appointed, after examination (June 23, 1924),
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified; also \'ice Consul of career,
October 16, 1924; assigned to Kobe November S, 1924.
Hagen, William I. — Bom in Hillsboro, N. Dak., February' 18,
1S99; attended North Dakota State School of Forestry' 1918,
Unsversity of North Dakota 1920-1923, and George Washington
University 1923-24; stenographer in commercial firm 1919-20;
land-law clerk in interior Department 1922-1924; appointed a
clerk at St. 300 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, August i, 1924.
Haig, Robert Van Rensselaer. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
August 16, 1900; completed high school 1917, and graduated
from the University of Maryland (B. S.) 1921; served in the
United States Army September-December, 1918; clerk in a
bank and for a milk producers' association in \\'ashington,
August, 192 1, to January, 1923; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January 27,
1923; at Si, 100 March i, 1924; class one May 31, effective June i,
1924; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
Hailer, Fred E. — Bom in Washington, D. C, January 7,
1888; attended grade school; employed in hotels 1904-1910 and
1914-1917; served in the United States Marine Corps 1910-1914;
watchman in Government buildings February to December,
1918; served in the United States Navy one month 1918: rein-
stated as a watchman in the State, War, and Navy Building,
January, 1919; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed a messenger, under Civil Service rules. March 8,
1921; position allocated to C. A. F. one at $1,140 July i. 1924.
Hair, Erwin Pembroke. — Bom in St. Jo, Te.\-., August iS,
1905; attended high school 1919-1921; employed as messenger
boy for a private concern June-November, 1922, and for the
United States Weather Bureau January, 1923, to July, 1924;
appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, July 16, 1924.
Hale, Bernard Franklin. — Bom in Lunenburg, Vt., June 2a,
1896; home. Lunenburg; attended grammar schools in Vermont,
Quebec, and Prince Edward Island; Goddard Seminary, Barre.
Vt., one year; graduated from Hebron (Me.) Academy, 1916;
studied under private tutors in Trinidad and Huddersfield;
clerk in the American Consulate General at London 1916-1918;
appointed Vice-Consul at Edinburgh March 5. 1918; Vice-
Consul at Swansea June 11, 1918; at Leeds November 24, 1919;
at Plymouth January 3, 1920; appointed, after examination
(May 12, 1919), Consular Assistant November 17, 1920; Vice-
Consul de carrifere of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Ply-
mouth June 23. 1922; to Dundee July 18. 1923; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two November 23. 1923; class one
May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified. July i, 1924,
class nine, also Consul, August 8. 1924; assigned to Dunfermline
August 30, 1924.
*Hale, Edward Joseph. — Retired as Minister to Costa Rica.
Died in Fayetteville, N. C, February 16, 1922. Register of
1918.
♦Hale, Franklin D.— Retired as Consul of class seven, as-
signed to Huddersfield July, 1918. Register of 1917.
Hall, Barton. — Born in Leavenworth, Kans., July 13, 1881;
home, Kansas City. Mo.; graduated from Harvard University
(S. B.) 1907; practiced architecture in New York City two
years; administrator of two estates; served in the United
States Army December, 1917-IQ19, with rank of lieutenant;
appointed, after examination (May 19, 1919). Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four September 5, 1919; assigned
to Athens October 14, 1919; appointed Secretary of class three
January iS. 1922; assigned to Berlin July 13, 1922; appointed
138
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Foreign Service Ofticer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as
Second Secretary of Legation at Helsingfors July 17, 1924.
Hall, Bertha. — Born in Addison, Me.; educated in public
and private schools; employed in pension agency in Augusta
four and a half years; a stenographer for four years; clerk in
War Department December 31, 1917, to July 5, 1920; with the
International Communications Conference August 2 to Novem-
ber s, 1920; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, November 4, 1920; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
Halstead, Albert.— Born in Cincinnati. Ohio, September 19,
1S67; home, Cincinnati; attended the public schools of Cincin-
nati and preliminary schools elsewhere; graduated from Prince-
ton University in 1SS9; employed as clerk in the office of the
surveyor of the port of Cincinnati, 1889-1891; represented the
Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette at Washington, 1891-1896; was
aid-de-camp to Governor William JMcKinley, 1892-1896; editor
of the Springfield (Mass.) Union, 1896-1899; Washington corre-
spondent of the Brooklyn Standard-Union and Philadelphia
Evening Telegraph, 1899-1906; appointed, after examination
(March 29, 1906), Consul at Birmingham April 3, 1906; Consul
of class four by act approved February s, 191 5; appointed
Consul-General of class three February 22, 1915, and assigned
to \'ienna; on detail in the Department of State March 2S-De-
cember 19, 1917; assigned to Stockholm December 19, 1917;
appointed Consul-General of class two July 6, 1918; directed
to proceed to Vienna as American Commissioner in Austria
May I?, 1919; detailed to Paris September 7, 1920; assigned to
Montreal November 26, 1920; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class one July i, 1924.
*Halsted, jr., Albert. — Retired as Vice Consul de carriere of
class one, assigned to Munich, April, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦ Halstead, Marshal. — Retired as Consul at Birmingham
March 26, 1906. Died in Cincinnati, Ohio, January 29, 1908.
Register of 1913.
♦Hamilton, John E.— Retired as Consul at Corn-wall. Canada,
August, 1909. Register of 1913.
Hamilton, Maiwell M. — Bom in Tahlequah. Okla., Decem-
ber 20, 1S96; home, Sioux City, Iowa; attended Washington and
JelTerson University 1914-15; graduated from Princeton Uni-
versity 1919; employed in a bank in Sioux City, Iowa, four
summers; in United States Army JM ay-December, 1918; instruc-
tor in the Tome School, Port Deposit, Md., 1919-20; appointed,
after examination (Januarj' 19, 1920), Student Interpreter in
China May 20, 1920; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Canton
October 9, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Hamlin, John Nellis.— Bom in Roseburg, Oreg., March 9,
1S95; home, Roseburg; attended University of Oregon 1915-1917;
graduated from Harvard University 1923; served in the United
States Army 191 --iS; appointed, after examination (July 9,
1923J, Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; Secre-
tary in the Diplomatic Service July 18, 1924; assigned to Tirana
October 20, 1924.
♦Hamm, Theodore Gushing.— Died at his post (Durango)
November 6, 1914. Register of 1913.
♦Hamm, Walter Charles.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Newcastle-on-Tyne August, 1919. Register of
1918.
Hampton, Ada Janney.— Born in Hamilton, Va.; graduated
from high school 1921, and from business college 1923; employed
in commercial concern; appointed a clerk at $1,200, temporarily,
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January
25, 1924; permanently, at $1,320 July 16, 1924.
♦Handley, William White.— Died at his post (Callao-Uma)
September 27, 1919. Register of 191S.
Haneke, Marie S.— Born in Washington, D. C; public-
school education; employed as telephone operator in Washing-
ton. D. C, 1907-1910; w'ith the Emergency Fleet Corporation,
Philadelphia, 1918; with the United States Shipping Board
November, 1918, to September, 1920; appointed a telephone
STffitchboard operator at $720 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, March 3, 1921; position allocated to
C. A. F. one at $1,140 July i, 1924.
Hanna, Margaret M.— Born in Ann Arbor, Mich.; educated
in the public and high schools of Washington, D. C., and by
private tutors; appointed confidential clerk to the Chief of the
Bureau of Indexes and Archives, Department of State, at $900
November 16, 1895; confidential clerk to the Second Assistant
Secretary of State at $900 January 6, 1896; clerk class one Feb-
ruary 23, 1897; class two December 4, 1905; class three March 4,
1907; detailed as clerical assistant Pious Fund Arbitration at
The Hague, 190a; detailed as clerical assistant Venezuelan
Claims Commission at Caracas, 1903;- detailed as clerical assist-
ant to the Delegation of the United States to the Second Peace
Conference at Tlie Hague, 1907; detailed as clerical assistant
to the Delegation of the United States to the Fourth Inter-
national Conference of American States, Buenos Aires, 1910;
appointed clerk class four May i, iqi6; Chief of Bureau at
$2,100 July I, 1918; special assistant at $2,500 June i, 1920;
drafting officer at $2,500 July i, 1920; at $3,000 June 17, effective
July I, 1921; on February 28, 1923, was detailed as a Special
Assistant and designated also as Special Disbursing Ofiicer of
the Department of State to the Delegation of the United States
to the Fifth International Conference of American States held
at Santiago, Chile, March 25, 1923; Chief of the Office of Coordi-
nation and Review January 31, 1924; appointed a drafting
officer at $3,500 April i, 1924.
Hanna, Matthew Elting.— Born in Londonderry, Ohio,
March 9, 1873; home, Stamford, Conn.; graduated from
West Point in 1897; was a cavalry officer. United States Army,
1897-1913; served m New Mexico 1897-1898, in Cuba 1899-1904;
was Aide to the Military Governor 1898-1902, commissioner of
public schools 1900-1902, and military attach^ in the Legation
at Habana 1902-1904; served in Montana 1904-05; was a student
oflQcer two years and an instructor three years at the Staff
College, Fort Leavenworth; special agent of the United States
in Panama, 1909; on the general staff. United States Army,
1910-1912; special representative of the United States Army
at German maneuvers, 1911; resigned from Army 1913; man-
ager in a manufacturing chemists concern in New York 1912-
1917; inspector general Massachusetts Militia 1912-1914; an
assistant in the American Embassy in IMexico City February-
August, 1917; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1917),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four, August 23,
1917, and assigned to ilexico City; appointed Secretary of class
three March 14, 1919; class two August 24, 1921; assigned to the
Department of State as Acting Chief of the Division of Mexican
Affairs, September 20, 1921; designated Chief December 20, 1921;
assigned to Berlin March 10, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i, 1924; class three August S, 1924.
♦Hanna, Philip C. — Retired as Consul General of class five,
assigned to Monterey, December 1919. Register of 1918.
♦Hanna, Rea. — Retired as Consul at Georgetown, 1913.
Register of 1913.
♦Hannah, Frank Sanford.— Retired as Consul at Kehl
August, 1911. Register of 1913.
Hansen, Carl Christian.— Born in Denmark May 14, 1862;
naturalized in Modesto, Calif., July 6, 1887; attended school
abroad and in California; graduated from the Cooper Medical
College; hospital interne in San Francisco four years; assistant
in postgraduate department of the University of California
one year; practiced medicine; medical missionary in Turkey
and Siam, 1893-1898; physician in charge of the Van Santvoord
Sanatorium in Siam to October, 1908; appointed Vice and
Deputy Consul-General at Bangkok April 2, 1909; Vice-Consul
at Bangkok February 6, 1915.
Hanson, George Charles. — Born in Bridgeport, Conn.,
October 11, 1883; home, Bridgeport; graduate of Cornell Uni-
versity (C. E.), 1908; engaged at various times in business and
engineering work; appointed, after examination (May 5, 1909),
Student Interpreter in China June 12, 1909; Deputy Consul-
General at Shanghai September 7, 191 1; also interpreter Octo-
ber is, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter at Chefoo
May 13 , 19 1 2 ; Vice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter at Dalny
November 25, 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter
at Newchwang March 17, 1914; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
and Interpreter at Tientsin May 9, 1914; Vice and Deputy Con-
sul and Interpreter at Newchwang January s, 1915; appointed
Consul of class eight March 2, 1915, and assigned to Swatow;
assigned to Chungking JSIarch 20, 1917; to Foochow April 15,
1918; appointed Consul of class seven July 6. 1918; class six
September 5, 1919; assigned to Harbin December 27, 1921; ap-
pointed Consul of class five Augfust 23, 1922; class four June
5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Hanson, George M.— Born in Fillmore, Utah, June 29, 1869;
home, Ogden, Utah; educated at Millard Academy and Uni-
versity of Utah; engaged for four years in teaching school; in
newspaper work in Ogden four years; in county treasurer's
office eight years, and was private secretary to a United States
Senator six years; appointed, after examination (April i, 1912),
Consul at Hobart August 23, 1912; Consul at Sandakan April 24,
1914; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5, 1915;
assigned to Prince Rupert May 20, 1916; appointed Consul of
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
139
class six July 6, 1918; assigned to Aalborg September 12, 1918;
did not £0 to Aalborg; detailed to Liege April 17. 1919; ap-
pointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919; assigned to
Trieste March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Hanson, James. — Colonel, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Military Attach6 at Santiago, Chile, November 24,
1923-
*Hapgood, Norman. — Retired as Minister to Denmark
November, 1919. Register of 1922.
Hardy, James Walter.— Born in Lewiston, N. C, July 17,
1887; attended public schools; laborer at the Washington Navy
Yard one year; private. United States Army, October 27, 191 7,
to March 4, 1919; employed as a driver by the District of Co-
lumbia 1919-20; appointed an assistant taessenger in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, December 22, 1920.
Hargis, jr., Harry W. — Born in Atlanta, Ga., November 6,
1S96; attended business college, Raleigh, N. C, 1915-16; Trinity
College, Durham, N. C, 1916-17; University of Georgia, 1917-
1919; employed three years in general stenographic work; served
in Central Officers' Training School, Camp Gordon, Ga., Sep-
tember I, 1918, to January 9, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at
Habana April 25, 1921.
Harkum, John F. — Bom in Washington, D. C, June 28, 1S74;
grade-school education; employed as a porter twenty years;
messenger in the War Department 191S-1923; transferred to
the Department of State and appointed an assistant messenger,
under Civil Ser\'ice rules, July 16, 1923.
Harlow, William McGrath. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
October 30, 1S9S; attended Gouzaga School 1904-1909, St. John's
College 1909-1915, business school 1915; employed in private
concern 1915-1917; served in Marine Corps 1917-1919; Chief
Yeoman, Coast Guard Headquarters, Treasury Department,
1919-1924; appointed clerk in the American Consulate at
Hongkong March, 1924; Vice-Consul at Hongkong September 4.
1924.
♦ Harmony, Julio. — Retired as Consul at Corunna June, 1906.
Regfister of 1913-
Harnden, Robert — Born in Honolulu. Hawaii. November
27, 18S1; home, Berkeley, Calif.; attended the public schools of
Alameda, Calif., nine years and the University of California
one year; employed as an accountant in a lead company four
years in San Francisco; real estate agent two years; spent four
years in travel and study in Europe; American newspaper
correspondent in London 1916-17; appointed Vice-Consul at
Seville November 7, 1917; appointed, after examination (June
18, 1917), Consul of class eight February 19, 191S; on detail at
Seville; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; as-
signed to Seville, November 13, 1919; appointed Consul of class
five November 23, 1921; assigned to Valencia May 17, 1922; to
Rosario January 2, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Harper, Oscar Cole.— Born in Garland, Tex., December 30,
1895; attended the Artesia (N. Mex.) High School to 1913; the
University of Texas, Austin, two years; employed in a clerical
capacity in Dallas and El Paso, Tex., 1916-1918; appointed
Vice-Consul at Ciudad Juarez January 9, 1919; at Chihuahua
May 37, 1931; at Ciudad Juarez August 19, 1921.
Harriman, Oliver Bishop. — Bom in New York City May 25,
1887; home, Romney, W. Va. ; attended Ruby preparatory
school, the Morristown school, and spent three years at Har-
vard University; engaged in fruit growing in West Virginia
for two years; served as private secretary to the Ambassador
to Chile; appointed, after examination (June 28, 1915), Secre-
tary of Enibassy or Legation of class five October 15, 1915;
assigned for duty in the Department of State October 20,
1915; assigned to Berlin February 25, 1916; appointed Secretary
of class four May 10, 1916; assigned to Vienna January 17, 1917;
to Habana June 7, 1917; appointed Secretary of class three
July 13, 1917; assigned to >Iexico December 17, 1918; to Monte-
video, February 26, 1920; appointed Secretary of class two
June 28, 1920; assigned to London August 3, 1921; to Copen-
hagen July 23, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I, 1924.
Harrington, Julian Fiske.— Bom in Framingham, Mass.,
April II, iQoi; graduated from high school 1910. and attended
Columbia University one semester, 1920; employed in clerical
capacities by commercial concerns in Greenfield, >Iass., and
New York City, fourteen months; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate at Malaga in April, 1921; Vice Consul at
Malaga July s, 1922; at Antwerp May 17, 1923.
* Harris, Charles B.— Retired as Consul at Reichenberg, July,
1910. Register of 1913.
Harris, Ernest Lloyd. — Bom in Jasper County, Iowa, Oc-
tober 26, 1870; home. Rock Island, 111.; attended the public
schools of Edgington, 111.; graduated from Cornell College,
Mount Vernon, Iowa; spent five years at Heidelberg Univer-
sity, Ph. D. (1894), J. U. D. (1895); was lecturer on civil law
in the State Llniversity of Iowa; appointed Consular Agent at
Eibenstock May 10, 1898; Commercial Agent November 11,
1902; Consul at Chemnitz March 23, 1905; Consul at Smyrna
July 25, 1906; Cousul-General June 10, 1908; Consul-General at
Stockholm January 20, 1911; appointed Consul-General of class
five February 22, 1915, effective February s. 1915; retired
August, 1016; appointed a Consul-General of class five May 14,
191S, under Executive order of April 30, 1918; detailed to Irkutsk
ilay 8, 1918; appointed Consul-General of class four September
5, 1919; unassigned from October 15. 1920; assigned to Singapore
February 16, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
three July i, 1924.
Harris, George Franklin. — Born May 4, 1876; appointed a
laborer in the Department of State, October 13, 1916.
♦Harris, Heaton W. — Retired as Consul General of class three,
assigned to Habana, September 1920. Register of 1918.
Harrison, Leiand.— Bom in New York City April 25. 1883;
educated at Eton College and Harvard University (A. B.),
1907; served as private secretarj' to the Ambassador to Japan,
1907-08; appointed, after examination (December 2, 1907),
Third Secretary of the Embassy at Tokyo June 10, 190S; Second
Secretary of the Legation at Peking January 14, 1909; Second
Secretary of the Embassy at London August 16, 1910; Sec-
retary of the Legation at Bogota February i, 1912; Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class three by act approved February
5, 1915; appointed Secretary of class two March 2, 1915; assigned
for duty in the Department of State, March 6, 1915; appointed
Secretary of class one July 13, 1917; Diplomatic Secretary of the
American Cotnmission to Negotiate Peace, with the rank of
Cotmselor of Embassy, November 30, 1918; assigned to Paris
November 28, 1919; designated and assigned as Counselor of
Embassy at Paris May 20, 1920; assigned to the Department of
State, March 9, 1921; expert assistant, Conference on the Limita-
tion of Armament, November 3, 1921; Assistant Secretary of
State March 31, 1922.
Hart, Hilda M.— Born in Pottstown, Pa.; high school and
business college graduate; employed in office of Food Admin-
istration December, 1917 to January, 1919; in War Risk Insur-
ance Bureau January, 1919, to February 1920; appointed a
clerk at $1,100 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, February 24, 1920; class one August 16, 1921; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
♦Harfer, Eugene Claudius.— Retired as Consular Assistant
January, 1919. Register of 1918.
♦Hartman, Charles S.— Retired as Minister to Ecuador
March, 1922. Register of 1922.
Hartman, Douglas William.— Bom in Horicon, Wis., Sep-
tember 7, 1902; graduated from high school and attended the
Milwaukee (Wis.) State Normal School two years; pursued a
business college course 1922; employed in various capacities
while attending school; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Depart-
ment of S<^te, under Civil Service rules, January 2, 1923; at
$1,000 May I, 1923; at Si, loo October 1, 1923; class one February
I, 1924; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
Hartnett, Timothy Vincent.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., De-
cember 14, 1890; attended public schools, and commercial high
school one year; employed by a tobacco company in New York
seven years; with a subsidiary company as accountant and sales
manager in St. John's, Newfoimdland, since 1912; appointed
Vice-Consul at St. John's January 14, 1919.
♦Harvey, George.— Retired as Ambassador to Great Britain
November, 1923. Register of 1922.
*Harvey, Horace J,— Retired as Consul at Fort Eric August,
1914. Register of 1913.
♦Harvey, Roland B.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class two, unassigned, October, 1917. Died in
Baltimore, Md., November 14, 1917. Register of 1916.
Haskell, Lewis Wardlaw.— Bom in Pastoria, Ark., Decem-
ber 3, 186S; home, Columbia, S. C; graduate of the South Caro-
lina Mihtary Academy, 1889; and the Georgetown University
law school (LL.B.), 1894; instructor at branch college of the
University of Georgia, 1S89-1892; clerk in Railway Commis-
I40
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
sioner's OEfice, Department of the Interior, 1894-1901; prac-
ticed law in Columbia, S. C, 1901-1910. and was referee in bank-
ruptcy; served two terms in the South Carolina House of Rep-
resentatives; lieutenant to lieutenant colonel of the National
Guard of South Carolina; appointed, after examination (July
7. 1908), Consu4 at Salina Cruz January 11, 1910; Consul at Hull
February 16, 191a; Consul at Belgrade November 24, 1913;
Consul of class seven by act approved February 5, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class six March a. 191s; assigned to Geneva
September 17, 1915; appointed Consul of class five September s,
1919; class three June 4, igio; Consul General of class four June
5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924; as-
signed to Algiers October 23, 1924.
♦Hasklns, Thomas Wilson.— Died at Pe-tai-ho. China. July
ij, 1908, while Consul at Swatow. Register of 1913.
Hathaway, Jr., Charles Montgomery. — Bom in Deposit, N. Y.,
March 31, 1S74; home Olyphaut, Pa.; educated at Yale Univer-
sity (B. A., AI. A., Ph. D.); in real-estate and insurance busi-
ness; instructor and tutor Adelphi College, Columbia Univer-
sity, and United States Naval Academy, 1902-1911; appointed,
after examination (June 27, 1910), Consul at Puerto Plata
August 19, 1911; Consul at Hull November 24, 1913; Consul of
class eiglit by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Con-
sul of class seven September i, 1916; assigned to Cork May 22,
1917; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed
to Budapest December i, 1919; appointed Consul of class five
June 4, 1920; assigned to Bombay November 20, 1920; ap-
pointed Consul of class four November 23, 1921; assigned to
Dublin December 27, 1921; appointed Consul of class three
June 3, 1924; Consul General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class three July i, 1924; assigned to Dublin
October 11, 1924.
Haupt, Alfred Boucsein. — Born in Baltimore, Md., December
30, 1888; graduated from Johns Hopkins University (A. B.)
1909; University of Maryland (LL. B.) 1917; took four months'
course University of Poitiers, France, 1919; employed in the
Coast and Geodetic Survey July-September, 1907; instructor
of mathematics, Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, 1909-1919;
served in the United States Army September, 191 7 to July,
1919; admitted to the Maryland bar in July, 1917; appointed a
law clerk at $2,000 in the Department of State, tmder Civil
Service rules, Decembers, i9i9;at $2,300, June 16, 1920; draft-
ing officer at $3,000 September 19, 1921; at $3,200 November i,
1924.
Haven, Don Stevenson. — Born in Swissvale, Pa., January 9,
1893; home Tulsa, Okla.; graduated from Pennsylvania State
College (B. S.) 1916; employed on stock farm, as ore sampler,
shipper with steel company, and labor foreman; served in
United States Army May, 19 17 to June, 19 19; discharged as
first lieutenant; appointed Vice-Consul and clerk at Belgrade,
April 21, 1920; after examination (January 19, 1920). Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three May 24, 1920, and assigned to
Belgrade; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; assigned to Leipzig
June 23, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven March i, 1923;
remained at Leipzig on detail; appointed Consul of class six
December 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July
I, 1924.
Haven, Joseph Emerson.— Bom in Chicago, 111., January 19.
1885; home, Chicago; educated in the Chicago grammar and
high schools; studied medicine one year; appointed, after ex-
amination (August 16, 1904), Commercial Agent at SR Christo-
pher August 18, 1904; Consul June 22, 1906; Consul at Crefeld
March 30, 1907; Consul at Roubaix June 10, 1908; Consul at
Catania April 24, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved
February 5, 1915; a.ssigned to Turin July S, 1916; appointed
Consul of class six September 6, 1916; on detail at Avlona
February-May, 1919; returned to Turin June i, 1919; appointed
Consul of class five September 5, 1919; class four June 4, 1920;
detailed to Trieste August 16, 1920; assigned to Trieste January
25, 1922; to Florence March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Haven, Richard Barnard.— Bora in Chicago, 111., September 2,
1889; home, Chicago; attended the public schools of Chicago
seven years, studied under private tutor at Cambridge, Eng-
land, five years; attended the Real Gymnasium, Germany, one
year; the University of Lille, France, five years; and the North-
western University (M. D.); took special course at the Royal
University, Turin, Italy (SI. D.) ; on the house staff Mercy Hos-
pital, Chicago, eighteen months; enlisted as a member of the
Chicago Medical Unit attached to the Royal Army Medical
Corps of the British Army, May 1915, serving in France to De-
cember 1915; engaged in special research inquiry in Greece 1916,
attached to British Army hospitals in London fifteen months;
commanding officer, British military hospital, Turin, Italy,
nine months; resident commanding officer, American hospital.
Neuilly, France, 1918; appointed volunteer medical officer in
June 1918 to the A. E. F., A. R. C, and Y. M. C. A., stationed in
and passing through Turin; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul
at Roubaix, France, October 14, 1910; retired February-, 1913;
appointed Vice-Consul at Turin May i, iqi8; at Genoa De-
cember 24, 1923; at Constanza April 29, 1922; appointed, after
examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three May 26, 1922; assigned to Constantza June 23, 1922; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two February 26,
1923; class one November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, July I, 1924.
Havenner, Albert B.— Born in Washington, D. C, March 24,
1893; graduated from high school; attended a business college
six months and Georgetown Law School two years; employed
in a real estate office 1913-14; clerk to a representative, Panama-
Pacific Exposition, January-August, 1915; temporary clerk.
Department of State, March-June, 1916; clerk in the Passport
Agency of the Department of State in New York City April 6,
1917 to February 28, 1918; Army field clerk. United States
Army, February, 1918 to July 1919; temporary employee in
theDepartmentofStateat $1,000 July 14, 1919; at $1,140 Novem-
ber I, 1919; at $1,200 February i, 1920; appointed a clerk o'
class one, under Civil Service rules, July i, 1920; class two De-
cember 30, 1922, efTective January i, 1923; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Havens, Harry A.— Bom in Whitehall, N. Y., October 28,
1885; educated in public schools and Albany (N. Y.) Business
College; graduate of National University law school (LL.B.),
1911; (LL.M.), 1912; clerk and stenographer for five years;
appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, under Civil
Service rules. June 20. 1908; at $1,000 December i, 1908; class
one June 23. to be effective July i, 1909; class two August i,
1913; class four June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; drafting
officer at $2,500, December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; at
$3,000 August I, 1922.
Hawkins, Harry Calvin.— Bom in Reed City, Mich., March
25, 1894; graduated from Olivet College (A. B.) 191 7, and
Har\'ard University (A. M.) 1921; employed in the Transporta-
tion Division, Department of Commerce, one year, and as
instructor at the University of Virginia fifteen months; ap-
pointed a drafting officer at $3,500 in the Department of State
December 31, 1923; at $3,800 July i, 1924; appointed, after ex-
amination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied; also Vice-Consul of career, October 16, 1924; detailed to the
Department of State November 11, 1924.
Hawkins, John Cameron. — Bom in Sayville, L. I., N. Y.,
May 4, 1889; home Sayville; attended Kent School 1906-1909;
graduated from Princeton University (A. B.) 19 14; emplov^ed
by two bonding companies 1914-1917; division chief. Federal
Farm Loan Bureau, Treasury' Department, January-November
1917; ser\'ed in the United States Naval Reserve Force 1917-18;
retiring with the grade of lieutenant (junior grade); engaged in
oil business 1919-1922; sales manager for importing house 1922-
23; appointed, after examination (January 14, 1924), Vice-Con-
sul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Vancouver
July 12, 1924; to Hongkong December 15, 1924.
Hawkins, Richard Henry.— Born August 13, 1863; appointed
laborer in the Department of State March i, 1881; assistant
messenger July i, 190a; messenger November i, 1906.
Hawks, Stanley.— Bora in Stillwater, Minn., May 28, 1895;
home. Port Washington, N. Y. ; graduated from Yale Uni-
versity (A. B.), 1918; attended Harvard Law School and
the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques (Paris) one year
each; served in the United States Army, August, 1917, to
February. 1919. retiring with the rank of captain; private
secretary to a delegate of the United States to the Conference
on the Limitation of Armament, November, 192 1, to Febru-
ary, 1922; employed, temporarily, in the Department of
State, June 8 to September 15, 1922; appointed a drafting
officer at $2,500 in the Department of State, September 16,
1922; assigned as Acting Chief of the Division of Current In-
formation, December 5, 1922; appointed, after examination
(July 9, 1923K Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four,
December 12. 1923, and assigned to the Department of State;
assigned to Warsaw March 8, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Hawley, Harry Franklin. — Born in Newark, N. J., July s.
1880; home. New York City; educated in the public schools
of New York and under private instruction; employed in
various clerical capacities in New York City, 1895-1902; in
the Philippine civil service, 1902-1909; secretary to the Amer-
ican delegation to the Joint International Opium Commis-
sion, Shanghai, January to March, 1909; clerk in the Ameri-
can Embassy at Tokyo January 18 to June 30, 1909; appointed
clerk in the American Embassy at Tokyo November i, 1909;
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
141
appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Consul of
class eight September 14. 191 7, and detailed to Tokyo; as-
signed to Yokkaichi October 5. 1918; to Nagoya, March 8,
1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i. 1924; assigned to Windsor,
Ontario, December 12, 1924.
Hawley, William W.— Born December 3, 1873; appointed
laborer in the Department of State August 33. 1907.
Hayden, Oris Ellen. — Bom in Exeter, Me.; graduated from
Hebron Academy 1922, and attended a business college 1923;
employed as cashier and typist for short periods while attending
school: appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Ser\'ice rules, January 28, 1924; at $1,000 March i,
1924; at §1,320 July I, 1924.
Hayes, John L.— Bom in Washington, D. C, August i. 1892;
attended grade schools and Business High School, Washington;
Temple Business School one year; Emerson Institute one year;
Knights of Columbus Evening School one year; employed by
Southern Railway Co. in Washington June, 1909, to June, 1917;
served in the United States Army June, 1917, to August, 1919;
in Bureau of the Census December, 1919, to August, 1920; ap-
pointed clerk at $1,100 in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, December 3, 1920; class one December 30, 1922,
effective January i, 1923; class two March i, 1924; at $1,680
July I. 1924-
Haynes, Thornwell.— Born in Spartanburg, S. C, May 30,
1868; home, Birmingham, Ala.; graduate of Wofford College,
Spartanburg (A. B.), and Vanderbilt University (A. M.);
engaged in teaching six years; employed as a superintendent of
schools 1S97-1900; 1909-1915; president of Biriningham College
1915-1917; appointed Consul at Rouen May 22, 1900; Commercial
Agent at \'ladivostok March 8, 190^, but did not proceed there;
Consul at Xanking June 13. 1905; Consul-General at Singapore
March 3c, 1907; I'etired February 7, 1909; appointed, after ex-
amination (January 25, 19 15), Consul of class nine April 16 191 7;
assigned to Helsingfors August 14, 1917; appointed Consul of
class eight September 14, 1917; appointed Commissioner to
Finland, with rank of Minister Plenipotentiary, May 24, 1919
pending the establishment of a Legation; appointed Consul
of class six September s, 1919; class five June 4, 1920: assigned
to Berne July i, 1920; appointed Foreign Service Officer ot
class six July i, 1924.
♦Hays, Perry Coleman.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Santa Rosalia, July, 1918. Register of 1918.
* Haywood, William.— Died in New Mexico December 19,
1906, while Consul-General at Seoul. Register of 1913.
* Hazeltine, Ross.— Died at his post (Lourenco Marques),
while a Consul of class four, July s, 1922. Register of 1923.
* Heald, Perley C— Retired as Commercial Agent at Wallace-
burg September, 1906. Register of 1913.
Heard, William Wilson.— Born in Frederick, Md., January 9,
1887; home, Baltimore, Md.; attended the public schools of
Frederick eight years and Baltimore Business College six
months; enlisted in the United States Navy June 3, 1902, and
served to Januarj' 8, 1908; employed in various capacities in
Frederick, 190S; clerk and stenographer, Baltimore, 1909-1912;
appointed Consular Agent at Fredericton June 13, 1912; Vice-
Consul at Quebec June 16, 1915; appointed, after examination
(May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three December
23, 1919, and assigned to Quebec; assigned to Kingston, Jamaica
March 12, 1920; appointed \'ice-ConsuI de carritre of class two
May 24, 1920; class one November 17, 1921; appointed Consul
of class seven June 22, 1922; assigned to Bluefields September 2,
1922; detailed to the Department of State June 23, 1924: ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
* Hearin, Charles Turner.- Retired as Vice-Consul de car-
rifere of class three, assigned to Beirut, April, 1923. Register
of 1923.
Heath, Donald Read. — Born in Topeka, Kans., August 12,
1894; home, Topeka; spent two and a half years at Washburn
College and one semester at Montpelier University in France;
employed as a newspaper reporter and writer February, 1916,
to August, 1917, and October, 1919, to September, T920; served
in the United States Army August, 1917, to October, 1919, re-
tiring as first lieutenant; appointed, after examination (June 28,
1920), Vice-Consul de carriOre of class three Ser)tember 7, 1920;
assigned to Bucharest October 18, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; assigned to Warsaw De-
cember 18, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one
February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923;
remained at Warsaw on detail; appointed Foreign Service Offi
cer of class eight July i, 1924.
* Heath, John. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class four, assigned to Habana, May, 1917. Register
of igi6.
Hecht, Elizabeth.— Bom in Washington, D. C; attended
high school and business college one year each; stenographer
for commercial concerns 1915-1917 and 1919-1921; for American
Red Cross 1917-1919; and for the United States Veterans'
Bureau 1923-24; appointed a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, October 24,
1924.
* Heck, Lewis. — Retired as Consul of class five, unassigned
December, 1920. Register of 1922.
Heckert, George T.— Born in Breedlove, W. Va., February
25, 1894; completed high-school education in three years;
attended George Washington University two years; teacher of
public schools at Horse Shoe Run, W. Va., :9i3-i9i6; derk in
the otficeof thedcpot quartermaster, War Department, Septem-
ber, 1918, to March, 1921; appointed a clerk of class one in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, April i, 192 1;
class two December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; class
three May 31 eflective June i, 1924; at Si,S6o July i, 1924.
Hedian, George Drum. — Bom in Wilkes- Barre, Pa., Decem-
ber 8, 1856; graduate Pennsylvania State Normal School, B. E.
(1874), M. E. D. (1879); Columbian University (now George
Washington University) LL. B. (1883), LL. M. (18S4); prac-
ticed law in Pennsylvania; official stenographer, orphan's court ,
Luzerne County, 1886-1890; legal representative of mining com-
panies in Ecuador since 1899; appointed Consular Agent at
Esmeraldas February 19, 1908.
*Heenan, Thomas E.— Died at his post (Fiume), June
25. 1914, to which he was appointed April 24. 1914. Register
of 1913.
Heeter, Gertrude C. — Born in Washington, D. C: public-
school education; employed in a printing office 1913-191S;
mimeograph and multigraph operator in War Department
two years; appointed a multigraph operator at $900 in the
Department of State, temporarily, July 31. effective August i,
1920; at $900, under Civil Service rules, December 15, 1920;
at $1,000 April i, 1922; at $1,100 December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,200 October i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924;
at Si, 500 August 16, 1924.
* Helmke, William. — Retired as Chief of the Division of Latin-
American Affairs, Department of State, May, 1915. Register
of 1914-
fHelmrod, George. — Retired as Consul atBeme June. 1914.
Died at Berne December 12, 1921. Register of 1913.
Hein, Herbert R. — Lieutenant commander. United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Assistant Naval .\ttache at Tokyo
April 23, 1924.
*Heingartner, Alexander.— Died March 30, 1917, while Con-
sul at Liege. Register of 1916.
Heingartner, Robert W.— Born in Canton. Ohio, February
20, 1881; home. Canton; educated in public schools in Oliio and
four years under tutors in Europe; appointed Consular Agent at
Carini March 25, 1904; Deputy Consul at Trieste September 12 ,
1904; Vice and Deputy Consul October 16, 1906; Vice and Dep-
uty Consul-General at Vienna February 27, 1907; appointed
Vice-Consul at Vienna February 6, 1915; assigned to the Spanish
Embassy at Vienna, April 14, 1917; to the American Legation
at Berne February 3, 1918; appointed, after examination (May
12, 1919), Consul of class six June 4, 1920, and detailed to
Vienna; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i ,
1924.
Heins, Fred George.— Bom in Alma, Mo., November 22,
1900; attended high school 1915-16, and a business college
1920-21; clerk in the United States Coast Guard Headquarters
October, 1921, to March, 1922; employed on a fann six years;
appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, November 11, 1924.
Heintzleman, P. Stewart.— Bom in Fayetteville. Pa., July 34,
1880; home, Fayetteville; attended public schools; graduated
from Cliambersburg Academy in 1S98, Pennsylvania College
(A. B., 1901), and the University of Pennsylvania (A. B., 1902) ;
appointed, after examination (October 23, 1902), Student Inter-
preter in China October 25, 1902; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Canton October 5, 1904; Vice and Deputy Consul at
142
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Dalny October S, igo6; retired as Vice and Deputy Consul at
Dalny May, 1907; transferred from the consular service to the
Department of State as assistant to the Third Assistant Secre-
tary on Far Eastern Affairs June i, 1907; designated as assistant
in the Division of Far Eastern Aflairs March 20, 190S; appointed
Consul at Swatow August 14, 1908; but did not go to post;
detailed as Vice-Consul-General at Shanghai December 21;
190S; appointed Consul at Chungking January 22, 1909, but did
not go to post; in charge of the Consulate-General at Shaiighai
July I. 1909, to September 6, 1909: appointed in the Division of
Far Eastern Affairs, Department of State, in connection with
foreign trade and treaty relations, November 24, 1909; appointed
Consul at Dalny June 24, 1910, but did not go to post; appointed
Second Secretary of the Legation at Peking August 16, 1910;
Assistant Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs June 27,
1911; Consul-General at Mukden July 28, 1914; Consul-General
of class live by act approved Februarys, 1915; appointed Consul-
General of class four October 27, 1916, and asigned to Canton;
assigned to Tientsin April 15. 1918; to Hankow, September S,
1919; on temporary detail in the Department of State March i
to April 23, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Olificer of class three
July I, 1924,
Heisler, Charles Harrington.— Bom in Milford, Del., July 20,
iS3S; attended the public and high schools of Philadelphia, Pa.,
twelve years; Delaware College, Newark. Del., four years; em-
ployed on the engineering corps, Pennsylvania Railroad Co..
six months; by a mining company in Nevada one year; with
the Victoria Railways, Victoria, Australia, thirteen months;
with theCrov.rn mines, Johannesburg, South Africa, September,
1914; appointed clerk in the American Consulate at Johannes-
burg in November, 1914; Vice-Consul at Cape Town June 9,
1915; appointed, after examination (January 24, 1921), Vice-
Consul de carricre of class three. May 25, 192 1; assigned to
Kovno July 14. 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class two May 26, 1922; assigned to Riga June so, 1922; re-
assigned to Riga. Latvia, July 29, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consui de carricre of class one February 26, 1923; Foreign Serv-
ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; class eight, also Consul,
August 8, 1924; assigned to Malmo September 17, 1924.
Heizer, Oscar Stuart.— Bom in Kossuth, Iowa. Febmary 7,
1868; preparatory and high-school education, three years scien
tific and literary course; course in law with correspondence
school; assistant treasurer of the four American missions in
Turkey, 1S92-1906; appointed Deputy Consul-General (also
Interpreter) at Constantinople May 21, 1906; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General January iS, 1908; also Marshal July 3, 1911; re-
tired as Interpreter July i, 1913; appointed Vice-Consul at Con-
stantinople February 6, 1915; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1914), Consul of class eight Febmary 22, 1915, and
assigned to Trebizond; on detail at Constantinople June 5 to
October 27, 1916; on detail at Bagdad January 25, 1917, to June
30, 1920; appointed Consul of class seven September 14, 1917;
class six September 5, 1919; detailed to Jerusalem May 21, 1920;
appointed Consul of class five June 4, 1920; detailed to Constan-
tinople November 13, 1920; assigned to Jerusalem October 6,
1923; appointed Consul of class four December 19, 1923; Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Hemry, Sussnna. — Bom in McComb, Ohio; attended !Mc-
Comb High School, and the Tri-State Normal College (Angola,
Ind.), three years; pursued course in business college and
studied under private tutors; employed as a stenographer
fourteen years; clerk in the War Department, April i, 1918, to
January 20, 1923; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules, Jan-
uary 22, 1923; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Henderson, John William.— Born in Washington, D. C,
November 10, 1S98; attended St. Mary's Industrial School,
Baltimore, Md., eight years; employed by the American Red
Cross in Rome and Venice one year; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate at Venice February 19, 1919; Vice Consul
at Venice November 10, 1919; at Saloniki April 27, 1921; at
Catania July 3, 1923.
Henderson, Loy Wesley. — Bom in Rogers, Ark., June 28,
1892; home, Colorado Springs, Colo.; graduated from North-
western University (A. B.), 1915, and took one year's course
each at the University of Denver Law School and the New
York University Graduate School; employed as public-school
superintendent in Colorado, 1915-1917; with the American
Red Cross in Europe, 1918-1921; appointed, after examination
(January 16, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three.
May 26, 1922; assigned to Dublin, August 28, 1922; to Queens-
town, July 17, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two, November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924; detailed to the Department of State December iS.
1924.
Henderson, William Dalton.— Born in Ciudad Bolivar,
Venezuela. May 25, 1889; attended St. Mary's and Wimbledon
Colleges (England) three years; tutored two years in Dresden,
Germany; attorney for an export company in Ciudad Bolivar;
appointed Consular Agent at Ciudad Bolivar December 7, 1910;
retired 1916; reappointed August 20, 1921.
Hendra, John Chatten.— Bom in Camborne, Cornwall, Eng-
land, January 24, 1.S-9; naturalized; public-school education;
employed in the accounting department of a steel corporation
nine years; served as acting American Consular Agent at Cruz
Grande, Chile, May to October, 1923; appointed Consular
Agent at Cruz Grande, November 14, 1923.
* Hendrick, Michael J.— Died at his post (Windsor, On-
tario) September 9, 1922, while a Consul of class five. Register
of 1922.
Hengstler, Herbert C— Bom in Middletown. Ohio, Decem-
ber 17, 1876; graduate of .Middletown high school. Pitman and
Howard Stenographic and Business College of Cincinnati, and
George Washington University (LL. B.); with paper-manu-
facturing firm, 1895-1S98; appointed clerk in the Department of
State at $900, under Civil Service rules, August 13, 189S; at $1,000
June 25. to take effect July i, 1900; class one July i. 1901;
class two July i, 1902; served one year as secretari' to a Member
of Congress; appointed clerk class three December 4. 1905; class
four March 4, 1907; Chief of the Consular Bureau ]\Iay 9, 1907;
member of the Board on Supplies for the Foreign Service; mem-
ber of the Board of Examiners for the Consular Service; ap-
pointed drafting officer at $3,000 July i, 1918, and designated
Acting Chief of the Consular Bureau; drafting officer at $3,500
December 31, 1920, effective January i, 1921, and designated
Chief of the Consular Bureau; designated as Director of Pur-
chases and of Sales for the Department of State, member of the
Federal Purchasing Board and the Federal Liquidation Board,
and member of the Federal Specifications Board October 17,
1921; at $3,800 July I, 1924; designated Chief of the Division of
Foreign Service Administration August 19, 1924.
Henry, Frank Anderson.— Bom in Garden City, N. Y., De-
cember 10, 1883; home, Wilmington, Del.; graduate of Lehigh
University (Ch. E.), 1906; employed by a chemical company
in New York, 1906-1909, and in laboratory of a powder com-
pany in Wilmington, Del., 1910-1912; appointed, after exami-
nation (April I, 1912), Consul at Guadeloupe August 23, 1912;
Consul at Puerta Plata November 24, 1913; Consul of class nine
by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class
eight September 5. 1916; assigned to Puerto Cabello March 20,
1917; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919, and as-
signed to Teneriffe; appointed Consul of class five November 23,
1921; detailed to Barcelona November 17, 1922; appointed Con-
sul of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924.
*Henry, Harold Oliver. — Died in Peking January i, 1912,
while a Consular Assistant. Register of 1913.
* Henry, William W.— Retired as Consul at Quebec August,
1909. Register of 1913.
Herbert, Edward Eugene. — Bom in Sheldon, N. Dak.,
October 29, 1887; educated in the public schools of St, Paul,
Minn.; employed in various capacities by express companies
in the United States and Canada eleven years; appointed
Vice-Consul at Regina, Saskatchewan, March 11, 1916; at
Calgary September 19, 1922; at Regina October 2, 1922,
* Hermida, Enrique.— Retired as Marshal at Hankow April,
1911. Register of 1914.
* Herod, 2d, William Portle. — Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, assigned to the Department of
State, September, 1922. Register of 1922.
Herr, Joseph Stromier. — Bom in Waterbury, Conu., April
22, 1900; graduated from high school 1918, and attended the
Sheffield Scientific School 1921; student at Georgetown I-'oreign
Service School, 1922-23; employed as clerk during summer
vacations; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, October i, 1923; at Si, 000,
December 31, 1923, effective January i, 1924; at $1,260 July i,
1924.
Herrick, Myron T. — Born in Huntington. Ohio, October 9,
1854; home, Cleveland, Ohio; studied at Oberlin College and
Ohio Wesleyan University; received honorary degree of .'\. M.
from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1899; practiced law in Cleve-
land, 1S78-1886; secretary and treasurer, 1886-1894. and presi-
dent, 1894-1912, Society for Savings of Cleveland; chairman
board of directors. Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad; ofluer or
director in several other railway and financial enterprises and
served as president of the American Bankers' Association;
trustee and treasurer, McKinleyNationalMemorial Association ;
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
143
delegate International Congress 01 Commerce and Industry,
Ostend, June 24. igo.'; governor of Ohio 19OJ-ID0'); appointed
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to France
February 15, igu; trustee. Carnegie Institution of Washington;
chairman American Committee for Devastated France; retired
as Ambassador to France November, 1914; reappointed Am-
bassador Extraordinarv and Plenipotentiary to France April
16,1921; designated April 3, 1924, asan Honorary Delegate on the
part of the United States to the meeting of the General Assem-
bly of the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome in
May, 1924.
Herring, Charles E.— Born in Washington, D. C, January
10, 1S87; educated in grade and high schools of Washington;
graduated from George Washington University (LL. D.);
clerk in the War Department 1910-1914; transferred to Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce,
February, 1914; appointed a Trade Commissioner for work in
Belgium, June, 1919; First Assistant Director of the Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce May, 1920; Commercial
Attachd at Berlin July 11, 1921.
*Herter, Christian Archibald.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, assigned to the Department
oi State, March. 1920. Register of 1922.
Hester, William Hughes.— Born in Charlotte, N. C, October
6, 1899; public-school education; chaufTeur four years for pri-
vate concerns; chauffeur in the War Department four years;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed a chauf-
feur, under Civil Service rules, March 26, 1923.
Hewes. Clarence Bussey.— Bom in Jeanerette, La.. Feb-
ruary I, 1*90; home, Jeanerette; graduate of the University of
Virginia (LL. B.) 1914; Tulane University (LL. B.) 1915; prac-
ticed law in the District of Columbia June,, 1916-October. 1917;
private secretary to an Interstate Commerce Commissioner,
1917-1S; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at Si, 500 in the Depart-
ment of State December i6, 1918; appointed, after examination
(November ii, 1918), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class
four February 10, 1919; on detail in the Department until
August, 1919; assigned to Panama, July 29, 1919; appointed Sec-
retary of class three, June 28, 1920; assigned to The Hague,
August 31, 1920; to San Jose, Costa Rica, March i, 1922; to San
Salvador July 21, 1922; to Guatemala Jtme 22, 1923; appointed
Secretary of class two January 23. 1924; assigned to Peking
April 24, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four
July I, 1924.
Hibbard, Frederick Pomeroy.— Born in Deuison, Tex., July
2<, 1894; home, Denifon; graduated from the University of
Texas (A. B.) 191 7. and took post-graduate course at Harvard
University one year: served as a private and sergeant. Medical
Reserve Corps, United States Army, June, 1917-July, 1919;
appointed, after examination (October 18, 1920), Secretary of
Embassy or I,cgatioa of class four November 15. 19:0; assigned
to Warsaw January 5, 192 1; to London January S, 1924; ap-
pointed Secretary of class three January 23, 1924; appointed For-
eign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
* Hibben, Paxton.— Retired as Secretary of the Legation at
Santiago, Chile, July, 1912. Register of 1913.
Hibbs, Walter Perry.— Bom in Washington. D. C, August
18, 1892; educated in the public schools of Washington and
took course at the Temple Business College; clerk and stenog-
rapher in the water department of the District government
190S-1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900 in the De-
partment of State, June 18. 1917; at Si.oco October i, 1917; at
$1,200 March i, 191S; at $1,320 November i, 1919; clerk to the
Secretary of State at Ji.Soo December 29. 1919, eflettive Janu-
ary r, 1920; appointed < Icrk of class four in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, April 8, 1920; at 82,100 July i,
1924.
Hickerson, Jack Dewey.— Bom in Crawford, Tex., January
26. 1896; home. Temple, Tex.; graduated from the University
of Texas (A. B.) 1920; employed as bookkeeper, clerk, and
quizmaster in American history; sensed in the United States
Army Augu;t 28 to December i, 1918; appointed Vice-Consul
and clerk at Tanipico July 9. 1920; alter examination (June 28,
1920), Vicc-Con^ui de carriere of class three September 7, 1920,
and assigned to Tampico; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two May 26. 1922; assigned to Rio de Janeiro July 15,
1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carridre oi class one Febmary
16, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained
at Rio de Janeiro on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Para August 15, 1924.
Hickey, Andrew S.— Commander, United States Navy;
assigned to duty as Naval Attache at Buenos Aires November
13. 1924; also at Santiago.
Hickey, Bernard F.— Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo, June 21, 1923.
Hickey, William A.— Bora in Chicopee, IHass.. July 29, 1890;
attended high school and business college; employed os clerk
and accountant in various manufacturing concerns nine years;
in military service 1917-18; appointed Vice-Consul at Port
Limon, December 31, 1920; at Maracaibo, May 16, 1921; at
Barranquilla October 28, 1922; resigned June 30, 1924; appointed
Vice Consul at Dundee July 28, 1924.
* Hicks, John.— Retired as Minister to Chile May, 1909.
Register of 1913.
Hicks, Knowlton Vincent.— Bom in Waterford, N. Y., June
22, 1902: attended public schools 1908-1917, and Troy Conserva-
tory of Music 1914-1920; employed by private firms 1917-1923;
appointed clerk in the American Consulate at Ghent October,
1923; at Hamburg May, 1924; Vice Consul at Hamburg Decem-
ber 17, 1924.
* Higglns, Edward.— Died at his post (Bahia) November 17,
1919. Register of 191S.
* Higgins, John C— Retired as Consul at Dundee Septem-
ber, 1909. Died in Wilmington, Del., June 18, 1924. Register
of 1913.
* Hill, David Jayne.— Retired as Ambassador to Germany
September, 191 1. Register of 1913.
* Hill, Frank Davis.— Died at his post (I'rankfort on the
Main) May 23, 1912. Register of 1913.
Hill, Ralph Waldo Snowden.- Born in Washington, D. C.
August 20, 1882; received his early education from tutors, in
the public schools, and at the University of Missouri; graduate
of the University of Virginia (LL. B.), 1909; took courses at
George Washington University and L'Ecole des Sciences
Politiques, Paris; practiced law in Missouri and the District
of Columbia; in a railway freight office at El Paso. 1903-04; sec-
retary of the summer school of the University of Virginia, 1908;
privatesecretary toa member of Congress, 1913-1916; appointed,
temporarily, an assistant Solicitor in the Department of State
at $2,500 May 23, 1916; permanently June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; assistant solicitor at $3,000 October 22, 191 7; as-
sistant to the Solicitor at $4,000 December 31, 1919, effective
January i, 1920; appointed a drafting officer at $4,000 July i,
1920; at $4,500 April I, 1924; at $4,600 July i, 1924; at $5,200
September 16, 1924.
* Hills, Ralph Warren.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, assigned to Rome, January, 1916.
Register of 1915.
Hilts, Harold Capron.— Bom in Honolulu, Hawaii, Septem-
ber 19, 1900; attended San Diego (Calif.) high school 1912-1915;
served in the United States Army 1917-1S; engaged in general
investment business several years; employed by a sugar com-
pany in Honduras March, 1923, to August, 1924; engaged a;;
amateur photographer at Puerto Cortes 1924; appointed Hon-
orary Vice Consul at Puerto Cortes December 10, 1924.
Hinckley, Robert TD'Donneli.— Bom in Washington. D. C,
May 27, 1S94; home, Washington; attended private schools
and Columbia University Law School; admitted to the Dela-
ware Bar in 1916; bank clerk 1912; assistant in District Attor-
ney's office 1912-1916; with an oil company 1920-1922; ensign
and lieutenant in the Na\'y 1918-1921; appointed, after exam-
ination (July 9, 1923), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
also Secretary in the Diplomatic Service, July 18, 1924; assigned
to Bucharest July 26, 1924.
* Hinckley, Thomas.— Died in London November 6. 1918.
while Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three, assigned
to Rome. Register of 1917.
Hinke, Frederick William.— Bom in Philadelphia, Pa.,
September 8, 1900; graduated from Auljum (N. Y.) High
School, 1918, and Hamilton College (A. B.), 1922; clerk in the
American Consulates at San Luis Potosi and at Antilla, 1923;
appointed Vice-Consul at Antilla November 24, 1923; ap-
pointed, after examination (July 25, 1923), Consular Assistant
January 7, 1924; detailed to the Department of State April 19,
1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified. July i,
1924.
Hitch, Calvin Milton.— Born in Morven, Ga., July 28. 1S69;
home, Morven; educated in public schools, Eniory College and
the Commercial College of Kentucky University; practiced law
and was prosecuting attorney for Brooks County, 1890-1S96;
member of the Georgia Legislature, 1.S90-97; appointed execu-
144
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
tive secretarj' by three governors of Georgia and served as such ,
1 898-1907; private secretary to Senator Bacon, 1907-1910; general
agent of an insurance company in Georgia, 1910-1913; appointed
Assistant Chief of the Division of Latin-American Affairs July
3, 1913; appointed Consul of class five February 22, 1915, and
assigned to Nottingham; appointed Consul of class four Sep-
tember 14, 1917; on temporary detail in the Department of
State June-October, 1919; appointed Consul of class three June
4, 1920; assigned to Basel March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Hitchcock, Heory B. — Bom in Canton Center, Conn., March
7, :887; home, Ellenville, N. Y.; graduate (A. B.) of Yale Uni-
versity; employed four summers at Chautauqua, N. Y., in the
baggage office of the institution and as assistant in the ticket
office of the Chautauqua Steamboat Co.; ticket sdler for the
Boston Terminal Co. one year; appointed, after examination
(January 31, 1912), Student Interpreter in Japan March 12,
1912; Interpreter at Yokohama March 23, 1915; also Vicc-
Consul July 6, 1915; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Nagasaki
May IS, 1916; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Yokohama Feb-
ruary 14, 1917; Consul of class eiRht October 24, 1918; on detail
at Yokohama; appointed Consul of class six September s. 1919;
assigned to Taihoku September 8, 1919; to Nagasaki Septem
ber iS, 1922; appointed Consul of class five March i, 1923; For-
eign Service Olhcer of class six July i, 1924; assigned to Tokyo
November 8, 1924.
♦ Hitt, Robert Stock well Reynolds.— Retired as Minister to
Guatemala September, 1913. Register of 1913.
Hodgdon, Anderson Dana. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., May 8
1S90; home, Leonardtown, Md.; graduated from Washington
and Lee University (A. B.), 1911; University of Maryland
(LL. B.), 1914; took two year postgraduate course at Johns
Hopkins University; employed with a guaranty and trust
company; practiced law in Baltimore 1913-1917, and in Leon-
ardtown 1919-1923; served in the Maryland Naval Militia,
1914-1919, retiring with the rank of lieutenant; appointed, after
examination (June 25, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three October 6, 1923; assigned to Prague November 19, 1923;
to Stuttgart June 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924.
Hodges, Campbell B. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military Attache at Madrid and Lisbon, March 23,
1923-
* Hoefele, Philip Millard. — Retired as clerk in the Embassy
at Vienna September, 1913. Register of 1913.
Hofer, Myron Arms. — Born in Cincinnati. Ohio, October 28,
1892; home, Cincinnati; graduated from Harvard University
(A. B.) 1915; served as private secretary to American Minister
at Copenhagen January, 1916, to May, 1917; ensign and lieu-
tenant. United States Naval Reserve Flying Corps, June, 1917,
to November, 1918; in Embassy at Paris December, 1918, to
July, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 26, 1919),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four September 5,
1919; assigned to Tokyo Novembvr i8, 1919; to Peking July
5, 1921; appointed Secretary of class three, August 24, 1921;
assigned to the Department of State April 6, 1923; appointed
Secretary of class two January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class four July i, 1924; assigned as First Secretary of Legation
at Montevideo August 9, 1924.
Hoff, Harold Mackie. — Bom in Lawn, Pa., December 24,
1S98; attended public school 1907-1912, preparatory school
Ontario, Canada, 1913-1915; employed at farming and in real-
estate business; appointed clerk in the American Consulate at
Belfast July, 1924; Vice Consul at Belfast December 27, 1924.
Hoffay, Joseph. — Bora in Berlin, N. Y., August 26, 1892;
pursued a correspondence-school course; employed by a tram-
way company 1911-1913, and by an oil company in Victoria,
Brazil, 1913-1922; acting American Consular Agent at Victoria
January 25, 1923; appointed Consular Agent at Victoria
March 2, 1923.
Hoffman, Robert J.— First Lieutenant, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo May 2, 1923.
Hoffman, William Freeman.— Born in Staklstown, Pa.,
April 22, 1888; attended Marshall College (Ph. B.) 1908-1911;
University of Pennsylvania 1911-12; Universities of Berlin
and Leipsic 1912-13; Sorbonne March-June, 1919; employed
as high-school instructor 1913-14; instructor, Clairton, Pa.,
1915-16; clerk, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1916-17; served in the United
States Army, October 5, 1917, to July 23, 1919; appointed
Vice-Consul at Porto Alegre October 20, 1920.
Hogan, Marion Regina.— Bom in Washington, D. C; gradu-
ated from high school and a business college; clerk in the Navy
Department July, 1919, to October, 1922, and in the Bureau of
Internal Revenue, Income Tax Division, Treasury Depart-
ment, October. 1922, to October. 1923; transferred from the
Navy Department and appointed a clerk of class one in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\-ice rules, November i,
1923; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
*Hogg, Theodore Bosler.— Retired as Consul of class six,
assigned to Santo Domingo, October, 1922. Register of 1932.
* Hoke, Joseph T.— Retired as Consul at Windsor, Nova
Scotia, June, 1908. Register of 1913.
Holaday, Ross Edgar.— Born in Westboro, Ohio, July 14,
1869; home, Wilmington, Ohio; graduated from the Wilming-
ton (Ohio) high school; engaged in teaching; practiced law; was
a representative in the General Assembly of Ohio for two terms;
clerk in the Wilmington post office; appointed Consul at San-
tiago de Cuba June 6, 1902; Consul of class four by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class two February 22,
1915, and assigned to Manchester; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Holden, Edward Chauvenef.— Born in Washington, D. C,
June 22, 1877; graduated from the San Jose (Calif. )higli school
in 1894; attended the University of California two years and
the Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., two years; em-
ployed in various clerical positions in Indianapolis, Ind., and
Philadelphia, Pa., 1897-1905; held various positions on Bra-
zilian staff of a steamship company, 1905-1911; representative
of American manufacturers in Brazil; appointed Vice and
Deputy Consul at Para May 9, 191 2; Vice-Consul at Para by
act approved February 5, 1915.
♦Holder, Charles Adams. — Retired as foreign trade ad-
viser in the Department of State July, 1916. Register of 1915.
Holinger, Gertrude Wilhelmina.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y.;
graduate University of Pennsylvania (B. S.) 191S; taught
mathematics in a high school six months; dictaphone operator
and clerk three months; appointed a clerk at Si, 000 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, July 21, 1919;
class one July i, 1920; class two December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Holland, Philip.— Born in Murray, Calloway County, Ky.,
August 26, 1877; home, Jackson, Tenn.; attended public schools
for nine years and McFerrin College, Martin, Tenn., two years;
taught school one year; attended Southwestern Baptist Uiu-
versity three years; studied law in that university and gradu-
ated in 1902; practiced law in Tennessee, 1902-1910; appointed,
after examination (July 7, 1908), Consul at Puerto Plata March
7, 1910; Consul at Saltillo August 19, 191 1; Consul at Basel June
26, 1913; Consul of class six by act approved February s. iQis;
Consul of class five September 14, 1917; class four April 7, 1920;
class three June 4, 1920; assigned to Guatemala March 30,
1923; appointed Consul General of class four June s, 1924; Foreign
Sers'ice Oflicer of class three July i, 1924.
Holler, John Emanuel. — Bom in Chambersburg, Pa., April
23. 1899; home, Chambersburg; graduated from the Holbrook
School (Ossining, N. Y.) 191 7, and from Hamilton College
(A. B.) 1921; served in the United States Army October-
December, 1918; clerk in the American Consulate at Bilbao,
Spain, August, 1921, to September 29, 1922; appointed, after
examination (June 26, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three September 30, 1922: assigned to Bilbao October 7, 1922;
to Gibraltar December 18, 1922 ; to Venice Jime 2 , 1923 ; appointed
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Holllday, John.— Retired as marshal at Hankow, June, 1917.
Register of 1916.
Hollis, William Stanley.— Born in Chelsea, Mass., April 4,
1866; home, Boston, Mass.; educated in the Massachusetts
public schools and the United States Naval Academy; in the
Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, 1888-89; appointed clerk in
the Consulate at Cape Town July i, 1889; Consular Agent at
Port Natal March 18, 1891; Consul at Mozambique August 18,
1892; Consul at Lourenco Marques January 6, 1898, and while
holding that post was in charge of the Consulate at Pretoria
December 15, 1899, to February 10, 1900; appointed Consul at
Dundee May 31, 1909; Consul-General at Beirut December 19,
1910; Consul-General of class five by act approved February s,
1915; served under various details in Europe 1917; on leave of
absence in the United States and under orders of the Depart-
ment of State December, 191 7, to April 6, 1918; detailed to
London March 22, 1918; assigned to Lisbon July i, 1920; ap-
pointed Consul General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class three July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
145
♦Hollister, Joseph S.— Retired as Vice-Consul de carricre d
class three, assigned to Glasgow, July, 1920. Register of 1918.
*HoUoway, William R.— Retired as Consul-General at Hali-
fax July, 1907. Died in Indianai>olis, Ind., December 30, 1911.
Register of 1913.
Holmes, James Obelton.— Born May 15, 1879; appointed
laborer in the Department of State July 3, 1906; assistant mes-
senger December i, 1906.
Honaker, Samuel William. — Bom in Tampa, Fla., March 14,
1SS7; home, Plauo, Tex.; attended the public and high schools of
Piano, Tex., nine years. Bingham Preparatory School, Ash-
ville, N. C, two years and University of Virginia five years (A.
B., A. M. V, clerk in railroad office at Amarillo, Tex., 1909-ic; with
the La Plata Cold Storage Co., Puerto la Plata, Argentina, 1912-
13; clerk in the American Consulate-General at Rio de Janeiro
since March, 1913; appointed Deputy Consul-General at Rio
de Janeiro July 19. 1913; Vice-Consul at Rio de Janeiro Febru-
ary 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Johannesburg January 18, 1916;
appointed, after examination (June 18, 1917). Consul of class
eight February 19, 1918; on detail at Johannesburg; appointed
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed to Lourenco Mar-
ques, March 7, 1921; appointed Consul of class five November
21, 1921; class four March i, 1923; ordered to report to the De-
partment of State pending a new assignment May 6, 1922;
detailed to the Department of State November 7, 1922; to
Kingston, Jamaica, December 24, 1923; to Teheran June 23,
1924; appointed Foreign Ser\ice Officer of class five July i. 1924;
class four September 20, 1924; assigned to Smyrna October 30,
1924.
Honey, Robertson. — Born in Montevallo, Ala., August 17,
xS-o; home, Scarsdale, N. Y.; received his early education in
public and private schools of the United States, Germany, and
France; graduate of West Point, 1893, and University of Mary-
land (LL. B.I, 1896; second lieutenant of artillery 1893-1898;
major, Thirteenth Regiment, N. G., New York, 1900-1901;
deputy assistant district attorney. New York County, 1898-
19C0; practiced law in New York City 1900-1914; appointed,
after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at Madrid April
34, 1914; Consul of class eight by act approved February 5,
1915; appointed Consul of class seven July 14, 1916, and
assigned to Catania; assigned to Bristol August 31, 1918; ap-
pointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920; Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to Hamilton July 23, 1924.
Hood, Hugh Seneca.— Born in Ripley, Ohio; May 4. 1864;
educated in the public schools of Ohio; stenographer in various
offices in Chattanooga, Tenn., 1S90-1900; stenographer and clerk
for Port Elizabeth municipality, 1900-1909; clerk in consulate
at Durban since February 8. 1909; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul December 11, 1909; Vice-Consul by act approved Febru-
ary s, 1915.
Hood, Solomon Porter. — Born in Lancaster, Pa., July 30,
1856; home, Trenton, N. J.; graduated from Lincoln College
in 1876 and from its theological department in 1880; taught in
public schools four years; pastor of churches in Pennsylvania,
New York, and New Jersey and district superintendent in
New Jersey; principal, Beaufort Normal Industrial School;
missionary in Haiti four years; chief organizer emancipation
exhibition in celebration of fifty years of Negro freedom; ap-
pointed Minister Resident and Consul-General to Liberia
October 26, 1921.
Hoover, Charles Louis.— Born m Oskaloosa, Iowa, January
II, 1872; home, Bolivar, Mo.; graduated from high school in
1888; attended the University of Missouri; employed by a cattle
company in Idaho; assistant engineer in mining company until
1893; attended Cotner University. Lincoln, Nebr., lor two years;
school principalat Maple Creek, Nebr., and Edgeraont, S. Dak.,
until January, 189R; entered the Railway Mail Service in 1898;
served in the Post Office Departjnent and bureau of education
in the Philippine Islands; division superintendent of schools;
appointed, after examination (July 7, 1908), Consul at Madrid
June 4, 1909; Consul at Carlsbad August 22, 1912; Consul at
Prague July 17, 1914; Consul of class six by act approved Febru-
ary S. 1915; appointed Consul of class five August 3. 1916. and
assigned to Sao Paulo; appointed Consul of class four April 28,
1930; resigned May 14, 1920; reappointed Consul of class four
July 19, 1921; assigned to Danzig September 19. 1921; to Batavia
July 21, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924.
Hope, Leighton.— Bom in College Hill, Miss . August 29. 1870;
home, Oxford, Miss; educated in the i)ublic schools of Mississii>
pi and by private instructors; clerk in the Bureau of Pensions,
1890-1908; naturalization examiner, 1908-09; special agent, De-
partment of Justice, 1909-10; Chinese inspector, 1910-1913;
special examiner. Bureau of Pensions, 1913-1916; appointed
Vice-Consul at Hongkong, October 5, 1916; appointed Mte
examination (January 19, 1920). Consul of class seven, June 4,
1920, and detailed to Hongkong; detailed to Ensenada May 17,
1922; assigned to Ensenada October 2, 1923; appointed Foreign
Ser\'ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Hopper, George Dunlap.— Born in Stanford, Ky., July 13,
1889; home, Danville, Ky.; graduate of Centre College (A.B.)
1913, and Louisville Law School (LLB.), 1915; store manager
four years; principal of Munfordville schools, 1913-14; practiced
law in Danville, 1915-1917; appointed, after examination (June
18, 1917), Consul of class eight September 14, 1917; detailed to
the Consulate-General at Stockholm, November 27, 191 7; ap-
pointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; detailed to the
Department of State December 11, 1919; detailed to Rotterdam
June II, 1920; to Hamburg March 8, 1923; assigned to Dun-
kirk November 27, 1923; appointed Foreign Sen'ice Officer of
class seven July i, 1924.
Horn, Thomas Stanislaus. — Bom in Duquoin, 111., June 24,
1894; home, St. Louis, Mo.; graduated from the University of
St. Louis (LL. B.) 1919; employed as law clerk. Bureau of
Naturalization, six months; advertising manager one year;
correspondence clerk in a bank eighteen months; appointed,
after examination (January' 24, 1922), Vice-Cohsul de carriere
of class three May, 26, 1922; assigned to Kingston. Jamaica,
August 28, 1922; to Tampico May 12, 1923; appointed \'icc-Con-
sul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; assigned to Salina
Cruz May 22, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July 1, 1924; assigned to Saltillo December 24, 1924.
Home, James H. — Born in Marshall, N. Y., May 17, 1894;
attended public schools and high school to 1912; hotel employee
1912-1917; served in the United States Navy Decesiber, 1917,
to September, 1919; employee in the Navy Department Octo-
ber, 1919, to March, 1921; appointed an assistant messenger in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, March 16,
1921.
♦Homibrook, William Harrison.— Retired as Minister to Siajn
November, 1916. Register of 1915.
*Horton, George. — * * * Appointed Foreign Ser\'ice offi-
cer of class three July i. 1924. Retired from active service as
Consul General at Budapest October, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Hosmer, Charles Bridgham. — Born in Hudson, Mass., July
15, 1SS9; home, Lewiston. Me.: graduated fiom Hudson (Mass).
High School 1907; the University of Maine (LL. B.; 1911; granted
a certificate of graduation by Havana University Diplomatic
and Consular Seminary, 1922; engaged in the general practice of
law at Lewiston, Me., 1911-1918; secretary to a Congressman of
the Sixty-fifth Congress; appointed AMce-Consul at Habana Janu-
ary 9. 1919; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 24, 1920, and assigned
to Habana; appointed \'ice-Coiisul de carritre of class two,
November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; assigned to Santo
Domingo December 22, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven
March 1, 1923; assigned to Santo Domingo March 28, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924; class
seven August 8, 1924.
♦Hostetter, Louis. — Retired as Consul of class nine, unas-
signed, October, 1917. Register of 1916.
•Hotchkiss, E. Scott.— Retired as Consul at Calgary Septem-
ber, 1913. Register of 1913.
* Hotschick, George M.— Died in Chicago, 111 , July u, 1911,
while Consul at Trieste. Register of 1913.
Houck, Fred Henry. — Bom in Washington, D. C, August 19,
1890; educated in the public schools. Success School, and the
Temple School of Washington, D. C; employed in the United
States navy yard in Washington, D. C. 1907-1913; repre-
sentative for a life insurance company 1913-1917: served as an
Army field clerk 191 7-192 1; clerk in the American Consulate
at Hamburg July, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Hamburg
April 24, 1922; at Ghent May 27, 1924.
Hough, Frances Rozetta. — Born in Cleveland, Ohio; educated
in a private school of Cleveland and in public schools and
Mount Vernon Institute of Washington, D. C; served as a
private secretary for three years: appointed clerk in the Office
of the Superintendent of Public Documents, Government
Printing Office. June, 1899; transferred to the Department ol
State as clerk class one May 13, 1907; appointed clerk class three
June 31, to be effective July i. 1916; class four December 31,
1919, effective January 1. 1920; at $2,100 July i, 1924-
Houghton, Alanson B.— Bora in Cambridge, Mass., Octo-
ber 10, 1863; home, Coming, N. Y.; graduated from Harvard
146
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
University (A. B.) 1886, and pursued postgraduate courses at
Gottingen, Berlin, and Paris; glass manufacturer; officer of
coal and life insurance companies; served as president Coming
Board of Education, and as president board of religious educa-
tion, western Xew York diocese. Episcopal Church; trustee
Hobart College and St. Stephens College; Member House of
Representatives 1919-1932; appointed Ambassador Extraor-
dinary- and Plenipotentiary to Germany February 10, 1922.
Houlahan, Peter Joseph. — Born in Conshohocken, Pa.,
August 17, 1891; attended St. Matthew's Parochial School,
Conshohocken, eight years; business college, Norristown, one
year; stenographer and office assistant in the foreign depart-
ment of the Adams Express Co., New York, three and one-half
years; with a real estate firm in Philadelphia three years;
secretary to general superintendent, Camp Dix, Wrightstown,
N. J., seven months; appointed Vice-Consul at Buenos Aires
luly 3. 191S.
♦Howard, Henry Clay.— Retired as Minister to Peru Sep-
tember, 1913. Register of 1913.
Howard, Robert Flournoy.— Bom in Macon, Ga., May 22,
1S99; home, Macon; attended grade and high schools of Geor-
gia, and the Georgia School of Technology two years; member
of a college endowment publicity staff one year; clerk in the
American Consulate at Milan June i, 1921, to May 25, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul at Milan May 26, 1922; appointed, after
examination (June 26, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three June 21, 1923, and assigned to JSIilan; assigned to London
June 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924.
*Howe, Church.— Retired as Consul at Manchester October,
1913. Register of 1913.
Howe, Ralph Merwin.— Born in Washington, D.C., October
14, 1899; attended Business High School three years; employed
as a clerk 1916-1918; served in the United States Marine Corps
July, 1918, to December, 1919; appointed a temporary clerk
at $960 in the Department of State February 17, 1919; at $1,140
February i, 1920; at $1,140, under Civil Service rules, July r,
1920; class one August 16, 1921; at Si,6So July i, 1924.
*Howe, William Stuart.— Retired as Interpreter, also Vice-
Consul. at Hankow December, 1917. Register of 1917.
Howell, J. Morion.— Bora in Uuiopolis, Ohio, March 17,
1863; home, Dayton, Ohio; graduated (M. D.) 18S5 from Sterling
Medical College, now the medical school of Ohio State Univer-
sity; studied also in Europe; received degree of A. M. from
Northwestern University 1896; (LL. D.) Otterbein University
1922: practiced his profession in Dayton 1885-1921; served as
president United States Board of Examining Surgeons; mem-
ber State Board o( Health of Ohio; author; appointed Agent
and Consul-General at Cairo, October 7, 1921; Envoy Extraor-
dinary and Minister Plenipotentiatry to Egypt June 21, 1922.
Howell, jr., Williamson Smith.— Born in Bryan, Tex., No-
vember 10. 1890; home, San Antonio, Tex.; attended private
schools and studied one year in the University of Texas, two
years in a law office; practiced law in San Antonio 1912-1916;
appointed, alter examination (April 10, 1916), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four August 3, 1916; assigned to San
Jose August 10, 1916; unassigned from November 10, 1916; ap-
pointed, temporarily, in the Department of State November 8,
1917; clerk in the American Embassy at London, temporarily,
December i, 1917; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class
four May 3, 1918; assigned to London July 5, 1918; appointed
Secretary of class three December 20, 1919; assigned to Prague.
June 14, 1920; to Habana July 13, 1922; appointed Secretary of
class two December 4, 1922; assigned to Panama March 4, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924; as-
signed as First Secretary of Legation at Warsaw July 17,
1924.
♦Howells, Joseph A.— Retired as Consul at Turks Island July,
1912. Died in Auburndale, Fla, August 10, 1912. Register of
IQ13.
Howze, Eoline. — Born in Winona, Miss.; attended public
schools in Winona and one year each at Centenary College,
Cleveland, Tcnn., Ward Seminary, Nashville, and Univer-
sity of Missis.sippi; attended kindergarten summer school at
Knoxville; employed by various concerns in Memphis 1913-
1921; appointed a clerk at Si. 000 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, November 31, 1921; at $1,080 Sep-
tember I, 1922; at $1,140 October 16, i922;class oneDecember3o,
192J, effective January i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Hovt, Edna K. — Born in Coldwater, Mich.; college education;
appointed clerk class one in the Department of State, under
Executive order, July i, 1904; class two, October i, 1918; at$i,6So
July I, 1924.
Hoyt, Elton Maynard.— Bora in South Norwalk, Conn.;
March 30, 1900; graduated from Norwalk High School and
attended University Preparatory School (Charleston, S. C.)
191 7-18; employed as a clerk one year; scr\'ed in the United
States Army April, 1919, to February, 1920; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, March-July, 1923;
appointed Vice-Consul at Yarmouth July 18, 1923; at Charlotte-
town October 13, 1924.
Hoyt, Ira Ford.— Born in South Norwalk, Conn., July 2,
1876; high-school education; member of the general assembly
of Connecticut 1907-0S; commissioner of charities, Derby, Conn.,
1908; connected in various capacities with theaters in Con-
necticut and New York City, 1895-1918; appointed, tempora-
rily, at $a,ooo, in the Department of State, June 17, 1918; at
$2,500, October i, 1918; appointed Passport Agent in the Pass-
port Bureau of the Department of State in New York City at
$2,000 August 12, 1919; at $3,000 June 18, effective July i, 1921.
Huddle, Jerome Klahr.— Born in Seneca County, Ohio, March
25, 1891; home. Fort Recovery, Ohio; attended Heidelberg Uni-
versity, Tiffin, Ohio, three years; newspaper reporter 1907-0?;
principal of high schools at Bloomville and Fort Recovery;
Ohio, 1910-1914; employed during summer of 1912 by Goodyear
Tire and Rubber Co., Akron, Ohio, and during summer of 1914
as teacher in summer school at Heidelberg University; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Consular Assist-
ant March 24, 1915; on detail in the Department of State; de-
tailed for duty with the American Commission to Negotiate
Peace, November 30, 1918; appointed Consul of class seven Sep-
tember 5, 1919; detailed to Paris October 15, 1919; to Berlin
February 9, 1920; appointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920;
detailed to Warsaw, September 28, 1920; to Hamburg, Septem-
ber 20, 1921; appointed Consul of class five November 19. 1921;
class four March 1, 1923; detailed to the Department of State
April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924; class four August 8, 1924.
Huddleston, John Fletcher.- Bom in Forsyth, Ga., July 19,
1892; home, Cleveland, Ohio; attended high school and the
University of Florida, 1910-1913; employed as messenger by a
congressional committee, 1913-1916; served in the United States
Navy, 1916-1920, retiring with the rank of lieutenant; engaged
in grocery business, 1920-21, and employed as advertising
salesman, 1921-1923; appointed, after examination (June 25,
1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three, October 6, 1923;
assigned to Milan, November 19, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser-
vice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Hudson, Joel Carrington. — Bora in Ravenden, Ark., Sep-
tember 4, 1899; home, St. Louis, Mo.; attended Blackburn
College, 1916-17, the University of Grenoble three months,
and graduated from Washington University (B. S.), 1923;
served in the United States Army, 191 7-1919; appointed, after
examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three, February 26, 1923; assigned to Wellington, April
27, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924-
*Huggins. Harold Clarkson.— Retired as Interpreter, also
Vice-Consul, at Yokohama April, 1917. Register of 1916.
Hughes, Charles Evans.— Born in Glens Falls, N. Y., April
II, 1S52; attended Colgate University 1876-1878; (A. B.) Brown
University 1S81. (A. J.I.) 1884; (LL. B.) Columbia University
1884; (LL. D.) Brown 1906; Columbia, Knox, and Lafayette
1907; Union and Colgate 1908; George Washington 1909; Wil-
liams College, Harvard University, and University of Penn-
sylvania 1910; Yale University 1915: University of Michigan
1922; Dartmouth, 1923; Princeton, Amherst, University of Brus-
sels, University of Louvain, and University of the City of New
York, 1924; admitted to New York bar 1SS4; prize fellowship Col-
umbia Law School 1MS4-18S7; practiced law in New York 1S84-
1891, 1893-1906; professor of law 1891-1893, special lecturer 1893-
1895, Cornell University; special lecturer. New York Law
School, 1893-1900; counsel Stevens gas committee (New York
Legislature) 1905; counsel Armstrong insurance committee
(New York Legislature) 1905-06; special assistant to Attorney
General, coal investigation, 1906; nominated for mayor of
New York by Republican convention 1905, but declined;
elected governor of New York lor two tenns (1907-0S and 1909-
10); resigned October 6, 1910; appointed Associate Justice,
United States Supreme Court, rfdy 2, 1910, and assumed
duties October 10, 1910; nominated for President of the United
States by the Republican National Convention at Chicago
June 10, 1916, and resigned from the Supreme Court on the
same day; practiced law in New York 1917-1921; chairman
district board of draft appeals. New York City, 1917-18; special
assistant to the Attorney General in charge of aircraft inquiry
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
147
1918; appointed Secretary of State March 5, 1921; commissioned
by the President October 24, 1921, Commissioner Plenipoten-
tiary, with the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary, to serve as a
member of the commission to represent the Government of the
United States at the Conference on the Limitation of Arma-
ment, Washington; Chairman of the United States-Panama
Commission to negotiate an arrangement to take the place of
the Taft Agreement February 11, 1924-
Hughes, James J.— Born in South Boston. JIass., February
36, 1879; attended public schools and a business college; nurse
J895-1913; salesman for New York concern 1913-1918; clerk in
Customs Service, New York City, May, 1918, to July, 1919;
appointed in the Passport Bureau of the Department of State
in New York City at $1,400, August 27, 1919; at $1,200, under
Civil Service rules. May 20, 1920; at $1,400 April i, 1921; assistant
Passport Agent at $2,000 March i, 1924; at $2,300 July i, 1924.
Hukill, George Raymond. — Bom in Middletown, Del.-
February 2, 1S93; home, Middletown; attended high school
1907-1909, Conway Hall, Carlisle, Pa., 1909-1911, and Lehigh
University 1911-1913; graduated from Yale University (Ph. B.)
1916; served in the United States Army 1917-18, retiring
with the rank of second lieutenant; engaged in handling estate
and traveling 191S-1923; appointed, after examination (Jan-
uary 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carricre of class three February
26, 1923; assigned to Batavia April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924-
Hull, Ralph Moody.— Bom near Frankford, W. Va., April 3
1899; attended high school 1920-1922; public-school teacher
1917-1923; clerk to coimty superintendent of schools of Green-
brier County (\V. Va.) July, 1923. to December, 1924; appointed
a clerk at $1,320 in the Department? of State, under Civil Service
rules, December 16, 1924.
* Hull, Willard Basherer. — Retired as Interpreter, also ViceJ
Consul-General, at Shanghai December, 1909. Register o
1913-
HuUey, Benjamin Mayham.— Bom in Lewisburg, Pa., June
28, 189S; home, De Laud, Fla.; graduated from Stetson College
of Liberal Arts (A. B.) 1917, Harvard Graduate School (A. I>I.)
19 19, Oxford University (B. A.) 1921; professor of history. Stetson
Universitx-, 1922-1924; appointed, after examination (June
23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, also Vice Consul
of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Stockholm November 8,
1924.
Hunsaker, J. C. — Commander, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Assistant Naval Attache at London, also at Paris,
Berlin, Rome, and The Hague, November 15, 1923.
* Hunt, George Wylie Paul.— Retired as Envoy Extraor*
dinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Siam October, 1921
Register of 1922.
Hunt, Louis. — Bom in Conneaut, Ohio, October 15, 1894;
grade-school education; served in the United States Navy
February 3, 1914, to January 18, 191S; clerk in New York City
and Cleveland, Ohio, one year, and conducted restaurant
business one year; clerk in the post office, Cleveland, Septem-
ber, 1922, to January', 1923; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service mlcs, January 16
1923; at $1,000, I^Iay i, 1923; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Hunt, William Henry.— Born in Nashville, Tenn., June 28,
1869; home. New York City; educated at Lawrence Academy,
Groton, Mass., and Williams College, Williamstown; was em-
ployed in New York City for a time and later as clerk in the
American Consulate at Tamatave; appointed Vice-Consul at
Tamatave IMarch 20, 1899; Consul August 23, 1901; Consul at
St. Etienne November i, 1906; Consul of class eight by act ap-
proved February s, 1915; appointed Consul of class six June 4,
1920; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Hunter, B. L. — Lieutenant, United States Navy; assigned to
duty as Language Officer at Tokyo August 25, 1924.
* Hunter, William Dulany. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
assigned to Nice, December, 1920. Died in Washington, D. C.
December 11, 1923. Register of 1918.
Hurd, Alan Thomas. — Bom in Waterloo. Iowa, April 14, 1895;
home, Btrkt ley, Calif.; high-school graduate; attended junior
college, vSan Diego, Calif., two years; University of Califomia
three years; business night school, one year; served in the United
States Army, 1917-1919; clerk in the American Consulate, Bir-
mingham. 1921-22; appointed \'ice-Consul at Birmingham April
6, 1922; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), Vice
Consul de carricre of class three October 6, 1923; assigned to
Birmingham October 12, 1923; to Florence December 13, 1923;
appointed Foreign Scr\-ice Officer, imclassified, July i, 1924.
Hurley, John P. — Born in New York City, September 15, 1878:
home, Brookh-n, N. Y.; attended St. Kieran's College (Ireland;
1S94-1901; Cornell University (C. E.) 1907; employed as clerk
1902-03; as civil engineerby the city of New York on the Catskill
Aqueduct 1903-1909; on highway construction in Brooklj-n
1909-1914: served in the National Guard 1909-1917; in the United
States Army as captain 1917-1919; appointed, after examination
(June 18, 1917). Consul of class eight August 15, 1919; dasj seven
December 18, 1919; assigned to Reval September 20. 1919; to
Riga June 23, 1920, appointed Consul of class six November
23, 1921; reassigned to Riga, Latvia, July 29, 1922; appoiutcd
Consul of class five December 19, 1923; Foreijm Ser\Mcc Officer of
class six July i. 1924.
Huraey, Leo Bernard. — Bom in Washington, D. C, May 20.
1897; public-school education; employed in various capacities
lour years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at Si,o2o, in the
Department of State September i6, 1918; clerk at $1,000. under
Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; at $i,oSo November 3,
1922; at $1,140 December 30, 1922, effective January 1, 1923;
class one October i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Hurst, Carlton. — Born in Crefeld, Germany, of American
parents, November 22, i894;-home, Washington, D. C; edu-
cated in schools in Maryland, Germany, France, Connecticut,
and at Wesleyan University; appointed clerk in the American
Consulate-General at Barcelona, !March 21, 1914; in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Lyon July, 1915; Vice-Consul at Madrid
October 25, 1916; at Santander July 23, 1917; at Almeria Septem-
ber, 28, 1917; Vice-Consul at Seville October 7, 1918; at Cadiz
February 18, 1919: at Seville May 14, 1919; at Cadiz January
3, 1920; appointed, after examination (June 24, 1918), Con-
sular Assistant October 21, 1920; Vice-Consul at San Salvador
April 12, 192 1 ; detailed to Bremen September 20, 192 1; ap-
pointed Vice Consul de carriere of class three November 17,
1921, and assigned to Bremen; appointed Vice Consul de
carriL-re of class two February 26, 1923; assigned to Bremer-
haven July 16, 1923; to Bremen August i, 1923; appointed For-
eign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Bremerhaven August 18, 1924.
Hurst, Carlton Bailey. — Bom in Bremen, Germany, of Amer-
ican parents, August 16, 1867; home, Washington, D.C.; attended
Phillips Exeter Academy, Harvard College, and graduaetd
from the University of Tubingen, Germany (^I. A. and Ph. D.)
1891; appointed Consul at Catania July 22, 1892; Consul at
Crefeld September 23. 1S93; Consul at Prague iMarch 22, 1895;
Consul-General at Vienna June 8, 1897; resigned March 27, 1903;
appointed Consul at La Guaira October 19, 1904; Consul at
Plaucn August 23, 1905; Consul at Lyon December 14, 1910;
Consul-General at Barceiona November 24, 1913; Consul-
General of class four by act approved February 5, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul-General of class three June 4, 1920; assigned
to Habana August 19, 1920; appointed Consul General of class
two March i, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class one July i,
1924.
Husar, Leonard Goodwin. — Bom in San Francisco. Calif.,
September 23, 1SS9; home, Los Angeles. Calif.; attended an
American preparatory school in Dresden 1903-1906; Stanford
University 1906-190S; graduated from the University of South-
cm California (LL. B.) 1912; practiced law in Los Angeles
1912-1922; assistant prosecuting attorney of Los Angeles;
served in the United States Army 1917-1S: appointed dis-
trict attorney of the United States Court for China, February
21, 1922.
Huston, Jay Calvin.— Born in Knox, Ind., July 20, 1888;
home, Oakland, Calif.; attended Leland Stanford, jr.. Univer-
sity three years and graduated from the University ol California
(B. L.). 1914; employed as specialty salesman, 1910-11; play-
ground supervisor in Oakland, Calif., while attending college;
appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Student In-
terpreter in China March 24, 1915; Vice-Consul at Nanking
June 26, 1917; Vice-Consul at Hankow October 25, 1917; Vicc-
Consul and Interpreter at Nanking November i, 1917; Vice-
Consul and Interpreter at Hankow November 24, 191 7; at Nan-
king March 8, 1919; at Hankow December 3, 1919; at Canton
January 28, 1922; at Tientsin May 10, 1922; appointed Consul
of class six June 22, 1922; remained at Tientsin on detail; ap-
pointed Consul of class five June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class six July i. 1924; detailed to Hankow August 8, 1924.
* Hutchinson, Norman.— Retired as Secretary of Legation
and Consul-General to Rouraania and Serbia and Secretary
of the Diplomatic Agency in Bulgaria September, 1909. Reg-
ister of 1913.
Hutchinson, Wallace C— Bom in Pomfret, Vt., July 30,
1855; attended Vermont Normal School four years; employed
by a commercial house in New York twelve years; manager of
a plantation in Honduras; appointed Consular .\gcnt at Tela
148
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
April 12, 190s; retired February 19, 1914; appointed Consular
Agent at Puerto Barrios, September 25, 1917; Vice-Consul at
Puerto Barrios January 8, 1919.
Hyde, Charles Cheney.— Bom in Chicago, III., May 22, 1873;
graduated from Yale University (A. B.) J893, (A. M.) 1898;
Har\'ard University (LL. B.J 1898; Northwestern University
(LL. D.) 1924; practiced law in Chicago 1898-1923, and in
Washington, I). C, 1920-1923; lecturer on diplomacy in
Northwestern University Law School 1899, and professor of
law 1909-1925; lecturer on international law at Yale Uni-
versity 1908; author of "International Law Chiefly as In-
terpreted and Applied by the United States," Boston, 1922;
member of the staff of the American Journal of International
Law; appointed Solicitor for the Department of State Feb-
ruary 6, 1923.
Hyde, fdward. — Born in Coimty Fermanagh, Ireland, Sep-
tember 17, 1S64; educated in the ordinary schools of London,
England: employed as chief of importing agency, Chile, twenty-
five years; appointed Consular Agent at Talcahuano April 26,
1921.
Hynson, Frances L.— Bom in Baltimore, jVId.; attended high
school four years; clerk in the Treasury Department five and
one-half years; transferred from the Treasury Department and
appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, August 12, 1924.
*Iddings, Lewis Morris.— Retired as Agent and Consul-
General at Cairo March ,1910. Died in Rome December 26,
1921. Register of 1913.
*Ide, Henry Clay.— Retired as Minister to Spain August,
1913. Died at St. Johnsbury, Vt., June 12, 1921. Register of
191.3.
Ifft, George Nicolas.— Bom in Butler County, Pa., January
27, i86s; home, Pocatello, Idaho; attended the public schools
and Witherspoon Institute, Butler, Pa.; graduated from
Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa., and attended
the University of Leipzig; employed as reporter on Pittsburgh,
Chicago, Denver, and Salt Lake City newspapers; editor of the
Pocatello (Idaho) Tribune for twelve years; appointed, after
examination (May 15, 1905), Consul at Chatham May 19. 1905;
Consul at Annaberg June 22, 1906; Consul at Warsaw June 10,
1908; Consul at Nuremberg January 21, 1909; Consul at St. Gall
February 6, 1914; Consul of class four by act approved Febru-
ary s, 1915; assigned to Stuttgart July 8, 1916; detailed to the
Consulate General at Winnipeg and was in charge May 21,
1917, to July 28, 1917; assigned to Vardo, Norway, Septem-
ber s. 1917; on detail at Christiania November 24, r9i7, to May
26, 1918; detailed to Christiansand June 15, 1918; assigned to
Bergen March 15, 1919; to Nancy January 12, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
♦IngersoU, George Pratt.— Retired as Minister to Siam June,
1918. Register of 1917.
Ingram, Augustus Eugenio.— Born in Philadelphia. Pa., May
9, 1867; home, Los Angeles, Calif.; educated at Shrewsbury
School, England, and by a tutor; in law office in Los Angeles
five years; appointed clerk, under Civil Service rules, in the
Department of Agriculture, April 12, 189S; transferred to the
Department of State March 31, 1900, and detailed for duty
in the office of the Third Assistant Secretary of State; ap-
pointed, after examination (May 10, 1902), Consular Clerk
May 15, 1902; Deputy Consul-General at Paris December
13. 1902; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Paris July 20,
1903; retired as Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Paris
December, 1903; assigned to duty in the Consulate-General
at Antwerp December, 1903; appointed Vice-Consul at
Nottingham June 17, 1904; Vice-Consul General at Stockholm
June 8, 1905; in charge of the Consulate-General at Stockholm
from June 16, to August 16, 1905; appointed Vice-Consul at
Nottingham August i, 1905; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Paris December 22, 1905; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Berlin July 7, 1906; retired as Vice and Deputy Consul-Gen-
eral at Berlin January, 1907; assigned to duty in the Consulate-
General at Montreal January, 1907; appointed Consul at War-
saw March 30, 1907. but did not serve; assigned to duty in the
Department of State at Washington June, 1907; appointid
Consul at Calais August 15, 1907, but did not serve; Consular
Assistant July i, 1908; Consul at Bradford June 2, 1909; Consul
of class six by act approved February 5. 1915; appointed Consul
of class four March 2, 1915; class three September s, 1919; as-
signed to Havre July i, 1920; appointed Consul-General of class
four November j^. 1021: deta-led to the Department of State
April 4, 1923; assigined to Vancouver April i, 1924; appointed
Foreign Scr\-ice Officer of class three July i, 1924.
* Ingram, Donald McChesney.— Retired as a Consular As-
sistant, also Vice-Consul at Goteborg, October, 1920. Register
of 1918.
Ives, Ernest Linwood.— Boru in Norfolk, Va., October 17,
1887; home, Norfolk; attended public schools eight years, Nor-
folk Academy tv\o years, Virginia Military Institute one year,
and William and Mary College two years; appointed Vice and
Deputy Consul at Mannheim June 7, 1909; Vice and Deputy
Consul atMagdeburg November 17, 1910; Vice and Deputy Con-
sul-General at Frankfort-on-the-Main March 4, 1914; Vice-Con-
sul at Frankfort-on-the-Main February 6, 191 5; Vice-Con-sul at
Cologne June 11, 1915; reappointed Vice-Consul at Frankfort-on-
the-Main December 4, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Erfurt
April i, 1916; \'ice-Consul at Breslau June i, 1916; reappointed
Vice-Consul at Frankfort-on-the-Main October 19, 1916; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Budapest January 19, 1917; appointed,
after examination (January 19, 1914), Consular Assistant April
21, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Paris May 5, 191 7; Vice-Consul
at Nantes July 17, 191 7; Vice-Consul at Paris March 8, 1918;
appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 19 19, and re-
mained at Paris; appointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920;
class five November 19, 1921; class four March i, 1923; assigned
to Alexandria August 17, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Ives, John Reno.— Bom in Chicago, 111., January i, 1898;
home, Ann Arbor, Mich.; graduated from high school 1916, and
attended the University of Michigan 1916-1921; salesman for a
private concern 1921-1923; appointed, after examination (June
23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, also Vice-Consul
of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Hamburg October 21,
1924.
Jackson, Alfred Lincoln. — Born September i, 1877; appointed
an assistant messenger in the Department of State June 28, to
be effective July i, 1916; resigned July 31, 1918; appointed,
temporarily, at $720, October 17, 1918; reinstated as assistant
messenger November 14, 1918.
Jackson, Carlton.— Bom in Eaglesville, Tenn., June 26, 1880;
graduated from the University of Nashville (A. B._) 1898;
attended Vanderbilt and Cokunbia Universities; with an
insurance company 1898-1904; National Bureau of Education
at Nashville 1904-1911; manager for an international fmit com-
pany 19H-1917; with a company securing charcoal for gas
masks 191 7-18; served in United States Army 1918, retiring
with the rank of First Lieutenant; appointed Trade Commis-
sioner September, 1919, and assigned to Lima; Commercial
Attache at Mexico November, 1920; represented a trade cor-
poration during 1922; appointed Trade Commissioner at Bogota
Februari' 16, 1923; Commercial Attache at Bogota July 28, 1924;
at Habana December 27, 1924.
Jackson, Dorothy. — Bom in Bayonne, N. J.; completed grade
schools and attended high school and business college one year
each; employed by the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.
two years; appointed a telephone switchboard operator at
$720 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
November 6, 1922; position allocated to C. A. F. one at $1,140
July I, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,140 October 27, 1924.
♦Jackson, George H. — Retired as Consul at Cognac January,
1914. Register of 1913.
Jackson, Irving. — Bom April 3, 1877: messenger with the
Ruisian-Japanese Peace Conference, September-October, 1905;
appointed a messenger in the Department of State October 16,
1905: laborer July 2, 1906; assistant messenger January 2, 1907;
messenger July i, 1907; assistant messenger July 13, 1909; mes-
senger June 22, to be effective July i, 1916.
Jackson, Jesse B.— Bom in Paulding, Ohio, November 19,
1871; home, Paulding; educated in the public schools of Pauld-
ing; served in Spanish-American War; enrolling clerk, Ohio
House of Representatives, 1900-1901; employed in insurance
and real-estate business; appointed, after examination (March
9, 1905), Consul at Alexandretta March 17, 1905; Consul at
Aleppo Jime 10, 1908; Consul of class seven by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six July 12, 1916; on
detail, temporarily, in the Department of State November 24,
1917, to October, 1918; detailed to Cairo October 4, 1918; ordered
to return to Aleppo March 4, 1919; appointed Consul of class
five September s, 1919; class four June 4, 1920; assigned to
Leghorn April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class five July i, 1924.
* Jackson, John Brlnckerhoff.- Retired as Special Agent ot
the Department of State in the American Embassy at Berlin,
1917. Died at Montreaux, Switzerland, Dect.^nber 20, 1920.
Register of 1916.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
149
Jackson, William Isaac— Born in Waterloo. III., July 6,
1S94; home, Madison, 111.; attended high school four years;
business college one year; George Washington University
1920; a school of accountancy four months; employed in a
clerical capacity in a foundry at East St. Louis, 111.; law clerk
and assistant chief, capital stock section. Treasury Depart-
ment, 1914-1917; accountant and investigator. Committee on
Expenditures of tlie War Department, 1919-20; served in the
United States Army May 1917, to May 1919, first lieutenant;
appointed \'ice-ConsuI at Bahia April 17, 1920; appointed after
examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three October 26, 1921; assigiied to Bahia November 14, 192 1;
appointed \'ice-Consul de carriere of class two February 26, 1923;
assigned to Montreal April 27, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere ol class one November 23, 1923; Consul of class seven
June 3. 1924; Foreign Service Otiicer of class eight July i, 1924.
Jacobs, Joseph Earle.— Born in Johnston, S. C, October 31,
1893: home, Johnston; graduate of College of Charleston (A.B )
1913; teacher in high school of Johnston and manager and book-
keeper in a mercantile business 1913-1915: appointed, after
exaAnination (August 30, 1915), Student Interpreter in Turkey
October 15, 1915; did not proceed to Constantinople; appointed
Student Interpreter in China November 5, 1915; Vice-Consul
at Foochow June 26, 1917; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at
Shanghai April 15, 1918; designated to exercise judicial author-
ity and jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases August 25, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six November 19, 192 1; remained
at Shanghai, on detail; designated senior assessor May 10,
1923; detailed to the Department of State December 22, 1922,
for a period not to exceed three months from February i, 1923;
appointed Consul of class five December 19, 1923; Foreign
Service (jfticer of class six July i, 1924.
Jacobson, Simon Bertrand. — Born in New York City Novem-
ber 26, 1S91; home, Brooklyn; graduate of Cornell University
(B. S.) 19 14; employed as an investigator of labor conditions
in New York; appointed, after examination (January 35,
1915), Consular Assistant August 30, 1916; assumed duties
under this appointment May 9, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul
at Bordeaux May 10, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Bordeaux October
22, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 24,
1920; class one November 17, 192 1; assigned to Alexandria
May 16, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven June 22, 1922;
on detail at Cairo, temporarily, August 28 to September 30,
1922; ordered to Washington September 21, 1923; detailed to
Christiania January 2, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
Jaeckel, Theodore. — Born in New York City December 39,
1882; home. New York City; graduate of Williams College
(A. B.) 1904; took a year's course at Harvard; graduate of
New York Law School (LL. B.) 1908; practiced law in New
York, 1909-1914; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1914), Consul at Maskat April 34, 1914, but did not proceed to
his post; appointed Consul at Stavanger July 17, 1914; Consul
of class nine by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed
Consul of class eight February 32, 19 1 5, and assigned to Stettin ;
to the Department of State May 15, 1917; appointed Consul
of class seven September 14. 1917; assigned to Bordeaux March
15, 1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; class
five June 4, 1920; class four November 23, 1921; class three
March i. 1923; assigned to Hamburg April 28, 1923; appointed
Consul General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class three July i, 1924; assigned to Warsaw October 23, 1924.
James, Jules. — Lieutenant commander. United States Navy;
assigned to duty as Assistant Naval Attache at Paris April 26,
1923; also at Lisbon and Madrid June 30, 1924.
James, William George.— Bom in Neath, South Wales,
Great Britain, July 15, 1891; educated in the public and Neath
intermediate schools of South Wales; attended the Allegheny
High School and DufT's Business College of Pittsburgh, Pa.;
student Emerson Institute, Washington. D. C; clerk in War
Department, Adjutant General's Ofhcc 1918-19; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, at $900. in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, March 27, 1922; appointment expired Sep-
tember 26. 1923; reappointed a clerk at $1,000 October 18, 1922;
at $i,ioo October i, 1923; class one March i, 1924; at $1,440 July
I, 1924.
Jameson, Jay Paul.— Born in Washington, D. C, November
3, 1883; home. Washington; attended public and private
schools; graduate of Dickinson College (Ph. B.) 1907. (A. M.)
1916; stenographer and typewriter 1903; appointed, after ex-
amination (August 4, 1907). Student Interpreter in China Au-
gust 27. 1907; appointed Deputy Consul-General and Interpre-
ter at Shanghai November i. 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General April 25, 1910; served as Junior Assessor, Mixed Court.
Shanghai; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at
Hankow December 2. 1911; Consul at Anlung May s. 1914;
Consul of class eight by act approved February 5. 1915; Consul
of class six June 8, 1915. and assigned to Nanking; detailed for
special duty in Russia and Siberia May i. 1918; appointed
Consul of class five September s, 1919; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State June 12. 1920; expert assistant, Conference on
the Limitation of Armament, November 3, 1921; appointed
Consul of class four November 23, 1921; resigned March 15,
1922; appointed a drafting oflicer at 83.500 in the Departmeiit
of State March 16, 1923; at $3,800 July i, 1924.
* Janes, Henry L.— Retired as Assistant Chief of Dirision
of Latin-American Affairs, Department of State, December
13, 1912. Register of 1913.
Jarvis, Robert Yelverton.— Born in Clay City. Ky ., November
5. 1893; home, Los Angeles. Calif.; attended Princeton Uni-
versity 1911-1913. University of Louisville Law School
1915-16. and New York Law School 1916-17; employed with
a lumber company in Canada; clerk in freight office; law clerk;
served as second lieutenant, United States Army, August, 1917,
to December, 1918; practiced law in Los Angeles February-
June. 1919; with a silver mines company in Arizona 1919-1921;
appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921). Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three October 26, 1921; assigned to Warsaw
December 14, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two February 26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923; Consul of
class seven June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I. 1924.
Jay, Peter Augustus.— Born in Newport. R. I., August 23.
1877; home. Newport; attended Eton College. England,*
five years and graduated from Harvard University (A. B.)
1900; in business in New York in 1901-03; appointed Third Sec-
retary of the Embassy at Paris October 13. 1903; Second
Secretary of the Legation at Constantinople June 5. 1903; Sec-
retary of the Legation September 8, 1903; Secretary of the
Embassy at Constantinople June 28. 1906; Secretary of the
Embassy at Tokyo June 21, 1907; Agent and Consul-General
at Cairo December 21, 1909; retired October. 1913; appointed
Secretary of the Embassy at Rome November 29. 1913; Sec-
retary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved
February 5, 1915; designated and assigned as Counselor of the
Embassy at Rome July 17, 1916; appointed Envoy Extraordi-
nary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Salvador May 4. 1930.
to Rumania April i8, 1921.
♦Jefferson, Benjamin Lafayette. — Retired as Minister to
Nicaragua October, 1921. Register of 1918.
* Jeflery, Robert Emmett.— Retired as Minister to Uruguay
June, 192 1. Register of 1918.
Jenkins, Douglas.— Born in Adams Run, S. C, February 6,
1880; home. Greenville, S. C; attended private school and
graduated from the Porter Military Academy. Charleston,
S. C, in 1897; member of the Sumter Guards at Charleston;
was employed as clerk and law student, 1897-1901; admitted
to the bar in May. 1901; law clerk and practicing attorney,
X901-1903; fjecame a reporter on the Greenville News in 1903.
and later became city editor; appointed, after examination
(April 7, 1908). Consul at St. Pierre June 22. 1908; Consul at
Goteborg March 8. 1913; Consul at Riga November 24, 1913;
Consul of class seven by act approved Fel)ruary 5. 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class six March 3, 1915; detailed to Harbin
August 16, 1918; appointed Consul of class five September 5,
1919; assigned to Harbin September 6, 1919; appointed Consul
of class three June 4, 1930; Consul-General of class four Novem-
ber 19, 1931; detailed to the Department of State December 33,
1921; assigned to Canton March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
♦Jenkins, John.— Retired as Consul-General at San Salvador
June, 1907. Register of 1913.
Jenkins, William Lancaster.— Born in Gwynedd, Pa.. De-
cember 12, 1888; home. Gwynedd; graduate of Swarthmore
College (A. B.), 1910; secretary Religious Society of Friends,
New York. 1910-11; clerk, advertising manager, and solicitor
in Farmers and Mechanics Trust Co. of West Chester, 191 1-
1913; business manager Chautauqua Association of Pennsylva-
nia, 1913; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914).
Consul at Guadeloupe June 24, 1914. but did not go there;
on detail at Liverpool August 27-November 7. 1914; detailed as
Vice-Consul at Dublin and entered on duty November 9. 1914;
Consulof class nine by act approved February s, 191 5; on detail
in the Consulate at Cork May 8 to 12, 1915; detailed as Vice-
Consul at Swansea and entered on duty June 5, 1915; detailed
as Vice-Consul at London October. 1915; appointed Consul of
class eight October 18. 1915; on detail at Moscow January 4-
June 31, 1916; at Trebizond July 6, 1916, to January 14, 1918:
at Tiflis January 18 to May 26. toi8; at Moscow June 12-16 and
I50
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
July 6-AuFiist 14, 191S; at Vologda June 17-July S. i9i8; at
Petrograd August 15-31. 1918; on detail in Department; ap-
pointed Consul of class seven October 14, 1918; detailed to
Odessa January 10. 1919; to Tiflis April 22, 1919; assijrned
to Funchal July s. 1919; appointed Consul of class six Septem-
ber s, 1919; assigned to Nairobi August s. 1921; appointed
Consul of class five November 23. 1921; class four December
19, 1923; detailed to Calcutta January 23, 1924; appointed
Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Jenkins, William Oscar. — Bom in Shelbyville, Tenn.;
May iS, 187S; attended preparatory schools in Tennessee and
Vanderbilt University; employed with the Monterey Foundry
and Machine Co. 1902-1904; with the American Smelting and
Refining Co. 1904-1906; engaged in independent business
since 1906; appointed Consular Agent at Puebla. Mexico.
February 26. 191S.
Jensen, Julius Jorgen Christian. — Born in Lone Rock. Wis.,
October 31, 1S83; attended high school. Sioux City, Iowa, 1902-
1906; State University of Iowa, 1906-07; George Washington
University (LL.B.) 1912-1913; admitted to the bars of the Dis-
trict of Columbia and the State of Wyoming; employed as clerk,
naercantile company, Sioux City, Iowa, 1907-1909; assistant ob-
server and clerk United States Weather Bureau, 190-1916; ob-
server. Weather Bureau. Cheyenne. Wyo.. April- December,
1916; engaged in private law practice. Casper, Wyo.. 1917-18;
law clerk. Bureau of Naturalization; examiner of licenses. Bu-
reau of Exports, War Trade Board, November 18, 1918, to Janu-
ary 8, 1919; real estate expert, Real Estate Service of the War
Department, January 24, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Co-
penhagen December 4, 1920; at Malmo October 30, 1923; at
Copenhagen, December 17, 1923.
Jessup, Philip Caryl. — Bom in New York City January s,
1897; graduated from Hamilton College (A. B.) 1919; Yale Law
School (LL. B.) 1924; served in United States Army 1917-18;
assistant to several officials of a national bank 1919-1921; assist-
ant to the treasurer of a paper company 1921-1924; appointed
a drafting officer at $2,400 in the Department of State October 15,
1924.
Jewell, John F. — Born in Scales Mound, 111., May 11, 1874;
home. Galena, 111.; attended Warren Academy, Charles City
(Iowa) Academy, and graduated from the University of Mich-
igan (LL.B.) 1896; member of the bar in the States of Illinois
and Michigan; practiced law at Galena. 111., 1896-1902; mem-
ber of the American Bar Association; appointed, after examina-
ation (June 3, 1902), Consul at Martinique June 9, 1902; Consul
at St. Michael June 22. 1906; Consul at Melbourne June 10,
1908; Consul at Vladivostok August 19. 191 1; Consul at Chefoo
July 30. 1914; Consul of class four by act approved February 5,
1915; appointed Consul of class three July 12, 1916; assigned
to Lourcnco Marques August 3. 1916; to Batavia June 15. 1918;
unassigned from February 8, 1921: assigned to Birmingham
January 18, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I, 1924.
* Jewett, Milo A. — Died at his post (Trondhjem) February
15, 1921. Register of 1918.
Johnson, Albion Wesley. — Born in Kittery, Me., March 18,
1886; attended high school, Portsmouth, N. H., five years;
studied medicine at Boston hospitals; registered iti Massachu-
setts as physician and surgeon October, 1909; translator, office
of the Military Attach^. Madrid. January, 1918, to September,
1918; teacher of English, Seville, November-December, 1917;
clerk in the American Consulate at Seville, 1917; interpreter.
United States Iirmiigration Service, El Paso, Tex.; practiced
medicine at various times; engaged in special work for the
United States Government in Spain 1918; appointed Vice-
Consul at Malaga February 20, 1920; at Barcelona July 18,
1921; at Dublin January 13, 1923.
Johnson, Charles Leonard. — Bom in Ednor, !Md., July 31,
1890; graduated from high school 1910. and from Howard
University (B. S.) 1914; employed in real estate agent's office
1914-1917; messenger in The Adjutant General's Office. War
Department 1917-1922; transferred to the Department of
State and appointed an assistant messenger, under Civil Serv-
ice rules. July 17. 1922.
Johnson, Elizabeth F. — Born in Valley View, Tex.; attended
high school and business college; employed in private con-
cerns 1915-1918 and 1919-1921; in Government Departments
1918-19 and 1921-1924; appointed a clerk at 81,320, temporarily,
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, Decem-
ber 8, 1924.
Johnson, Felix S. S. — Born in Washington, D. C, January
9, 1869; home, Vineland. N. J.; educated in the Viueland (N. J.)
High School. Pictou Academy, and Bonn University; practiced
law; appointed Deputy Consul at Kehl January 12, 1887; Con-
sular Agent at Freiburg April 28, 1891; retired October. 1892'
appointed Commercial Agent at Stanbridge December iS. 1S99;
Consul at Puerto Cortes July 19, 190s; Consul at Bergen August
17, 1906; Consul at Kingston, Ontario, January 10, 1910; Consul
of class eight by act approved February 5. 1915; appointed
Consul of class seven April 16, 1917; Foreign Ser\ ice Officer
of class eight July i, 1924.
Johnson, Frederick Conger. — Born in Pictou, Nova Scotia,
of American parents, November 15, I8S7; attended school and
college at Bonn (Obercasscl) Germany, received degree and
graduation diploma after examination by the Imperial Ex-
amining Commission of Coblenz; also Technictim, Mittweida
Saxony, one year; University of Pennsylvania, I9o;'-o4; em-
ployed as clerk in a hotel 1914-191S; appointed Consular Agent
at Paspebiac July 26, 1918; at Gaspe January 23, 1919; Vice-
Cousul at Riviere du Loup November i;, 1919; resigned De-
cember 20, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul at Frederictcn Sep-
tember 19, 1921.
Johnson, Hallett. — Born in New York City November j6,
188S; home. South Orange, N. J.; graduated from Williams
College (A. B.), 1908, and Columbia University (LL. B.). 1911;
practiced law in New York City, 191 i-i 2 ; member of the Seventh
Regiment National Guard of New York; appointed after exami-
nation (May 27, 1912). Third Secretary of the Embassy at Lon«
don August 22, 1912; Third Secretary of the Embassy at Con-
stantinople May 22. 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class five by act approved February s, 1915; appointed Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class four ]\Iarch 2, 1915; assigned
to Constantinople March 6, 1915; assigned to La Paz June 16,
191S, but did not go there; assigned to Santiago, Chile, July 6,
1915; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three
May 10, ig 16; assigned to La Paz, Bolivia, to be Charged' Affaires
ad interim during the absence of the minister July 20, 1916; took
charge of the Legation September 24, 1916; reassigned to San-
tiago January 3. 191 7; assigned to the Latin-American Division,
Department of State, January 14. 1918: acting chief of division
August IS, to November 21, 1919; appointed Secretary of class
two. December 20, 1919; assigned to Brussels ]March 23. 1920; to
Stockholm May 26, 192 1; to Madrid July 23, 1923; to Berlin June
5, 1934; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i,
1924; assigned as First Secretary of Embassy at Paris July 17,
1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class three August
8, 1924.
* Johnson, Henry Abert.— * * * Appointed Foreign Sers'ice
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Dundee July, 1924, under the provisions of the Act
of iMay 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Johnson, Herschel Vespasian.— Born in Atlanta, Ga., May 3,
1894; home, Charlotte, N. C; graduated from University of
North Carolina (A.B.) 1916, and studied law at Harvard Uni-
versity one year; instructor of French one year; served in the
United States Army October, 191 7, to December, 1920, retiring
with the rank of captain; appointed, after examination (October
18, 1920). Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four No-
vember 15, 1920; assigned to Berne January 12, 1921; to Sofia
December 16, 1921; appointed Secretary of class three Sep-
tember 22, 1922; assigned to the Department of State July 23,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924;
class five September 20, 1924.
♦Johnson, James W. — Retired as Consul at CorintoSeptem'
ber, 1913. Register of 1913.
♦ Johnson, Jesse H. — Retired as Consul of class eight, as-
signed to Regina. March, 1923. Register of 1922.
Johnson, John David.— Born in Vermont November 3. 1884;
attended public schools of Vermont and Eastman Business
College, and graduated from Georgetown University (LL. B.),
1908; member of the bar of the District of Columljia; stenogra-
pher and typewriter in business offices and public stenographer,
1902-1904; appointed clerk in navy-yard, Portsmouth, N. H.,
at $720, under Civil Service rules. November 12, 1904; resigned
April 30, 1905; appointed clerk in the Post-Office Department
at S900, under Civil Service rules. May i. 1905; resigned July 6,
190s; appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, under
Civil Service rules, July 7, 1905; class one July 2, 1906; class two
March 4, 1907; class three June i, 1909; detailed as clerk to the
Agency of the United States in the North Atlantic Coast Fisher-
ies Arbitration before the Permanent Court at The Hague. 1910;
appointed clerk class four December i, 1913; special employee
in charge of Consular Post Allov.-anccs and Allotments, at
$2,400 August 15. 1918; at $2,160 July i. 1919; drafting officer,
at $2,500 December 31, 1919, effective January i. 1920; at $3,000
June 17, effective July i, 1921; designated as the representative
of t!ie Department of State to serve as a member of the Federal
Traffic Board October 31, 1921; appointed Consul of class six
UIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT,
151
August 23, 1922; detailed to the Department of State Septem-
ber 30, 1922; appointed Consul of class five December 19, 1923;
Foreign Service Otticcr of class six July i, 1924.
♦Johnson, Joseph Lowery. — Retired as Minister Resident
and Consul General to Liberia October. 1921. Register of 1918.
Johnson, Lucius Hartwell. — Bom in Aiken, S. C, June 8,
1897; graduated from Ailcen High School 1915, and attended
the University of South Carolina 1916; pursued liusiness col-
lege course three months; served in the United States Navy
May, 1918, to August, igig; clerk in the Department of State
November, 1919, to December, 1920; clerk in the American
Consulate at Dublin, Ireland, December, 1920, to September
8, 1922; appointed V'ice-Consul at Dublin September 9, 1922;
at Bilbao January 13, 1923; at ^Montreal July 5, 1924.
Johnson, Nelson Trusler. — Born in Washington, D. C, April
3, 1.S87; home, Xewkirk, Okla.; spent twelve years in public
and private schools, and two i'ears in George Washington
University; appointed, after examination (August 14, 1907),
Student Interpreter in China August 27, 1907; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General and Interpreter at Mukden November i, 1909;
Vice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter at Harbin April 18,
1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at
Hankow July 30, 1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and
Interpreter at Shanghai December2, i9ii;Mixed Court Assessor;
designated to exercise judicial authority and jurisdiction in civil
and criminal cases June 7, 1913; appointed Consul at Chung-
king December 29, 1914; Consid' of class six by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Changsha March 2, 1915; detailed
to Shanghai April 12, 1918; to the Department of State Sep-
tember II, 191S; appointed Consul of class five September 5,
1919; class three June 4, 1920; expert assistant, Conference on
the Limitation of Armament November 3, 1921; appointed
Consul General at Large November 23, 1921; Consul General of
class three June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class two
July I, 1924-
♦Johnson, Robert Underwood. — Retired as Ambassador to
Italy 1921 Register of 1922.
Johnson, Stewart. — Born in St. Louis, Mo., December 10,
iSSo;home, Winnetka, 111.; graduate of Yale University (A.B.),
190J. and Harvard Law School (LL. B.), 1907; clerk of Legation
at Rio de Janeiro, 1902-1904; practiced law in Chicago, 1907-
1915; appointed, after examination (November 30, 1914), Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class four March 3, 1913; as-
signed to Santo Domingo March 6, 1915; appointed Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class three July 28, 1915; assigned
to Guatemala to be Charge d'Affaires during the absence of
the minister September i, 1916; assigned to San Jose, C. R.,
January 26, 1917; to Caracas January 18, 1919; appointed Secre-
tary of class two December 20, 1919; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State iMarch 24, 1920; to Berlin December 17, 192 1; to
Cairo JMarch 3, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
our July I, 1924.
Johnson, Thomas L.— Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Naval Attache at Paris and Madrid May 17, 1924;
also at Lisbon June 30, 1924.
Johnston, Edna Earl. — Born in Mackoy, Ky.; attended high
school 1903-1906; Ohio University 1907-08; business college,
Washington, D. C, 1912-13; public-school teacher two years;
clerk in the office of the Auditor for the Post Office Department
1911-1914; Bureau of Internal Revenue 1914-1917; secretary to
Assistant Comptroller of the Treasury ( Paris, France) Novem-
ber, 1917 to October, 1919; clerk in the Treasury Department,
October, 1919, to June, 1921; transferred to the Department
o( State and appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Serv-
er rules. Au;4USt i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦Johnston, James.— Retired as Consul at Algiers August,
1909. Register ol 1913-
♦Jones, Arthur Mason. — Retired as Second Secretary of the
Embassy at Petrograd March, 1915. Died in Washington,
D.C., December 6. 191 7. Register of 1914.
Jones, Chester Lloyd.— Born in Hillside, Wis., March 6, i88ri
graduated from the University of Wisconsin (A. B.) 1902;
attended University of Berlin and University of Madrid each
one year; University of Pennsylvania (Ph. D.) 1906; instructor
in political science at the University of Pennsylvania several
years; assistant editor of the Annals of the American Academy
of Political and Social Science several years; Director of the
Bureau of Foreign Agents of the War Trade Board 1918-19;
Commercial Attache at Madrid 1919-20; author of several books
on political science; appointed Trade Commissioner to Cuba
and designated Acting Commercial Attache August, 1921;
Commercial Attache at Paris August 8, 1922.
Jones, Claud A. — Commander, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Assistant Naval Attache at London, Paris, Rome,
Berlin, and The Hague June 27, 1924.
* Jones, Floyd Seymour. — Retired as Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three, assigned to Callao-Lima, March, 1923. Register
of 1924.
Jones, Grace E. — Bom in Abilene, Kans.; attended public
and high schools; took course at Central Kansas Business
College; employed by telephone and electric company,
Abilene, one year; Council of National Defense, eight months;
War Industries Board, five months; appointed a clerk, tempo-
rarily, at $1,080. in the Department of State November 22. igiS;
at $1,140. February i, 1920; clerk, at $900. under Civil Service
rules. December 15. 1920; at Si. 000 December i, 1922; at Si, 100
February i, 1924; class one May 31 effective June i, 1924; at
Si, 440 July I, 1924.
Jones, Harold Frederic— Bora in Brockton, Mass., May 30,
1891; attended grammar and high schools in Brockton and grad-
uated from Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst
(B. Sc). 1913; employed with the United Sugar Co., of Los
Mochis, Mexico, 1913-1919; served in the United States Army
part of 191S; appointed Consular Agent at Los Mochis Septem-
ber 6, 1919.
♦Jones, John Edward.— Died in Alexandria County, Va.,
May 20, 1918, while Consul of class three, assigned to Lyon.
Register of 191 7.
♦Jones, Thomas C— Retired as Consul at Funchal March,
1906. Register of 1913.
♦Jones, Thomas Samboh.— Retired as Minister to Honduras.
Register of 1918.
Jones, Victor Emanuel.- Bora in Washington, D. C, Decem-
ber 26, 1895; served in the United States Army May, 1918, to
July. 1919; elevator conductor. State. War and Navy Build-
ing July, 1917, to May, 1918, and July, 1919, to March, 1920'
appointed assistant messenger in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules. March 13, 1920.
Jones, William Oscar.— Bom in Chapmans Quarries, Pa.,
May 26, 1895; home. Easton, Pa.; attended business college two
years. Temple School one year, and Georgetown Foreign
Ser\'ice School one and one-half years; employed as clerk 1912-
1916; public accountant three and one-half years; served in the
United States Army 191 7 to 1919. retiring with the rank of
second lieutenant; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923).
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 6, 1923; assigned
to Danzig November 19, 1923; to Konigsberg >Iay 5, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i. 1924;
assigned to Malmo November 3, 1924.
Jonscher, Addie F. — Bom in Washington. D. C; completed
grade school and attended Technical High School 1906-07; em-
ployed as clerk by professional business men three years;
clerk in the Treasury' Department nine months, and in the
Department of State two and one-half years; employed by the
All America Cable Co. two years; reappointed a clerk at
$1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
March i, 1923; at $1,100 May 31 effective June i. 1924; at Si,6Sj
July I, 1924.
Jordan, Curtis Calhoun. — Born in San Diego, Calif., March
20, 1892; home, Eagle Rock, Calif.; attended the College of Law,
University of Southern California 1913-1917; served in the
United States Army November, 1917, to February, 1920, resign-
ing as second lieutenant after fourteen months overseas service;
appointed after e.xamination (May 26, 1919), Secretary of
Embassy or Legiiticn of class four December 20, 1919;
as igned to Poit au Prince June 14, 1920; to Helsingfors March
I, 1922; appointed Secretary of class three March 23, 1922;
Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as
Second Secretary of Embassy at Habaiia July 17, 1924.
Josselyn, Paul Reitler. — Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, De-
cember 18, 1R85; home. Cedar Rapids: attended the public
schools of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; graduated from Bcloit (Wis.)
College (B. A.) in 1009, and took a special course at George
W.ish ngton University one year; employed as clerk and
stenographer by various business concerns; appointed clerk in
the office of the Chief of Ordnance, War Department, August,
1909; appointed, alter exammation (March 7, 1910), Student
Inten^reter in Cliina April 20, 1910: Deputy Consul-General at
Tientsin July 26, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at
Tientsin November 22, 191 2; also Interpreter March i, 1913;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Inten^rcter at Canton
March 17, 1914; Vice-Consul at Canton February 6, 1915; Vice-
Consul and Interpreter at Tientsin July 5, 191 7; Consul of class
152
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
eight February 19, 1918; assigned to Chungking April 15. 1918;
appointed consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed to the
American Legation at Peking April 16, 192 1; appointed Chinese
Assistant Secretary of Legation at Peking July i, 1921; Foreign
Service Ofliccr of class six July i, 1924; class five August 8, 1924.
Jouard, EUsee. — Bom in France in 1851; naturalized in New
York; educated in French high school; retired merchant of
Cognac; appointed Consular Agent at Cognac February 11,
1899; Vice and Deputy Consul June 17, 1908; Vice-Consul at
La Rochelle May 31, 1915.
Jova, Eugene Elias. — Bom in Calabazar de Sagua, Cuba,
July 13, 1892; naturalized; attended Rockville (Md.) Acad-
emy 1907-1909; Charlotte Hall Military Academy 1909-10, and
graduated from a business college in Washington, D. C, 1912;
employed in a bank one year in Cuba and in private business
1914-1917; engaged in ship chartering 1917-1921; acting
American Consular Agent at Sagua la Grande, Cuba, July i,
1921, to September 29, 1922; appointed Consular Agent at
Sagua la Grande October 6, 1922.
Joy, Margaret J. — Bom in Washington, D. C.; graduated
from St. Patrick's Academy, 1913; received business education
in private school and business college; served under temporary
appointments in the United States Post Office and Patent
Office; six months with an insurance company; United States
Food Administration, one year; appointed a clerk, at $1,200,
in the Department of State December s, 1918; clerk of class one,
under Civil Service rules, August 3, 1920; class two March i,
1924; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Joyce, Kenyon A.— Lieutenant colonel, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Military Attache at London December 12,
1923.
* Judelsohn, Montefiore. — Retired as Interpreter at Constan-
tinople November, 1919. Served special detail in Legation at
Berne December i, 1917, to November, 1919. Register of 1918.
Kagey, Charles L.— Bom in New Market, Va., December 22,
[876; home, Beloit, Kans., studied law at University of Vir-
irinia; practiced law in Kansas 1898-1921; served as county
attorney of Logan County 1899-1901; president Kansas Bar
Association 1914-11;; director Kansas State Historical Society
since 1916; vice president American Bar Association for Kansas;
district judge, fifteenth judicial district, Kansas, 1919-20;
appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-
tiary to Finland, October 8, 1921.
Kaiser, Gladys Flora. — Bom in Rochester, N. Y.; attended
high school 191 7-1920; employed as stenographer in private
firms 1920-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service mles, October 22, 1924.
*Kaiser, Louis.— Retired as Consul at Mazatlan July, 1909.
Register of 1913-
Kane, Blanche M. — Bom in Lock Haven, Pa.; attended
high school and State normal school, Lock Haven, Pa.; em-
ployed in Government Departments 1917-1924; transferred
from the Treasury Department and appointed a clerk at $1,320
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, Decem-
ber I, 1924-
Kavanagh, William J.— Born in Albany, N. Y., June 30 ,
1869; attended the public schools of Rochester, N. Y.. prepara-
tory school, and studied under private tutors; graduated from
the Georgetown University Law School (LL. B.), 1914; was
private secretary, first, to the head of a manufacturing con-
cern and later to the resident manager of an export and com-
mission house; bookkeeper and clerk five years; Spanish cor-
respondent three years; appointed special laborer in Navy
Department at $3.04 per diem, under Civil Service rules,
December 3, 1903; clerk at $r,ooo July i, 1905; transferred and
appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900 June 12,
1906; class one March 4, 1907: class two June i, 1909; detailed
for special duty at the American Embassy at Mexico City
March 22 to May 25. 1911, during the Madero revolution; ap-
pointed clerk class one May :6, ign; class two June 22, to be
effective .Tuly i, 1916; class three December 31, 1919, effective
January i, 1920; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Keating, Joseph T.— Bom in Sag Harbor, N. Y., October 13
1899; graduated from Georgetown University (LL. B.) 1920,
(LL. M.) 1922; employed in a law office 1917-1919; served in
the United States Army; practiced law several months;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, November 24, t922;at $1,000 May i, 1923; at
$1,500 July I, 1924.
Keblinger, Wilbur.— Bom in Charleston, W. Va., November,
187s; home, Staunton, Va.; attended public schools, Staunton
Military Academy, and graduated from George Washington
University (LL. B.), 1904; employee of Southern Railway and
American Ordnance Co. for two years; clerk in War Depart-
ment, 1898-99; secretary. International Boundary Commission,
United States and Mexico, 1899-1914; Commissioner for the
United States on the Rio Grande Commission, 1910-1914;
appointed, under Executive Order of March 28, 1914, Consul
at Malta May 15, 1914; Consul of class eight by act approved
February s, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven September
14, 1917; detailed to Fiume May 27, 1919; appointed Consul of
class six September s, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; detailed to
Zagreb July 29, 1920; returned to Fiume. on detail, November,
1921; appointed Consul of class four November 19, 1921; as-
signed to Fiume January 25, 1922; to Bombay March 30, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Keeley, jr., James H.— Bora in Curwensville, Pa., Novem-
ber 27, 1895; home, Washington, D. C; graduated from high
school and from the United States School of Military Aero-
nautics, Princeton University; employed by various con-
cerns during summer vacations; by powder company 1916-17;
served in the United States Army August, 1917, to January,
1919; engaged in restaurant business in Burkburnett, Tex.,
1919-20; appointed Vice-Consul at Constantinople June 11,
1920; appointed, after examination (January 24, 1922), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three September 30, 1922; assigned
to Constantinople October 7, 1922; to Damascus February 24,
1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November
23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Keena, Leo John.— Born in Detroit, Mich., April 12, 1878;
home, Detroit: attended public and parochial schools in De-
troit, Detroit College, and the University of Michigan; seaman
on U. S. S. Yosemite in 1898; engaged in mining, lumbering,
and office-equipment business; appointed, after examination
(November 10, 1908). Consul at Chihuahua May 31, 1909; Con-
sul at Florence December 14, igio; Consul-General at Buenos
Aires April 27, 1914; Consul-General of class five by act ap-
proved February, 5, 1915; appointed Consul-General of class
four February 22, 1915, and assigned to Valparaiso; assigned
to Zurich March 27, 1919; to Warsaw September 30, 1920;
appointed Consul-General of class three November 23, 1921;
Foreign Service Officer of class two July i, 1924; Consul, and
assigned to Liverpool August 26, 1924.
* Keene, Francis Bowler. — * * * Appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class three July i, 1924. Retired from active
ser\'ice as Consul General at Rome July, 1924, under the pro-
visions of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Kehl, John E. — Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, October 10, 1S70;
home, Cincinnati; high-school and business-college education;
studied for the wood-engraving profession; secretary and treas-
urer of a publishing house for sbc years; conducted printing and
publishing business until 1897; appointed, after examination
(October 13, 1897), Consul at Stettin October 15, 1S97; Special
Commissioner of Deeds for the State of Ohio while stationed
at Stettin; Consul at Sydney, Nova Scotia, June 10, 1908; Con-
sul at Saloniki August 19, 1911; Consul of class sbc by act ap-
proved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class five March
2, 191s; Consul of class four September 14, 1917, and assigned
to Santiago de Cuba, but did not proceed to post; assigned to
Aarhus April 13, 1918; appointed Consul of class three June 4,
1920; detailed to Coblenz August 2, 1920; unassigned from
September, 1920; detailed to Berlin February 17, 1921; assigned
to Breslau November 15, 1921; to Stuttgart June 11, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924;
class three August 8, 1924.
Keiser, Robert Larrick. — Bom in Bloomington. 111.. July 2,
1888; home, Indianapolis, Ind.; attended the public schools of
McLean County, 111.; graduated from Bloomington (III.) High
School, 1905 and took postgraduate course 1905-06; Butler Uni-
versity, Indianapolis, 1910-11; studied under private tutors
summers of 1910-11; student at the Metropolitan School of
Music, Indianapolis, 1910-1913; employed in a clerical capacity,
1908-1910 and 1912-13, in Indianapolis, Ind.; organist. First
Baptist Church, Indianapolis, 1909-1913; entered private busi-
ness in Indianapolis, 191 2; business representative in South
America 1913-14; appointed clerk in the American Consulate
at Santos February, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Sao Paulo
July 3, 1915; appointed, after examination (June 18, 1917),
Consul of class eight February 19, 1918; assigned to Fayal
August 31, 1918, but did not reach that post; detailed to Bor-
deaux December 4, 1918; assigned to St. Michael's February i,
1919; appointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; assigned
to Colombo September 8, 1919; to Tegucigalpa May 20, 1922;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924;
assigned to Messina October 22, 1924.
Keith, Edwin Donald. — Bom in Chicago, 111.. March 3. 1887;
graduated from Yale UniTetsity (LL, B.) 1905, and from the
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
153
University of Toulouse, France, 1919; engaged in practice of
law and banking law and as business and financial adviser
twelve years; ser\'ed as a captain in the United States Army,
two and a half years during the war; appointed drafting otBcer
at $2,500 in the Department of State, September 3, 1920; at
$3,000 March 16, 1923.
Kelley, Robert F. — Bom in Somcrville. Mass., February 13,
1894; home, Boston; graduated from Harvard University
(A. B.) 1915, (A. M.) 1917; studied at the University of Paris
1915-16; assistant professor of history at Harvard University
1916-17; served in the United States Army 1917-1922, retiring
with the rank of captain; assigned to duty as Assistant Mili-
tary Attachii at Helsingfors July 28, 1921; appointed, after
examination (Jlay 19, 1919), Secretary of Hmbassy or Legation
of class four, December 20, 1919, but declined appointment;
appointed, after examination (June 26, 1922); Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three November 16, 1922; assigned to Calcutta
December 14, 1922; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in the
Department of State September 26, 1923; reappointed Vice
Consul de carriere of class three May 24, 1924; class two May 28,
1924; class one May 31, 1924; Consul of class seven June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
♦Kelley, William Fitch.— Died at his post (Rome) March 4,
1916. Register of igis-
Kellogg, Frank Billings. — Bom in Potsdam, N. Y., Decem-
ber 22, 1856; home St. Paul, Minn.; attended public schools;
received honorary degree from McGill University, Montreal,
Canada, (LL. D) 1913; admitted to the bar in Minnesota in
1S77 and practiced law 1878-1923; city attorney of Rochester
three years; Olmstead County attorney five years; member
Davis, Kellogg and Severance; special counsel for the Govern-
ment in Paper and Standard Oil Tnist cases; special Govern-
ment counsel for Interstate Commerce Commission in railway
merger cases; Government delegate. Universal Congress of
La-n-yers and Jurists, St. Louis, jilo., 1904; Delegate Repub-
lican National Convention 1904, 1908, and 1912; member Re-
publican National Committee for Minnesota, 1904 and 1912;
president American Bar Association 191 2-13; United States
Senator from ;Minnesota 1917-1923; Delegate Fifth International
Conference of American States, Santiago, Chile, 1923; ap-
pointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to
Great Britain December 11, 1923.
♦Kellogg, James C— Retired as Consul at Colon June, 1914.
Died in Washington, D. C, November 18, 1916. Register of
1913.
Kelly, William J. — Born in Washington, D. C, April 11,
1894; educated in grade school; hospital employee. 1911-1915,
and 1916-17; laborer. State, War and Navy Building, one year;
employed temporarily at $720 in the Department of State
December 28, 1918; appointed laborer (unskilled), under Civil
Service rules, December 15. 1920.
Kemp, Edwin Carl. — Born in East Douglass, Mass., August
34, 1S84; home, St. Petersburg, Fla.; attended the public
schools of Atlanta, Ga.; employed in a clerical capacity several
years; quartermaster in merchant marine three years; prac-
ticed osteopathy, 1910-1914; appointed, after examination (Jan-
uary 19. 1Q14). Consul at St. Pierre April 24, 1914; Consul of
class nine by act approved February 5. 1915; detailed as Vicc-
Consul at Marseille and entered on duty July 22, 1915; as-
signed to Tunis July 8. 1916; appointed Consul of class eight
September i, 1916; assigned to Bucharest May 27, 1919; ai>-
pointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; class five June 4,
1920; detailed to Budapest November 11, 1920: assigned to
Danzig April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Kemp, Percy George. — Bom in Chatham, Ontario, August i,
1881; naturalized in Brooklyn, N. Y., JMarch 23, 1906; attended
the public schools of Chatham, the Chatham Collegiate Insti-
tute, and graduated from business college; employed by various
business houses in New York City as private secretary, stenog-
rapher and clerk, and traveling salesman; appointed \ice-
Consul at Valencia January 16, 1919; at Malaga July 15, 1920;
at Cadiz January 29, 1921; at Almeria August 29, 1921; at Cadiz
December i, 1921; at .Mmcria July 20, 1923; at Huelva January
28, 1924; at Funchal March 10, 1924.
Kemper, Graham Hawes. — Born in Bethany, W. Va., April
15, 1877; home, Lexington, Ky.; educated at Transylvania
University (B. S.) Kentucky State University (M. S.), George
Washington University, and Georgetown University; teacher
in the United States and in Philippine Islands; clerk United
States Civil Service Commission, 1909-1911; appointed, after
eaxmination (June 27, 1910), Consul at Cartagena August 19,
1911; Consul at Erfurt September 18, 1913; Consul of class eight
by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class
seven July 12, 1916; assigned to Prague August 3, 1916; to Vigo
July 21, 1917; to Funchal November 5, 1917; to Sofia May 27,
1919; appointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919; class four
June 4, 1920; assigned to Yokohama December 13, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Serx-ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Kendall. Frederick Albert. — Bom in Newton, Mass., June i,
i860; educated in private and public schools, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and Berlitz School of Languages;
employed as architectural draftsman in Boston and Wash-
ington 1886-1901; an architect in Washington 1902-1918; re-
search assistant. War Trade Board February, 1918, to July,
1919; appointed a clerk at $1,500 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, July 15, 1919; class three September
16, 1922; at Si,S6o July I, 1924.
Kendrick, Stephen E.— Bom in Brooklyn. N. Y., February
16, 18S9; employed with a fire extinguisher company in Provi-
dence, R. I., three years; entered the United States Navy
June, 1917; employed with the Peace Commission at Paris
and in the Legations at Prague and Vienna; appointed \'ice
Consul at Vienna December 19, 1921.
Kennedy, Maud. — Bora in Washington, D. C; educated in
the public schools of Washington; clerk and cashier in various
offices in Washington, D. C, nine years; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $900 in the Department of State June 4, 1917;
at $1,100 March i, 1918; at $1,200 July i, 1918; clerk at $900,
under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class one August
I, 1921; class two November 21, 1923; at .?i,68o July i, 1924.
* Kent, William Patton.— * * * Appointed Foreign Ser\-ice
Officer of class four July i, 1924. Retired from active ser\-ice a
Consul at Hamilton, Bermuda July, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of ;May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Kerens, Richard C— Retired as Ambassador to Austria-
Hungary June, 1913. Died September 4, 1916. Register of
1913-
Kerr, Ruth Dorothy.— Bom in Dubuque, Iowa; attended
grammar and high schools; stenographer and clerk in Dubuque
1917-18; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,030, in the Depart-
ment of State August 10, 191S; at $i,oSo September i, 191S; at
$1,140 November i, 1918; at $1,200 February i, 1920; clerk at
$1,000, under Civil Service rules, October 16, 1920; class one
October iS, 1921; class two April i, 1924; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
♦Killmaster, George Benjamin.— Retired as Consul at New-
castle, Australia, March, 1915. Register of 1914.
Kimberly, Allen.— Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant Military Attache at Berlin December 28, 1922.
♦King, Hamilton.— Died in Bangkok while Minister to Siam
Septemb'jr 2. 1912. Register of 1913.
♦King, Harry Gilbert.— Retired as Interpreter, also Vice-
Consul, at Shanghai, August, 1923. Register of 1922.
King, Loyal T.— Bom in Butler. Pa.. June 14. 1898; attended
high school and is student at Georgetown University Law
School; admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia, 1923;
employed as drug clerk four years; stenographer for oil cor-
poration and a steel car company six months each; appointed
a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, February 21, 1921; at $1,100 December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; class one November 21, 1923; at $1,440 July i,
1924.
♦King, Pendleton. — Died in Giessen, Gennany, July 31, 1913,
while Consul at Aix-la-Chapelle. Register of 1913.
King, Walter W.— Born in Galena, Ind., December 18, 1875:
attended high school at New Albany (Ind.); University of
Louisville (M. D.) 1897; engaged in private practice of medicine
1897-98; medical officer in the United States Public Health
Service April, 1898, to December, 1920; clerk to Special ^fis-
sion to Russia May, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Naples
November 9, 1920.
Klrby, Augustus Montnimon.— Born in Butler, Ky., October
31, 1886; graduated from the University of Kentucky (A. B.)
1907; teacher, deputy, and provincial treasurer in the Phil-
ippine Civil Service, 1907-1914: employed by the Standard
Oil Co. of New York at Amoy and Saigon 1914-1919;
private and second lieutenant in the Signal Section of the
United States Army 1918-19; appointed Vice-Consul at Saigon
August s, 1919.
Kirby, Cornelia M.— Bom in Campbello, New Bmnswick
Cfuiada; high-school education; worked as compositor and proof
'54
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
reader in several offices; clerk in Government Printing Office
1902-1908; proof reader for a private corporation 1921-1924;
appointed a clerk at $1,140, temporarily, in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, August 20, 1924.
♦Kirjassoff, Max David.— Died at his post (Yokohama) Sep-
tember I, 1923, while a Consul of class six. Register of 192a.
Kirk, Alexander Comstock. — Bom in Chicago, III., Novem-
ber 26. 1S88; home, Chicago; graduate of Yale University
(A. B.) 1909; received diploma from Hcole dcs Sciences Poli-
tiques, Paris, 1911. and Harvard Law School (LL. B.), 1914;
admitted to the Illinois bar in 1914; private secretary to the
Third Assistant Secretary of State 1915; appointed, after ex-
amination (November 30, 1914), Secrctarj' of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class four March 2. 1915; assigned to the Department of
State March 6. 1915; assigned to Berlin August 5, tgi;; ap-
pointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three Novem-
ber s, 1915; assigned to The Hague February 3, 1917; attached to
the American Commission to Negotiate Peace December, 1918.
to July, 1919; assigned to the Department of State July 24. 1919;
appointed Secretary of class two December 20, 1919; assigned to
Tokyo February 26, 1920; to Peking May 2. 1922; unassigned
from October 7, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I, 1924; assigned as First Secretary of Embassy- al
Mexico City July 17, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class three November 17, 1924.
♦Kirk, Milton Beckwith. — Retired as Consul of class six,
assigned to Rouen, January, 1923. Register of 1922.
Klrkconnell, Sandy. — British subject, bom in Honduras
June 31, 1870; appointed Consular Agent at Bonacca June 20,
igo6.
E^tchen, Conway N. — Born in Hopkinsville, Ky., August 24'
189s; graduated from Central High School. Washington, D. C,
1913; attended Washington and Lee University 1913-14;
George Washington University 1916-17; graduated from the
National University Law School (LL. B.) 1923; appointed,
temporarily, at S50 a month in the Department of State Janu-
ary 9, 1915; at $75 May 15, 1915; clerk of class one, under Exec-
utive order, June 22, effective July i, 1916; resigned August 25,
1917; served as Army field clerk in the Signal Corps of the
United States Army, in France, August, 1917, to January,
1920; reinstated as clerk of class one in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, January 22, 1920; appointed
clerk of class two December i, 1921; law clerk at $2,000 Novem-
ber 13, 1923; at $2,400 July I, J024.
♦Kitchen, William Whitney.— Died at his post (Teneriffe)
October 16, 1912. Register of 1913.
Klemann, John V. — Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Naval Attache at Berlin May 26, 1924; also at Copen-
hagen, Oslo, and Stockholm June w. 1924.
Kliefoth, AUred Will.— Bom in Mayville, Wis., October 10,
1889; home, Madison, Wis.; attended the Ma^-ville High School
1903-1907; the University of Wisconsin 190S-1913 (A. B.); em-
ployed with the social service commission in Milwaukee, Wis.,
one year; with the Chicago Church Peace Union, Chicago, one
year; engaged in independent newspaper work 1916; appointed,
after examination (January 19, 1914), student interpreter in
China April 4, 1914. but declined; appointed clerk in the Ameri-
can Legation at Stockholm, June 15, 1916; resigned September,
1916; employed in the American Embassy at Petrograd 1916-17;
appointed clerk in the American I{mbassy at Petrograd, July i,
1917; Vice-Consul at Haparanda November ^o, 1917; passpoit
control officer at Tomeo; comraiisioned first lieutenant. United
States .\rmy, December, 1917; appointe 1 a special assistant in
the Department of State at $3,500 June 17, 1920; drafting officer
at $3,500, July 12, 1920; appointed, after examination (January
15. 1923), Consul of class six March i, 1923; detailed to the
Department of State March 13, 1923; designated Assistant
Chief of the Division of Eastern European Affai s November 30,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924; class six August 8, 1924; assigned to Berlin September 22,
1924.
Knabenshue, Paul. — Bom in Toledo, Ohio, October 31, 1883;
home, Toledo; graduate of Toledo High School; employed in
Belfast Consulate; appointed Vice-Consul at Belfast June 20,
1906; Vice and Deputy Consul May 23, 191 1; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General at Cairo July 17, 191 1; Vice-Consul at Cairo
February 6, 1915; appointed, after examination (May 26, 1909),
Consul of class eight September 14, 1917; on detail at Cairo;
detailed to Beimt May 2, 1919; appointed Consul of class six
SeptemVjer 5, 1919; class five November 19, 1921; class four
March i, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924;
class four August 8, 1924.
* Knabenshue, Samuel S.— Retired as Consul-General at
Tientsin July, 1914. Register of 1913.
Knemeyer, Erma Manila.— Bom in Fort Madison, Iowa;
graduated from high school 1916, and from the State University
of Iowa (A.. B.) 1920; completed course in a business college
1921; clerk in the Treasury Department September, 1921, to
December, 1922; appointed a clerk of class one in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, March 30, 1923; at
$i,S6o July I, 1924.
♦Knowles, Horace Greeley.— Retired as Minister to Bolivia
August, 1913. Register of 1913.
Kodding, Trojan.— Bom in Hamilton, Ohio, July 8, 1899;
home, Wilkinsburgh, Pa.; graduated from the University of
Pennsylvania (S. B.) 1921; studied at Har\'ard Law and
Graduate Schools and at the Universite de Poitiers; served in
the United States Army October-December, 191S; appointed,
after examination (July 9, 1923), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four December 12, 1923, and assigned to the.
Department of State; assigned to Tirana February 4, 1924;
appointed Foreign .Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Koebler. Hugo W. — Lieutenant commander. United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Naval .\ttache at Warsaw, 1921.
♦Kopp, Edgar.— Retired as Marshal at Chefoo March, 1909.
Register of 191 1.
*Korn{eld, Joseph Saul.— Retired as Minister to Persia
September, 1924. Register of 1924.
Krai, Georgina.— Born in Racine, Wis.; attended public
schools and spent one year each in Chicago University. George
Washington University, and a business college; appointed a
clerk at $1,000, temporarily, in the Department of State, under
Ci vi Service rules, August 26, 1920; at $960, under Civil Service
rules, February 26, 1921; at $1,000 August 16, effective August
26, 1921; at $r,ioo December 30, 1922, effective January 1, 1923;
class one November 12, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Krausse, Henry Gustave.— Born in Brownsville, Tex., Octo-
ber 28, 1896; attended the public and high schools of Browns-
ville eight years; business college, Galveston, one and one-half
years; employed in a clerical capacity by firms in Galveston
and Brownsville 1913-1917; by the United States Public Health
Service, Brownsville, May-August, 1917; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Matamoros, Mexico; appointed Vice-Consul
at Matamoros January 6, 1919; at Nuevo Laredo September 14,
1922; at Matamoros October 9, 1922; at Nuevo Laredo May 10,
1924; at Matamoras July 26, 1924.
♦Krisel, Alexander. — Retired as Interpreter, also Vice-Consul,
at Shanghai March, 1918. Register of 1917.
*Krogh, Gerhard h. * * *; Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired as Consul at Malmo
January, 1925. Register of 1924.
Kroner, Hayes. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Language Officer at Peking September 27, 1921; Assist-
ant Jlilitary Attache July 30, J924.
Kumler, Preston.— Born in Evansville, Ind., December 5,
1877; graduated from Evansville High School 1894; West-
minster School 1896, Yale University (A. B.) 1900, Harvard
University (LL. B.) 1903; Editor Harvard Law Review; prac-
ticed law in Chicago seventeen years; fomiersccrctary, Municipal
Voters' League, Chicago; served as Captain of Infantry, United
States Army, 1917-1919; served v\ith the American Relief Ad-
ministration in Russia 1921-22; appointed a special assistant in
the Department of State November 22, 1923; drafting officer
at $2,500 February i, 1924; at $3,000 July i, 1924.
Kuykendall. Clark Porter.— Born in Towanda, Pa.. May 10,
1896; home, Towanda; graduated from Columbia University
(A. B.) 1920; served in the United States Army 1917-1919;
appointed, after examination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three September 7, 1920; assigned to Amsterdam
October 18, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
May 26, 1922; class one Februari' 26, 1923; assigned to Batavia
March 30, 1923; appointed Consul of class seven December 19,
1923; remained at Batavia, on detail; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Kyger, J. H. — Lieutenant, United States Navy; assigned to
duty as Assistant Naval Attache at London December 20, ipai.
Labbie, Alptaonse P. — Born in Wallagrass, Me., June 5, 1884;
attended public schools until 14 years of age; Wallagrass
Convent one year; Madawaska Training School. Fort Kent,
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMENT.
155
e., three years; engaged in merchandising in Wallagrass three
ars; agent for life insurance company eight years; manager
r same company of agency of Aroostook and northern New
runswick; appointed Consular Agent at St. Leonards Decem-
T 20, igis-
Lacey, Louise Elizabeth.— Bom in Brooklyn. N. Y.; eradu-
ed from Columbia University (A. B.) 1898; social secretarial
ark in Washington, D. C, 1913-1917: appointed a clerk,
tnporarily. at Si, 200, in the Department of State, September
191S; clerk of class one, under Civil Ser\-ice rules, October 6,
20; at Si,6So July i, 1924.
Lacey, Maurice Winters. — Born in Washington, D. C,
sbruary 2, 1S92; has a public school education; telegraph
lerator for 13 years; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the
epartment of State, at Si. 400, December jo, 1917; at $1,600,
ily I. 1918; clerk of class three, imder Civil Service rules. De-
mber 3, 1920; at $i,S6o July i, 1924.
Lackey, Mary Goodloe.— Bom in Kansas City, Mo.; edu-
ted in public schools. Central and Westport high schools,
ider private tutor, and at Danville (Ky.) Business School;
;rk and stenographer; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
,200, in the Department of State, July 20, 1918; clerk at $720,
ider Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; at $840, April 30,
Fective May i, 1921; at Si,oco, August 16, 1921; at $i,oSo,
ctober 16, 1922; class one December 30, 1922, effective Janu-
y I, 1923; at Si, 440 July i, 1924; at $1,500 August 16, 1924.
LaGrutta, Theresa Marie.— Born in New York City; educated
the public schools; appointed a messenger girl at $480 in the
assport Bureau of the Department of State in New York
ity, under Civil Service rules, July 8, 1920; at $600 July i, 1921;
essenger at SS40, February i, 1922; at $960 March i, 1924; at
.200 July I, 1924.
♦Laine. James Oliver. — Retired as Consul of class five, unas-
jned. May, 1919. Register of 1918.
Lakin, Harry Moore. — Bom in Alverton, Pa., February 20,
89; home, Greensburg, Pa.; attended public and private
hools in Pennsylvania and Virginia, the University of
licago, and the Ohio Northern University (A. B.), (M. A.);
udied languages and political economy in Paris and JNIadrid;
igaged in educational and joumaUstic work in the Philippine
lands and Porto Rico; appoiated Vice-Consul at Leghorn
ebmary 3, 1916; appointed after examination (June 18, 1917),
jnsul of class seven September 5, 1919, and remained at Leg-
)m; assigned to Aden November 20, 1920; appointed Consul
class six November 23, 1921; unassigned from December,
21; detailed to the Department of State April 21, 1922; ap-
jinted Consul of class five March i, 1923; Foreign Service
fficer of class six July i, 1924, assigned to Durban September
*Lamb, Eugene Melvin. — Retired as Student Interpreter
1 China, also Vice-Consul at Antung, December, 19 16. Regis-
;r of 1916.
♦Landon, Francis G. — Retired as Second Secretary of the
;mbassy at Vienna June, 1907. Register of 1913.
Lane, Arthur Bliss. — Born in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, N. Y.,
ime 16, 1894; home. New York City; graduate of Yale Uni-
ersity (A. B.) 1916; served in the Connecticut National Guard
} 15-16; private secretary to the American Ambassador to Italy
Lily, 1916-August, 1917; appointed, after examination (June 25.
)i7), secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four August 23.
)i7. and assigned to Rome; appointed Secretary of class three
[arch 14. 1919; assigned to Warsaw April 16, 1919; to London
)ecember 10, 1919; to Beme, April 6, 1922; appointed Secre-
ary of class two September 22, 1922; assigned to the Dcpart-
lent of State February 26, 1923; detailed as Assistant to the
rndersecretary of State May 12, 1924; appointed Foreign
er%-ice Officer of class tour July i, 1924.
Lane, Charles Wilkins.— British subject, born in Pictou,
:ova Scotia, May 25, 1864; attended the Pictou Academy and
raduated from Dalhousie University (Halifax) (LL. B.) 1887;
ppointed King's Counsel 191 5; practiced law in Lunenburg
birty years and acted as agent for several insurance and surety
ompanics; appointed Consular Agent at Lunenburg February
D, 1924.
Lane, jr., Rufus Herman. — Bom in Willoughby, Ohio, May
4, 1901; home, Falls Church, Va.; attended Union College
920-21, and George Washington University 1920-1922; gradu-
ted from the University of Virginia (B. S.) 1923; employed as
ngineer's assistant six months; appointed, after examination
June 23, 1924). Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, October
6, 1924, and detailed to the Department of State.
Lane, William Edward. — Bora in Westborough, Mass.,
December 6, 1889; educated in the grammar and high schools
of Brooklyn, N. Y.; clerk to the Trade Commissioner of the
Department of Commerce at Bucharest, Rumania, 1919; for-
eign correspondent for an export house in New York 1920-21;
appointed a clerk in the American Consulate at Cologne Octo-
ber, 1921; Vice-Consul at Cologne February 14, 1922.
*Laiig, Paul.— Died at his post (Sherbrooke) October 31,
igii. Register of 1913.
Langdon, William Russell.— Bom in Smyrna, Turkey, of
American parents, July 31. 1891; home, Dedham, Mass.; re-
ceived his early education in schools at Smyrna; graduated
from Mount Hermon School, Massachusetts, and spent one year
at Trinity College; clerk in Consulate-General at Constanti-
nople, 1911-1913; and at Athens, 1913-14; appointed, after exarn-
ination (January 19, 1914), Student Interpreter in Japan April
4, 1914; also Vice-Consul at Yokohama March 24, 1916; also In-
terpreter at Yokohama January 4, 1917; appointed Assistan:
Japanese Secretary to the Embass>- to Japan, February 12, 1918;
Vice Consul de carriere of class one August 26, 1919; assigned to
Yokohama July 8. 192 1; appointed Consul of class six Novem-
ber 23, 1921; assigned to Antung Jlay 10, 1922; appointed Consul
of class five June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
♦Lange, Erwin Frederic. — Retired as Interpreter at Constan
tinople, also Vice-Consul at Brusa, August, 1917. Register
of 1916.
* Langhorae, Marshall. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class one, unassigned, December, 1919. Register of
1918.
Langley, Laura Estelle.— Born in Fairfax County, Va.; edu-
cated in public schools; appointed, temporarily, at $480 in the
Department of State April 6, 1917; at $600, May i, 1917; at $720,
October i, 1917; a telephone switchboard operator at $720,
July I, 1918, under Executive order of June 12, 1918; at $900,
December 31, 1919; position allocated to C. A. F, one at $1,140
July I, 1924.
Langley, Ruth Harlin.— Bom in Mankato, IMinn.; graduated
from high school 1919; clerk in the Bureau of the Census, De-
partment of Commerce, January, 1920, to July, 1922; clerk in
the Fuel Administrator's Office, the Coal Commission, and
the Post Office Department August, 1922, to January, 1924;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service mles, January 16, 1924; at $1,000 May 31, effective
June I, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Lankford, Milton Stewart.— Bom in Princess Anne, Md.,
October 4, 1873; attended high school and Pierce's Business
College, Philadelphia. Pa.; postmaster in Princess Anne, Md.,
1899-1905; accountant and teller. United States Subtreasury
«t Baltimore 1905-1912; in private business 1913-1917; in
charge of Army supplies in Spain 1917-1919; chief of transpor-
tation. Ordnance Department at Large, Charleston, S. C,
1919-20; appointed Consular Agent at Caibarien, November
14, 1921.
La Richeliere, Edmond Wilfrid,— Bom in Southbridge,
Mass., February 28, 1S95; attended the public schools of South-
bridge six years and the Conmiercial Academy (Quebec.
Canada) six years; commercial reporter for a branch office of a
New York concern in Quebec eleven years; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Quebec September. 1923, to February, 1924;
appointed Vice-Consul at Quebec Febmary 13. 1924-
Larkin, William Edward.— Bom in North Adams, Mass..
June 23, 1893; attended high school four years, and Georgetown
School of Foreign Service three years; compiler for city directory
1907-1911; compositor for a printing company 191 2; clerk in the
United States Postal Service 1913-1917 and 1919-20; ser\'ed in
the United States Army 1917-18; clerk in the Income Tax Unit,
Treasury Department, 1921-1923; clerk in the American Con-
sulate at Foochow October, 1923. to April, 1924; appointed Vice
Consul at Foochow April 14. 1924-
Lamed, Frank Henry.— Bom in Old Point, Va., April i, 1861;
attended public and high schools; studied in private school
in Europe; employed by the United States Immigration
Serv^ice, Department of Labor, thirty years; Washington
representative of New York shipping corporation 1919-1921;
reappointed as special assistant to the Commissioner General
of Immigration August, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Lon-
don Febmary 14, 1922; at Naples October 10, 1923.
♦Lasseter, Dillard Brown.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
detailed to the Dciiartment of State, Octofjer, 1923. Register
of 1922,
32952—25-
-11
156
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
LatchloTd, Stephen. — Born in Annapolis Junction, Md., Feb-
ruary 4, 1SS3; attended the public schools of Maryland and a
business college in Washington, D. C; took course in commer-
cial law with the International Correspondence Schools of
Scranton, Pa.; Washington College of Law (LL. B.) 1920; ad-
mitted to the bar of the District of Columbia. October 1930:
employed as clerk in commercial houses, 190&-1904; stenog-
rapher and typewriter in law offices 1904-05; appointed ste-
nographer and typewriter in Panama, under the Isthmian Canal
Commission, July 18, 1905; transferred to the Department of
State and appointed clerk at $900 August 19, 191 1; at $1,000
August I, 19:3; class one December 3, 191s; class two June 32,
to beeffective July i. 1016; class three. May 1,1918; law clerk at
$2, coo September 8, 1921; at 82,250 September 16, 1922; at
$2,500 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; assistant
solicitor at $2,500 November i, 1923; at §3,000 July i, 1924.
♦Latham, Charles Louis.— Retired as Consul of class five,
unassijrned, January 30, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Lathrop, Lorin Andrews. — * * * Appointed Foreign
Ser\-ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924. Retired from active
service as Consul at Nassau July, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Lattin, James William.— Retired as Marshal at Amoy, 1916.
Register of 1915-
Laughlin, Irwin Boyle. — Bom in Pittsburgh, Pa., 1871; gradu-
ate oi Yale, 1893 ; traveled extensively in Europe and the Orient;
treasurer of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Co. of Pittsburgh;
private secretary to the Minister to Japan, 1904-05; appointed
Second Secretary of the Legation at Tokyo January 13, 1905;
Secretary of the Legation and Consul-General at Bangkok
June 2S, 1906; Second Secretary of the Legation at Peking
March 9, 1907; Second Secretary of the Embassy at Petrograd
June 17, 1907; Secretary of the Legation to Greece and Montene-
gro July 30, 190S; Second Secretary of the Embassy at Paris
August 4, 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at Berlin December
II, 1909; detailed as secretary of the Special Mission to the
Ottoman Empire October 7, 1910; Secretary of the Embassy
at London September 12, 1912; Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class one by act approved February 5, 1915; designated
and assigned as Coimselor of the Embassy at London July 17,
1916; unassigned from April, 1919; assigned to duty with the
American Delegation, Conference on the Limitation of Arma-
ment, November i, 1921, to March 30, 1922; appointed Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Greece March
24, 1924.
Lawrence, Ethel Lee.— Bom in Montour Falls, N. Y.; at-
tended public and private schools; graduated from Tanner's
Business College, of Washington, D. C: studied one year in
George Washington University; also summer course in Inter-
national Law, 1923; graduated from Washington College of Law,
(LL. B.) 1914; appointed copyist in the Patent Office at $720.
under Civil Service rules, July 2, 1902; at $800 March 6, 1903;
at $900 July I, 1903; transferred to the Department of State as
clerk at Sgoo April 12, 1904; appointed clerk at $1,000 July 2,
1906; class one March 4, 1907; class two December i, 1909; class
three June 22, to be effective July 1, 1916; class four September 3,
1919; law clerk at §2,000 October 27, 1923; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
Lawson, Eldora Christina.— Bom in Brockton, Mass.; gradu-
ated from the Brockton High School 1913; stenographer in an
insurance office 1913-1922; appointed a clerk of class one in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, November 27,
1922; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Lawson, Stanley Reginald.— Bom in New York City March
4, 1900; preparatory education in Sweden; attended Eslov's
College (Sweden) 1917-1919; clerk in the American Consulates
at Malmo and Dresden 1919-1924; appointed Vice-Consul at
Dresden July 7, 1924.
Lawton, Ezra Mills.— Born in Ironton, Ohio, August 23,
1S64; home, Cincinnati, Ohio; public and high school education;
clerk, mechanic, and bookkeeper; electrical engineer and con-
tractor, 1888-1906; in mining and quarry business, 1907-1913;
appointed Consular Agent at Oaxaca February 19, 1908; retired
September, 1913; appointed, after examination (June 10, 191 2),
Consul at Tegucigalpa December 22, 1913; Consul of class eight
by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Nogales March
20, 1917; appointed Consul of class seven April 16, 1917; assigned
to Guatemala December 17, 1918; appointed Consul of class
five September 5, 1919; in charge of the Legation at Tegucigalpa
October 4, 1919, to April 6, 1920; appointed Consul of class four
June 4, 1920; assigned to Sao Paulo July i, 1920; appointed
Consul of class three November 19, 1921; assigned to Sydney,
Australia, March 30, 1923; appointed Consul-General of class
four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i,
1924.
Lawton, James Swan.— Born in Chicago, 111., January 14,
1880; attended the Chicago public and high schools and Shat-
tuck Academy, Faribault, ^linn., four years; employed in the
laboratory of a steel company in Chicago one year; in assay
ofilice. Salt Lake City, Utah, one year; engaged in prospecting,
leasing, and mining in Utah and Nevada nine years; general
manager in Surinam for the Dutch Guiana Culture Co. since
1913; appointed Consular Agent at Paramaribo August 33,
1917.
Lay, Julius G.— Bom in Washington, D. C, August 9, 1872;
home, Washington; educated in the public schools and acad-
emy at Yonkers, N. Y., and Columbia grammar school, New
York City; employed as clerk in the Consulate at Ottawa for
four years; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at
Ottawa September i, 1S93; Consul at Windsor, Ontario, Octo-
ber 26, 1896, Consul-General at Barcelona, Spain, May 3, 1899;
Consul-General at Canton October 3, 1904; Consul-General at
Cape Town May 24, 1906; Consul-General at Rio de Janeiro
May 2, 1910; Consul-General at Berlin June 24, 1914; Consul-
General of class two by act approved February' 5, 1915; detailed,
temporarily, in the Department of State, March 15, 1917; as-
signed as Acting Foreign Trade Adviser February 18, 1918;
resigned March i, 1920; employed with an international banking
firm 1920-1924; appointed under Executive Order of June 3,
1924, Consul-General of class two June 5. 1924; detailed to the
Department of State June 27, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class one July i, 1924; assigned to Calcutta August
15, 1924.
Lay, Tracy. — Bom in Gadsden, Ala., November 5, 1882;
home, Gadsden; studied civil engineering at the Alabama
Polytechnic Institute four years, and political science at George
Washington University; reporter and editor, 1904; advertising
manager for a department store, Montgomery, Ala, 1904-1907,
and for a dry goods company, Birmingham, Ala., 1907-1908;
secretary to a Member of Congress, 190S-1911; clerk of the
Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, House of Rep-
resentatives, 1911-12; appointed, after examination (January
31, 1912), Consular Assistant March 12, 1912; Deputy Consul-
General at London May 27, 191 2; Vice and Deputy Consul at
Dubhn January 3, 1914; Deputy Consul-General at Paris Feb-
ruary 26, 1914; Vice-Consul at Paris February 6, 1915; Consul
of class nine July 14, 1916; on detail at Paris; appointed Consul
of class eight September 14, 1917; detailed to the Department
of State August 19, 1919; appointed Consul of class five Sep-
tember 5, 1919; classfour June4, 1920; class three Novemberig,
1921; designated for duty in connection with the Conference
on the Limitation of Armament October 24, 1921; appointed
Consul-General of class four March i, 1923; assigned to Munich,
March 30, 1923; detailed to the Department of State July 5,
1923; appointed Consul General of class three June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class two July i, 1924.
* Layton, Thomas Buxton Lawn. — Retired as Consul of class
five, unassigned, October, 1922. Register of 1922.
Leach, Richard Strong. — Born in New Haven, Conn., August
31, 1899; home, Plymouth, Conn.; graduated from high school
1916, and Yale College (A. B.) 1921; attended Yale Graduate
School 1921-22; served in the Students' Anny Training Corps
at Yale October-December, 1918; master in private school
1922-23; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), Consular
Assistant January 7, 1924, and detailed to the Department of
State; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
Leary, Herbert Fairfax. — Commander, Uuited States Navy;
assigned to duty as Assistant Naval Attache at London, Paris,
Rome, Berlin, and The Hague April 12, 1924.
Leary, Robert Edmund. — Bom in Boston, Mass., Febru-
ary 16, 1895; graduated from grade school, and attended St.
Joseph's College several years; employed in a clerical capacity
in Boston, 1913-1916, and by the Bethlehem Shipbuild-
ing Corporation 191 7; served in the United States Army
December, 191 7, to July, 1919; an assistant in a clothing manu-
facturers' association 1919-1921; clerk in the American Consu-
late at Palermo April, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Palermo
June 29, 1922.
*Leavell, William Hayne. — Retired as Minister to Guatemala
July, 1919. Register of 1918.
*Leavitt, Arthur Howland. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
unassigned, September 24, 1917. Register of 1916.
Leckey, Phoebe Fabian. — Bom in Lexington, Va.; graduate
of Goucher College and of Draughon's Business College, Mem-
phis, Tenn.; mercantile correspondent several years; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $960, in the Department of
State September 16, 1918; at $1,080 November i, 1919; at $1,140
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
157
iruary i, 1920; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules, Febru-
I, 1921; at $1,000, August 16. 1921; at $1,080, September i,
1; at $1,140, December 30. 1922, effective January i, 1923;
s one October i, 1923; at Si, 500 July i, 1924.
eClercq, Frederic Dagonet Kellogg.— Bom in New York
' March 22. 1896; home, Charleston, S. C; graduated from
ord University (A. M.) 1921; employed as a secretary to an
or and an architect and in research work 1914-1917; served
tie United States Navy as ensign and lieutenant June, 1917,
November, 1919; employed in research work November,
I, to June. 1920; in the Department of State one month;
ointed, after examination (October iS, 1920), Secretary of
bassy or Legation of class four November 15, 1920; assigned
^ndon, December 13, 1920; appointed Secretary of class
:e December 4, 1922; on detail in the Department of State
nary i, to March 9, 1923; assigned to Tokyo July 23, 1923;
ointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Ledouz, Urbaln J. — Retired as Consul at Prague June, 1907.
ister of 1913-
»e, Augustus.— Born July 21, 1876; appointed skilled
irer. Department of Agriculture, July i, 1908; assistant
senger in the Department of State November s, 191 3.
se, Frank Charles. — Born in Norfolk, Nebr., August 14,
; home, Salida, Colo.; graduate of University of Colo-
) (A. B.), 191s; employed in jewelry business and as a
chmaker in Sahda and Omaha. 1904-191 1; appointed, after
mination (August 30, 1915), Consular Assistant October 15,
; Vice-Consul at Bordeaux January 25, 1916; at Petro-
1 September 19, 1916; at Moscow April i, 191S; ordered to
:kholm August 26, 1918, to take charge of personnel and
lives of Moscow Consulate General; detailed to Malmo
tember 14, 1918; attached to the Embassy staff at Arch-
si, with rank of Attache, November 26, 1918; directed
rust 6, 1919, to return to the United States; appointed
sul of class seven September 5, 1919; detailed to the De-
Mient of State January 5, 1920; appointed Consul of class
June 4, 1920; class five November 23, 1921; assigned to
dford September 21, 1923; appointed Consul of class four
ember 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i,
Lee, Frederic Edward. — Retired as Consul of class four,
liled to Shanghai, November, 1922. Register of 1922.
,ee, Joseph Wilcox Jenkins. — Retired as Minister to Guate-
a March, 1908. Register of 1913.
se, Parker Hughes. — Bom in Alexandria, Va., December
1890; educated in the public schools; employed as a mes-
:er in Washington, D. C, nine years; appointed, tempora-
, at $792, in the Department of State Febmary 6, 1918; an
stant messenger, under Civil Service rules, August 5, 1918;
senger August i, 1923.
se, Samuel T. — Born in Leeds, England, May 30, 1876; ad-
led to citizenship at Ann Arbor, Mich., May 26, 1899;
le, Ann Arbor; educated at Ann Arbor (Mich.) public and
L schools and the University of Virginia; read law; served
le United States Army three years during Spanish- Ameri-
War and the Philippine insurrection; appointed clerk and
slator, War Department, Manila, P. I., at $1,200 September
[900; transferred to bureau of education, Manila, July 16,
; promoted to division superintendent of schools for
intal Negroes at $1,600 November i, 1902; resigned Decem-
15, 1904; appointed chief of the record division, department
dUcc and prisons. Canal Zone, at $1,800 June 26, 1905; trans-
^d to the Department of State and appointed clerk at $900
■30, 1906; class one March 4, 1907; appointed, after exam-
ion (July 7, 1907), Consul at Nogales August 15, 1907; Con-
at San Jose, Costa Rica, May 31, 1909; detailed as Vice-
sul at Bluefields on special duty September 7, 1910, to
' 17, 1911; Consul of class seven by act approved February
us; appointed Consul of class six March 2, 1915; class four
' 24, 1916, and assigned to Rio Grande; assigned to Porto
^e June 18, 1918; appointed Consul of class three Septem-
5, 1919; assigned to Nottingham March 30, 1923; appointed
sul General of class four June 3, 1924; Foreign Ser\'ice
cer of class three July i, 1924.
.effingwell, Albert.— Retired as Consul at Warsaw Sej>-
ber, 1906. Register of 1913.
sgendre, Josephine Cole.— Bom in New Orleans, La.; grad-
d from high school 1912 and attended college 1912-13; clerk
he Bureau of War Risk Insurance 1918-1920 and the Bu-
1 of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department, 1920-1923;
sferred from the Treasury Department and appointed a
I at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Sers'ice
rules, January 16, 1924; at $1,000 May 31, effective June 1, 1924;
at $1,320 July X, 1924.
♦Leishman, John G. A. — Retired as Ambassador to Ger-
many October, 1913. Died in Nice, France, March 27, 1924.
Register of 1913.
Leng Hui. — Born in Siam, July 6, 1876; educated in French
and American schools of Bangkok; appointed Interpreter
to the Legation at Bangkok August 27, 1901.
Leonard, Henry Harrison. — Born in Connersville, Ind.,
March 9, 1865; educated in public schools; bookkeeper and
engaged in business in Nicaragua; appointed Consular Agent
at Corinto March 19, 1907; Vice and Deputy Consul July i,
1908; Vice-Consul by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed
Consular Agent at Buenaventura December 19, 1917; Vice-
Consul at Corinto July 28. 1920.
Leonard, Walter Anderson. — Born in Essex, Iowa, August 3,
1880; home, Evanston, 111.; attended high school, business col-
lege, and graduated from State University of Nebraska (A. B.),
1903, and took post-graduate work in economics at the Univer-
sity of Chicago, and at Freiburg, Baden; organized commercial
department, Kankakee (111.) high school, 1905-06; appointed
Vice and Deputy Consul at Freiburg, August 2, 1907; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Kehl, January 25, 1908; retired July i, 1908;
head of commercial department New Trier Township High
School (Cook County, 111.), and business manager of New Trier
book store 1908-1912; appointed, after examination, (April i,
1912), Consul at Stavanger August 23, 1912; Consul at Colombo
July 24, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved February
5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six April 16, 1917; class five
September s, 1919; detailed to the Department of State June
6, 1920; appointed Consul of class four Norember 23, 192 1;
detailed to Stockholm July 24, 1922; appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Leoni, Sylvio Charles. — Bom in New York City July 19, 188S;
attended the Austrian Gymnasium at Fara, Dalmatia, five
years; Commercial Institute at Rome two years; employed
by a banking house in Rome, 1910, and in the Rome office of
Thomas Cook & Son of London, 1911-1914; appointed Vice-
Consul at Florence May 18, 1915; resigned August i, 1920;
appointed Vice-Consul at Messina June 17, 1922; at Milan
December 13, 1922.
Leroux, Juan Enrique. — Born in Dominican Republic of
American parents June 28, 1876; clerk; appointed Consular
Agent at. Sanchez August 29, 190S.
*Le Roy, James A. — Retired as Consul at Duraugo August,
1907. Died in Fort Bayard, N. Mex., February, 1909. Reg-
ister of 1913.
*Lespinasse, Alphonse John. — Retired as Consul of class
seven, assigned to Cette. December 1920. Register of 1918.
Letcher, Marion. — Born in Shorter, Ala., September 4, 1873;
home, Conyers, Ga.; educated at the University of Alabama and
the University of Chicago; was school assistant in Montgomery,
Ala., 1895-96; principal of Scale (Ala.) high school; first lieuten-
ant in United States Volunteer Infantry and company com-
mander in Cuba during; Spanish-American War; president of
Douglasville College, Douglasville, Ga., 1900-1901; superinten-
dent of public schools, Conyers, Ga., 1901-1903; employed in the
Bureau of Education. 1903-1909; resident of Washington,
D. C; appointed, after examination (November 10, 1908),
Consul at Acapulco June 2, 1909; Consul at Chihuahua January
10, 1911; Consul of class eight by act approved February 5,
1915; appointed consul of class six February 22, 1915; detailed
as acting Foreign Trade Adviser in the Department of State
June 10, 1916; appointed Consul-General of class five .\pril 16,
191 7; detached from the office of the Forcit;n Trade Adviser
February 18, 1918; appointed Consul General of class four
April 8. 1918; assigned to Christiania April 9, 1918; to Callao-
Lima July i, 1920; to Copenhagen August 19, 1920; appointed
Consul General of class three June 3, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class two July i, 1924.
Levis, Davis Beauregard. — Born in St. Louis, Mo., Novem-
ber 23, J865; educated in the public schools of Illinois; passenger
agent of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railway four
years and engaged in independent business; appointed Vice
and Deputy Consul at St. Etienne September 17, 1914; Vice-
Consul at St. Etienne by act approved February 5, 1915;
Vice-Consul at Kingston, Jamaica. December 14, 1917; at La
Rochelle April 3, 1919; at Bordeaux November 19, 1930; at
Brest August 25, 1922; at Boulogne-sur-nier October lo, 1933;
at Cherbourg November 33, 1933; at Havre February 33, 1933;
at Boulogne-sur-mer October 6, J924; at La Rochelle October
23. 1924-
158
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Levlsee, Scott Stevens.— Bom in Lemon, Pa., May i8, iSgo;
home, Richmond, \'a.; attended Keystone Academy three
years, and graduated from Pennsylvania Stale College (B. S.)
1912; employed as bookkeeper for a dairy company 1906-1908,
and State dairy inspector 191 2; chemist for a condensed-milk
company three years, and a teacher in a private school one year;
employed as chemist for a private concern one and one-half
years and for two concerns under Government super\ision four
and one-half years; inspector for a municipal government two
years; appointed, after examination (January 14, 1924), Vice
Consul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified. July i, 1924; assigned to Glasgow July 31.
1924.
Lewis, Jr., Charles William.— Bora in Carlsbad, N. Max.,
March 17, 1898; home, Ann Arbor, Mich.; graduated from high
school 191 7; attended the University of Cincinnati 191 7-18,
and graduated from the University of Michigan (A. B.) 1922;
served in the United States Army February, 1918, to May,
1919, retiring with the rank of second lieutenant; employed by
a cash register company 1919; assistant professor at the Uni-
versity of Michigan 1921-22 and instructor 1922-23; appointed,
after examination (Januar>' 15, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Manchester April
27, T923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924.
Lewis, Daniel William. — Born in Ironton, Ohio, April 12,
1897; attended high school one year; ser\-ed in United States
Army 1916-1919; employed by United States Veterans' Bureau
1922-1924; appointed a typewriter repairman at $1,020 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December i,
1924; at $1,500 December, 31, 1924, effegtive January i, 1925-
Lewis, Gertrude G.— Bora in Walpole, Mass.; graduate of
Walpole High School, and attended a commercial college in
Boston; employed as stenographer in Norwood, Mass., one and
one-half years; with the War Industries Commission, Cleveland
District, Washington, D. C, eight months; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at Si, 200, in the Department of State, November
»6, 1918; clerk of class one. under Civil Service rules, August 3,
1920; class two, February 3, 1921; at $i,58o July i, 1924.
♦Lieber, Peter. — Retired as Consul at Diisseldorff June, 1908.
Register of 1913.
♦Lieberknecht, Adam. — Retired as Consul at Zurich June,
1908. Register of 1913.
Lieder, Eugene J.— Bora in Brooklyn, N. Y., October 5,
1891; public school and business college education; cashier for
a New York express company 1907-1910; an accountant at
Ensenada, P. R., 1910-1919; served as provost marshal at
Guanica, P. R., 1918; an accountant at La Romana, Domini-
can Republic, 1919-1922; appointed Consular Agent at La
Romana Noveniber 14, 1922.
*LieIeld, Ernest Theophilus.— Retired as Consul at Freiburg
June, 1908. Register of 1913.
Linard, Drew. — Born in Harrisburg, Pa., October 21, 1867;
home. Mobile, Ala. ; educated at San Mateo Military Academy
and Burlington College; engaged as a civil engineer in the
United States and Latin America twenty years ; appointed, after
examination (March, 1907, Consul at Ceiba, March 30, 1907;
retired October 1910; Consul for Honduras and Commercial
Agent for Brazil and customhouse broker at Mobile, Ala., 1911-
1914; appointed a clerk in the Department of State November
4, 1914; drafting officer at §2,500 July i, 1916; served in the
United States Army as captain and major October, 191 7, to
March, 1919; appointed a drafting officer at 83,000 in the Depart-
ment of State March 5, 1919; appointed Consul of class seven,
September 5, 1919; assigned to St. IMichael's September 6, 1919;
to Sault Ste. Marie March 30, 1923; to Piedras Negras December
17, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i,
1924.
Lincoln, Eunice A. — Born in Lacey Spring, Va.; attended
high school two years and Shenandoah Collegiate Institute five
years; teacher in Shenandoah Collegiate Institute five years;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at 5 1,140, in the Department
of State, July 16, 1918; at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, Feb-
ruary 15. 1919: class one December 31. 1919. effective January
I, 1920; class two September 16, 1922; class threeMay 31, effective
Jime I, 1924; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Llndgren, Henry Walter.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., July
10, 1892; attended public schools; graduated from a business
college 1909; employed as stenographer and general office
assistant 1909-1918; stenographer. United States Immigration
Service, Ellis Island, November, 1918, to August, 1919; ap-
pointed a clerk of class one in the Passport Bureau of the De-
partment of State in New York City, under Civil Service rules,
August 26, 1919; clerkof class two June 25, effective July i, 1930;
class three March i, 1924; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Lindholm, George Victor.— Bora in Riverside, N. J., August
20, 1901; graduated from high school 1920, and attended Syra-
cuse University two years; employed as temporary clerk in
the Department of State during two summer vacations, and
by the Young Men's Christian Association 1921-22; appointed
a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, November 26, 1923; at $1,000 March i, 1924; at $1,320
July I, 1924; at $1,500 August 30, 1924.
Lindsey, Myma Nagel.— Bora in Colimibus, Ky.; attended
high school and business college; stenographer in private con-
cerns and in Treasury Department; appointed a clerk at $1,320
temporarily, in the Department of State, imder Civil Service
rules, October 25, 1924.
Linehan, Ella Cecelia.— Bora in North Easton, Mass.; high-
school graduate; employed as clerk and stenographer in busi-
ness houses in Boston four years; in War Department two
years; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, February 24, 1920; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Linnell, Irving Nelson. — Born in Boston, Mass., January 27,
1881; home, Boston; graduated from the Cambridge (ilass)
Latin School, 1901; Harvard College (A. B.), 1904; Harvard
Law School (LL. B.).),i907; employed in a lawyer's office in
Boston 1907-08; practiced law in Boston 1908-191 1 ; member of the
Cambridge (TVIass.) common council, 1909-1911, serving as presi -
dent one year; secretary of the General Theological Library,
Boston, 191 1 ; employed in a law office in Prince Rupert since
191 1 ; appointed Consular Agent at Prince Rupert September 23 ,
1914; Vice-Consul at Prince Rupert April 20, 1915; Vice-Consul
at Vancouver March 16, 1916; appointed, after examination
(June 18, 1917), Consul of class eight February 19, 1918; detailed
to Vancouver February 20, 1918; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919; assigned to Plymouth December i, 1919;
detailed to London July 3:, 1920; detailed, temporarily, to
Cardiff August 24, 1921; returned to London September 13,
192 1 ; appointed Consul of class five November 23, 192 1; class
four March i, 1923; detailed to the Department of State March
30, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five July i,
1924; class four August S, 1924.
Linthicum, Walter Joseph. — Born in Baltimore, Md.. Febru-
ary 10, 1893; attended St. Martin's Academy, Baltimore, 1902-
1908; Baltimore pubHc schools 1908-1910; Baltimore Poly-
technic Institute 1910-1912; business college three months;
employed as shipping clerk 1912-13: salesman 1913; with the
United States Geological Survey 1913-1915; surveyor 1915-16;
foreman of construction work four months; Mexican border
service 1916-17; inspector of roads, Maryland State Roads
Commission three months; served in the United States Army
1917-18, first lieutenant; appointed Vice-Consul at Singapore
January' 19, 1920; at Palermo April 12, 1922; at Marseille May
3, 1923; at Nice October 15, 1924.
♦Listoe, Soren. — Retired as Consul-General of class four, as-
signed to Rotterdam, November, 1920. Register of 1918.
Livesey, Frederick. — Born in Auburn, N. Y., April i, 1886;
graduated from Harvard University (A. B.) 1908, and attended
Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration 1915-
16; floor member, Boston Chamber of Commerce grain ex-
change 1908-1910; farm manager, chief clerk of farms and chief
clerk of railways United Fruit Co., in Guatemala, 1910-1914;
translator for an oil company 1916-17; translator in the Army
War College 1917-18; first lieutenant in the United States
Army, 1918-19; detailed to American Commission to Negotiate
Peace, December, 1918, to April, 1919; reemployed as transla-
tor in the Army War College 1919-1923; appointed a drafting
officer at $3,000 in the Department of State November 12, 1923.
* Livingston, Charles Ludlow. — Retired as Consul of class
seven, assigned toCharlottetown, February, 1922. Register of
1918.
♦Livingston, Lemuel W. — Retired as consul of class nine,as-
signed to Cape Haitien, December, 1919. Register of 1918.
Loar, Mary J.— Born in Jacksonville. III.; attended the pub-
lic schools of Jacksonville; teacher in Council Bluffs (Iowa)
school 1912-1918; clerk in War Department October, 1918, to
April, 1920; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, April 12, 1920; at $1,100 May 31
elTective June i, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Lockhart, Frank Pruit.— Born in Pittsburg, Tex., April 8,
1881; received his education in public and private schools of
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
159
Texas and at Grayson College; associate editor of the Pittsburg
Gazette, 1900-1902; private secretary to a member of the House
of Representatives, 190J-1911; clerk. House Committee on
Public Buildings and Grounds, 1911-1913; private secretary
to a Senator and clerk of Senate Committee on Expenditures
in the Department of Agriculture, 1913-14; appointed Assistant
Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs, Department of
State, July 29, 1914; appointed drafting officer at $3,500, July
I, 1919; sent on special mission by the Department of State
to Japan, China, Philippine Islands. Straits Settlements, Siam,
and Dutch East Indies, 1919-20; expert assistant. Conference
on the Limitation of Armament November 3, 193 1; appointed
a drafting officer at $4,000, August 16, 1922; at $4,400 August i,
1924.
Loftus, Victor H. — Born in Lawrence, Mass., July 17, 1897;
graduate of Lawrence High School; attended University of
Maine one year; business college three months; employed dur-
ing vacation periods with commercial concerns; clerk in the
Ordnance Department, under Civil Service rules, two months,
1918; enlisted with the United States Shipping Board; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,000, in the Department of State tempo-
rarily, under Civil Ser\-ice rules, February 10, 1919; clerk in the
Diplomatic Service at $3,250, and assigned to the Embassy at
Paris December 5, 1919: reappointed a clerk at $1,000 \a the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, August 30,
1920; class one, December 31, 1920, effective January i, 1921; class
two March i, 1924; at Si, 860 July i, 1924.
*Logan, George Lafayette. — Retired as Consul of class six,
unassigned, December, 1931. Register of 1918.
Logsdon, Seth Donnelly. — Born in Frederick, 111., February
J3, 1894; attended a normal school three years and a business
college one year; employed as a bookkeeper :9i6-i7; served in
the United States Army 191 7-1920; appointed a clerk of class
one in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
September 16, 1920; class two December 30, 1932, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
*Long, Boaz Walton. — Retired as Minister to Cuba February
1922. Register of 1918.
♦Long, James Vemer.— Retired as Consul at Venice May,
1914. Register of 1913.
I/Ongyear, Robert Dudley. — Born in Paris, France, of Ameri-
can parents, February ir, 1896; home, Cambridge, Mass.; grad-
uated from Harvard University (A. B.) 1917; attended third
Reserve Oft'icer's Training Class, United States Naval Acad-
emy, February-June 1918; Harvard Law School 1919-20; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three, May2s, 1921; assigned to Port au Prince,
July 21, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
May 26, 1922; class one February 26, 1923; assigned to Geneva
March 30, 1923; appointed Consul of class seven December 19,
1923; remained at Geneva, on detail; appointed Foreign Ser-
vice Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
*Loop, Carl Raymond. — Died at his post (Catania) July 39,
1933. while a Consul of class five. Register of 1922.
Lord, John Hayes. — Born in Plymouth, Mass., August 5.
1S93; attended college preparatory school 1908-1910; Harvard
College 1910-1915 (A. B. 1914); business college, February-June,
191s; Sorbonne University, Paris, March-June, 1919; employed
by a fruit grower at Bonita, Calif., Jime, i9r3, to August, 1914;
by a silk manufacturing company at Weehawken, N. J., Au-
gust, 1915, to October, 1916; by a New York firm, as accountant,
October, 1916, to April, 1917; enlisted in the United States
Marine Corps April 26, i<yi7; discharged August, 1919, as ser-
geant; appointed Vice-Consul at Basel, March 3, 1930; at
Prague, August s. 1920; at Singapore October 18, 1931.
Loren, Odin Gerhard.— Bom in Superior, Wis., April 17,
1893; attended Spokane (Wash.) High School three years;
Spokane College one year; employed as collector and clerk,
Spokane, 191 3; billing clerk and stenographer, Edmonton
Alberta, 1912-1914; salesman, general merchandise store, 1915;
bookkeeper, Coulett City, Wash., 1916-17; clerk-typist, Spo-
kane, 1919; served in the United States Army, first lieutenant.
1917-1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Colon February 6, 1920.
Lorentzen, Jurgen H. L. — Bom in St. Louis, Mo., June 36.
1893; attended private schools, St. Louis, 1903-1906; (irundan
College, Berne, Switzerland, 1906-07; Real-Gymnasium, Bre-
men, Germany, 1909-10; University of Illinois, 1916-17: assistant
to manager of a chemical company, St. Louis, Mo., 1913-1915.
real estate salesman, Washington, D. C. 1917-18: appointed
Vice-Consul at Zurich March 11, 1920; at Kovno June 30. 1932;
at Palermo January 3, 1924.
*Lorlllard, George L.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class one, assigned as Special Agent to care for
American interests in Serbia January, 1917. Register of 1916.
Lothrop, Alfred Peirce.— Bora in Leominster, Mass.. June
25, 1884; graduated from Oberlin College (A. B.) 1906, (A. M.)
1907; Columbia Uaiveriity (Ph. D.) 1909; associate pro-
fessor in biological chemistry at Columbia University 1909-
1914; assistant professor of biological chemistry Queen's Uni-
versity, Kingston, Ontario, 1914-1916, and professor 1916-1933;
acting associate professor of chemistry, Oberlin College, 1923-
1923; appointed \'ice-Consul at Kingston, Ontario, October 30,
1922.
Lough, Ernest St. George.— Bom in Brooklyn. N. Y., May
30, 1863; graduate of the Brooklyn Polytechnic School and of
Yale University, class of 1884; member of a firm of importeri
and exporters also a member of the New York Produce Ex-
change and the New York JIaritime Exchange in New York
City 18S4-1908; plantation owner in Guadeloupe; appointed
Vice-Consul at Guadeloupe May 10, 1919.
Love, Joseph J.— Bom in Mobile, Ala., March 22, 1867; at-
tended public schools of New Orleans, La., 1874-1884, and
Tulane Law School 1S97-9S; employed as boss plasterer 1S84-
18S7; as contractor 1887-1896; clerk in the post office at New
Orleans, La., since 1S96; appointed United States despatch
agent at New Orleans November 27, 1922.
Lowrie, Walter Booth.— Bora in Duluth, Minn., September
3, 1902; attended high school and Park College (Missouri) 1920-
21; employed in a hospital and by an engineering corporation
several years; clerk in the American Consulate at Port Said;
appointed \"ice Consul at Port Said August 26, 1924.
Lowrie, Will Leonard.— Bora in Adrian, Mich., March 8,
1869; home, Chicago, 111.; graduated from Adrian College; at-
tended the University of Michigan and the University of
Leipzig; newspaper and magazine writer four years; on editorial
staff of Chicago Tribune three years; secretary to the American
Minister to Brazil one year; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Rio de Janeiro January 14, 1899; resigned July 15,
1901; appointed, after examination (July 14, 1906), Consul at
Weimar, July 21, 1906; Consul at Erfurt Jime 10, 1908; Consul at
Carlsbad May 31, 1909; Consul-General at Libson August 22,
1912; appointed Consul-General of class five February 22, 1923
effective February 5. 1915; Consul-General of class four Septem-
ber 5, 1919; assigned to Athens July i, 1920; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class three July i, 1924; assigned to Wellington
October 22, 1924.
Lowry. Edward Prindle. — Bora in Lancaster, Wis., August
S, 1887; home, Paris, III.; attended high school i903-i9o6;United
States jtlilitary Academy 1907-08; graduated from Officers School
(Philippine Islands) 1909; teacher of mathematics, St. John's
Military Academy, two years; served in the Philippine Consta-
bulary with grade of lieutenant two years, 1909-1911; served as
major (cavalry) Persian Gendarmerie 1911-12; employed as
clerk with the United FruitCo. inBocas del Toro, Panama, Uwo
years, 1913-1915; with logging company, Seattle, Wash., several
years; served in the United States Army, retiring with the
grade of major; with the Lithuanian Mission to the United
States four months, 1920; clerk in the Legation at Habana
1920-21; appointed, after examination (June 37, 1931), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three October 26, 1921; assigned to
Habana December 22, 1921; to Mexico April 12, 1922; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two February 26, 1923;
class one November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924.
Lucas, Alice Rosetta. — Born in Washington, D. C; graduate
of St. Patrick's Academy; employed in a law office in Alexan-
dria, Va., 1910-1916; appointed clerk atSgoo, temporarily, in the
Department of State October 4, 1916; at $900, on probation.
May I, 1917; at $1,000, August i, 1917; class one. May i, 1918;
class two, March i, 1919; class three February i, 1924; at $1,860
July I, 1924.
♦Lumry, Carl Games. — Retired as Vice-Consul de carriere
of class tliree, assigned to Naples, December, 1921. Register
of 1922.
Lundahl, Ralph M.— Bora in Two Harbors. Minn., May 8,
1905; high school education and graduated from Augustana
College and Normal School (Sioux Falls, S. Dak.) 1923; attended
a business college four months; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\nce rules, February i,
1924; at $1,000 May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $1,320 July i
1924.
Lupton, Stuart Kenneth. — Born in Clarkesville, Tenn., No-
vember 0, 1875; home, Clarkesvillc,Tenn.; attended high school;
i6o
BIOGRAPHICAI^ STATEMENT.
graduated Irom Southwestern Presbyterian University (Ten-
nessee) and Washington University; employed as bookkeeper
and salesman; practiced dentistry; appointed Marshal of the
Consular Court and Vice and Deputy Consul at Amoy May 8,
1905; resigned May, 1906; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul
at Valparaiso September ai, 1906; Vice and Deputy Consul at
Messina November 31, 1908; appointed, after examination (No-
vember 10. 1908). Consul at Messina January 21, 1909; Consul at
Catania February 10, 1909; Consul at Karachi August 37, 1909;
Consul-General at Guatemala February 18, 1914; appointed
Consul of class six February 22, 1915; effective February s, 1915,
and assigned to Guatemala; Consul of class five July 14, 1916,
and assigned to Bombay; assigned to Chefco, September 8,
1919; appointed Consul of class four June 4, 1920; assigned to
Sofia December 12, 1923; appointed Foreign Service OfTicer of
class five July i, 1924.
*Lyon, Ernest.— Retired as Minister Resident and Consul-
General to Liberia August, 1910. Register of 1913.
McAndrews, John Henry Eugene.— Bom in Owatonna.
Minn., July i, 1884; attended Sacred Heart Academy eight
years; Owatonna High School two and one-half years; Pills-
bury Academy, one year; summer normal school, Millbank,
S. Dak.; taught school in South Dakota two years; employed
in a clerical capacity in Owatonna two years; general salesman,
Southern States, for a Chicago firm; appointed Vice-Consul at
Cork August 21, 1918; transferred to Frankfort on the Main for
visa work July 13, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Frankfort on
the Main, November 15, 1921; Vice-Consul at Bucharest Janu-
ary 7, 1922.
McAndrews, Patrick James— Born in Adams, Mass.. Octo-
ber 31. 1890; attended Adams High School five years; New York
University two years; employed as timekeeper on construc-
tion work 1913 to 1914; factory foreman in New York four
years; factory manager in Prescott, Canada; served in the
United States Army; appointed Vice-Consul at Prescott, May
20, 1920.
McArdle, Raymond John.— Bom in Bolivar, N. Y., Decem-
ber 20, 1891; home, Pittsburgh, Pa.; attended the University
of Illinois 19H-12, Carnegie Institute of Technology 1913-1915,
and Catholic University of America 1920-21; served in the
United States Army 1917-1919; draftsman in the office of a
railroad engineer 1912-13; designer and salesman 1915-16; en-
gaged in decorating business 1916-17; secretary for the Knights
of Columbus in France four months, 1919; salesman 1921-22;
appointed, after examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul
de carri&re of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Mexico
April 27, 1923; to Santa Marta August 11, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer unclassified, July i, 1924.
Macatee, Robert Berry.- Bom in Front RoyaL Va.. July 31,
1891; home. Front Royal; high school gftaduate and took a
course in George Washington University; cipher clerk and con-
fidential clerk to the Governor General of the Philippines 1913-
1916; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of
State December 15, 1916; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules,
April 5, 1917, at Si.ooo August 1, 1917; class one, temporarily,
December 13, 1917; class two, temporarily, August i, 1918; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 24, 1918) a Consular Assistant
October 7, 1918; detailed ,ior duty with the American Commis-
sion to Negotiate Peace November 30, 1918; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three May 25, 1920, and assigned to
Geneva; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two Novem-
ber 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; Consul of class seven March
I, 1923; detailed to London March 30, 1923; appointed Consul of
class six June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Ofificer of class seven
July I, 1924.
McBeth, Warren.— Born in Charleston, S. C, April 26, 1874;
appointed assistant messenger in the War Department Janu-
ary I, 1895; assistant messenger in the Department of State
December 22, 1913; messenger January 23, 1915; chief messen-
ger February 23, 1915; reappointed messenger February 15,
1917.
McBride, Harry Alexander.- Born in Flint, Mich., October
14, 1887; home, Pontiac, Mich.; graduate of the Pontiac High
School and attended private schools in Dresden; manager of
printing and advertising departments for hotel company, 1905-
1908; in Consulate-General at Dresden October, 1908, to Febru-
ary, 1909; appointed Consular Agent at Bilbao February 16,
1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Barcelona October
31, 1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Zurich October
18, 1911; appointed, after examination (April i, 1912), Consular
Assistant September 3, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
at Boma July 5, 1913; ordered to proceed to Angola for six
months to investigate commercial conditions June 33, 1914; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Boma February 6, 1915; detailed to
London August 4. 1916; Vice-Consul at London October 5,
1916; appointed Consul of class eight September 14, 1917; ap-
pointed alternate American representative on the Nitrate oi
Soda Executive February 5, 191S; Acting General Receiver of
Customs and Financial Adviser of Liberia August, 1918, to May
I, 1919; reinstated as Consul of class eight May i, 1919; assigned
to Warsaw June 3, 1919; appointed Consul of class five Septem-
ber 5, 1919; class four June 4, 1920; on detail in the Depart-
ment of State August 7 to October 4, 1920; detailed for special
duty in eastern and southern Europe, October 4, 1920; detailed
to the Department of State December 27, 1920; appointed
Consul of class three November 23, 1921; retired as Consul of
class three, detailed to the Department of State August ji,
1922; foreigti representative of an American firm in Spam,
appointed Vice-Consul at Malaga April 4, 1923.
McCabe, E. R. Warner.— Lieutenant colonel. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Military Attache at Rome June 6,
1924.
McCafferty, William Joseph.— Bom in San Francisco, Calif.,
September 23, 1889; home, San Francisco; high school graduate
and took a course in a business college; stenographer with
various concerns in San Francisco 1908-1915; in the department
surgeon's office, Manila, 1916-17; appointed Vice-Consul at Mel-
bourne February 10, 1917; appointed, after examination (June
24, 1918), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 27,
1919; assigned to Melbourne October 22, 1919; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 24, 1920; assigned to Auck-
land October 18, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class one November 17, 192 1; assigned to Hongkong December
13, 1921; appointed Consul of class seven March i, i923;remained
at Hongkong on detail; on temporary detail at Amoy July-
September, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924; assigned to San Salvador July 12, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven August 8, 1924.
McCally, Marguerite Baird.- Born in Chicago, 111.; has
public school and business school education; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, in the Department of State, August 10, 1914;
permanently at $900, under Executive order, June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk at $1,000 May 21, 1917;
class one, August i, 1918; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
♦McCarthy, Hugh Charles. — Retired as Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three, assigned to Soerabaya, September, 1923.
Register of 1922.
McCarthy, Ward Brown.- Born in Washington, D. C. Jan-
uary 7, 1893; attended public and business schools and grad-
uated from the Georgetown University Law School (LL.B.)
1922 (LL. M.) 1923; member of the bar of the District of Col-
umbia; employed as a page. United States Senate; with the
Southern Railway and the Geological Survey; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State August 10,
1914; permanently a clerk of class one, under Executive
order, June 22, to be effective July 1, 1916; served in United
States Army September, 1917, to September, 1919, retiring
as second lieutenant in the Air Service; with the Peace Con-
ference at Paris January-December, 1919; reinstated as clerk
of class one in the Department of State August 13, 1920; class
fwo December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,860
July I, 1924.
♦McCaslin, Charles. — Retired as Marshal at Newchwang
June, 1906. Register of 1914.
McClare, Louise F.— Born in McKenzie, Tenn.; educated in
the public schools; attended normal school two years; clerk in
various offices at Blytheville, Ark., one year; clerk in Ordnance
Division, War Department, 191 7-1920; appointed a clerk at $900
in the Department of State, under Civil-Service rules, January
28, 1921; at $1,000 December 12, 1921; at $1,100 May 31, effective
June 1, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
*MacClintock, Samuel.— Retired as Consul at Puerto Cortes
April, 1910. Register of 1913.
McClure, Wallace Mitchell. — Born in Knoxville, Tenn.,
July 30, 1890; graduated from the University of Tennessee
(A. B.) 19x0, (LL. B.) 191 1 ; Columbia University (A. M.) 191s;
engaged in the legislation drafting department of Columbia
University January-June, 1914; employed on the mayor's tax
commission of the city of New York September, 1914, to Febru-
ary, 1915; secretary to the committee on assessment and taxa-
tion of the State of Tennessee February-March, 1915; Cutting
traveling fellow of Columbia University July, 1915, to July.
1916; practiced law at Knoxville July, 1916, to August, 191 7;
second lieutenant in United States Army August, 1917, to
December, 1918; employed as an expert to legislative commit-
tee to draft the income-tax law of New York February-March,
1919; member of the University of Tennessee faculty March-
June, 1919; practiced law 1919-20; appointed a drafting officer
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
l6l
at $3,000 in the Department of State December 4, 1920; at
$3,500 Novemberis, 1922; at $3,800 July i, 1924; at $4,200 Sep-
tember I, 1924.
McCollough, Derrill H. — Bom in Spartanburg, S. C. August
II. 1851; attended St. Paul's School. Concord, N. H.. two years;
Trinity College. Hartford, Conn., three years (A. B.); United
States storekeeper and gauger in South Carolina two years; en-
gaged in independent business several years; appointed Vice-
Consul at Ceiba June 6, 1918.
McColium, Arthur H. — Ensign, United States Navy; as-
signed to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo December 27,
1921.
McConnico, Andrew Jackson. — Born in Vaiden, Miss., Feb-
ruary 20, 1875; home,Vaiden; educatedat Moody's Boys' School,
Mount Hermon, Mass., and Brown University, Providence,
R. I.; was reporter on the Providence Evening Telegram and
the Providence Journal and Bulletin; was admitted to the bar
at Vaiden in 1902; practiced law; town treasurer and town
solicitor of \'aiden; appointed, after examination (April 7, 1908),
Consul at St. Johns, Quebec, May 31, 1909; Consul at Trinidad
September 18, 1913; Consul ot class seven by act approved
February 5. 1915; assigned to Corinto March 20, 1917; to Guada-
lajara June 5. 1919: appointed consul of class six September 5,
1919; assigned to Bluefields June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
*McCormick, Robert Sanderson. — Retired as Ambassador to
France ^f arch, X907. Died near Chicago April 16, 1919. Regis-
ter of 1913.
*McCreery, Fenton R.— Retired as Minister to Honduras
July, 1911. Register of 1913.
McCuen, Nina Burton. — Born in Fredericksburg, Va.; edu-
cated in the public schools and attended high school two years;
pursued a course of study at a young ladies' seminary three
years; employed as a clerk by the United States Food Admin-
istration ten months; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,020
in the Department of State November 23, 1918; at $900, under
Civil Service rules, January 37, 1919; at $1,000 July i, 1919;
class one March i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦McCuUough, Charles Augustus.— Died in Calais, Me., April
30, 1914, while Consul at St. Stephen. Register of 1913.
*McCurui, John Niven.— * * * Appointed Foreign Serv-
ice OiScer of class five July i. 1924. Retired from active serv-
ice as Consul at Yarmouth July, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦McCutcheon, John Tyndall.— Retired as a Consular Assist-
ant, also Vice-Consul at Beirut February, 1920. Register of 1918.
McDermott, Michael James.— Born in Peabody, Mass., July
a, 1894; graduated from Peabody High School 1912, Burdett
College, Lynn, Mass., 1914; employed as a clerk by an insur-
ance company in Boston 1914-1917; clerk in the office of the
Provost Marshal General, War Department, Washington, July-
August, 1917; clerk in the executive office of the White House
July-December, 1917; Army field clerk in The Adjutant Gen-
eral's Office 191 7-1920; clerk in the American Section of the
Supreme War Council at Versailles, France, January-June,
1918; confidential clerk to Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, and American
Peace Commission at Paris June, 1918, to May, 1920; secretary
to Elihu Root of the Committee of Jurists to draft the project
for an International Court of Justice at The Hague, Paris,
May-August, 1920; appointed a special assistant in the Depart-
ment of State August 28, 1920; clerk of class three, under Civil
Service rules, October 7, 1920; class four June 15, 1922; ap-
pointed private secretary to the Undersecretary of State June
12, 1923; Assistant Chief of the Division of Current Information
April I, 1924; drafting officer at $3,000 July i, 1924.
McDonald, Donald C. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Assistant Military Attache at Paris April 11, 1923;
Military Attache at Brussels March 13, 1924.
McDonald, John Joseph.— Born in Boston, Mass., February
9, 1889; graduated from Dartmouth College (A. B.) 191 1; Prince-
ton University (A. M.) 1912; Yale University (LL. B.) 1917;
admitted to the New Hampshire bar June 30, 1917; engaged in
newspaper reporting 1913-14; admitted to the Massachusetts
bar, March 12, 1918; engaged in the practice of law in Boston,
Mass., October, 1917, to September, 1919, and in Manchester,
N. H., September. 1919, to October, 1921; permitted to prac-
tice before the United States Court for the District of New
Hampshire July 27, 1920; admitted to the bar of the Supreme
Court of the United States October 16, 1922; appointed a
drafting officer at $3,000 in the Department of State October
20, 1921; Assistant Coimsel in the American and British Claims
. Arbitration September 25, 1922; Associate Counsel December
28, 1923.
McDonough, Dayle Crockett.— Born in Cameron. Mo., De-
cember 14, 1891; home Kansas City, Mo.; graduated from the
University of Missouri (LL. B.) 1912; practiced law in Kansas
City 1913-1917, served in the United States Army May-Decem-
ber 1917; a supervisor of correspondence. Bureau of War Risk
Insurance, April, 1918, to September, 1919; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919). Consul of class seven, September
5, 1919; assigned to Concepcion October 21, 1919; to La Paz
June 22, 1922; appointed Consul of class six August 23. 1922;
class five December 19, 1923; Foreig;n Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924.
MacEachran, Clinton Edson.— Born in Beverly, Mass., De-
cember 27, 1887; received public school education and one year
in a business college; stenographer for business house in Boston
four and one-half years; appointed clerk in the Department of
State at $900, under Civil Service rules. October 21, 1910; class
one November ^o, 1911; class two March i, 1912; on special de-
tail at the Embassy in Mexico City February 21, 1913, to Sep-
tember 9. 1913, and at Vera Cruz November 8, 1913, to July 3,
1914; appointed clerk class three June 22, to be effective July i,
1916; class four December i, 1917; detailed as a confidential clerk
to the American Commission to the American-German Pris-
oner of War Conference at Berne August 16. 1918; special assist-
ant to the Counselor of the Department of State at $2,400. Feb-
ruary I, 1919; appointed drafting officer at $2,500, July i, 1919;
on detail with the American Commission to Negotiate Peace
July-December, 1919; appointed drafting officer at $3,000 De-
cember I, 1920; Consul of class seven June 14, 1921; detailed to
the Department of State June 22, 192 1; member of the Board of
Efficiency of the Department of State June 30, 1921; detailed
to Antwerp March 2, 1922; appointed Consul of class six March
I, 1923; on detail in the Department of State June 18 to July 15,
1923; assigned to Ghent April 10, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
McEnelly, Thomas.— Bom in Milford. Mass.. September 3.
1888; home. New York City; attended Marlboro High School
and business schools in New York; employed in office of Pan-
ama Railroad Steamship Co., New York, and clerk in a hotel
in Brbnxville, N. Y. ; appointed Vice-Consul at Mexico Sep-
tember 4, 1918; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919;,
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 27, 1919;
assigned to Frontera October 9, 1919; to Matanzas, November
26, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May
24, 1920; class one November 17. 1921; assigned to Buenaventura
May 12, 1922; to Chihuahua September 21, 1923; appointed
Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; assigned to Chihuahua
December 22, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
McFadden, Faber Joseph.— Bom in Dubuque, Iowa, Septem-
ber 28, 1S95; entered Cornell University; discontinued studies
in junior year to enter military service April. 1917; officer.
United States Army ; ser\-ice in France and military mission to
Spain 1917-1919; clerk American Legation. Guatemala, Central
.\merica, 1919-20; commercial investigations in western Europe
1920-192,2; appointed a drafting officer, at $2,500 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, April 17, 1922; at
$3,000, June 30, effective July i, 1923; detailed on special mission
to the Embassy at Paris April i, 1924.
♦McFarland, Silas Clark.— Died October 24, 1903, while
Consul-General at Large. Register of 1913.
McFetridge, Johnson.— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa.. June 10,
1892; graduated from high school 1912, and attended the Art
Institute of Chicago, 111.. 1915; employed as an advertising
artist 1915-X918; served in the United States Army 191S-19;
employed as negative cutter. United States Coast and Geodetic
Survey, September, 1919, to August. 1920; lithographic drafts-
man. Engineers' Reproduction Plant, Washington Barracks,
August, 1920, to January, 1923; clerk in the Income Tax Unit,
Bureau of Internal Revenue, January, 1923. to May. 1924;
appointed a clerk of class three in the Department ot State,
under Civil Service rules. May 16. 1924; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
McGavack, Alice.— Bom in Waterford, Va.; attended
Gunston Hall Seminary. Washington. D. C, two years;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $960, in the Department of
State September II, 1918; at $1,020, November i, 1918; at $i.oSo,
February i. 1920; appointed a clerk at $900, under Civil Service
rules, December i, 1920; at $1,000 July i, 1921; class one Sep-
tember I, 1922; class two April i, 1924; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
McGee, Ruth Elizabeth.— Bom in Brockton, Mass.; assistant
in a dentist's office 1921-1924; appointed a clerk of class one in
the Department of State, under Civil Serx-ice rules, April j8,
1924; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
l62
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
McGilchrist, John. — British subject; appointed Consular
Agent at Grenada June 21, 1920.
McGlasson, Clifford Wayne.— Bom in Ciucinnati, Ohio,
October 31, 1897; attended high school four years and a business
college one year; studied lansuages in Spain and Italy; clerk
for a bonding company 1917-1S; stenographer, Post Office
Department, 1918-19; clerk for a cash-register company 1919-20;
clerk in the Department of State January-September, 1921;
clerk in the American Consulate at Seville 1921-22, and at
Turin 1923; appointed Vice-Cousul at Turin April 16, 1924; at
Goteborg Jime 18, 1924.
♦McGoodwin, Preston Buford. — Retired as Minister to Ven
fzuela October, 192 1. Register of 1918.
♦McGoogan, George Byron.— Died in Mobile, Ala., August
ap, 191 1, while Consul at Georgetown. Register of 1913.
Macgowan, David Bell.— Born in Shelby County, Tenn.,
June 5, 1870; home, Knoxville; a graduate of Washington and
Lee University and took courses at Universities of Halle and
Berlin; newspaper reporter for seven and a half years in Mem-
phis, St. Louis, and Chicago; correspondent of American
papers and the Associated Press in Berhn and Petrograd five
years; correspondent of a London newspaper in Petrograd
three years; editorial writer on a Knoxville newspaper eight
years; appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Consul
of class nine October 18, 1915; detailed as Vice-Cousul at Mos-
cow December 22, 1913; appointed Consul of class eight Sep-
tember 14, 1917; detailed to Vladivostok June, 1918; appointed
Consul of class six September s, 1919; assigned to Vladivostok
July I, 1920; detailed to Riga Aug:ust 21, 1922; attached to the
American Legation at Riga, with the rank of First Secretary
October 14, 1922; appointed Consul of class five March i, 1923;
Consul of class four June s, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
McGurk, Jo3«ph F.— Born in Paterson, N. J., March 3, 1892!
home, Paterson, N. J.; attended St. John's Parochial Schoo'
ten years; Paterson High School, one and one-half years!
Spencer's Business College, Paterson, one year; employed by
the American Locomotive Co., Paterson, six years; clerk in the
American Consulate at Valparaiso, 1914-15; appointed Vice-
Consul at Valparaiso May 19, 1915; Vice-Cconsul at Antofa-
gasta, temporarily, June 21, 1917; reappointed Vice-Consul at
Valparaiso July 5, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Paris June 9,
1919; at Havre September 6, 1919; apointed, after examina-
tion (June 24, 1918), Vice-Consul de carricre of class three Sep-
tember 27, 1919; assigned to Paris October 2, 1919; appointed
Vice-Consul de carricre of class two May 24, 1920; assigned to
Dakar September 30. 1920; to Brest May 12, 1921; to Dunkirk
July 6, 1921; to Paris October 7, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class one November 17, 1921; Consul of class seven
June 22, 1922; remained at Paris on detail; assigned to Zagreb
August 18, 1922; appointed Consul of class six August 23, 1922;
class five June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class six July
I, 1924; assigned to Helsingfors September 9, 1924.
Mclnnes, William Francis. — Bom in Providence, R. I.,
October 26, 1900; graduated from La Salle Academy 1919, and
from a business school 1920; attended Providence College 1922-
1924; bookkeeper for a private concern May-December, 1920,
and employed as stenographer December, 1920, to September,
1922; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, August 29, 1924.
Mclntlre, Ruth Elizabeth.— Bora in Ira, Iowa; graduated
from West Des Moines (Iowa) High School 1913, and attended
Iowa State Agricultural College three semesters; public-school
teacher 1913-1918; clerk in the War Department 1918-1923;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed a clerk
of class one, under Civil Service rules, May 7, 1923; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
♦Mcintosh, Milton B.— Retired as Marshal at Newchwang
October, 1913. Register of 1914.
Mack, Jason M. — British subject, bom in Nova Scotia, 1843;
lawyer: appointed Consular Agent at Liverpool, Nova Scotia,
December aS, 1895.
♦McKay, Arnold Artemus.— Retired as Consul of class six, on
detail at Valparaiso, November 1919. Register of 1918.
♦Mackay, Raymond Cady.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
detailed to Shanghai, March, 1920. Register of 1922.
McKenna, James Edward.— Bom in Boston, Mass., Novem-
ber 20, 1887; educated in Boston public schools, Boston College,
and the law school of Georgetown University; employed in the
Boston Public Library four years and in a lawoffice six months;
appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, under
Civil Service rules, October 8, 1910; at $1,000 March 29, 1912, to
take effect April i, 1912; class one December i, 1913; on special
detail at the Embassy in Mexico City December 17, 1913, to
May 4, 1914; appointed clerk class two June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; chief clerk and disbursing officer, special mission
to Russia, May 15, 1917; reappointed clerk class two in the De-
partment of State August 3, 1917; served in United States Army
September, 1917, to May, 1919; reappointed clerk of class two in
the Department ol State June 19, 1919; appointed clerk of class
three May i, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500 April i, 1921; at
82,800 July I, 1924.
McKenny, Eileen.— Born in Richmond. Va.; educated in
private schools and a business college; stenographer in a bro-
ker's office and on Federal Reserve Board; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, in the Department of State, December 30, 19x5;
permanently at $1,000, under Executive order, June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; class one July 28, to be effective August
I, 1917; class two October 18, 1921; class three February i, 1924;
at $1,860 July I, 1924.
♦McKieman, Charles Patrick.- Died in Chungking May
a8, 1916, while Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Canton. Regis-
ter of 1915.
McKinney, Walter Hastings.— Bom in Sault Ste. Marie,
Mich., September 6, 1889; home, Sault Ste. Marie; graduated
from high school 1907, and attended the University of Mich-
igan three years; employed as clerk in a bank one year, and
as purchasing agent for a paper company 1911-1913; manager
of a wholesale and retail grocery business 1913-1923; promoted
two subsidiary' corporations and engaged in various other
enterprises; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923).
Consul of class seven October 6, 1923; detailed to Bordeaux
November 20, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
McKittrick, William K.— First Lieutenant. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo June 27 ,
1924.
McLain, Camden Lester.— Bora in Goodview, Va., April 27,
i'',93; attended high school and business college in Roanoke,
Va.; served in the United States Army 1917-18; Army field
clerk 1918-19; clerk in Consulate General at Valparaiso 1921-32;
appointed Vice-Consul at Valparaiso March 9, 1922; at Con-
cepcion May i, 1924.
♦McLean, Arthur. — Died in New York December 39, 1918,
while en route to Brussels, to which post he was assigned
December 17, 1918. Register of 191 7.
McLean, Henry C— Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military Attache at Reval October 11, 1933; also at
Helsingfors, Riga, and Kovno; at Berlin and Rome October
22, 1924.
McLean, Henry Colt. — Born in Litchfield, Conn., November
15, 1881; graduated from Yale University (A. B.) 1903; assistant
manager foreign trade bureau. Merchants Association of New
York; export manager of several firms; traveled extensively in
Europe; appointed in 1918 Commercial Agent in charge New
York office. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce,
Department of Commerce; Trade Commissioner in Italy in
1919; Commercial Attach^ at Rome October 22, 1920.
McLean, Sarah Brown.— Bora in Milroy, Pa.; attended pri-
vate and high schools; teacher in California 1912-1914; employed
by the United States Food Administration in Washington,
D. C, August, 1917. to November, 1918; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, at $960, in the Department of State, November 23,
1918; at $1,020 February i, 1919; at $840 July i, 1919; clerk at
$900, under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; at $1,000 Au-
gust 16, 1921; at Si, 100 March i, 1924; class one May 31, effective
June I, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦McMackln, John.— Died in New York August 13, 1906,
while Consul at Georgetown. Register of 1913.
McMataon, Grace Emge. — Born in Marietta, Ohio; attended
public schools, and high school one year, 1912; completed a
business course; stenographer for various commercial concerns
1915-1918; clerk in The Adjutant General's Office, War Depart-
ment, April, 1918, to April, 192 1; appointed a clerk of class one
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, April 30,
effective May i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
McMahon, Joseph William. — Born in Meriden, Conn., June
34, 1885; attended high school two years; graduated from busi-
ness school in Hartford, Conn.; employed by companies in
Meriden, Conn., 1902-1908; in JEtnsL Life Insurance Co. at
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMENT.
163
Hartford, Conn., 190S-09; appointed clerk in the Department of
State at S900, under Civil Service rules, July 28, 1909; at $1,000
November i, 1910; class one November 13, 1911; class two June
32, to be effective July i, 1916; class three, August i, 1918; class
four, September i, 1922; at 82,100 July i, 1924.
*MacMaster, Frederic Duncan. — Retired as Consul at Zan-
zibar December, 1906. Register of 1913.
MacMaster, George L.— British subject, bom in Glasgow,
Scotland. October 18, 18SS; attended 'VVilliamsburgh Public
School at Paisley, Scotland, and Bellahuston Academy. Glas-
gow; employed as bookkeeper in Glasgow nine years; steno-
grapher with a Brazilian railway company and assistant
manager and manager of an oil company in Brazil; appointed
Consular Agent at Ceara, April 5, 1919.
♦McMillan, Neal. — Retired as Consul at Sarnia August,
igog. Register of 1913.
"McMillin, Benton.— Retired as Minister to Guatemala,
December, 1921. Register of 191S.
McMillin, Stewart Earl.— Bom in Arkansas City, Kans.,
December 17. 18S9; home, Lawrence. Kans.; graduate of the
University of Kansas (A. B.) 1914, (LL. B.) 1917; employed
for short periods as a salesman and in library work; appointed,
after examination (June i8, 1917), Consul of class eight Septem-
ber 14, 1917; assigned to Port Limon November s, 1917; ap-
pointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned to
Antofagasta May 17, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
McMillion, Georgia Eleanor.— Bom in Lewisburg, W. Va.;
attended public schools and spent one year in normal school;
teacher in public school two years; clerk in the War Depart-
ment two years; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, Januarj' 17, 1921; at $1,000,
January g 1922; at $1,100, December 30, 1932, effective January
I. 1923; class one October i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
MacMuiray, John Van Antwerp. — Born in Schenectady,
N. v., October 6, 1881; educated at Lawrenceville School;
graduate ol Princeton University (B. A., 1902, and M. A., 1907)
and Columbia University law school (LL. B., 1906); admitted
to the bar in New York, 1906; home, Princeton, N. J.; ap-
pointed, after examination (March 15, 1907), Secretary of the
Legation and Consul-General at Bangkok May 10, 1907; Secre-
tary of the Legation to Greece and Montenegro June 10, 1908,
but did not go to post; appointed Second Secretary of the
Embassy at Petrograd July 30, 1908; clerk in the Department
of State, charged with the distribution of information among
the diploma tic missions, April 12, 191 1; clerk class three June 27,
1911; designated Assistant Chief of the Division of Near Eastern
Affairs July 7, 1911; Acting Chief February 12 to May 14, 1913;
redesignated Acting Chief August 24, 1912; appointed Chief
of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs December 13, 1913;
Secretary of the Legation at Peking September 4, 1913; Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class two by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class one November s, 1915; designated and assigned as
Counselor of the Embassy at Tokyo November 10, 1917; Charg^
at Peking July i-November 30, 1918: reassigned to Tokyo Oc-
tober 15, 1918; assigned to the Department of State for duty in
the Division of Far Eastern Affairs July 23, 1919; appointed
Chief, Division of Far Eastern Affairs, August 20, igig-.expert
assistant, Conference on the Limitation of Armament, Novem-
ber 3, 19; I ; designated to act as principal observer in behalf of
the American Government at the conversations between the
Chinese and Japanese representatives in regard to the Shan-
tung question, November, 1921, to February, 1922; appointed
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924; an Assistant
Secretary of State November 18, 1924.
♦McNally, James Cliflord. — Retired as Consul at Tsingtao
April, 1914. Died at Atlantic City, N. J., August 4, 1920.
Register of 1918.
McNamee, Luke. — Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Naval Attache at London August i, 1924.
*McNeely, Robert Ney. — Died while en route to his post
(Aden) December 30, 1915. Register of 1915.
McNeir, William.— Born in Washington, D. C, October 14,
1864; educated in public schools and Emerson Institute, Wash-
ington; appointed page in the House of Representatives Decem-
ber I, 1877; served until March 4, 1879; appointed temporary
clerk in the Department of State May i, 1881; packer August $,
1882; clerk at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, August i. 1886;
class one July i, 1889; class two May 2. 1892; resigned June 9,
1892; reappointed clerk class one May 11, 1893; class two Feb-
ruary 23, 1897; class three April i, 1899; class four June 35,
to take effect July i, 1900; appointed Chief of the Bureau of
Rolls and Library December 4, 1905; member of the Depart-
ment of State Advisory Committee on Printing and Publica-
tion February 23, 1906; member of the Committee on Business
Methods January 2S. 1907; representative of the Department of
State on the United States Board on Geographic Names May
24, 1907; Chief Clerk November 30. 1909; appointed a member of
the committee to represent the Department of State in the
inquiry ordered by the President into the economy and effi-
ciency of the Executive Departments of the Government
October 19, 1910; Chief of the Bureau of Accounts and Dis-
bursing Clerk April 23, to take effect May i, 1913; detailed
as Disbursing Officer of the American Delegation of the
American-Mexican Joint Commission August 30, 1916; ap-
pointed agent for the sale of war savings certificate stamps
and thrift stamps in the Department of State March 18, 1918;
designated by the Secretary of State as chairman of a com-
mittee in the Department of State having to do with the
Third Liberty Loan Campaign March 20, 1918; detailed as
Disbursing Officer of the American Commission to Negotiate
Peace, November 30, 1918; appointed a drafting officer at $3,000
March i, 1921; at $3,500 June 17, effective July i, 1921; desig-
nated disbursing officer in connection with the Conference on
the Limitation of Armament September i, 192 1; in connection
with the American Delegation to the Conference on Central
American Affairs, Washington, December i, 1922.
McNew, Frank Orlando.— Bom in Wellspring, Tenn.,
July 27, 1858; attended public and private schools; gradnated
from East Tennessee Wesleyan University (A. B.) 1S81; clerk
in Pension Office 1S82-83; Treasury Department and General
Accounting Office 1883-1924; transferred from the General
Accounting Office and appointed a clerk at $2,300 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, December 19, 1924.
McNlece, Renwlck Sloane. — Born in Salt Lake City, Utah,
June 28, 1886; home. Salt Lake City; graduated from Princeton
University (A. B.) 1907; instructor. Salt Lake City High School,
1907-1917; manager of a copper company's office June- August,
1917; in military training camp August-November, 1917; served
in the United States Army as lieutenant and captain Novem-
ber, 191 7, to August, 1919; teaching fellow. University of Cali-
fornia, 1919-20; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1920), Consul of class seven June 4, 1920; assigned to Penang
August 2, 1920; appointed Consul of class six August 23, 1922;
assigned to St. Michael's March 30, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to Stoke-
on-Trent September 9, 1924.
McPherson, John Allan.— Bom in Watertown, N. 'V..
June 7, 1873; public school education; engaged in business in
Mexico twenty-eight years; proprietor of Guaymas Bottling
Works, candy and soda factory; appointed Vice-Consul at
Guaymas October 11, 1917.
MacVeagh, John Hammond.— Bom in Saranac Lake, N. Y.,
November 26, 1891; home New York City; educated in Europe
and the 'United States and graduated from Phillips Exeter
Academy; employed with a steel company two years; on fruit
ranch and in forestry six months; in banking business Novem-
ber, 1919, to July, 1920; served in the Italian and British armies
1915-1917; in the United States Army November, 1917. to June,
1919, as lieutenant and captam; appointed, after examination
(July II, 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
August 24, 1921; assigned to the Department of State Septem-
ber 12, 1921; to Santiago, October 22, 1921; to Buenos Aires,
March 28, 1922; to Bogota, August 8, 1922; retired April, 1923;
reappointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four,
June 27, 1923; assigned to Habana, July 17, 1923; appointed
F'oreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; class seven
August 8, 1924.
MacVitty, Karl de G. — Bom in Nashville, Tenn., February 37
1883; home, Chicago, 111.; attended the Garrett Military Acad-
emy, Nashville, four years; Jarvis Hall, Denver, Colo., three
years; various schools in North Carolina and Tennessee three
years; business college one year; studied abroad under private
tutor two and one-half years; newspaper reporter in Nashville
one year; theatrical press agent five years; president and owner
of one-half of the capital stock of a coriwration of theatrical
managers in Chicago 1909-1917; appointed Vice-Consul at
Genoa August 3. 1917; at Belfast January 25, 1919; at Nassau
June 9, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 12. 1919),
Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; remained at Nassau
on detail; assigned to Saigon July i, 1920; detailed to Sydney,
Australia, July 25, 1921; assigned to Auckland December 6,
1921; appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
32952—25-
-12
164
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
McWilliams, Roy.— Bom in Chicago, 111., April 14, '875:
graduated from Yale University (A. B.) 1897, Harvard Uni-
versity (LL. B.) 1900; engaged in the practice of law, and in
1903 became a partner in a law firm in Chicago; appointed con-
sular agent at Bayonne September 5, 1917; appointed consular
agent at Biarritz April 15, 1918; Vice-Consul at Biarritz April
17, 1920.
Macy, Clarence Edward. — Bom in St. Joseph, Mo., Novem-
ber 9. 1886; home, Denver, Colo.; graduate of the State pre-
paratory' school. University of Colorado, in 1905; employed as
miner, railway mail clerk, and examiner in the Railway Mail
Service in Colorado until 1914; manager of mail traffic; in
military service 1918-19; in postal express service in France
and Germany 1919-1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Coblenz
November 15, 1921; appointed, after examination (June 26,
1932). Vice Consul de carriere of class three June 21. 1923;
assigned to Coblenz July 2, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Madden, William Vincent. — Bom in Philadelphia, Pa.,
February 24. 1876; educated in parochial and public schools in
Gennantown, Philadelphia; telegraph operator in Phila-
delphia 1895-1899; merchant in Mahanoy City 1900-1912; chief
clerk Postal Telegraph Co., Philadelphia, 1912-1914; agent
American Express Co., Mahanoy City, Pa., 1914-1917; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in the Department of
State November 17. 1917; at $1,400 December 13, 1917; at $1,600
July I, 1918; appointed clerk of class three, under Civil Service
rules, December 16, 1920; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
*Magelssen, William C— Died at sea October 17, 1919, while
en route from Melbourne, to which post he was assigned as
Consul of class four. Register of 1918.
*Maglll, Samuel E.— Died in Hot Springs, Ark., January 29.
1913, while Consul at Guadalajara. Register of 1913.
♦Maginnis, S. Abbot. — Retired as Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Bolivia December, 1921. Register
of 1922.
Magnuson, Erik Waldemar.— Bom in Stockholm, Sweden,
April 24, 1891; naturalized; home, Chicago, 111.; attended grade
schools in Stockholm and Chicago; graduated from a business
college; clerk for an export firm 1909-1916; traveling account-
ant 1916-17; served in the United States Navy 1917-1919, and
detailed to the offices of the naval attaches at Christiania and
Copenhagen; clerk in the American Legation at Stockholm,
Sv.eden, 1919-1922; appointed, after examination (January 16,
1922), Vice Co.asul de carriere of class three September 30,
1922; assigned to Stuttgart October 17, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carri re of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Magoon, Charles E.— Retired as Minister to Panama Oc-
tober, 1906 Died in Washington, D. C, January 14, 1920.
Register of 1913.
Magruder, Alexander Richardson. — Bom in Nice, France, of
American parents January 17, 1883; graduate of Harvard
University (A. B.), 1906; with a cement company in New
York City one and a half years; appointed, after examination
(May 17, 1909), Secretary of the Legation to Paraguay and
Uruguay August 4, 1909; Second Secretary of the Embassy at
Rio de Janeiro September 17, 1910; Second Secretary of the
Embassy at Rome March 2, 191 1; Secretary of the Legation at
Lima Jime 5, 1912; clerk class three in the Department of State
under the provisions of Executive order of December i, 1910,
December 13, 1912; Secretary of the Legation at Copenhagen
May I, 1913; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three
by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Stockholm
May 20, 1916; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class two August 3, 1916; assigned to the Division of Western
European Affairs, Department of State, January 30, 1918; to
Madrid June 28, 1918; assigned to Helsingfors and accredited
as charge d'affaires pro tempore March 12, 1920; appointed
Secretary of class one June 28, 1920; assigned to Constantinople
March 8, 1922; to Prague July 13, 1922; to Beme February 26,
1923; representative of the United States on the International
Conference for the purpose of drawing up a convention for the
suppression of the circulation and traffic in obscene literature
held at Geneva, 1923; designated and assigned as Counselor
of the Legation at Berne February 20, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class two July i, 1924; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State July i, 1924.
*Mahin, Frank W.— * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i , 1924. Retired from active service as
Consul at Amsterdam July, 1924, under the provisions of the
Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Mahon, Edith Agnes.— Bom in Fort Ringgold, Tex.; edu-
cated in grammar and high schools; employed as stenographer
in a real estate ofiBce four months; appointed a clerk, tempora-
rily, at $1,000, in the Department of State, June 20, 1918; at
$1,140 November i, 1919; at $1,200, October 5, effective October
1, 1920; appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules,
February i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Makiason, George Albert.— Born in San Francisco. Calif.,
March 18, 1887; home, San Anselmo, Calif.; graduate of Lowell
High School; studied under private tutors in Paris, Geneva,
and Berlin, 1908-1914; machinist's apprentice three years;
salesman; assistant foreman machinist. Bureau of Navigation,
Manila, 1907; employed as assistant secretary of American
Association of Commerce and Trade, Berlin, 1908-09; appointed
Consular Agent at Sorau December 23, 1909; Deputy Consul at
Tampico November 6, 1914; Vice-Consul at Tampico February
6, 1915; Consular Agent at Amapala July 3, 1916; appointed,
after examination (June 26, 1916), Consular Assistant Augrust 30,
1916; unattached from October 31, 1917; Consular Agent at
Santa Fe, Isle of Pines, January 26, 1918; appointed Consular
Agent at Nueva Gerona March 28, 1918; Consular Agent at
Cardenas June 14, 191S; Vice-Consul at Santo Domingo, May 16,
1919; Vice-Consul de carriere of class three, September 27, 1919;
assigned to Santo Domingo, October 22, 1919; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 24, 1920; class one
November 17, 1921; Consul of class seven June 22, 1922, and
detailed to Valparaiso; appointed Consul of class six August 23,
1922; class five December 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Maleady, Thomas Joseph. — Bom in Fall River, Mass.,
January 22, 1S99; high-school graduate, and attended George-
town Foreign Service School two years; served in the United
States Army 1917-1919; employed by a shipbuilding corpora-
tion six months, and as a clerk in the Treasury' Department
eight months; employed by a private concern 1920-21; clerk
in the Department of State, January-October, 1922; clerk in
the American Consulate at Edinburgh, Scotland, November
1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Edinburgh March 28, 1923.
Malige, Marcel Etienne. — Bom in Lapwai, Idaho, July 5,
1900; home, Lapwai; attended the University of Idaho and the
University of Washington; employed as farmer, musician,
motion-picture operator and salesman while attending college;
appointed, after examination (January 16, 1922), Vice-Censul
de carriere of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Victoria
June 23, 1922; to Nantes August 11, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Mallison, William T.— Lieutenant commander. United
States Navy; assigned to duty as Naval Attache at Rio de
Janeiro October 29, 1923.
♦Malmros, Oscar. — Retired as Consul at Rouen June, 1909.
Died at Rouen. France, August 18, 1909. Register of 191^.
*Man, Ernest A. — Retired as Consul at Leghorn January,
191 1. Register of 1913.
Mandara, Cresphio.— Bom in Troia, Italy, December 13, -
1886; naturalized; served in United States Army; appointed
laborer in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
May I, 1919; assistant messenger November i, 1919.
Maney, Edward Strait.— Bom in Pearsall, Tex., September
27, 1899; attended West Texas Military Academy 1916-17;
Columbia Military Academy 191 7-18, and University of Texas
1919-20; served in the United States Navy 1918-19; employed as
field cashier of an oil company in Mexico 1920-21 ; clerk in cotm-
ty engineer's office 1921-1923; clerk in the American Consulate
at Torreon June 15, 1923, to April 3, 1924; appointed Vice-
Consul at Torreon April 4, 1924.
*Mamiing, Bernard.- Retired as Consular Assistant, also
Vice and Deputy Consul-General, at Genoa January, 191a.
Register of 1913.
^Manning, Isaac A. — Retired as Consul of class six, assigned
to Barranquilla, July, 1916. Register of 19x5.
Manning, Raphael Andrew.— Bom in Newton, Mass., Octo-
ber 24, 1896; home, Newton; attended Georgetov/n Foreign
Service School three years, and Georgetown Law School one
year; took summer courses at the Colegio de Belen (Habana,
Cuba), and at the University of Mexico; employed by a news-
paper company in Boston 1916-17; served in the United States
Army 1917-1919; secretary to a Member of Congress 1912-1923;
appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three October 6, 1923; assigned to Montevideo
November 19, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, July I, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
165
Manning, William Ray.— Bora in Home, Kans., December
36, 1871; graduate of Baker University (A. B.), 1899; Uni-
versity of Kansas (A. M.). 1902; University of Chicago (Ph.D. ).
1904; instructor in history and economics, Purdue University,
1904-1907; assistant professor of European Diplomatic History
at George Washington University, 1907-1910; adjunct profes-
sor of Latin American and English History, University of
Texas, I9i«>-i9i7; associate professor 1917-1919; appointed a
Special Assistant in the Department of State, at $3,000, August
36, 1918; drafting officer, at $3,000, July i, 1919; at $3,300, Sep-
tember I, 1920.
^Mansfield, Robert E. — Retired as Consul-General of class
five, assigned to Stockholm December, 1916. Register of 1916.
*Manton, Benjamin D. — Retired as Consul at Colonia June,
1906. Died in Barbados, West Indies, July 30, 1911. Register
of 1913-
Mantovanl, Lawrence Anthony. — Born in Lamaca, Cyprus,
April 18, 1890; naturalized in New York City August 7, 1917;
educated in American and French colleges in Smyrna; New
York representative of a Cyprus dye firm 1913-1917; appointed
Consular Agent at Cyprus December 31, 1921.
*Marbure, Theodore. — Retired as Minister to Belgium Janu
ary, 1914. Register rl 1913.
Marchand, Ray Bleakly. — Born in Alliance, Ohio, January 8,
1892; attended the Alliance public schools and graduated from
Ohio Northern University (LL. B., Ph. B.); practiced law four
years; employed by an airplane manufacturer in Buffalo,
N. Y.; officer in the United States Army 1918-19; appointed
Vice-Consul at Victoria, British Cohmibia, June 13, 1919; at
Sherbrooke, March 31, 1920.
Marquis, Joseph Augustus. — Born in Waterville, Me., April
34, 1891; home, Waterville; attended Waterville High School;
Colby College one year; University of Maine two years; ad-
mitted to the Maine bar September 18, 1917; employed as
reporter, publishing company of Elm City; traveling salesman
for a tobacco company one year; practiced law in Waterville;
appointed clerk in the American Legation at The Hague,
January 4, 1918; Vice-Consul at Antwerp, January 13, 1921; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three May 25, 1921; assigned to Antwerp, June
II, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 26,
1933; assigned to Rotterdam June 23, 1922; to Cherbourg No-
vember 6, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one
February 26, 1923; assigned to Paris September 18, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Marriner, James Theodore.— Born in Portland, Me., May 17,
1892; home, Portland; graduate of Dartmouth College (A. B.)
and Harvard University (A. M) 1915, (Ph. D.) 1918; instructor
in English at Radcliffe College and Harvard University, 1916-
1918; appointed, after examination (Junes.?, 1918). a Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four August 27, 1918; assigned
to Stockholm September 30, 1918; appointed secretary of class
three, December 20, 1919; assigned to Bucharest August 9, 1921;
to the Department of State July 23, 1923; appointed Secretary
of class two January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class
four July I, 1924.
Marsh, Frances M. — Born in Lewisburg, Pa.; educated in
the public schools of Lewisburg and Bucknell Institute; clerk
in railway office; in Office of Register of Wills, Washington,
D. C., and assistant clerk to the Senate Committee on Rules;
appointed clerk in the Department of State, at $1,200, under
Executive order, April i6, 1909; class two January 27, to be
effective February 15, 1914; class three March i. 1919; class
four March i, 1921; designated Assistant Chief of the Diplo-
matic Bureau December 20, 1923; appointed drafting officer at
$2,500 May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $3,000 July i, 1924;
appointed an Assistant in the Division of Foreign Service
Administration August 19, 1924.
Marsh, O. Gaylord. — Born in Buchanan, Mich , January 7,
1879; home, Wenatchee, Wash.; graduate of Philomath Nor-
mal College (B.S. D), 1903; University of Washington (LL B),
190s; teacher in Seattle, 1903-1905; teacher in the Philippines,
1905-1907 and 1908-09; practiced law at Wenatchee. Wash.,
1907; held various positions in auditing bureau, Philippines,
1909-1913; in Civil Service Commission, 1913-1915; appointed,
alter examination (January 19, 1914), Consul of class nine
March 2, 1915; on detail as Vice-Consul at Ottawa 1915-1917;
assigned to Progreso March 20, 1917; appointed Consul of class
eight April 34, 1917; class six September 5. 1919; class five
June 4, 1920; class four June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class five July i, 1924; assigned to Montevideo October 23, 1924.
*Marsh, Richard Ogelsby.— Retired from the Diplomatic
Service March, 1911, declining appointment as Third Sec-
retary of the Embassy at Petrograd. Register of 1913.
Marshall, William Francis. — Bom in Newport, R. I., Jan-
uary 6, 1890; educated in the private and public schools of
Newport; clerk for three and one-half years in the chemical
laboratory. Naval Torpedo Station Newport, and for nine
months in a lawyer's office and in business houses of Newport;
appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, under
Civil Service rules, March 30, 1910; at $1,000 June 27, 1911; class
one December 1, to be effective December 19, 1913; class two
June 32, to be effective July i, 1916; resigned December 16, 1917,
to enter United States Array; reappointed clerk of class two
in the Department of State May 26, 1919; transferred to the
Passport Bureau of the Department of State in New York
City July i, 1919; appointed clerk of class three in the Passport
Bureau in New York June 25, effective July i, 1920: at $1,860
July I, 1924.
Martell, Alonzo Archibald. — British subject, bom in Main-
adieu, Nova Scotia, October 20, 18S1; employed with a real
estate and insurance broker in Louisburg; appointed Consular
Agent at Louisburg, September 25, 1922.
*Martin, Chester W. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four June i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Toronto July, 1924, under the provisions of the
Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Martin, James Henry. — Born in Culpeper, Va., November
9, 1905; public school education; employed in a hotel August-
September, 1919; appointed messenger boy at $420 in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser^-ice rules, .September
23, 1919; at $600 May i, 1923; position allocated to C. A. F. one
at $1,140 July I, 1924.
Martin, John F. — Born in Greencastle, Pa., October
16, 1889; home, Jacksonville, Fla.; graduate of Princeton Uni-
versity (A. B.), 1911, (A. M.), 1914; clerk in the American Le-
gation at Santiago, 1911-1913; instructor in modern languages,
Princeton University, 1914-15; appointed clerk in the American
Embassy at Santiago July 21, 1915; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 28, 1915), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of clas«
four July 28, 1915; assigned to Santiago July 29, 1915; assigned
to Buenos Aires February ii, 1916; to Mexico June 9, 1917; ap-
pointed Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned to Ha-
bana April 27, 1918; to Bogota January 4, 1919; to London
April 4, 1919; appointed Secretary of class two December 30,
1919; assigned to San Jose, Costa Rica, August 37, 1930; to
Santiago, Chile, November 16, 1920; to Madrid March 3, 1934;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Martin, jr., John Stephen. — Born in Philadelphia, Pa., July
>3. 1855; graduate of the "Lyc^e" of the University of France
in Marseille (B. S.), 1873; in commercial business at Marseille;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Marseille November 19,
1878; acted as Consul on several occasions; resigned September
15, 1889; appointed confidential clerk to the Commissioner of
Railroads November 1, 1889; clerk in the Department of State
at $1,000, under Civil Service rules, August 1, 1891; class one
February 10, 1893; class two September 15, 1893; class three May
II, 1894; class four July i, 1S95; translator at $2,100 June 25,
to be effective July i, 1900; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
♦Martin, Lewis A.— Retired as Consul at Chihuahua Sep
tember, 1909. Register of 1913.
Martin, Tmman Morris.— Captain, United States .A.rmy:
assigned to duty as Language CJfficcr at Tokyo July :. 1921;
Assistant Military Attache February 16, 1924.
♦Martin, William.— Retired as Consul-General at Hankow
June, 1909. Register of 1913.
♦Marvin, George.— Retired as Marshal at Mukden .August,
1907. Register of 1914.
♦Marye, George Thomas.— Retired as Ambassador to Russia
March, 1916. Register of 1915.
♦Mason, Dean Birchard.— Died at his post (Algiers) January
16, 1917. Register of 1916.
♦Mason, Frank H.— Retired as Consul-General at Paris
January, 1914. Died in Paris, January 31, 1916. Register of
1913
Mason, May. — Bom in Lisbum, Pa.; educated in publk
schools New Cumberland, Pa.; attended Business High (night)
School. Washington, D. C; clerk in the War Department
1918-1921; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900, in the De-
1 66
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, March i6, 1922;
permanently September 16, 1922; at $1,000 December 30, 1922,
effective January i, 1923; at $1,100 May 31 effective June i, 1924;
at $1,380 July I, 1924.
Mason, Ruth Castleman.— Bom in Washington, D. C; high-
school graduate; attended George Washington University;
employed by a private concern 1922-1924; appointed a clerk at
$900, temporarily, in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, April 14, 1924; at $1,140 July i, 1924.
Masterson, Kathryn Madeline. — Born in New Brunswick,
N. J.; graduated from Sacred Heart Parochial School (New
Brunswick, N. J.) 1904, and from a business college 1906; em-
ployed as stenographer in insurance ofhces 1909-1912, and by
manufacturing and business concerns six years; stenographer
in the Military Intelligence Division, War Department, May
6, 1918 to July 24, 1922; transferred to the Department of State
and appointed a clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules,
July 24, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
*Masterson, William Wesley. — Died at his post (Plymouth)
while a Consul of class four. May 10. 1922. Register of 1922.
Mathee, William Helmuth. — Bom in Aachen, Germany,
January 10, 1S93; naturalized at Marion, Ohio, December 9,
1921; graduated from the Real-Gymnasium (Aachen, Germany)
1912; attended the Universities of Bonn, Berlin, and Cornell
one semester each, and the University of Wisconsin one and
one-half years; employed as farm manager, salesman, and
geologist of several subsidiary companies of a New York corpo-
ration 1916-1922; clerk in the American Consulate General at
Zurich 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Zurich May 3, 1922;
at Basel December 4, 1922; at Zurich January 4, 1923.
Mathews, Rhoda Ada. — Bom in Grumpier, N. C; attended
high school and normal school; public-school teacher at Marion,
Va. 190S-1918; clerk in the Veterans' Bureau September, 1918,
to December, 1922, and in the Treasury Department, Decem-
ber, 1922, to May, 1923; employed in the Government Printing
Office June-July, 1923; transferred to the Department of State
and appointed a clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules. July
9, 1923; at $1,000 October 9, 1923; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Matre, Joseph B. — Bom in Cincinnati, Ohio, November 23,
1888; attended high school in Cincinnati, 1903-1907; University
of Cincinnati (A. B.), 1912; Cincinnati Law School (LL. B.)
1913; employed in various capacities by business firms in
Ondnnati during summer vacations; correspondent in a life
insurance office in Cincinnati, 1913-1915; private secretary to a
Congressman. 1915-1917; engaged in the practice of law, 1917-18;
served in United States Army October-December, 1918; ap-
pointed a special assistant in the Department of State, at
$2,000, December 16, 1918; law drafting assistant at $2,500
January 31, effective February i, 1920; assistant solicitor at
$3,000, June I, 1920; drafting officer at $3,500 November i, 1923
Matthews, Ben Carl.— Bora in Rock Hill, S. C, March 17.
1894; graduate of the Rock Hill graded schools and of the
National Salesman Training Association of New Orleans;
clerk in a store 1910-11; traveling salesman for a tobacco com-
pany. 1912; engaged in the retail grocery business, 1913-1915;
secretary and general manager of a corporation doing a general
mercantile business; appointed Vice-Consul at Antofagasta
July 31, 1917; at Arica October 10, 1922; at Antolagasta No-
vember 10, 1922; at Iquique October 27, 1923; at Antofagasta
June 16, 1924.
Matthews, Harrison Freeman. — Bom in Baltimore, Md.,
May 26, 1899; home Baltimore; graduated from Princeton
University (A. B.) 1921, (A. M.) 1922; took a six months' course
at ficole Libre de Sciences Politiques, Paris; seaman in the
United States Naval Reserve May-December, 1918; appointed,
after examination (July 9, 1923), Secretary of Embassy or Le-
gation of class four December 12, 1923, and assigned to the De-
partment of State; assigned to Budapest February 2, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
♦Maverick, Robert Van Wyck, — Retired as Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four, assigned to Berne, April,
1917. Register of 1918.
May, Earl Franklin.— Born in Fredericksburg, Va., June 20,
1905; attended Business High School (Washington, D. C.)
two years; clerk in the office of a national committee head-
quarters eight months; clerk in the United States Patent
Office January, 1922, to December, 1923; appointed a clerk at
$900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
January 21, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
♦May, Henry Coleman.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, unassigned, November.igid. Regis-
ter of 1915.
Mayer, Ferdinand Lathrop.— Born in Indianapolis, Ind.,
May 25, 1887; home, Indianapolis; graduate of the Hill School,
Princeton University (A. B.) 1909, Harvard Law School
(LL. B.) 1913, Princeton Graduate School (A. M.) 1916; spent
six months in a law office in 1913; appointed, after examination
(April 10, 1916), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
August 3, 1916; assigned to Port au Prince August 10, 1916; ai>
pointed Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned to the
Division ol Latin American Affairs, Department of State. De-
cembers, 191 7; to London January 18, 1919; endisponibilite, De-
cember 8, 1919; assigned to the Department of State September
14, 1920; appointed Secretary of class two August 24, 1931;
assigned to the Division of Far Eastern Affairs in coimection
with the Conference on the Limitation of Armament Septem-
ber 14, 1921; assigned to Tangier March i, 1922; to Peking
March S, 1923; on detail at Tokyo September 12 to October 8,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i,
1924; class three August 8, 1924.
Maynard, Lester.- Born in San Francisco, Calif., April 5,
1877; home, San Francisco; educated in the public schools of
California; journalist, publisher, editor, and war correspondent;
appointed, after examination (June 7, 1906), Consul at
Sandakan June 26, 1906; Consul at Vladivostok March 11, 1908;
Consul at Harbin August 19, 191 1; Consul at Amoy August 20,
1912; Consul of class four by act approved February 5, 1915;
on detail in the Department of State jNIarch i-July 31, 1916;
assigned to Chefoo July 12, 1916; to Alexandria September 8,
1919; appointed Consul of class three June 11, 1920; assigned to
Havre August 17, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class four July i, 1924.
Maynham, Harold B.— British subject, bom in Eccles
England, February 17, 1870; general commission agent at Me-
dellin, Colombia; appointed Consular Agent at Medellin Octo-
ber 9, 1914; reappointed May 31, 1919
Mayo, Paul Thoburn.— Bora in Concordia, Kans., August 9,
1884; home. Evergreen, Colo.; graduated from Denver Univer-
sity (A. B.) 1916, (A. M.) 1917; served in the United States
Army November, 1917, to March, 1919; salesman and assistant
manager of a farm mortgage company; assistant professor,
Denver University; assistant estate manager; appointed, aftei
examination (July 9, 1923), Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, also Secretary in the Diplomatic Service, July 18, 1924;
assigned to Lima August 5, 1924.
♦Mays, Livingston Taliaferro.— Retired as Consul at St. Ste-
phen, New Brunswick, July, 1915. Register of 1914.
Mays, Marshall Ingalls.— Bora in Blue Rapids, Kans.,
December 7, 1889; graduated from Topeka (Kans.) High School
1908, and postgraduate 1909; attended Washburn College 1909-
10; employed by a railroad company 1910-1917; served in the
United States Army 1917-1919; employed abroad by the Young
Men's Christian Association and the Near East Relief Com-
mission 1919-20; clerk in the Amarican Consulate at Auckland,
New Zealand, June, 1920, to April, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul at Wellington April i, 1922.
Melly, John James.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., April 16.
1887; home AUentown, Pa.; graduated from the University of
Pennsylvania (B. S.) 1909; took course in government employ-
ment management at Carnegie Institute of Technology 1918;
employed as clerk, private secretary, and treasurer and man-
ager of several manufacturing concerns 1909-1918; staff member,
industrial division, Carnegie Corporation of New York 1918-19;
appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class
seven September 5, 1919; detailed to Berne October 29, 1919;
assigned to Port Limon May 17, 1922; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Meinhardt, Carl David.— Born in Brockport, N. Y., July 30,
1888; home, Brockport; attended the Brockport State Normal
School and graduated from Syracuse University (Ph. B.), 1911;
principal of Crown Point (N. Y.) High School, 1911-12; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 31, 1912), Student Inter-
preter in China March 12, 1912; Deputy Consul-General at
Hankow temporarily October 3, 1913; Vice-Consul and Inter-
preter at Chefoo September x, 1915; Vice-Consul and Interpre-
ter at Canton June 26, 1917; at Changsha April 12, 1920; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Melendy, Franz B.— Lieutenant commander. United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo August
Memmlnger, Luclen.— Bom in Tampa, Fla., August n,
1879; home, Charleston, S. C; educated in the public schools;
on staff of five newspapers for several years; served a full term
in the State militia of South Carolina; appointed, after exam-
ination (March 14, 1907), Consular Clerk March 30, 1907: Vice
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
167
and Deputy Consul-General at Boma April 3, 1907; Consular
Assistant July i, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Naples
August 13, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Beirut April 31,
1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Smyrna January 21,
1911; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Paris December 13,
1911; Consul at Rouen September 18, 1913; Consul at Madras
December 32, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919;
assigned to Leghorn September 8, 1919; appointed Consul of
class five August 23, 1922; assigned to Bordeaux April 28, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Ofiicer of class six July i, 1924.
Merrell, Edwin Clay.— Bom in Nashville, Ark., October 9,
1881; attended the public schools of Nashville and Barren
Academy nearly three years; engaged in newspaper work in
Ardmore, Okla., 1905-1912, with the exception of one year spent
in the marshal's office; managing editor Four States Press,
at Texarkana, 1913-1915; engaged in business in Elk City,
Okla., 1916-17; appointed Vice Consul at Halifax, January 25,
1918; at Charlottctown July 9, 1919; at Halifax September 6,
1919; at Hamilton, Bermuda, July i, 1930.
Merrell, jr., George Robert.— Born in St. Louis, iMo., July
13, 1898; home, St. Louis; graduated from Cornell University
(A. B.), i92i;in the Air Service of the United States Army (sec-
ond lieutenant) September, 1917, to December, 1918; appointed,
after examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Le-
gation of class four December 15, 1921; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State January 4, 1922; to The Hague, March i, 1922;
assigned, temporarily, to the American Delegation on Com-
mission of Jurists December i, 1922; to Port au Prince January
4, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July
I, 1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
Merrill, Keith. — Bom in Minneapolis, Minn , April 2, 1887;
home, Minneapolis, attended the Hill School in Pottstown,
Pa., 1903-1906; AVilliams College, Williamstown, Mass., one
year; Yale University 1908-1911 (A. B.); Harvard Law School
(LL. B.) 1914; law student in attorneys' offices in Duluth,
Minn., and Winnipeg, Manitoba, summers of 1909- 1911;
practiced law 1914-1916; appointed Vice-Consul at London
July 5, 1917; appointed, after examination (June 24, 1918),
Consul of class eight July 17, 1919; remained at London on
detail; appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919;
class six June 4, 1920; assigned to Madrid Augfust 25, 1921;
appointed Consul of class five November 19, 1921; class four
March i, 1923; detailed to Sydney, N. S., June 30, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924; de-
tailed to the Department of State December 10, 1924.
♦Merrill, Selah. — Retired as Consul at Georgetown Septem-
ber, 1908. Died January, 1909. Register of 1913.
Merrlman, Gladys Elizabeth.— Bom in St. Joseph, Mo.;
graduated from Hannibal (Mo.) High School, 1908; assistant
timekeeper in a railroad olifice at Hannibal, Mo., November-
December, 1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200, in
the Department of State August 26, 1918; clerk of class one,
under Civil Service rules, July 24, 1920, at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Merritt, Leonard A. — Born in Marquette County, Wis., June
3, 1861; educated in public hchools and a commercial college
and graduated from George Washington University (LL. M.,
M. Dip.); telegraph operator; railway station agent; stenog-
rapher in various offices in St. Paul, Minn. ; postmaster for two
years in Minnesota; member of the bar of the District of Co-
lumbia; appointed compiler in the Department of Agriculture,
under Civil Service rules, March 24, 1896; resigned August 4,
1896; appointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, Au-
gust 5, 1896; at $1,000 June 3, 1898; class one July i, 1899; class
two February i, 1902; class three March 2. 1908; class four
August 22, 1912; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
♦Merry, William Lawrence.— Retired as Minister to Costa
Rica July, 1911. Died in Battle Creek, Mich., December 14,
1911. Register of 1913.
Mersereau, Claude M.— British subject, born in Chatham,
New Brunswick, March 21, 1885; editor and publisher of a
newspaper in Bathurst, New Brunswick; appointed Consular
Agent at Bathurst October 25, 191s.
Mersman, Scudder, — Bom in St. Louis, Mo., August 3, 1888;
graduate of Sheffield Scientific School. Yale University (Ph.
B.), 1911; served in the United States Army; appointed Vice-
Consul at Tahiti February 10, 1922.
Messersmith, George Strausser.— Born in Fleetwood, Pa.,
October 3, 1S83; home, Newark, Del ; graduate of the Key-
stone State Normal School, Kutztown, Pa., and attended
Delaware College; principal of schools in several towns of
Delaware; field agent American Society for Extension of
Universit>- Teaching; secretary of State Board of Examiners
of Delaware, 1911-1914; vice president State Board of Education
of Delaware, 1912-1914; lecturer at summer schools; author of
a history on the Government of Delaware; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at Fort Erie June 25,
1914; Consul of class nine by act approved February 5, 1915;
assigned to Curacao May 20, 1916; appointed Consul of class
eight September 14, 1917; detailed to Antwerp January 29, 1919;
assigned to Antwerp May 10, 1919; appointed Consul of class
six September 5, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; class four No-
vember 23, 1921; class three March i, 1923; Consul General of
class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three
July I, 1924.
♦Metcalf, Horace W. — Retired as Consul at Newcastle-on-
Tyne January, 1912. Register of 1913.
Metzger, Jacob Allen.— Born in Stark County, Ohio, Febru-
ary 5, 1880; attended public school, high school, and commercial
college; graduated from National University (LL. M.), 1915;
member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States;
employed as school-teacher, bookkeeper, stenographer, and
order clerk; appointed copyist at $900 in the General Land
Office, under Civil Service rules, May 2, 1907; resigned Septem-
ber 12, 1907; appointed clerk at Sgooin the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, September 13, 1907; at $1,000 July i,
1908; class one June i, 1909; class two October 21, 1910; class
three March i, 1912; assigned to legal work in the office of the
Solicitor September 17, 1914; appointed law clerk at $2,250
June 22, to be effective July r, 1910; at $2,500 October 22, 1917;
Assistant Solicitor at $2,500 December 12, 1917; at $3,000 Octo-
ber r, 1918; assistant to the Solicitor at $4,000 December 31,
1919. effective January i, 1920; drafting officer at $4,000, July
I, 1920; at $4,500 July I, 1922; at $5,200 July i, 1924.
Meyer, Cord. — Bom in New York City November 15, 1893;
home, New York City; graduated from Yale University (Ph.
B.) 1917; in the Air Service of the United States Army April,
1917, to March, 1919; served as an assistant in the Department
of State August 23, to November 30. 1920; appointed, after
examination (October 18, 1920), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four November 15. 1920; assigned to Habana
December 13, 1920; detailed for duty in connection with the
Conference on Central American Affairs, Washington, No-
vember 14, 1922; detailed as Assistant Secretary of the Dele-
gation of the United States to the Fifth International Con-
ference of American States, Santiago, Chile, March r, 1923!
assigned to Stockholm June 22, 1923; appointed Secretary of
class three January 23, 1924; Foreign Ser\fice Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
♦Meyer, George von L.— Retired as Ambassador to Russia
March, 1907. Register of 1913.
Meyer, Ira Philip.— Born in New York City Febmary 15,
1902; attended Central High School (Washington, D. C.) two
years, and a commercial school one year; clerk for a shipping
company three months and for the Untied States Civil Ser\'ice
Commission six months 1923; appionted a clerk, temporarily, at
S900 in the Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules,
February 7, 1924; permanently, April 4, 1924; at $1,000 May 16,
1924; at $1,320 July I, 1924.
Meyer, Paul Walter. — Bora in Beatrice, Nebr., August 8,
1900; home, Denver, Colo.; graduated from the University of
Denver (A. B.) 1923; private in Kansas National Guard June-
September, 1918; appointed, after examination (January 14,
1924), Student luteriJreter in China April 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Michael, William H.— Retired as Consul-General at Cal-
cutta, December, 1912. Died in Washington, D. C, May ij,
1916. Register of 1913.
♦Michelson, Albert Heminway.— Died at his post (Cologne)
June 9, 19 1 5, to which he had been assigned March 8, 191s.
Register of 1914.
Middlekaufi, Aura I. — Born in Hagerstown, Md.; business
high school graduate; stenographer and bookkeeper in Wash-
ington; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of
State, August 2, 1915; pennanently a clerk of class one, under
Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class two,
August I, 1918; class three December 31, 1919, effective Jan-
uary I. iy;o; class four September i, i9.'2; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Middleton, Lilhan Helen.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa.; has
a public school and business college education; employed with
several concerns in Washington; appointed a clerk, tempora-
rily, in the Department of State, October 29, 1914; permanently
a clerk of class one, under Executive order, June 22, to be effec-
tive July I. 1916; class two May i, 1920; class three February i,
1924; at $1,860 July I, 1924.
1 68
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Middleton, Minnie Dewey.— Born in Westfield, Mass.; Bt-
tended the public scliools of Westfield, Massachusetts State
Normal School, and the Massachusetts Normal Art School at
Boston; appointed clerk in the Adjutant General's Office,
War Department. July i, 1898; resigned February, 1910; ap-
pointed clerk in the Department of State art $900 November
II, 1914, under Executive order of November 11. 1914; class
one June aj, to be effective July I, 1916; class two, November i,
1918; at Si,6So July i. i9-4-
Milboume, Harvey Lee.— Bom in Rockville, Md., May 10,
189s; home Charles Town, W. Va.; Kraduated from Charles
Town High School 1914; attended Richmond (Va.) College
1914-1917; employed as traveling salesman during vacations;
clerk in the chancerj' court of Richmond; sergeant, first-class,
in the United States Army 1917-1919; appointed Vice-Consul
at Anioy August 28, 1919; at Swatow October 14, 1920; at
Tsinan November 23, 1920; appointed, after examination
(January 16, 1923), Vice Consul de carriere of class three Feb-
ruary 26, 1923; assigned to Tsinan March 2, 1923; appointed
Vice Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Miles, Basil.— Retired as Third Secretary of the Embassy
at BerUn 1908. Register of 191S; Secretary American Delega-
tion Limitation of Armament October 12, 192 1.
Miles, Laura Marian.- Bom in Princess Anne, Md.; at-
tended pubhc schools; Baltimore Female College, one year;
Columbia University, one and a half years; teacher in public
schools ten years; clerk in Zone Finance office, War Depart-
ment, October, 1918, to January, 192 1; appointed a clerk at
$1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
February i, 1921; at $1,100 March i, 1924; class one May 31
effective June i, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Miles, Sherman. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Military Attache at Constantinople September 27, 1922;
also at Sofia October 9, 1922.
♦Miles, Thomas. — Retired as Marshal at Nswchwang
March, 1909. Register of 1914.
Millard, Grace May. — Bom in Washington, D. C; gradu-
ated from Business High School (Washington) 1901; public-
school teacher 1912-1916, and a high-school teacher (Hyatts-
ville, Md.) 1917; clerk in the War Department, Adjutant
General's Office, 1917-1921, and in the Bureau of Efficiency,
July, 1921, to July, 1923; appointed a clerk of class one in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, July 17, 1923;
at Si. 500 July I, 1924.
Millard, Hugh. — Bora in Omaha, Nebr., August 12, 1894;
home, Omaha; graduated from Cornell University (B. S.) 1916;
engaged in fruit ranching in Oregon 1916-17; served in the
United States Navy as ensign and lieutenant September 191 7,
to June, 1919; clerk in the American Embassy at Paris June,
1919. to July, 1920; appointed, after examination (July 11, 1921),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four August 24, 192 1;
assigned to the Department of State September 8, 1921; desig-
nated for duty in connection with the Conference on the Limi-
tation of Armament October 29, 192 1; assigned to Rio de Janeiro
June 14, 1922; apponted Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July !, 1924; assigned to Berlin July 17, 1924; appointed For-
eign Service Officer of class seven August 8, 1924-
MlUer, Charles Henry.- Born in Washington, D. C, Sep-
tember 19, 1876; attended public school and business college
in Washington; appointed laborer in the Department of State
January i, 1894; clerk at $800 June 8, 1896; at S900 February
15. 1897; at $1,000 November 4, 1898; transferred to the Depart-
ment of Commerce and Labor July i, 1903; appointed clerk of
class one in the Bureau of Manufactures July i, 1905; resigned
December 17, 1909; appointed assistant law clerk in the De-
partment of State at $1,300 December 17, 1909; at $1,740 July
1, 1924.
♦Miller, Christian Cletus.— Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Vicc-Consul at Puerto Cortes, July, 1920. Register of
1918.
*Miller, Clarence A. — Retired as Consul at Tampico Sep-
tember, 1914. Register of 1922.
Miller, Daniel. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., May 24, 1889;
graduated from Johns Hopkins University (A. B.) 1908, and
pursued postgraduate course one year; ser\'ed in the United
States Army, August i, 1917, to February 18, 1919; clerk for
various construction companies, 1911-1917; clerk in the Amer-
ican Consulate General at Calcutta, July, 1920, to February,
1921; clerk in the American Consulate General at London,
August. 1921, to April. 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at London,
April 20, 1923; at Bradford, August 23, 1923; at London, August
29. 1923-
Miller, Edith. — Bom in Dixon, Md.; spent two years in
college; teacher in grade and high schools eight years; county
school superintendent four years; in War Trade Board August,
1918, to January, 1919; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, January 17, 1919;
class one March i, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Miller, Ellamanda H. — Born in Kellers Church, Pa.; gradu-
ated from public school and attended business college; em-
ployed by business houses in Philadelphia 1916-1918; appointed
a clerk, temporarMy, at $960, in the Department of State Sep-
tember 14, 1918; at $1,020 October i, 1918; clerk at $720, under
Civil Service rules, December 20, 1920; at $840 April 30, effective
May I, 1921; at $1,000 August 16, 1921; at $i,oSo September i,
1922; at $1,140 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923;
class one October i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Miller, George Harlan. — Born in Philadelphia, Pa., May u,
1893; home, Jenkintown, Philadelphia; graduated from Har-
vard University (A. B.) 1915; employed with an investment
banking firni and a talking machine company two years;
served as a lieutenant in the United States Artny August 23,
1917 to February 26, 1920; appointed, after examination (Octo-
ber 18, 1920), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
November 15, 1920; assigned to Rome, December 28, 1920; to
the Department of State November 13, 1922; appointed Secre-
tary of class three January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924; assigned as Second Secretary of Embassy
at Paris July 24, 1924.
♦Miller, Henry B.— Retired as Consul at Belfast November,
1910. Died in Portland, Oreg., November 28, 1921. Register
of 1913.
Miller, Hugh St. Elmo.— Bom inMudgee, New South \yales,
Australia, of American parents, February 3,1885; home, Chicago.
111.; attended public and private schools of Australia and of
Rochester, Ind.; Rochester Normal College, two years (B.S.)
1902; Hobart College, Geneva. N. Y. two years; assistant city
editor of a Denver (Colo.) newspaper, 1905-1909; Washington
correspondent for various newspapers, 1910-1916; on staff of
Christian Science Monitor, Boston, 1917-18; publicity director.
Near East Relief, New York, 1919-20; appointed Vice-Consul
at Hongkong February 24, 192 1; at Cornwall September 6. 1922;
appointed, after examination (January 16, 1922), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three September 30, 1922; assigned to Corn-
wall October 7, 1922; to Quebec October 30, 1922; to Singapore
December 22, 1922; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class
two May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924-
♦Miller, J. Martin. — Retired as Consul at Reims December,
1907. Register of 1913.
Miller, Ransford Stevens.— Born in Ithaca, N. Y., October
21, 1867; graduate of Cornell University, 1888; secretary of the
Young Men's Christian Association, Japan, for four years;
Acting Interpreter to the Legation to J? pan from February,
1895; appointed Interpreter August 27, 1895; Japanese Secre-
tary and Interpreter to the Embassy tr. Japan July 24, 1906;
Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs, Department of
State, August 31, 1909; secretary, with personal rank of Min-
ister Plenipotentiary, of the Special Embassy representing the
President and people of the United States at the funeral of the
late Emperor of Japan at Tokyo September 13-15, 1912; Consul-
General at Seoul November 24, 19 13; Consul-General of class
four by act approved February 5, 1915; detailed to the De-
partment of State July-October, 19 17. on the occasion of the
Japanese special mission to the United States; detailed to the
Embassy in Tokyo January-June. 1918; appointed Chief of the
Division of Far Eastern Affairs in the Department of State
October I, 1918; reappointed Consul-General of class four.
August 20, 1919; assigned to Seoul September 5, 1919; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Miller, Walter Aloysius.— Bom in Philadelphia, Pa., August
29, 1896; educated in public schools and Foreign Ser\Mce School
of Georgetown University; ser\'ed in United States Navy
1917-18; stenographer for private concerns 1913-1922; clerk in
Navy Department 1923-24; appointed a clerk at $1,140 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, October 28,
1924.
♦Mills, Roger Sherman.- Retired as Marshal at Chefoo
June, 1917. Register of 1916.
♦Mills, WilUam Wallace.— Retired as Consul at Chihuahua
March, 1907. Died in Austin, Tex., February 10, 1913. Regis-
ter of 1913.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
169
*Millspaugh, Arthur Chester. — Retired as Consul of class
four, detailed to the Department of State, September, 1922.
Register of 1922.
♦Milmore, Oscar Longfellow. — Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class two, unassigned, August, 1921.
Register of 1922.
*Milner, James B. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Niagara Falls July, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Mhiter, John Russell. — Born in Abbeville, S. C, November
12, 1S93: home, Baltimore. Md.; graduated from Davidson
College (A. B.) 1913 (A. M.) 1915; employed as instructor in
high school and college 1913-1916; newspaper reporter 1916-17
and in 1920; served in United States Marine Coips 1917-1919, dis-
charged as captain; clerk in the Department of State two months
in 1920; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three. May 24. 1920; assigned to Port
Elizabeth August 2, 1920; to Johannesburg March 8, 1921;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November 17.
1921; class one May 26, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven
March i, 1923; remained at Johannesburg on detail; detailed
to Cape Town May 25, 1923; appointed Consul of class six De-
cember 19. 1923; assigned to Breslau June 11, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Mitchell, Jr., J, M. — Born in New Jersey in 1858; physician
and druggist; appointed Consular Agent at San Pedro Sula
January 26, 1891.
Mitchell, Lloyd Clair— Bom in Du Bois, Pa., March 6. 1896;
educated in public schools and business college; employed as a
bookkeeper and clerk one and one-half years; appointed a
clerk at $1,000. in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules. December 18. 1919; class one December 31, 1920, effective
January i, 1921; class two October i, 1923; at $i,6So July i,
1924; at $i,S6o December 13, 1924.
♦Mitchell, Mason. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924. Retired from active service as
Consul at Malta July, 1924, under the provisions of the Act of
May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Mitchell, Thomas James. — Bom in Fall River, Mass., October
S, 1899; attended high school and Fall River School of Commerce
several years; engaged in the manufacture of shellac 1918-19;
appointed Consular Agent at Bocas del Toro July 29, 1924.
Mitchell, Ward Mayhew Parker. — Bom in New Bedford,
Mass.. September 2, 1883; home Richmond, Va.; graduated
from Harvard University (A. B.) 1907 (LL. B.) 1910; in employ
of Legal Aid Society, New York City, 1911-12; practiced law in
New York 1913-1917; served in the National Guard of New
York June-September, 1916, and in United States Army No-
vember, 1917. to June. 1919; appointed, after examination
(January 19. 1920), Consul of class seven June 4, 1920; detailed
to Mexico City, October 26, 1920; to Chihuahua July 18, 1922;
appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; detailed to Mon-
treal September 21, 1923; assigned to Riviere du Loup De-
cember 31. 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
seven July i, 1924.
*Moe, Alfred Keane. — Retired as Consul at Bordeaux Janu-
ary, 1914. Register of 1913.
Moessner, Wallace Eugene. — Bora in Atlanta, Ga., Decem-
ber 26, 1893; attended high school and business college 1909-10,
and Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College 1912-1916;
served in the United States Army 1918-19; employed as drafts-
man by railway company 1916-1918; civil engineer 1920; em-
ployed as billing clerk by wholesale grocery company 1921-1923;
clerk in the American Consulate at Manchester 1924; ap-
pointed \'ice-Consul at Manchester September 3, 1924.
Mofiat, Jay Pierrepont.— Bom in Rye, N. Y., July 18, 1896;
home. New York City; attended Harvard University Septem-
ber. 1915, to December, 1917; served as private secretary to the
American Jlinister at The Hague and as an assistant in the
Legation at The Hague December, 1917 to March, 1919; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 24, 1918), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four September 5, 1919; assigned to
Warsaw September 27, 1919; to the Department of State April
11, 1921; to Tokyo, August 2. 1921; appointed secretary of class
three, August 24, 1921; assigned to Constantinople September
12, 1923; appointed Secretary of class two January 23, 1924.
Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
♦Moflat, Thomas Parker.— Retired as Consul at Managua
March, 1911. Register of 1913.
Moflatt, James P.— Bora in Albany. N. Y., March 18, 1886;
home. New York City; graduated from Fordham University
(LL. B.) 1910; employed as secretary, teacher and librarian
1907-1910; practiced law in New York City 1910-1917. and was
an abstractor of titles, record clerk, and on the stafi of the
district attorney; served in the United States Army as a lieu-
tenant, quartermaster corps, 19x7-1919; appointed, after ex-
amination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven. September s,
1919; detailed to Brussels October 29, 1920; detailed to the De-
partment of State April 11, 1921; assigned to Rangoon, July 37.
1921; appointed Consul of class six November 23, 1931; detailed
to Cape TownMarch 12, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924; class six August 8, 1924.
*Moaaghan, James Charles. -Died November, 1917, while
Consul of class four, unassigned. Register of 1916.
*Monges, Richard G. — * * * Appointed after examina-
tion (June 25, 1923), Vice Consul de carriire of class three June
13, 1924; assigned to Warsaw June 23, 1924; appointed For-
eign Service officer, unclassified, July i, 1924. Retired as For-
eign Service Officer, unclassified, assigned to Warsaw, Novem-
ber, 1924. Register of 1924.
Monroe, Ernest Leslie. — Bora in Boston, Mass., May 10, 1895;
attended public schools, and graduated from a business college
1910; employed as stenographer and clerk by various concerns
seven years; served in the United States Navy 191S-1920; clerk
in the American Consulate at Vladivostok February, 1921, and
at Harbin, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Harbin November
24, 1922; at Santiago de Cuba July 33. 1923; at Saraia April
26, 1924.
♦Monroe, jr., Gustavus Lane.— Retired as Secretary of the
Legation at San Jose, Costa Rica. March, 1912. Register of
1913-
Moiuoe, Herbert B.— Bora in Boston, Mass., June 5, 1S99;
attended high school and business college at Reading, Pa.; em-
ployed by an iron company 1917; served in the United States
Army 1917-1919; clerk in The Adjutant General's Office, War
Department, 1919-1921; clerk in the American Consulate at
Prague 1921-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, August 18, 1924; at $1,680
December i, 1924.
Monroe, Margaret Catherine.- Bora in WiUiston. N. Dak.;
graduated from the Wilhston High School and studied music
in conservatory at Minneapolis 1908; graduated from Fargo
(N. Dak.) College, course on pubUc school music and drawing,
1910; attended a business college in Washington, D. C, 1920-21;
music teacher 1911-1915; clerk in the register of deeds office at
Williston. N. D.. 1915-1920; clerk in the Navy Department,
January 16, 1920. to Febraary 16, 192 1; appointed a clerk at
$1100 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
February 17, 1921; class one October i, 1921; class two October
I, 1923; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Montgomery, Edmund Brewer. — Bora in Quincy, 111.,
September 18, 1891; home, Quincy; attended Quincy High
School, 1905-1909; University of Wisconsin, 1910-1912; United
States Naval Academy, June-Septernber, 191S; employed in
general office work 1913-1915; surveying 19x5-16; engineering,
January-May, 19x7; United States Naval Service May, 1917, to
February, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Port Limon, Costa
Rica, February X2, 1919; appointed, after examination (Janu-
ary 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 24,
X920; assigned to Barranquilla, August 2. 1920; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class one
May 26, 1922; assigned to Montevideo June 23, 1932; to Rio de
Janeiro September i, 1922; appointed Consul of class seven
March i, 1923; remained at Rio de Janeiro, on detail; appointed
Consul of class six December 19, 1923; detailed to London
February is, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
seven July x, X924; detailed to Dublin July 12, X924; returned
to London August i, 1924.
Mooers, Horatio Tobey.— Born in Vassalboro. Me., May 3.
1894; home, Skowhegan, Me.; graduated from Skowhegan Pre-
paratory School 1914; Bowdoin College (A. B.) 1918; attended
Dartmouth College summer session of 1918; employed as steno-
grapher during summer vacations; with the one hundred and
thirty-second Division French Infantry (Ambulance Corps) in
the Champagne April-December, 19x7; inducted into the
United States Army September 19x8; detailed for duty with the
Chemical Warfare Service, American University, D. C; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Antwerp January 27, 1919; at Brussels
May xo, 1919; at Glasgow December 3, 1919; at Edinburgh Janu-
ary 26, 1920; at Horta May x8, 1920; appointed, after examina-
tion (January X9, X920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
May 34, X920, and assigned to Horta; assigned to Lisbon April
3, 1932; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class two May 26,
I70
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
1922; class one November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924; class eight, also Consul, August
8, 1924.
♦Moomaw, John Crouse. — Retired as Vice Consul of career
of class one, assigned to Charlottetown, June, 1924. Register
of 1924.
♦Mooney, Daniel Francis. — Retired as Minister to Paraguay
June 1921. Register of 1918.
Moore, Alexander Pollock. — Bom in Pittsburgh, Pa., No-
vember 10, 1S67; home, Pittsburgh; engaged in newspaper
business since 187S as reporter, editor, publisher, and owner;
editor-in-chief of the Pittsburgh Leader 1904-1923, and president
Leader Publishing Co.; appointed Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiarj' to Spain, March 3, 1923.
Moore, Charles B. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Military Attache at Budapest; also at Warsaw Feb-
ruary 5, 1923; at Paris October, 1924.
*Moore, Fred R. — Appointed Minister Resident and Consul-
General to Liberia March 3, 1913, but did not go to post. Reg-
ister of 1913.
Moore, Rupert Holyoake.— British subject, bom in England
June 22, 187s; in newspaper work; appointed Consular Agent
at Kenora March 6, 1909; retired September, 1916; reappointed
Consular Agent at Kenora February 5, 1918.
Moore, Sadie Dameron. — Bom in Baltimore, Md.; attended
public and private schools in Norfolk, Manila, and Geneva;
employed in the Grosvenor Library, Buffalo, 1917-18; ap-
pointed a temporary clerk in the Department of State, at $1,100,
February 12, 1918; at $1,200, July i, 1918; clerk at $1,000, under
Civil Service rules, February i, 1919; class one March i, 1919;
class two January 16, 1922; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Moore, Stanton Clyde.— Born in Wellsville, Ohio, July 27,
1888; educated in public and business schools; employed as
clerk, correspondent, typewriter, proof reader, and printer,
1912-1916; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of
State, at $900 July 15, 1916; at $900, on probation. May i, 1917;
at $1,000 August I, 1917; class one May i, 191S; class two
March i, 1919; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
♦Moore, Thomas Ewing.— Retired as Secretary of the Lega-
tion at Lisbon June, 190S. Register of 1913.
Moerhead, Maxwell Kermedy.— Born in Pittsburgh, Pa.,
July 14, 1877; home, Pittsburgh; attended Shady Side Acad-
emy, Pittsburgh, and graduated from the University of Chi-
cago; employed as clerk for five years with the Pennsylvania
Railroad Co.; appointed, after examination (June 24, 1905),
Consul at St. Thomas, Ontario, June 26, 1905; Consul at Bel-
grade June 22, 1906; Consul at Acapulco January 13, 1908; Con-
sul at St. John, New Brunswick, May 31, igog; Consul at Ran-
goon April 11;. 1910: Consul of class six by act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 191s; assigned to Swansea September 17, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class five July 6, 191S; assigned to Nantes
March 13, 1919; appointed Consul of class three June 4, 1920;
assigned to Stuttgart December 23, 1921; to Dundee Jime 11,
1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
*Moos, Morton Frederick.— Retired as Consular Assistant
February, 1919. Register of 1918.
Morales, Franklin E.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., January
»6, 1884; home, Atlantic City, N. J.; received his education in
public schools, at a business college, and studied law in an
office for three years; engaged in export business; was Central
American representative, Internations Commercial Corpora-
tion 1916-1918, and vice president thereof 1919-30; representa-
tive of manufacturing jewelers of the United States in South
America 1920-21; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minis-
ter Plenipotentiary to Honduras, October 24, 1921.
Moran, John Edwin.— Born in Stevens Point. Wis., Decem-
ber 6, 1883; home, Waukegan, 111.; received his education in a
parochial school, a normal school, and business college; em-
ployed as a stenographer five years; taught shorthand several
months; stenographer in a naval training station March, 1911,
to May, 1912; in Department of Agriculture April, 1914, to
December, 1916; clerk in American Legation at Berne Decem-
ber, 1916 to December, 1919; appointed, after examination (May
12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three December 6.
1919; detailed to Berlin December 9, 1919; assigned to Auck-
land June 29, 1921; to Wellington December 13, 192 1; to Mel-
bourne June 5, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified, July I, 1924.
♦Morawetz, Albert R.— Retired as Consul at Leipzig June,
1912. Register of 1913.
*Morey, William.— Retired as Consul at Colombo July, 1907.
Died at Colombo March 25, 1908. Register of 1913.
Morgan, Edwin V^raon.- Born in Aurora, N. Y., February
22, 1865; graduate cf Harvard University, A. B. (1890), A. M.
(1891); student at University of Berlin, 1S91-92, 1894-95; in-
structor in history, Harvard, 1892-1894, and Adelbert College,
1895-189S; secretary to United States Commissioner to Samoan
Islands April to August, 1S99; appointed Secretary of the
Legation at Seoul January .^, 1900; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Seoul March 15, 1900; Second Secretary of the Em-
bassy at Petrogiad March 9, 1901; confidential clerk to the
Third Assistant Secretary of State April 7, 1902; Consul at
Dalay January 22, 1904; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary to Korea March 18, 1905; Envoy Extraordi-
nary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Cuba November 29, 1905;
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Para-
guay and Uruguay December 21, 1909; Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Portugal May 24, 191 1; Am-
bassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Brazil Janu-
ary 18, 1913.
Morgan, jr., Harry Hays. — Bom in Dorgen, Switzerland, of
American parents, April 25, 1898; attended Ecole des Roches
(Vemeiul, France) 1910-1913, Chateau de Lancy (Geneva,
Switzerland) 1913-1915, Ecole Duvigneau de Lanneau (Paris,
France) 1915-16, and Baccalaureat, University of Paris, 1917;
served in the United States Army July, 1917, to February, 1919;
inspector for the disinfection of rags and hides at Brussels.
Belgium, October 3, 1921; clerk in the American Consulate
General at Brussels, and in the American Consulate at Vienna;
appointed Vice-Consul at Vienna January 15, 1923; at Glasgow
March 29, 1923.
Morgan, Henry H.— Born in New Orleans, La., December
24, i860; home. New Orleans; educated at Brussels, Belgium
and Bonn, Germany; studied law; appointed Secretary of the
Legation at the City of Mexico September 27, 1882; retired
June 6, 1885; employed as attorney to prosecute the Belden
claim against the Mexican Government in 1886; cashier of K
gas-light company in St. Louis, 1887-1891; engaged in mining
in Mexico, 1892-1895; traveled abroad, 1896; appointed Consul
at Horgen June 8, 1897; Consul at Aarau May 25, 1898; Consul
at Lucerne May 15, 1902, to take effect July i, 1902; Consul at
Stuttgart June 22, 1906; Consul at Amsterdam April 29, 1907;
Consul-General at Barcelona May 11, 1910; Consul-General at
Hamburg November 24, 1913; Consul-General of class two by
act approved February s, 1915; detailed as special agent to in-
vestigate conditions in Cuba May 15, 1917; assigned to Ant-
werp December 17, 1918; to Brussels May 10, 1919; appointed
Commissioner of the United States to confer with Belgian
Ministry of Economic Affairs on matters formerly conducted
by Inter- Allied Commission on Industrial Agricultural Recon-
struction of Belgium June 25, 1919; assigned to Buenos Aires
October 3, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer of class one
July I, 1924.
Morgan, Stokeley Williams.- Born in Washington, D. C ,
October i, 1893; home, Camden, Ark.; graduate of Roxbury
Latin School and Harvard University (A. B.), 1916; appointed,
after examination (April 10, 1916), Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four August 3, 1916; assigned to London
August 10, 1916; appointed Secretary of class three July 13,
1917; assigned to Copenhagen February i, 1919; to La Paz
July 29, 1920; appointed Secretary of class two August 24, 1921;
assigned to Bogota March 20, 1922; to Riga November 3, 1922;
to Panama June 10, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class four July i, 1924; assigned, temporarily, to Tegucigalpa
July 12, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class three
August 8, 1924.
Morgans, Alfred Edward.— Born in Monmouthshire, Wales,
February 17, i860; mine owner and mining and railway engi-
neer in Central America and Western Australia; member of
Parliament in Western Australia; appointed Consular Agent
at Fremantle- Perth April 29, 192 1.
♦Morgenthau, Henry. — Retired as Ambassador to Turkey
July, 1916. Register of 1915.
Moriarty, Eugene Michael,— Born in Somerville, Mass.
September 29, 1902; high-school graduate 1920; attended night
school six months; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, February 15, 1921; at
$1,140 September i, 1922; resigned October 24, 1922; clerk for a
steamship company December, 1922, to September, 1923;
reinstated as a clerk at$i,ooo October 24, 1923; at $1,100 May 31,
effective June i, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
171
Moriarty, Francis Brandon. — Bom in WasliinEton, D. C,
June 12, 1SS4; attended public schools and a business college;
graduated from National University (LL. B.) (LL. M.); clerk
in various offices in Washington, D. C, 1900-1904; engaged in
the coal business 1905; typewriter repairman 1905-06; practiced
law 1910-1917; ser\ed in the United States Army 1917-1919,
and the Graves Registration Service in France 1920-21; prac-
ticed law in Paris, France, 1921-1923; clerk in the American
Consulate at St. Etienne May to December, 1923; appointed
Vice-Consul at St. Etienne December 6, 1923.
♦Moriarty, Jr., George Andrews.— Retired as Secretary of the
Legation at Guatemala March, 191 1. Register of 1913.
Moriarty, Loretta. — Bom in Dayton, Ohio; educated in high
and business schools; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at S990
in the Department of State, June 25, 191S; at $1,020 February i,
1919; at S840 July I, 1919; appointed a clerk at $840 under Civil
Ser\ace rules, October 16, 1919; at Sgoo, November i, 1919; at
$1,000, May I, 1920; at $1,080, October 16, 1922; at $1,140, Decem-
ber 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; class one October i, 1923;
at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Morlock, George Albert.— Born in VVinchendcn, Mass., May
IS. 1893; graduated from Clark College (A. B.) 1916; employed
as a stenographic clerk in Worcester and in War Department
July, 1916 to September, 1917; served in the United States
Army September, 191 7 to April, 1919; clerk in an ordnance de-
pot April-June 1919; appointed a clerk of class one in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, September 11,
1919; class two November i, 1919; clerk to the Secretary of
State April 14, 1922; drafting officer at $2,500 May 20, 1924; at
$2,800 July I, 1924.
Morris, George H. — Bom in Maryland, November 7, 1S78;
appointed a temporary employee of the Department of State,
at $792, !May 7, 1918; at S720, October i, 1918; assistant messen-
ger, under Civil Service rules, June 9, 1919.
♦Morris, Ira Nelson.— Retired as Minister to Sweden March
1933. Register of 1922.
Morris, Leland Bumette. — Bom in Fort Clark, Tex., Febru
arj- 7, 1886; home, Philadelphia, Pa.; graduated from Emerson
Institute, Washington, D. C, and attended University of
Pennsylvania part of five years; passed examinations of pre-
liminary board, Pennsylvania State Law Examiners; ap-
pointed, after examination (March 7, 1910), Student Inter;
preter in Turkey April i, 1910; Deputy Consul at Saloniki
June 25, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul at Saloniki October 25,
1912; also Interpreter August 4, 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General and Interpreter at Smyrna December 8, 1913; Vice-
Consul at Smyrna February 6, 1915; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State December 31, 191 7; appointed Consul of class
eight February 19, 1918; detailed to Montreal June 3, 1918;
detailed to Constantinople March 5, 1919; detailed as Consul in
charge at Saloniki June 7, 1919; appointed Consul of class six-
September 5. 1919; assigned to Saloniki June 23, 1920; appointed
Consul of class five November 23, 1921; class four June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924; assigned to
Cologne October 23. 1924.
♦Morris, Roland S. — Retired as Ambassador to Japan March,
1921. Register of 1918.
Morrison, Dorothy D. — Bom in Washington, D. C; high
school graduate, and spent two years at George Washington
University and one year at National School of Domestic Arts
and Sciences; appointed a temporary clerk in the Department
of State, at $900. May 18. 1918; at $1,020, September i, 1918;
resigned August 22, 1919; appomtcd a clerk at $1,100, under
Civil Service rules, January 31, 1920; class one, October 5,
effective October i, 1920; class two, April i, 1921; at Si, 680
July I, 1924.
Morrison, Emily Selina.— Bom in Millers Place, N. Y.; edu-
cated in public and private schools of Washington, D. C;
appointed skilled laborer at $600 in Census Office January i,
1900; clerk at $720 March, 1900; at $840 May, 1900; at $900 Jan-
uary I, 1901; at $1,000 July I, 1902; transferred to the Depart-
ment of State as clerk at $900 October 11, 1905; apix)intcd clerk
at $1,000 July I, 1907; class one June i, 1909; class two, De-
cember 3, 1917; class three September 16, 1922; at $1,860 July i,
1924.
Morse, William W.— Born in Sofia, Bulgaria, of American
parents, March 14, 1867; educated at St. Johnsbury (Vt.)
Academy and Chaffee's Phonographic Institute, Oswego, N. Y.;
stenographer, bookkeeper, and office man; clerk in the Ameri-
can consulate at Guayaquil 1907-1911 and 1918-19; appointed
Vice-Consul at Guayaquil July 15, 1919.
Morton, William Ross.— Bom in New Ulm, Minn., Decem-
ber 23, 1.87S; grammar and high school education; employed
by a mining company in South Dakota 1892-1899; chief immi-
gration inspector at Habana Cuba, 1900-1902; employed by
the United States Immigration Service at New York 1902-03,
and at Norfolk, Va., 1903-191S; investigator for the United
States Shipping Board in San Francisco 191S-1920; employed
by private shipping companies 1921; in the LTnited States Im-
migration Service October, 1921, to January. 1922; appointed
Vice-Consul at Athens January 18, 1922.
Mosburg, Earl Raymond.— Born in Lime Kito, Md ., Septem-
ber 9, 1897; high-school graduate; employed as a bookkeeper
three months in 1918; clerk in the War Department, June, 1918,
to January, 1919; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules. January 4. 1919; at $1,000
August I, 1919; class one December 31, 1920. effective January
I, 1921; class two October i, 1923; at $r,68o July i, 1924.
*Moseley, Percy Harley.— * ♦ * Appointed \'ice Consul
de carriere of class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924. Retired as Vice Consul of career,
assigned to Sydney, Australia, October, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Moser, Charles Kroth.- Retired as Consul of class three,
unassigned, August, 1922. Register of 1922.
♦Moses, George Higgins.— Retired as Minister to Greece and
Montenegro July, 1912. Register of 1913.
Moses, Henry Claremont. — Bom in Sumter, S. C, December
25, 1S90; attended Furman Fitting School, Clemson College
two years and Brown University one year; employed during
summer vacations and as correspondence clerk several years;
clerk in the American Consulate at Pemambuco December,
1920, to July, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Pemambuco July
16, 1921; at Rosario January 17, 1922; at Asuncion September
10, 1924.
*Mosher, Robert Brent. — * * * Appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class five July i, 1924. Retired from active serv-
ice as Consul at \'ictoria July i, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Mosher, Vivian Ruth.— Bom in Alba. Pa.; educated in
public schools and at a shorthand college; employed with
several business concerns two and a half years; appointed a
clerk, at$i, 000, in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, August 24, 1920; class one November 26, 1921; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Mosier, Robert Lee. — Bom in Winchester, Ind., August
24, 1897; home, Winchester; attended high school 1912-1915;
Culver Military Academy 1915-16; Evanston Academy 1916-17;
served in the United States Army 1918-19, retiring with the
rank of second lieutenant; employed as shoe salesman for short
periods; representative of a rubber-tire manufacturing com-
pany one year, and an automobile salesman six months; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 25, 1923J, Vice-Consul de
carriJre of class three October 6, 1923; assigned to \'alparaiso
November 19, 1923; appointed Foreign Serv-ice Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924; assigned to Concepcion October 22, 1924.
Moss, Marjorie. — Bom in Washington, D. C; attended
public schools and graduated from Western High School,
Washington, 1916; employed in lawyer's office. 1917-18; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,140. in the Department of
State, July 6, 1918; at $1,200 February 1. 1919; at $1,320 February
1, 19J0; at $1,400 October 5. effective October i, 1920; clerk at
$1,000, under Civil Service rules. February i, 1921; class one,
August 16, 1921; class two September i, 1922; at $1,860 July i,
1924.
Mott, T. Bentley.— Colonel (retired). United States Army;
assigned to duty as Military Attach^ at Paris May 9, 1919; also
at Berne May 24, 1922.
♦Mowrer, Frank Roger. — Retired as Consul-General at
Copenhagen July, 1909. Register of 1913.
Mucclo, John J. — Born in Valle Agricola, Italy, March 19,
1900; naturalized at I'rovidence, R. I., June 6, 1921; home,
Providence; graduated from Brown University (Ph. B.) 1921;
served in the United States Army, October i to December 19,
1918; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Consular
Assistant August 15, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three November 23, 1923; assigned to Hamburg January
2, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Oflictr, unclassified, July i,
1924.
Muirtaead, Dorris August.— Born in Fort Wayne, Ind.,
September 8, 1881; graduate of Fort Wayne High School 1898;
172
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
stenographer with two railroad companies in Fort Wayne and
Chicago seven years; with mining syndicate in Alaska; assistant
to superintendent of a Canadian railroad eight years; appointed
Consular Agent at Whitehorse March 31, 1911.
Mullen, Ann Elizabeth.— Born in Honesdale, Pa.; high-
school graduate; clerk in the Air Service, War Department.
January, 1918, to January, 1930; Treasury Department two
months; Census Bureau four months; appointed a clerk at $900
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules Novem-
ber 2^, 1920; at Si, 000 September i, 1922; at $1,100 February i,
1924, class one May 31, effective Jtine i, 1924; at $1,440 July i,
1924.
♦MuUlkin, Hugh.— Retired as Marshal at Tientsin Novem-
ber, 1913. Register of 1912.
Mundy, Louis Edward.— Born in Huntingburg, Ind., Feb-
ruary IS, 1S92; educated in public schools and business college;
stenographer and clerk in Indianapolis 1913-1917; appointed
clerk in the Department of State at $900, under Civil Service
rules. June i, 1917; at $i,ooo September 35, 1917; class one, tem-
porarily, August I, 1918; clerk to the American Commission
to Negotiate Peace, November 30, 1918; clerk of class one in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, November i,
1919; class two December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; de-
tailed as a clerk to the Delegation ot the United States to the
Fifth International Conference of American States, Santiago.
Chile, March 3, 1923; clerk of class three May 31, effective June i,
1924; at $1,860 July I, 1924.
Munro, Dana Gardner.— Born in Providence, R. I., July 18,
1893; home, Princeton, N. J.; attended Brown University
three years; University of Munich one year; graduated from
University of Wisconsin (A. B.) 1913 and from the University
of Pennsylvania (Ph. D.) 1917; engaged in research work for
Carnegie Peace Endowment in Central America 1914-1916;
research fellow in political science. University of Pennsylvania
1917; second lieutenant United States Army 1917-18; appointed
a special assistant in the Department of State at $3,750 January
4, 1919; drafting officer at $3, 500 July i, i9i9;at$3,5oo January 31,
effective February i, 1920; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1920), Consul of class four to assist in economic
investigational work June 4, 1920; detailed to Valparaiso June
29, 1920; to the Division of Latin American Affairs, Depart-
ment of State, November 28, 1921; designated Assistant Chief
of the Division of Latin American Affairs December 20, 1923;
appointed Consul of class three June 3, 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Murdock, Myra A. — Bom in Maryland; has a public-school
education ; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department
of State, January 10, 1915 ; permanently et $900, under Exec-
utive order, June 22, to be effective July i, igi6; at $1,000
September 22, 1917; class one, November i8, 191S; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
*Murphy, Dominic I. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class three July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Stockholm July, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Murphy, George H.— * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer ot class one July i, 1924; died at his post (Zurich) while
serving as Consul General, October i6, 1924. Register of 1924.
Murphy, jr., James Joseph.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa.,
November 19, 1887; home, Philadelphia; graduate of the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania (LL- B.), 1911; practiced lawin Phila-
delphia, 1911-1916; appointed, after examination (June 26,
1916), Consular Assistant August 30, 1916; Vice Consul at
Genoa October 26, 1916; Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
September 27, 1919. assigned to Genoa October 22, 1919; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 24, 1920;
assigned to Lucerne September 15, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class one November 17, 1921; Consul of
class seven June 22, 1922; remained at Lucerne, on detail; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Murphy, James Lee.— Bom in New York City, July 13, 1879;
home. New York City; attended preparatory school. New
York; Columbia University (C. E.) 1903; employed in main-
tenance of way department of several New York railroads;
assistant engineer on board of water supply, New York City,
1906-1910; conducted own business, 1911-1914; clerk in Ameri-
can Consulate at Kingston, Jamaica. 1917-18; appointed Vice-
Consul at Havre November 18, 1919; at Paris February 12,
1930; at Brest April 21, 1920; at Paris May 4, 1930; appointed,
after examination (January 24, 193 1), Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three May is, 1921; assigned to Paris June n, 1921; to
Nantes December 23, 1921; to Paris May 16, 1922; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere ot class two May 26, 1922; assigned to
Strasbourg July 10, 1922; to Paris Decemberi3, 1922; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriire ot class one February 26, 1923; Consul
of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at Paris, on detail;
detailed to Tangier December 19, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Murphy, John F.— Bora in North Adams, Mass., July 10,
1896; attended high school 1910-1914; an evening business college
1915-16; attending Pace Institute, Washington. D. C; em-
ployed in railroad freight office 1916-1918 and February-June,
1920; served in the United States Navy June, 1918, to January.
1919; clerk in North Adams (Mass.) post office, June, 1930, to
October, 193 1; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, November 14, 1921; at $1,000,
October 16, 1922; at $1,100, October i, 1923; class one February
I, 1924; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Murphy, Raymond Edward.— Born in Lewiston, Me., August
31, 189S; graduated from Bates College (A. B.) 1920; clerk in
Lewiston post office five months and conducted own business
at various times; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department
of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, August 10, 1920; class one
December i, 1921; at $i,6So July i, 1924.
Murphy, Robert Daniel.— Born in Milwaukee, Wis., October
28, 1894; home, Milwaukee; attended a coimnercial school six
months; JSIarquette University one year; graduated trotn
George Washington University Law School (Lt,. B.) 1930;
employed as clerk and stenographer in Milwaukee two years;
correspondence clerk. Post Office Department, eighteen months;
clerk in the American Legation at Berne, two years; assistant
to the chief of revenue agents, Internal Revenue Bureau, and
assistant field supervisor. Prohibition Unit; appointed, after
examination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three September 7, 1920; assigned to Zurich, April 2, 1931;
detailed to Munich October 7, 192 1; assigned to Munich No-
vember 15, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
May 26, 1922; class one February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven
December 19, 1923; remained at Munich, on detail; appointed
Foreign Service Officer ot class eight July i, 1924.
Murray, Helena Donovan. — Born in Reading, Mass.; edu-
cated in the grammar and normal high schools of New York
City; attended Burdctt Business College, Boston. 1915; stenog-
rapher, Bureau ot Foreign and Domestic Commerce. 1918-1922;
appointed a clerk of class one in the Departmeut of State, under
Civil Service rules. March 23. 1922; class two April i, 1924; at
$1,500 July I, 1924.
Murray, Wallace Smith. — Born in Bardstown, Ky., March
10, 1887; home, Cleveland, Ohio; graduated from Wittenberg
College (A. B.) 1909; Harvard University (A. M.) 1913; took
interpreters' course at Columbia University and was an officer
student at the Sorbonne, Paris; instructor in modern languages
Carthage College one year; head master of German and French,
University School, Cleveland, 1913-1920: served in the United
States Army as a first lieutenant 1917-1919; appointed, after
examination (May 26, 1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class four, March 22, 1920; assigned to Budapest, July 39,
1920; to Teheran January 7, 1922; appointed Secretary of class
three March 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer ot class six July i,
1924; class five October 17, 1924.
Murray, William Ballew.— Bora in Dow-ning. Mo., July 16,
1892; attended high school two years and a business college; em-
ployed by a utilities company 1910-1912; clerk for the Depart-
ment of Agriculture 1912-1917; cable clerk in South America
1917-18; private secretary to an executive in automotive busi-
ness 1918-19; clerk at Habana 1921-1924; appointed V'ice-Consul
at Habana October 17, 1924.
Murray, Woody.— Born in Murray, Ark., October 38, 1893;
graduated from business college 1913, and from high school
1914; attended University of Arkansas 1915-1918; Arkansas
State Normal School 1920; law school 1920-21; engaged in farm-
ing, teaching in public schools, and as stenographer at various
times 1913-1921; served in United States Army June-Decem-
ber, 1918; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, December 2, 1921; at $1,000 Septem-
ber I, 1922; class one December 30, 1922, effective January i,
1923; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Muse, Benjamin.- Born in Durham, N. C, April 17, 1898;
home, Petersburg, Va.; attended Trinity College two years
and Georgetown University one year; newspaper reporter in
Durham; correspondent in Jlexico summer of 1914; served in
the British Army January, 1917, to June, 1919; appointed a
clerk in the Department of State, imder Civil Service rules,
September s, 1919; after examination (January 19, 1910), Sec-
retary of Embassy or Legation of class four April 7, 1920, and
assigned to the Department of State; assigned to Copenhagen
June 14, 1920; to Managua March i, 1922; to Mexico September
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMENT.
173
29, 1922; appointed Secretary of class three January 23, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as
Second Secretary of Legation at San Salvador July 18, 1924.
Myers, David Jackson Duke.— Bom in La Fayette, Ga..
April 5, 1877; home, La Fayette; graduate of University of
Georgia (A. B.), 1900; taught in schools in Georgia 1900-igoi;
teacher in the Philippines, 1901-1903, and for six months in
1905; civil engineer. Canton, China, 1903-04; sur\'eyor in the
Philippines 1905-1912; appointed, after examination (April i,
1912), Consul at Puerto Cortes August 24, 1912; Consul at
Iquique April 24, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved
February 5, 1913; assigned to Punta Arenas March 2, 1915;
detailed to Buenos Aires November 3, 1917; assigned to Monte-
video July 21, 1919; appointed consul of class five September s,
1919; class four June 4, 1920; instructed April 6, 1923, to proceed
to \Vashington for further assignment; detailed, temporarily,
to San Luis Potosi August 30, 1923; assigned to Durango Sep-
tember 21, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
five July I, 1924.
Myers, Ethel. — Bom in Marion, Pa.; attended Pennsylvania
State Normal School, Shippensburg, Pa., 1905; graduated from
Irving College, Mechanicsburg, Pa. (A. B.), 1909; University
of Chicago (Ph. B.), 1918; teacher in Pennsylvania schools 1906-
1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,100, in the Depart-
ment of State, August i, 1918; appointed a clerk at $1,000,
under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class one, August
16, 1921; class two March i, 1924; at Si, 860 July i, 1924.
Myers, Harry Dustin. — Born in Litchfield, 111., October i.
1874; attended public schools and business college in Carthage,
Mo.; employed in various capacities in connection with rail-
ways in Mexico 1896-1910; secretary and treasurer of a cement
company in Joplin, Mo., 1910-1918; connected with the employ-
ment office of the Government e.xplosives plant at Nitro,
W. Va., 1918-19; fruit farmer, clerk in milling company and
in law office 1919-1921; clerk in the American Consulate Gen-
eral at Panama; appointed Vice-Consul at Panama Sep-
tember 3, 1921; at Buenaventura April i, 1924; at Panama Sep-
tember 17, 1924.
Myers, Louis Samuel. — Bom April a, 1873; appointed laborer
(unclassified) in the Department of Commerce and Labor July
3, 1903; transferred to the Department of State April 6, 1911;
appointed a laborer (unclassified), under Civil Service rules,
July I, 1918; assistant messenger March i, 1919; messenger
April I, 1922.
Myers, Myrl Scott.— Bom in Cumberland County Pa.. Feb-
ruari' 17, 18S6; home, Mechanicsburg, Pa.; attended private
schools; graduate of Dickinson College, (A. B.) 1906, (A. M.)
1907; principal of Auburn schools, 1906-07; appointed, after
examination (August 14, 1907), Student Interpreter in China
August 27, 1907; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Inter-
preter at Canton November i, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General and Interpreter at Tientsin December i, 1910; Vice
and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at Mukden July
25, 1911; Consul at Swatow November 24, 1913; Consul of class
eight by act approved February 3, 1915; appointed Consul of
class six March 2, 1915, and assigned to Chungking; assigned to
Swatow March 20, 1917; appointed Consul of class five Septem-
ber 5, 1919; assigned to Yunnanfu December 27, 1921; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; class five
August 8, 1924.
Myers, Nellie Vass. — Born in Danville, Va.; attended the
public schools of Danville, Randolph-Macon Institute, Dan-
ville, and Gunston Hall, Washington, D. C; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $840 in the Department of State October 13,
1917; at $990 March i, 1918; at $1,080 July i, 1918; at $1,140
February i, 1920; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules,
February i, 1921; at $1,000 August 16, 1921; at Si,o8o October
16, 1922; at $1,140 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923;
class I October i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Myers, Willys A. — Born in Van Meter, Iowa, January 20,
1883; high-school graduate; engaged in business in Brinkley,
Ark., two years; druggist in Mexico City six years; clerk in
the American Consulate at Vera Cruz; appointed Vice-Consul
at Vera Cruz February 11, 1919.
Nabel, Eugene. — Bom in Germany October 28, 1879; natu-
ralized in Rhode Island Febraary 18, 1903; educated in private
schools and commercial colleges in Chemnitz and business col-
lege in Providence; reporter, accountant, and correspondent,
189Q-1907; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at St.
Gall September 9, 1907; Vice and Deputy Consul July i, 1908;
Vice and Deputy Consul at Amsterdam March 19, 1914; Vice-
Consul at Amsterdam by act approved February s, 1915; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Rotterdam November 7, 1921.
Nash, James Alan.— Bom in Dublin, Ireland, April 6, 1883;
father naturalized during his minority; educated by tutors, in
public schools, and a business college; employed for one year in
a law office, four years as a secretary to a Senator and one year
as a farmer; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department
of State, December 16, 1914; permanently at $1,000. under Ex-
ecutive order, June 22. to be effective July i, 1916; class one
April 7, 191 7; class two, August i, 1918; class three .\ugust s.
1920; class four June i, 1922: at S2.400 July i, 1924.
♦Nash, Paul.— Died in London January 6, 1913, while Consul-
General at Budapest. Register of 1913.
Nasmith, Charles Roy.— Bora in Mannsville, N. Y.. Jiuly 18,
1882; home, Merion, N. Y.; graduate of Colgate University
(A. B.), 1904; (A. M.) 1916; attended Harvard University law
school three months; engaged on surv-ey work in vacation
seasons; teacher in two schools, 1904-1906; clerk in Limoges
Consulate, 1907; appointed Vice-Consul at Limoges April 22,
1907; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Brussels May 29, 1911;
appointed, after examination (January 31, 1912) Consular
Assistant November 27, i9i«; Consular Agent at Quibdo
February 26, 1914, but did not go to post; appointed Vice-
Consul at Brussels February 6, 1915; on detail at Amsterdam,
April, 1917, to January, 1918; appointed Vice-Consul at Rotter-
dam January 23, 1918; Consul of class eight February 19, 1918;
assigned to Ghent December 17, 191S; appointed Consul of class
six Septembers, 1919; class five November 23, 1921; assigned to
Newcastle-on-Tyne April 10, 1924; appointed Foreign Sers-ice
Officer of class six July i, 1924.
*Nason, Charles Pinckney Holbrook.— Retired as Consul at
Grenoble October, 1913. Register of 1913.
Nason, William Franklyn. — Born in Brockton, Mass.. No-
vember 13, 1897; home, Brockton; graduated from Brockton
High School, 1916; attended George Washington University
Law School 1920-21; munitions worker 1916-17; salesman
1917-18; clerk for United Fruit Co. at Almirante, Panama,
1918; order clerk for the Panama Railroad Co. at Balboa,
Panama, 1918-1920; appointed, after examination (January
24, 1921), Student Interpreter in Japan April 23, 1921; Vice-
Consul and Interpreter at Yokohama August iS, 1923; Vice
Consul and Interpreter at Mukden March 15, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Nathan, Edward Isaac— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa., July 10.
1878; home Philadelphia; attended the Philadelphia high
school; graduated from the law department of the University of
Pennsylvania; employed as wholesale dry goods stock clerk;
instructor; practiced law 1905-1907; appointed, after examina-
tion (July 7, 1907); Consul at Patras August 15, 1907; Consul at
Mersine, May 4; 1909; Consul of class eight by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven March 2, 1915;
assigned to Vigo December 8, 191 7; appointed Consul of class
six September 5, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; assigned to Palermo
November 2, 1921; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class
six July I, 1924.
Neale, Katherine. — Born in Washington, D. C; educated in
the public schools and the Sacred Heart of Mary Academy;
employed in office of real estate broker 1919-20; clerk. Bureau
of the Census May, 1920 to January, 192 1; appointed a clerk at
$900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
January 26, 1921; at Si.ooo December i, 1921; at Si, 100 May 31,
effective June i, 1924; at$i, 500 July i, 1924.
♦Neely, Roy H. — Retired as Consular Clerk in the Consulate-
General at Habana June 30, 1907. Register of 1913.
Neesley, Emma Louise Margaret. — Bom in Lyons, Iowa;
graduated from high school 191S; stenographer for a commercial
concern 1918-1924; appointed a clerk of class one in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, March 15, 1924; at
$1,500 July I, 1924.
*Neill, Richard Renshaw. — Retired as Secretary of the Le-
gation at Lima September, 1909. Died at Wayne. Pa., October,
1912. Register of 1913.
Nelson, Anders Christian.— Bom in Denmark May n. 1858;
naturalized in Chicago, 1891; educated in public and private
schools and military school of Denmark; in newspaper work
for sixteen years in Minneapolis and Chicago; appointed Con-
sular Agent at Schiedam August 13, 1901; Consular Agent at
Scheveningen April 5, 1910; Vice-Consul at The Hague No-
vember 23, 1917.
Nelson, Tulev Wetzel.— Born in Paris. 111.; high school edu-
cation; employed in an abstract office in Paris. 111.. 1902-03; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900, in the Department of
State December 22. 1917; at $1,100 March i, 1918; at $1,200
174
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
July I, i9j8; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules, February
1, 1921; class one August i, 1921; class two October 6, 1923; at
Si, 680 July I, 1924.
Nester, Alfred Tyrrell.— Born in Geneva, N. Y., July 19, 1898;
home, Geneva; attended private school 1906-1913; Lawrence-
ville (N. J.) Preparatory School, 1913-1916; Geneva High
School, 1917; Hobart College, 1918; employed as ambulance
driver, with Hayes Ambulance Corps in France 19 17; with
American Red Cross 191S; appointed Vice-Consul at Naples
November 21, 1919; appointed, after examination (June 28,
1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 26, 1922; as-
signed to Naples June 23, 1922; to Ha\Te March 30, 1923; ap-
pointed Vice Consul de carriere of class two November 23, 1923;
assigned to Christiania Jime 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Neville, Edwin Lowe.— Bom in Cleveland, Ohio, November
16, 1SS4; home, Cleveland; graduate of Cleveland High School
and the University of Michigan (B. A.); appointed, after exam-
ination (August 14, 1907), Student Interpreter in Japan August
27,1907; also Vice and Deputy Consul at Dalny, JIanchuria,
August 6, 1909, retired as Vice and Deputy Consul at Dalny
September 30, 1909; appointed Interpeter to the Consulate-
General at Seoul, Korea, March 29, 1910; also Vice and Deputy
Consul-General February 25, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul at
Dalny November 10, 191 1; reappointed Vice and Deputy
Consul-General and Interpreter at Seoul January 17, 1912; ap-
pointed Consul at Antung September 18, 1913; Consul at Tansui
May 5, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5,
1915; appointed Consul of class six October 27, 1916, and assigned
to Nagasaki; appointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919;
detailed to the Department of State December 16, 1919; ap-
pointed Consul of class four June 4,1920; expert assistant Confer-
ence on the Limitation of Armament, November 3. 192 1; ap-
pointed Consul of class three November 19, 1921; designated to
represent the department of State on the Advisory Board, to the
Federal Narcotics Central Board May 27, 1922; attended meet-
ings of the Advisory Committee on the Traffic in Opium held
in Geneva in 1923-24; appointed Consul General of class four
June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924;
designated November 6, 1923, one of a committee of three to
begin preparatory work on the International Narcotics Confer-
ence, Geneva, 1924; appointed October 17, 1924, a delegate to
represent the Government of the United States at said Confer-
ence convened at Geneva November 17, 1924, and invested
with full power to participate in the negotiation, conclusion,
and signing of a convention for the control of the traffic in habit-
forming narcotic drugs.
Newbill, Hiram Edward. — Born in Halifax County, Va.,
October II, 1896; attended high school 191 1-1914; served in the
United States Navy, 1914-1919; clerk in the Navy Department
1919-1922; clerk in the American Consulate at Tsingtao De-
cember 26, 1922, to August 27, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at
Tsingtao August 28, 1923; at Hankow May 27, 1924.
Newcomb, Anna Belle.— Bom in Loraine, Ohio; attended
Northampton (Mass.) High School 1918-1922, and a business
college 1922-1924; employed as stenographer at Smith College
January-June, 1924; appointed a clerk of class one in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, June 16, 1924; at
Si, 500 July I, 1924.
Newcomb, Robert M. — Bom in Vincennes, Ind., November
14. 1880; graduate of Vincennes High School; clerk in various
concerns 1901-1907; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at
Victoria March 25, J907; resigned September 30, 19x1; reap-
pointed March 30, 1912; resigned July 18, 1913; reappointed
February a, 1914; Vice-Consul at Victoria by act approved
February 5, igis-
Newcome, William A. — Born in New York in June, 1866,
appointed stenographer and typewriter. War Department,
San Francisco, Calif., under Civil Service rules, February, 1898;
resigned September, 1904; appointed clerk in the Department
of State at $900, under Civil Service rules, December a, 1904;
class one March i, 1905; class four Julya, 1906; resigned August
ji, 1908; detailed as a clerical assistant to the delegation of the
United States to the Second Peace Conference at The Hague,
1907; appointed clerk on the Japanese Exposition Commission;
reinstated as clerk in the Department of State at $1,000 Feb-
ruary I, 1909; assigned to duty in connection with the Depart-
ment's exhibit at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at
Seattle. Wash., May 18, 1909, to October 15, 1909; appointed
clerk class one April i, 1911; at $1,800 October s, 1911; clerk in
the American Embassy at Rome February i, 1913; retired
April, 1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,400 in the
Department of State October 6, 1917; Passport Agent, New
York City, at $2,000 July i, 1918; resigned August i, 1919;
appointed clerk in the American Commission at Berlin Octo-
ber 6, 1920; drafting officer at $3,000 in the Department of State
.A.pril I, 1921; Passport Agent in the Passport Bureau of the
Department of State in San Francisco at $3,000, under Civil
Service rules, June 18, effective July i, 1921.
Newell, Constance. — Born in Washington, D. C; attended
the Principia School (St. Louis, Mo.), 1914, The Laurels (Can-
terbury, England), 1913, University of Illinois, 1917-1920, and
Columbia University 1920-21; graduated from George Wash-
ington University (A. B.) 1922; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in
the Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, November
I, 1922, at §1,100 October i, 1923; class one April i, 1924; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Newson, Horace Dorsey.— Bora in New York City, iMay 28,
1891; home. New York City; educated at several schools in
United States and Europe, and attended Yale University three
years; employed as salesman and manager with architects in
Paris and New York, and as director and secretary of a hotel-
construction corporation 1913-1917; served in the United States
Army, as lieutenant, captain, and major 1917-1920, being de-
tailed part of that time with the Peace Commission in Paris,
and as Assistant Militari' Attach^ at London; appointed, after
examination (October 18, 1920), Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class four November 15, 1920; assigned to Budapest,
January 15, 1921; to Berlin, January- 31, 1923; appointed Secre-
tary of class three January 23, 1924; assigned to Mexico City
January 24, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
Nichols, Lois Minerva. — Bora in Washington, D. C; at-
tended Business High School, Washington, three years;
employed as a typist with the American Red Cross July-
October, 191 7, and as a stenographer with a lawyer and the
Fuel Administration March, 1918, to January, 1919; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in the Department of State,
June 10, 1919; clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules,
August 6, 1919; class two, October i, 1923; at $i,6bo July i, 1924.
♦Nicholson, John Bradford.— Retired as Vice-Consul and In-
terpreter at Changsha May, 1919. Register of 1918,
♦Nicholson, Vivian Lamont.— Retired as Consul of class
eight, on detail at Buenos Aires, September, 1919. Register of
1918.
♦Nicolson, Donald.— Retired as Student Interpreter in Tur-
key February, 1913. Register of 1913.
Nielsen, Fred Kenelm.— Born in Denmark April 32, 1879;
educated in public schools of Omaha, Nebr.; graduate of the
University of Nebraska (A. B.. LL. B.) and of Georgetown
University (LL. M.): employed in real-estate office and prac-
ticed law in Nebraska; member of the bar of the Supreme
Court of the United States; appointed clerk in the Department
of State at $900, under Civil Service rules, July 15, 1904; class one
July 3, 1906; class two March 4, 1907; class three November a,
190S; special agent of the General Land Office May 17, 1909;
resigned January 16, 1911; clerk with Newfoundland Fisheries
Arbitration Commission January-April, 191 1; clerk of class
three. Department of State, April 25, 1911; law clerk August i,
1913; assistant solicitor November 25, 1913; designated as acting
solicitor March 2, 1914; designated a Plenipotentiary Delegate
of the United States at the Interaational Conference on Spitz-
bergen May 18, 1914; commissioned a major in the United
States Army September, 1918; legal adviser to the American
Commission to Negotiate Peace at Paris, 1919; principal Amer-
ican delegate on the commission which considered the revision
of the treaties of 1839 relating to the neutralization of Belgium
which sat at Paris, 1919; American delegate on the commission
which drafted a treaty at Paris. 1919, relating to the Spitz-
bergen Archipelago; appointed Solicitor for the Department
of State June 23, 1920; expert assistant. Conference on the
Limitation of Armament, November 3, 1921; Agent of the
United States in the American and British Claims Arbitra-
tion August 8, 1922.
Nielsen, Orsen Norman.— Born in Beloit, Wis.. September
22, 1892; home, Beloit; attended the Beloit High School four
years and the University of Wisconsin two and one-half years;
employed with a manufacturing concern in Beloit several sum-
mer vacations; engaged in newspaper work in Beloit, Wis.,
Cleveland, Ohio, and Toronto, Ontario, several years; ap-
pointed clerk in the American Consulate General at Moscow
December 28, 1916; Vice-Consul at Moscow March 15, 1918;
Vice-Consul at Stockholm September 14, 1918; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three, September 27, 1919; assigned to Stockholm December 12,
1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 24,
1920; detailed to the office of the American Commissioner at
Berlin, March 18, 1921; assigned to Berlin November 15, 1921;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 17,
1921; Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; remained at Berlin,
BIOGRAPHICAt, STATEMENT.
175
on detail; appointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; detailed to Dublin
July 12, 1924-
♦Nightingale, Henry Oscar. — Retired as Marshal at Foochow
February, 1911. Register of 1910.
Norquist, Gordon.— Bom in San Francisco, Calif., Novem-
ber I, 1893; pursued a business college course, and attended
an engineering school one year; typist February-October,
1920; order clerk for a paper company three months; clerk in
the Bureau of Internal Revenue February-July, 1921; ap-
pointed a clerk of class two in the Passport Bureau of the
Department of State in San Francisco, under Civil Service
rules, November 16, 1921; at $1,500 August i, 1924.
Norris, jr., William Baker.— Bom in St, Joseph, Mo., Decem-
ber 30, 1S90; graduated from high school 1908, Amherst College
(A. B.) 1912, Georgetown Law School (LL. B.) 1916; employed
assupervjsorby a railroad company 1913; clerk in the Treasury
Department 1914-1916; practiced law 1916-17; first lieutenant
in the United States Army, 1917-1919; appointed a law clerk,
at $2. 000, in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, July 21, 1919; at $2,250 March 23. 1920; assistant solicitor
at 82,500 June i, 1920; at $3,000 June i, 1921; accompanied
American Delegation to the International Opium Conference
at Geneva as technical expert, Xovember-February, 1924-25;
at $3,200 November i, 1924.
♦Northcott, Elliott.- Retired as Minister to \'enezuela Au-
gust, 1913. Register of 1913.
♦Northrup, Alfred S.— Retired as Consul at Trebizond Feb-
ruary, 1915. Register of 1914.
Norton, Edward John.— Bora in St. Paul, Minn., December
29, 1874; home, Memphis, Tenn.; educated at St. Mary's School,
St. Paul, Minn.; cashier of two concerns at Port Limon; man-
ager merchandise department United Fruit Co., Port Limon;
resident manager of the Fruit Dispatch Co. at Memphis, Tenn.;
appointed, after examination (March 14, 1907), Consul at Asun
cion March 30, 1907; Consul at Malaga May 31, 1909; Consul at
Bombay August 22, 1912; resigned, to take effect August 30,
1913; appointed Vice-Consul at Malaga October 13, 1916;
appointed Consul of class five July 18, 1919, under Executive
Order of April 8, 1919; remained at Malaga on detail; assigned
to Sydney. Australia. September 5, 1919; appointed Consul of
class three June 4, 1920; directed, July 19, 1922, to proceed to
Washington; appointed Consul General at Large August 29,
1922; detailed to the Department of State September 6, 1922;
designated Chief of the Office of Consular Personnel September
18, 1923; designated a member of the Executive Committee
of the Foreign Service Personnel Board, representing the
Consular Service, June 19, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class three July i. 1924.
*Norton, Laurence Harper.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class four, assigned to Paris, June, 1924. Register
of 1924.
♦Norton, Thomas Herbert.- Retired as Consul at Chemnitz
May, 1914. Register of 1913.
Norweb, Raymond Henry —Born in Nottingham. England,
May 31, 1894; father naturalized during his minority; home,
Elyria, Ohio; spent a year at Oberlin College; graduate ol
Harvard LTniversity (A. B.) 1916; private secretary to the
American Ambassador in Paris August, 1916, to March, 1917;
appointed, after examination (April 10, 1916), Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four March 16, 191 7; assigned to
Paris, March 17, 1917; appointed Secretary of class three
August 23, 1917; assigned to the Department of State May
36, 1921; appointed Secretary of class two March 26, 1922;
assigned to Tokyo August 11, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Norwood, Dorothy Kathleen.— Bom in Fairbury. Nebr.;
graduated from high school and attended the State University
two years; office and clerical assistant in a jewelry store at Fair-
bury, Nebr., 1917-18; typist for the General Electric Com-
pany, Schenectady, N. Y., June to October. 1918; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, at $1,020, in the Department of State
October 11. 191S; at S^fio July i, 1919: clerk, at Si. 000, under
Civil Service rules, January 16, 1920; at $1,080 September i,
1922; at $1,140 December 30. 1922, effective January i, 1933;
class one October I, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Nutter, Ellen E.— Bom in Wausau, Wis.; graduated from a
normal school 1910, and attended two summer courses at the
Wisconsin State Normal School; public-school teacher 1910-
1919; clerk in the Bureau of the Census, Department of Com-
merce, 1920-1922, and in the United States Shipping Board
1922-23; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service Rules, October 5, 1923; at $1,000 April i,
1924; at $1,260 July I, 1924.
♦O'Brien, Edward C— Retired as Minister to Uruguay and
Paraguay February, 1910. Register of 1913.
♦O'Brien, Thomas J.— Retired as Ambassador to Italy Sep-
tember, 1913. Register of 1913.
O'Brien, William Gleason.— Bom in Brockton, Mass., Sep-
tember 2, 1899; graduated from high school 1919, and attended
Boston University 1919-1921; clerk in a jobbing dry-goods con-
cern six months; clerk in the American Consulate at Asuncion
July, 1922, to January, 1924; appointed Vice Consul at Asimcion
January 7, 1924; at Rosario September 10, 1924; at Havre Sep-
tember 22, 1924.
O'Donoghue, Sidney Eugene.— Bom in Emmitsburg, Md.,
August 20, 1895; home, Passaic, N. J.; attended Mount St.
Mary's College two years, Fordham University one year, and
Georgetown Foreign Service School; served in the United
States Army June, 191 7, to April, 1919; appointed a clerk at
$900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
November 19, 1919; appointed Vice-Cousul at Vladivostok
February 2, 1920; at Singapore April 2, 1920; at Trieste Octo-
ber 5. 1921; Vice-Consul at Athens January- 30, 1922; appointed,
after examination (January 24, 1921), \'ice-Consul de carriere
of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Athens June 23, 1922;
to Saloniki November 2, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class two February 26, 1923; assigned to Patras Sep-
tember 12, 1923; to Saloniki September 14, 1923; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 23, 1923; assigned
to Prague January- 4, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924.
*0£fut, Casper Yost. —Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Le-
gation ot class three, assigned to Panama, November, 1919.
Register of 1918.
♦O'Hara, John W.— Retired as Consul at Montevideo June,
1908. Register of 1913.
*0'Hara, Veazie Winthrope.— Retired as Consul of class
seven, detailed to Winnipeg, June, 1923. Register of 1922.
O'Keefe, James A.— Bora in Newark, N. J., March 4, 1868;
attended public school and the Cathedral School and St Alo-
vsius Academy at Newark, N. J.; employed as telegraph clerk,
operator, traffic chief, and chief operator in the Postal and
Western Union Telegraph companies at Richmond and Wash-
ington; appointed clerk in the Department of State at S.oo,
under Civil Service rules, January 2, 1909; class one December
7, 1909; class two September 10. 1913; class three July 28, to be
effective August i, 1917; class four February i, 1924; at $2,040
July I, 1924.
Olivares, Jos6 de.— Born in California November 26, 1867;
home, St. Louis, Mo.; educated in private and public schools of
southern California by tutors, and at the Liceo de Varones at
Guadalajara, Mexico; traveling correspondent for various
American newspapers until 1901; correspondent at Paris E.t-
position. 1900; author of "Our Islands and Their People;"
war correspondent during Spanish-American War; World's
Fair (St Louis) Exposition Commissioner to the South Amer-
ican Republics, and commissioner from the Argentine Repub-
lic to the exposition in 1904; newspaper correspondent until
1906; appointed, after examination (June 13, 1906), Consul at
>Ianagua June 23, 1906; assigned to special duty in the Depart-
ment of State December i, 1909, to January 11, 1910; appointed
Consul at Madras January 27, 1911; Consul at Hamilton, On-
tario, December 29, 1914; Consul of class seven by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six April 16, 1917;
class five September s, 1919; class four June 4, 1920; assigned
to Kingston, Jamaica, June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
•Oliver, Alton E.— Retired as Marshal at Hankow in 1912.
Register of 1914.
Olsson, Otto Oliver. — Bom in Marblehead, Mass., January
12, 1S98; attended high school 1912-1916, and business college
191 7-18; employed by private concerns in Massachusetts 1916-
1918 and 1922-1924; by Treasury Department 1918-1920; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, December 6, 1924.
O'Neil, James Richard. — Bom in Des Moines, Iowa, Sep-
tember iS, 1904; graduated from high school 1922, and attended
Georgetomi Foreign Service School one and one-half years;
clerk witli the United States Railroad Administration Novem-
ber, 1922, to June, 1923; appointed clerk at $900 iu the Depart-
176
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, October 8, 1923; at
$1,000 January S, 1924^ at $1,260 July 1, 1924.
O'Neill, Anna A.— Bom in Washington, D. C; graduate
Washington College of Law (LL. B), and took a special course
at Gonzaga College; admitted to the District of Columbia bar
in 1916; stenographer, assistant to a chemist, and a private
secretary for five years; employed in British Pecuniary Claims
Commission, 1912-1915; transferred to the Department of State
November i, 191s; appointed a clerk of class one, under Exec-
utive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class two
July 2S, to be effective August 1, 19 17; class three, temporarily,
August I, 1918; law clerk at $2,000 November 18, 1918; at $2,250
July iS, 1919; at $2,500 June I, 1920; assistant solicitor at $3,000
September 16, 1922.
Opitz, Richard. — Bom in New York City June 27, 1900; at-
tended preparatory schools 1914-191S, Columbia University
1919-20, and Savage School 1921-22; employed by private con-
cerns 1920-21; engaged in business 1922-1924; appointed a clerk
at $1,200 in the Passport Bureau of the Department of State in
New York City, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, JIarch 17, 1924.
Orams, Thomas. — Born iu London December 24, 1857; su-
perintendent, MoUendo office of the West Coast Cable Co.;
appointed Consular Agent at Mollendo July 17, 191a.
♦O'Rear, John Davis.— Died at La Paz, July 14, 1918. while
Minister to Bolivia. Register of 1917.
♦Orr, Arthur. — Retired as Second Secretary of the Embassy
at Rio de Janeiro July, 1911. Register of 1913.
Orr, George. — Born in Philadelphia, Pa., September 29,
1886; home, Atlantic City, N. J.; graduated from Temple Col-
lege 1907; clerk in a railway office one year; rodman and drafts-
man three years; engineer with railway company and a land-
development company and engaged in municipal work 1905-
1917 and 1919-20; served in the United States Army as lieuten-
ant and captain June, 1917, to July, 1919; appointed, after ex-
amination (January 19, 1920), Consul of class seven June 4, 1920;
detailed to Panama August 2, 1920; appointed Consul of class
six March i, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924; class six August 8, 1924.
Osboni, Howard Baldwin. — Bom in Passaic, N. J., June 14,
1877; attended high school in New Jersey and the dental de-
partment of the University of Pennsylvania three years; den-
tist since 1903; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Rangoon
August 10, 1911; Vice-Consul at Rangoon by act approved
February 5, 1915.
Osborne, A. A.^Bom in Sandusky, Ohio, September 10,
1882; graduated from Har\'ard University (A. B.) 1905; Colum-
bia University (Ph. D.) 1914; statistician 1910-11; instructor in
economics at the Universities of Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh,
also at Hobart, and Washington and Jefferson Colleges 1913-
1918; statistician with Explosives and Loading Division of the
War Department May, 191S, to January, 1919; appointed clerk
to the Trade Commissioner at Rome; Assistant Trade Com-
missioner at Rome November, 1920; Trade Commissioner and
Assistant Commercial Attache at Rome June 27, 192 1.
Osborne, John Ball.— Born in Pennsylvania June 34, 1868
preparatory education at Hillman Academy in Wilkes-Barre,
Pa., and graduated from Yale University (A. B.), 1889; ap-
pointed Consul at Ghent November 29, 1889; retired December
33, 1893; admitted to the bar of Philadelphia, 1895, and prac-
ticed law in Philadelphia and Scranton, 1895-1897; appointed
assistant secretary of the Reciprocity Commission October 18,
1897; Chief of the Bureau of Trade Relations in the Department
of State May 17, 1905; designated a member of the Interdepart-
mental Statistical Committee by Executive order of September
10, 1908; designated Honorary Commissioner-General to the
Universal and International Exposition, Brussels, 1910, and
Honorary Commissioner to the American Exposition, Berlin,
1910; designated a delegate to the International Congress of
Chambers of Commerce and Commercial and Industrial Asso-
ciations, London, 1910; appointed Consul at Havre August aj,
1913; Consul of class three by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul-General of class four September s, 1919; as-
signed to Christiania July i. 1920; to Genoa February lo, 1931;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
•Osborne, Llthgow.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Le-
gation of class three, unassigned, August, 1921. Register of 1918.
O'Shaughnessy, Kathleen Delia.— Born in Wareham, Mass.;
attended public schools and George Washington University;
employed by various concerns during summer vacations; ste-
nographer for commercial concern one month; appointed a
clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, February 7, 1921; class one August x6, 1931; class two
October i, 1923; at $1,680 July 1, 1924; at $1,860 December 31,
effective January 1, 1925.
♦O'Shaughnessy, Nelson.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class one, unassigned, September, 1916. Register
of 1915.
Ostertag, Augustus.— Bom in Philadelphia, Pa., August 4,
1890; home, East Downingtown, Pa.; educated in public and
business schools; clerk, stenographer, and bookkeeper 1906-
1917; served in the United States Army 1917-1919; secretary
to a banker 1919-1921; appointed clerk in the American Con-
sulate at Cartagena December, 1921; Vice-Consul at Carta-
g;ena August 15, 1922; at Guatemala February 12, 1923; at La
Paz August 21, 1924.
Oswald, Winne Blanchard.— Born in Chicago, 111.; educated
in public schools; appointed a clerk at $960, temporarily, in the
Department of State May i, 1919; at $900, under Civil Service
rules, February i, 1921; at $1,000 August 16, 1921; at $1,100
February i, 1924- class one May 31, effective June i, 1924; at
Si, 500 July I, 1924.
*0'TooJe, William Joseph.— Retired as Minister to Para-
guay May, 1924. Register of 1924.
Ott, Harry Benjamin.-Born in Galveston, Tex., January 37.
1895; attended high school at Houston three years; business
college in El Paso one year; employed by commercial concern
in Chihuahua. Mexico, several years; served in the United
States Army August, 191 7, to October, 1919, being discharged
with the rank of second lieutenant; traveling representative for
a commercial paper company December, 1919, to April, 1931;
appointed Vice-Consul at Chihuahua July 15, 1921; at Ciudad
Juarez July 26, 1923; at Chihuahua November i, 1923; at Fron
tera July 17, 1924.
Otterman, Harvey Boyd.— Bom in Allegheny, Pa., Septem-
ber 17, 1889; educated in public schools of Allegheny, at Car-
negie Institute of Technology, and shorthand schools; stenog-
rapher for Pittsburgh concerns nearly three years; appointed
clerk in the Department of State, at $900 per annum, under
Civil Service rules, December 6, 1912; at $1,000 April 22, 1914;
class two June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class three No-
vember 25, 1918; class four December 31, 1920, effective January
I, 1921; at $2,100 July I, 1924.
Owen, Jacob M.— British subject, born in Nova Scotia, 1847;
lawyer; appointed Consular Agent at Annapolis Royal April r8,
1873.
Owen, Somerset Anthony. — Born in La Plata, Md., Decem-
ber 18, 1896; attended Western Maryland College two years;
employed as a supervisor in an iron foundry in Baltimore June,
1916, to April, 1918; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, August 19, 1919; at
$1,100 November i, 1919; class one October i, 1920; appointed
Passport Agent in the Passport Bureau of the Department of
State in New Orleans at $2,500 June 18, effective July i, 193 1.
Owens, Louis George.— Born in Washington, D. C, Decem-
ber 15, 1900; public-school education; employed as errand boy
and bundle wrapper in department stores July, 1916-August,
1917; appointed messenger boy in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, August i, 1917; appointed tempo-
rarily at $720 November 1. 1518; at $900, under Civil Service
rules, November i, 1919; at $1,000 January 20, 1923; at $1,100
May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Owens, Thomas Robert.— Bom in Lineville, Ala., April 7,
1882; home, Lineville; graduated from Peabody College (L. I.)
1906; George Washington University (LL. B.) 1912; instructor
in Lineville College 1906-07; superintendent of schools at Pratt-
ville 1907-1910; practiced law in Gadsden, Ala., 1913-1917; prin-
cipal of high school in Gadsden 1915-1917; appointed, after ex-
amination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven September 5,
1919; detailed to Bagdad October 23. 1919; appointed Consul of
class six November 19, 1921; detailed to Habana April 23, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i , 1924.
♦Owsley, jr., Harry Bryan.— Retired as Secretary of the Le-
gation at Montevideo August, 1909. Register of 191 j.
♦Ozmun, Edward H.— Died at his post (Constantinople) De-
cember 9, 1910. Register of 1913.
Pabst, jr., Gustave — Bora in Milwaukee, Wis., May 39, 1899;
home, Milwaukee; graduated from Harvard University (A. B.)
1921; served as a corporal, Wisconsin State Guard; in the Secre-
tariat General, Conference on Central American Affairs, Decem-
ber, 1922, to February, 1923; appointed, after examination
(July 10, 1922), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
177
Febmarj' 3. 19^3. and assigned to the Department of State;
assigned to Lima July 26, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned as Third Secretary
of Embassy at Santiago July 17, 1924.
Packer, Earl LeNoir. — Bom ia Ogden, Utah, November 19.
1&94; home, Ot'den; graduated from Ogden High School 1912.
and from George Washington University (A. B.) 1921; clerk
and newspaper reporter three years; clerk in the Bureau of
Insular Affairs, War Department, October 25. 1915, to January
», 1917; clerk in the American Embassy at Petrograd January
3, to July 15, 1917; clerk. American Military' Mission, Petrograd,
July 16. 1917, to January S, 191S; commissioned first lieutenant.
Infantry, United States Army, Xovcmber 26, 191 7; Assistant
Militarj' Attache. Ameiican Embassy in Russia, January S,
1918. to October 29. 1919; appointed special assistant at $2,160 in
the Department of State, February 10. 1920; after examination
(January 19, 192c) \'ice-Consul de carriere of class three May
34, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500 in the Department of State
June 17. effective July i, 1921. and designated Assistant Chief
of the Division of Russian Affairs; Vice-Consul detailed to the
office of the American Commissioner at Riga February 20, 1922;
assigned to Reval September 19, 1922; detailed to the American
Legation at Riga October 14, 1922, as Vice-Consul with the rank
of Third Secretary of Legation; appointed Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class two February 26, 1923; class one November 23,
1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Paddock, Gordon. — Born in New York City September 6,
1865; graduate of Princeton University, 1887, and Columbia
University Law School, 1889; practiced law in New York City;
appointed secretary of the legation at Seoul April 24. :9oi; also
Vice and Deputy Consul-General May 9, 1901; Secretary of the
Legation and Consul-General May 23, 1902, to take effect July
I, 1902; duties as Secretary of Legation ceased November 34,
1905; appointed Vice-Consul-General July 17, 1906; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Harbin May i, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Mukden November i, 1909; Consul at Tabriz June
34, 1910; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; detailed to
Teheran December 16, 1920; retransferred to the Diplomatic
Service under Executive order of June 20, 1922, and appointed
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two July 14, 192;;
assigned to the Department of State July 20, 1923; to Belgrade
November 13, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
four July 1, 1924.
♦Paddock, Harry Luzerne. — Retired as Consul at Amoy April,
1908. Register of 1913-
♦Page, Thomas Nelson.— Retired as Ambassador to Italy,
1930. Died near Richmond, Va., November I. 1923. Register
of 1918.
*Page, Walter Hines. — Retired as Ambassador to Great
Britain November, 1918. Died in Pinehurst, N. C, Decem-
ber 31, 1918. Register of 1917.
Painter, Edward T.— Bom in Granite, Okla., December 2,
1902; attended high school 1919-1922, and business college 1923;
typist ia Interior Department Jaauary 2-August 31, 1924;
appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, imder
Civil Service rules, September 2, 1924.
Palcho, jr., John G.— Bom in Galhtzin. Pa., September 14.
1898; graduated from high school 1917; bookkeeper for national
bank Alay. 1917, to April, 191S; served in the United States
Army, April. 1918. to April, 1919; clerk in the Zone Finance
Office. War Department, May, 1919, to February, :92i; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class one March i, 1921; at
$i,68c July I, 1924.
Palmer, David W. — Bora in Vemon, Fla., August 26, 1899;
attended public achool, and a business college in Nashville
(Tenn.) 1921-1923; postal clerk and engaged in mercantile
business 1916-1921; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Ci\ai Service rules, July 17, 1923; at $1,000
December i, 1923; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Palmer, Ely Eliot.— Born in Providence, R. I., November 39,
1&87; home. Providence; attended the public schools of Provi-
dence ten years; Worcester .A.cadeiny one year; graduated from
Brown University (B. A.), 1908. George Washington Univer-
sity (Master of Diplomacy), 1910; did graduate work in the Uni-
versity of Paris, 1908-09; clerk in bank, 1904; assistant director
summer playgrounds committee. Providence, 1906, and direc-
tor, 1907-08; bookkeeper, 1909; appointed, after examination
<Jime 27, 1910), Consular Assistant December 20, 1910; assigned
to duty in the American Enibassy at Mexico City May, 191 1 .
assigTied to duty ia the Department of State December 3, 1912 '
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Paris January 8
1913; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Brussels February 26,
1914; Vice-Consul at Brussels February 6, 1915; detailed in the
Department of State and entered on duty March 15, 1915;
appointed Consul of class eight July, 24, 1916, and assigned to
Madrid; appointed Consul of class five September $• 1919; class
four June 4, 1920; assigned to Bucharest August 25, 1921; ap-
pointed Consul of class three November 23, 1921; Consul General
of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign .Service Officer of class three
July I, 1924.
Palmer, Olive F, — Born in England; educated in private
and public schools and in a business college; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $720 in the Department of State, August 7
1917; at $840, September, 15, 1917; at $900, October i, 1917; at
$i.oSo July I, 1918; at $1,140 November i. 1918; at $960 July i,
1919; at $1, 02c February I. 1920; clerk at $1,020. under Civil Scrv-
ice rules, March i, 1920; at $1,000 July i, 1920; at $1,080 October
16, 1922; at $1,140 December 30, 1922. efl'ective January i, 1933;
class one October i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦Palmer, jr., Theodore DeCue.— Retired as Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three, detailed to Sofia, June, 1921. Register
of 3922.
Pangbura, Harry Keep.— Bora ia Perry, Iowa, ^farch 27,
1879; graduate of high school and University of Chicago (M. D.),
1901; interne in Marine-Hospital Service, 1901; at Fort Stanton
Hospital, 1902; physician for variou? companies, 1903-1908; en-
gaged in private practice in Acapulco since January, 1908;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Acapulco September i,
1908; Vice-Consul at Acapulco by act approved February 5,
1915.
Pangle, Beulah Kathrj'n. — Bom in Middletown, Va.; at-
tended high school and business school; clerk in War Depart-
ment 1918-19; employed by private corporation 1919-1923;
stenographer for an attorney 1923-24; clerk in Department of
Commerce April-September, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,140,
temporarily, in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, September 11, 1924.
Park, James Loder.— Bom in Beaver Falls, Pa., June 14,
1895; educated in the grade aad high schools of Indiana and
Pennsylvania, and graduated from Pennsylvania State Col-
lege (B. S.) 1916; attended Harvard Medical School 1916-1919;
employed in various capacities during summer vacations;
with the Near East Relief Committee in the Aleppo area; clerk
in the American Consulate General at Smyrna September 31,
1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Smyrna June 7, 1922; at Con-
stantinople May 15, 1923; at Aden May 27, 1924.
Park, Nelson Renfrew.— Bom in Boston, Mass., November
25, 1890; home, Longmont, Colo.; attended St. Johnsbury (Vt.)
Academy 1905-1909; Colorado College, Colorado Springs (A. B.)
1910-1914; teacher in Rocky Ford (Colo.) High School 1914-15;
in Arecibo (Porto Rico) High School 1916-17; principal Are-
cibo High School 1917-18; entered second officers' training
camp in Porto Rico February i, 1918; commissioned first lieu-
tenant May 37, 191S, and assigned to Porto Rico brigade;
honorably discharged January 16, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul
at La Paz May 5, 1919; at Guatemala August 31, 1933; ap-
pointed, after examination (January 16, 1923), Vice-Consul de
carriereof class three November 16, 1922; assigned to Guatemala
November 24, 1922; to Callao-Lima February 12, 1923; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November 23, 1933;
class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July 1,1924.
Park, Sam. — Bom in Bedford, Iowa. July 3, 1S57; educated
in the pubhc schools of Bedford; president of the Industrial
Lumber Co.. Elizabeth, La., twenty years; resided in Mexico
and France several years; appointed X'ice-Consul at Biarritz
November 15. 1920.
Parkins, Albina Landstreet. — Bom in W'inchestcr, Va.; edu-
cated in a private school; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
$1,080, in the Department of State, September 21, 1918; at $1,140
March i, 1919; clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules. May i,
1919; at Si.ooo July i, 1919; class one July i, 1920; at $1,500 July i ,
1924.
Parks, James Edward. — Bom in Enfield, N. C, June 6,
1888; attended high school and business college; railway mail
clerk 1907-1912, and in trans-Atlantic mail service, 1912-1914,
1916-17; clerk in the United States Postal Agency in France
ten months; served in the United States Army 1917-1919,
retiring with the rank of captain; superintendent of a com-
mercial delivery department two years; clerk in the American
Embassy at Paris March 26, 1920, to June 30, 1931; clerk in
the American Consulate General at Paris July i, 1921, to
October i, 1933; appointed Vice-Consul at Paris October 3,
1923; appointed, after examination (January 4, 1924), Vice-Con-
I
178
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMENT.
sul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924; assigned to Lille
June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924; assigned to Cardiff July 12, 1924.
*Parmelee, Maurice. — Retired as Consul of class four, de-
tailed to Berlin, February, 1923. Register of 1932.
Parsloe, Arthur Gerard. — Bom in Atlanta, Ga., Alay 25, 1SS8;
educated by private tutors; employed on railroads one and
one-half years; taught English in Porto Alegre one year, was
employed as a clerk one and one-half years, and upon a plan-
tation near Santos six months; appointed Vice-Consul at Santcs
June 27, 191S; resigned, March 31, 1922; clerk in the American
Consulate at Santos September, 1922, to June, 1923; reappointed
Vice-Consul at Santos June 7, 1923.
Paschal, jr., George Reed. — Bom in Jacksonville, Fla.,
August 9, 1902; home, Jacksonville; graduated from the grade
and high schools of Jacksonville and attended the University
ol Florida Law School two years; employed by a railway ex-
press company, 1921-22; appointed, after examination (Janu-
ary 15, 1923), Student Interpreter in China, February 26, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Pastorini, Louisa. — Born in Binghamton, N. Y.; educated
in public schools; telephone operator at Key West, Fla., 191 1-
1914; appointed assistant telephone switchboard operator.
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December 12,
1914; telephone switchboard operator June 19, to be effective
July I, 1917; position allocated to C. A. F. one at $1,140 July i,
1924.
Patterson, Jeflerson. — Bom in Dayton, Ohio, May 14, 1891;
home. Dayton; graduated from Yale University (A. B.) 1913;
Harvard University (LL. B.) 1916; attended Harvard Business
School 1916-17; second lieutenant in the United States Army
August, 1917, to July, 1919; clerk in a law office several months;
appointed, after examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four August 24, 1921; assigned to the
Department of State September 8, 1921; designated for duty
in connection with the Conference on the Limitation of Arma-
ment October 12, 1921; assigned to Peking March i, 1922; ap-
pointed Secretary of class three January 23, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924; assigned as Second Secre-
tary of Legation at Bogota July 17, 1924.
Patterson, Robert Rowley.— Bom in Ann Arbor, Mich., July
31, 1895; home, Ann Arbor; attended Yale University 1914-1917;
University of Michigan Summer School 1914 and 1916; Univer-
sity of Toulouse (France) two months 1919; served as ambu-
lance driver in the French Army April-October 1917; in the
United States Army October, 1917, to May, 1919; salesman
for commercial concern five months; appointed, after examina-
tion (Januari' 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
May 25, 1921; assigned to Liverpool July 21, 1921; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two February 26, 1923; class one
November 23, 1923; assigned to Hamburg November 27, iy23,
but did not go to Hamburg; Consul of class seven June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i. 1924.
Patton, Kenneth Stuart.— Born in Salem, Va., July 23, 1883;
home, Charlottesville, Va.; graduate of University of Virginia,
(A. B.). 1904; one year at the Sorbonne, Paris; three years at
Johns Hopkins University; appointed, after examination
(April 7, 1908), Consular Assistant June 34, 1908; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Rome April 30, 1909; Vice and Deputy
Consul at Ceiba February 15, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Lisbon July 37, 1912; Consul at Cognac November
34, 1913; Consul of class eight by act approved February s.
1915; assigned to La Rochelle July i, 1915; to Calais October
27. 1916; appointed Consul of class seven November 10, 1916;
detailed to Paris Febmary 15, 1919; assigned to Belgrade May
37. 1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; class
five June 4, 1920; class four November 19, 1921; Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Pawlak, Waller J.— Bom in Buffalo, N. Y., June 10, 1892;
attended Central High School, Buffalo, 1905-1907; employed
as clerk 1907; stenographer and assistant storekeeper; chief
clerk and chief car record clerk fora railroad company in Buffalo;
rate clerk; assistant to business manager. Procurement Divi-
sion, Ordnance Department, December 13, 1917; appointed
Vice-Consul at Warsaw November 16, 1920.
Paxson, Frances B.— Bom in Waterford, Va.; graduated
from Business High School, Washington, D. C. ; employed as
a clerk by company in Washington, D. C., i9i2-:gi8; clerk in
the Navy League of the United States 1918-19; clerk in the War
Department 1919-20; appointed a clerk at $1,100 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, April 15, 1920; class
one December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,440 July
I, 1924.
Payne, Charles Edward Beresford.— Bom in Marauette,
Mich., December 14, 1S91; attended grade and high schools of
Marquette, Mich.; employed in various clerical capacities with
a railway company at Hibbing. Minn., 1909-1913; assistant
agent for a railway company at Fort William. Ontario, 1913-
191S; with a lumber company, Port Arthur, Ontario, 1918-19;
in Y. M. C. A. work. Port Arthur, April-June 1920; appointed
Vice-Consul at London, Ontario, February 21, 1921.
Payne, Charles Franklin. — Bom in Dayton, Va., July 4,
1900; attended high school three years and a night school two
years; pursued a course in higher accountancy 1919; messenger
boy in the United States Geological Survey, Department of
the Interior, and the United States Bureau of Markets. Depart-
ment of Agriculture, 1916-1918; employed by a railroad com-
pany as accountant 191S-1920, and by a rubber company 1920-
21; security salesman for a real estate company six months,
and clerk for the Board of Education, District of Columbia,
1922-23; clerk in the American Consulate at Maracaibo, March
to October, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Maracaibo, October
3. 1923.
♦Payne, Christopher H.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to St. Thomas, June, 1917. Register of 1916.
Peake, Clarence Harrison. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
August 29, 1888; attended public schools, and business college
one year; employed in the Government Printing Office, 1913-
1918; clerk with the United States Shipping Board two years;
in a business house one year; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January 11.
1921; at $1,000 October 18, 1921; at $1,100 May 31, effective June i,
1924; at $1,380 July I, 1924.
Pearson, Alfred John.— Born in Landskrona, Sweden, Sep-
tember 29, 1869; naturalized American citizen; home, Des
Moines, Iowa; graduated from Bethany College (A. B.) 1893,
(A. M.) 1896; Yale University (Ph. D.) 1S96; professor in several
colleges; director of overseas activities of the Young Men's
Christian Association 1918-19; author of several monographs;
appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
to Poland April 2, 1924.
Pearson, Frederick Fanning Ayer.— Bora in Newport, R. I.,
October 5, 1888; home, New York City; graduated from Har-
vard University (A. M.) 1911; employed as a reporter and in
editorial work on a New York newspaper November, i9i2,to
September, 1915; served in training camp and in the United
States Army, May, 1917, to December, 1918, with rank of first
lieutenant; appointed, after examination (May 12, 1919),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four September 5,
1919; assigned to The Hague September 27, 1919; to London
September i, 1920; appointed Secretary of class three,
August 24, 1921; assigned to Budapest January lo, 1922; to
Prague March 3, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
Pearson, Herbert Frederick. — Bom in Savannah, Ga., De-
cember 30, 1887; attended a business college one year, and
Washington and Lee University 1906-1910; employed as a
stenographer and as a public school teacher 1905-1913; as a
musician 1913-1917; served in the United States Army Decem-
ber 5, 1917. to February 8, 1919; clerk in the Treasury Depart-
ment March, 1919, to January, 1920; stenographer and clerk for
the American Graves Registration Service, and in the Amer-
ican Embassy, Paris, February, 1920, to July, 1921; clerk in the
American Consulate General at Paris, and in the American
Consulates at Seville and Naples, July 1921 to December, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul at Naples December 20, 1922; at Trieste
June 18, 1924; at Saloniki October 6, 1924.
Pearson, Margareth Mlddleton.— Bom in New London,
Conn.; graduate of Oyster Bay (Conn.) Commercial High
School, 1914, and of Pratt Business School, 1916; stenographer
in high school office; employed in various business houses,
1916-1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200, in the De-
partment ol State June 12, 1918; clerk at $1,000, under Civil
Service rules, February i, 1921; at $1,080 September i, 1932;
at $1,140 October 16, 1922; class one December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
♦Pearson, Richmond. — Retired as Minister to Greece and
Montenegro June, 1909. Died near Asheville, N. C, Septem-
ber 12, 1923. Register of 1913.
Pease, Margaret Carolyn. — Bom in Stepheutown, N. Y.;
attended high school 1917-1921, Mount Holyoke College 1921-
1923, business college January-July, 1924; employed by private
concerns July-November, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in
the Department of State, under Civil Servic^ rules, December
I, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
179
Peck, William Lawrence. — Bom in Putnam, Conn., March
30, 189s; home. New York City; graduated from Trinity Col-
lege (A. B.) 1916; pursued courses at the Sorbonne 1919; teacher
1916-17; served iu the United States Army 1917-1919; investi-
gator for an insurance company January to July, 1920; clerk in
the American Consulate at Stockholm 1920-1922; appointed,
after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three November 16, 1922; assigned to Stockholm Novem-
ber 24, 1922; to Reval May 19, 1923; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Peck, Willys Ruggles. — Born in China, of American parents,
October 24, 1882; home, Berkeley, Calif.; graduate of the Uni-
versity of California, 1906; was employed for two years as
instructor by the governor of Chihli, China; appointed, after
examination (October i, 1906). Student Interpreter in China
October 8, 1906; Assistant Chinese Secretary to the Legation at
Peking November 9, 1908; Chinese Secretary to the Legation at
Peking September 11, 1913; Consul at Tsingtau May 5, 1914;
detailed a<: Vice-Consul-General at Hankow December i, 1914;
Consul of class five by act approved February 5, 1915; returned
to Tsingtau February 6, 1915; detailed to Shanghai April 4,
1916; detailed to Tientsin and was in charge June 5, to July 22,
1916; returned to Tsingtau July 24, 1916; detailed to the Lega-
tion at Peking April 27, 191S; returned to Tsingtau June 10,
1918; detailed to Legation at Peking July r4, 1919; appointed
Consul of class four June 11, 1920; Chinese Secretary of the Lega-
tion at Peking July i, 1921; Foreign Service Officer of class four
July I, 1924; class three August 8, 1924.
*Pelrce, Herbert Henry Davis.— Retired as Minister to Nor-
way May, 1911. Died in Portland, Me., December 5, 1916.
Reeister of 1915.
Pelton, Walter Earle. — Bom in Union County, III., May 28,
1890; attended public school, business college, Ohio Mechanics
Institute, Cincinnati, 1897-1910, and graduated from the Na-
tional University Law School, Washington, (LL-B.) 1922;
stenographer for machinery manufacturing concern in Cincin-
nati, 1913-14; stenographer, American Red Cross headquar-
ters, 191 7-18; stenographer for Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury, July-August, 1918; served in United States Navy
August 19 to December 3, 1918; stenographer for a United
States Senator December, 1918, to March, 1919; appointed
clerk of class one in the Department of State, under Civil Serv-
ice rules. March 17, 1919; class two December 31, 1919; effective
January i, 1920; class three November 21, 1923; at $1,860 July i,
1924-
♦Penfield, Frederic Courtland. — Retired as Ambassador to
Austria-Hungary 191 7. Died in New York June 19, 1922.
Register of 1918.
Penn, Melville Edward.— Bom in Washington, D. C, March
IS, 189S; attended public and high schools; employed as shell
tester by an ordnance company 1916-17; served in the United
States Navy January, 1918. to July, 1919; appointed an assist-
ant messenger in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, March 9, 1921.
♦Pennoyer, Richard Edmands. — Retired as Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class two, assigned to Berlin, January,
1923. Register of 1923.
Perkins, Brigg Andrew. — Bom in Bountiful, Utah, May 25,
1874; graduated from Stanford University (A. B.) 1906; Uni-
versity of California (A. M.) 1912; employed as a mining engi-
neer one year; teacher in Nevada, Utah, and California, nine
years; Y. M. C. A. secretary one year; appointed Vice Consul
at Belgrade April 20, 192 1; at Zagreb February 4, 1924.
Perkins, jr., Clarence Warwick.^Bom in Govans, Md.,
July 23, 1899; home, Baltimore; graduated from Johns Hopkins
University (A. B.) 1921; employed on editorial staff of Balti-
more newspaper 1921-1924; appointed, after examination (June
23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, also Vice Consul
of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Vienna November 8,
1924.
Perkins, Linwood Hugh. — Bom in Brooksville, Me., No-
vember 23, 1896; high-school graduate; employed as clerk in
various private concerns 1915-1918; served in the United States
Army May, 1918 to April, 1919; employed as seaman June-
December, 1920, and as a clerk in a drug store five months;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, January 19, 1923; at $1,000 May 1, 1923; at
$1,320 July I, 1924.
Perkins, Mahlon Fay.— Bom in North Adams, Mass., No
vembcr 23, 18S2; home, Berkeley, Calif.; attended public
schools; graduate of Harvard University (A. B.), 1904; in
advertising business, Boston, 1905-06; tutor, 1906; teacher in
California, 1906-190S; appointed, after examination (July 7,
1908), Student Interpreter in China January 14, 1909; Vice and
Deputy Consul at ChefooMay 25, 1911; also Interpreter July 25,
1911; Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at Shanghai
^lay 13, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul-General March 17. 1914;
designated to exercise judicial authority and jurisdiction in
civil and criminal cases, temporarily, March 17, 1914; appointed
Vice-Consul at Shanghai February 6, 191 5; designated to exer-
cise judicial authority and jursidiction in civil and criminal
cases March 11, 1915; appointed Consul of class six September
14, 1917; assigned to Changsha April 15, 1918; appointed Consul
of class five September 5, 1919; detailed to Shanghai April 8,
1920; appointed Consul of class four June 4, 1920; detailed to the
Department of State May 10, 1922; appointed Consul of class
three August 23, 1922; Consul General of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Perkins, William Craig.— Bom in Washington, D. C, Octo-
ber 25. 1894; attended preparatory school; George Washing-
ton University 1915-16; Georgetown Law School 191 7 and 1919;
bank clerk two years; served in the United States Marine
Corps 1917-1919; appointed Vice Consul at Rc\'al July 28, 1920;
reappointed Vice-Consul at Reval, Esthonia, July 29, 1932;
appointed Vice-Consul at Warsaw May 19, 1923; at Barbados
March 28, 1924.
♦Perry, Charles Boswell.— Retired as Consul of class eight,
on detail in the Department of State, April, 1916. Register of
1915.
Peter, William.— British subject, bora in St. Lucia in 1851;
merchant; appointed Consular Agent at St. Lucia January 8,
1873-
Peters, Morris A.— Bora in Boston, Mass., March 10, 1870;
attended St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H., four years;
Massachusetts Institute of Technology three years; stock
broker, 1894-1907; planter in Porto Rico, 1907-1909; employed
by the United Fruit Co. since 1909; appointed Vice-Consul
at Puerto Plata July 9, 1915.
♦Peters, Thomas Willing.— Retired as Consul at Kingston
Jamaica, September, 1914. Register of 1913.
Pettengill, George T.— Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Naval Attache at Peking November 29, 1924.
Plan, Sudye Morrow.- Bora in Baltimore, Md.; educated
in the public schools of Baltimore and by private tutor; served
as typist in the American Red Cross and in the Department of
Agriculture; appointed clerk in the Department of State at
$900 under Civil Service rules, November 2, 19 18; class one
December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; class two March i,
1924; at Si, 680 July i, 1924.
Pfeiffer, William Conrad. — Bora in Cumberland, Md., April
27, 1895; attended public schools and business college; employed
as shipping clerk in private firm, and as clerk in Government
Departments; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, December 18, 1924.
Phelan, George Roosevelt.— Born in Bordeaux, France, of
American parents September 13, 1888; attended St. Michaels
Collcgp, Brussels, 1903-1910; employed as clerk in the American
Consulate at Brussels one year; manager of a sugar estate in
Venezueij. six and a half years; cashier of a bank nine months;
clerk in the American Consulate at La Guaira April-December,
1916, and again since May i, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at
Puerto Cabello June 19, 1919; at La Guaira November 13, igto;
at Puerto Cabello December 37, 1920; at Barbados October 15,
1923; at Puerto Cabello December 10, 1923.
Phelan, Raymond.— Bora in Brussels, Belgium, of American
parents, October 3, 1893; graduated from St. Michel College,
Brussels, 191 1; French instructor at Mecenas Institute, Port
of Spain, Trinidad, 1914-1916; appointed clerk in the American
Consulate at Trinidad February, 1916; Vice-Consul at Trinidad
December 29, 1916; Vice-Consul at La Guaira, August i j, 1918;
at Trinidad May 2, 1919; at TenerifTe March 22, 1921; at Las
PalmasMay i, 1924; at Teneriffe Sci^tember 13, 1924; at Dakar
October 15, 1924.
♦Phelps, Livingston.- Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three, assigned to The Hague, 1919. Register
of 1918.
Phenix, Spencer.- Born in New Britain, Conn., October
30, 1890; attended Phillips Exeter Academy 1906-1908; grad-
uated from Harvard University (A. B.) 1912; specialized in
municipal finance and administration, 1912-1918; served in the
United States Army, retiring with the grade of captain, 1918;
government and private work 1919-1921; special assistant to a
i8o
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
New York State Legislature committee 1921-22; appointed a
drafting oflScer in the Department of State at 83,500 August 16,
effective August 25, 1922; at $3,800 July i, 1924; at ,'$4,200 Sep-
tember I, 1924.
Philip, Hoffman.— Bom in Washington. D. C, July 13. 1872;
educated at Lawrenceville School, by private tutors, at Magda-
lene College (University of Cambridge), and Columbian Uni-
versity Law School, Washington; served in Santiago campaign,
Spanish American War, 1898, First Volunteer Cavalry (''Rough
Riders"); Vice Consul General. Consul General, and Secretary
of Legation at Tangier, Morocco, November 6, 1901. to July 20.
1908; member of Mixed Claims Commission atCasa Blanca 1908;
appointed Minister Resident and Consul General to Abyssinia
July 20, 1908; Secretary of the Embassy at Rio de Janeiro Decem-
ber 21. 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at Constantinople June
24. 1910; Cfiief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs, Depart-
ment of State, February 10, 1912; reappointed Secretary of the
Embassy at ConstantinopleAugust22, 1912; received from Presi-
dent of the United States the Red Cross Balkan War Medal for
services at San Stefano and Constantinople 191 2-13; served as
volunteer aid to Ambassador to France at Paris August to Octo-
ber, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one. by Act
of February 5. 1915; designated and assigned as Counselor of the
Embassy at Constantinople July 17. 1916; Charge d'Affaires at
Constantinople, with representation of interests of Allied
Powers at the Sublime Porte, from January to November, 1916;
instructed by Secretary of State January, 1917, to attempt to
deliver by sea American relief supplies to starving population of
Syria; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-
potentiary to Colombia August S. 191 7; empowered by President
to exchange treaty ratifications between United States and
Colombia relative to the Panama question January 11. 1922;
appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
to Uruguay March 23, 1922; Special Ambassador at the Uru-
guayan presidential inauguration March 1923,
Phillips, Lillian Frances. — Bom in Richmond, Mo.; gradu-
ated from Business High School 1909; clerk in the Bureau of
the Census, Department of Commerce. 1910-1913; clerk in the
War Department 1917-1919. and in the Department of State
1919-20; reinstated as a clerk at $900 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules. November 12, 1923; at $1,000 February
12, 1924; at $1,320 July I, 1924.
Phillips, William.— Bora in Massachusetts May 30, 187S;
home, Boston; attended private schools in Boston and Milton
Academy and graduated from Harvard University (A. B.).
1900; attended Harvard law school, 1900-1902; (A.M. ) Har\^ard
University, 1922; served as private secretary to the Ambassa-
dor to Great Britain. 1903-1905; appointed Second Secretary
of the Legation at Peking March 10, 1905; transferred from the
Diplomatic Service to the Department of State as assistant to
the Third Assistant Secretary on Far Eastern Affairs, June i,
1907; designated Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs
March 20, 1908; appointed Third Assistant Secretary of State
January 11, 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at London Sep-
tember 25, 1909; delegate to the International Congress of
Chambers of Commerce and Commercial and Industrial Asso-
ciations, London, 1910; retired and left London November 16,
1912; appointed Third Assistant Secretary of State March 13,
1914; designated chairman of the National Exposition Commis-
sion to represent the Government of the United States at the
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco,
August I. 1914; delegate to the Second Pan-American Scien-
tific Congress, Washington, December, 1915-January, 1916;
appointed Assistant Secretary of State January 24, 1917; Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Nether-
lands and Luxemburg March 3, 1920; Undersecretary of State
March 31, 1922; Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-
tiary to Belgium February 29, 1924; also Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Luxemburg February 29, 1924.
*Pickerell, George Henry.—* * * Appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class four July 1924. Retired from active
service as Consul at Para July i, 1924, under the provisions of
the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Pierce, Bertha Elizabeth.— Born in Peoria, 111.; graduated
from the University of Chicago (Ph. B.) 1906; traveled and
studied in Europe one and one-lialf years; employed as an
assistant librarian, University of Chicago, three months!
librarian. Exporter's Association. 1901; in Los Angeles Library
1891-1898; indexer Carnegie Institute, 1906-07; on editorial
staff of a publishing house 1908-09; corporation manager 191a-
13 and 1916-17; librarian. War Trade Board, January, 1918, to
March, 1919; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200, in the
Department of State April i, 1919; clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, February 16. 1920; class two, October i, 1920;
class three May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Pierce, Charles L. — Appointed a messenger in the Passport
Bureau of the Department of State in New York City at S840,
under Civil Service rules. August 13. 1918; at $1,000 June 25,
effective July i, 1920; appointed a clerk of class one in the
Passport Bureau of the Department of State in New York
City, under Civil Service rules. .A.pril i. 1921; class two March
I, 1924; at $i.6So July I. 1924.
Pierce, Maurice Campbell.— Bom in Bro-ihead. Wis., De
cember 30. 1887; home, Madison. Wis.; graduate University
of Wisconsin (A. B.) 1913; salesman in Chicago and Madison,
three years; served as Vice-Consul at Barmen 1914 and clerk
in consulate at Zurich 1915; clerk, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State June-September, 1917; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 18, 191 7). Consul of class eight September 14.
1917; assigned to Helsingborg November 30. 1917; detailed to
Moscow February 7. 1918, but did not go; assigned to Malmo
March 2, 1918; detailed to Archangel May 3. 1918; to Murmansk
November 26, 1918; appointed Consul of class six September 3
1919; detailed to Christiania December i, 1919; assigned to
>Ialmo May 25. 1920; detailed to London August 25. 1921;
assigned to Bergen January 2. 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i. 1924.
♦Pierce, William Arthur.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Charlottetown, May, 1920. Register of 1918.
♦Pierrepont, Seth Low.— Retired as Assistant Chief of Di-
vision of Latin-American Affairs. Department of State. June.
1913. Register of 1913.
*Pike, William J.— Died at his post (Strasbourg) April 23.
1923, while a Consul of class three. Register of 1922.
Pilcher, Joseph Mitchell.— Bom in Afarksville. La.. Decem-
ber 4, 1896; attended high school three years; special student at
Tulane University one year, and graduated from a business
college; page and clerk in the United States House of Repre-
sentatives 1913-1916; bank clerk 1916-17; served in the United
States Army overseas. 1917-1920; Fellow. Louisiana Historical
Society. 1917; assistant cashier and secretary 1920-1923; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,500 in the Passport Bureau of the Depart-
ment of State, at New Orleans, under Civil Service rules.
December 31, 1923, effective January i, 1924; at $1,680 August i,
1924.
Piles, Samuel Henry.- Bora in Livingston County, Ky.,
December 28, 1858; home, Seattle, Wash.; educated in private
schools of Kentucky; practiced law in Snohomish. Wash..
18S3-18S6; assistant district attorney for three counties in
Washington Territory; city attorney, Seattle, 1887-1889;
United States Senator 1905-1911; appointed Envoy Extraor-
dinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Colombia March 22.
1922.
Pinckney, Roswell Newcomb.— Bora in Albany. N. Y.,
December 3. 1896; graduated from high school 1916. and at-
tended Howard University 1923; messenger in the War De-
partment 1917-1920. and in the Veterans' Bureau 1920-1923;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed an
assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules, September 5,
1923-
Pinkerton, Julian Larabie.— Born in Versailles, Ky., January
21, 1894; home, Versailles; graduated from the University o!
Kentucky (A. B.). 1914; employed in a bank; entered the mili-
tary service of the United States May 19. 1917; first lieutenant
June 12. 1918; captian October 19. 1918; honorably discharged
June 2. 1919; appointed Vice Consul at Lisbon. January 8, 1920;
appointed after examination (January 24, 1921), Vice Consul
de carriere of class three October 26, 192 1; assigned to Loanda
December 14, 1921; assigned to Durban November 19, 1923;
appointed Foriegn Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Pinkerton, Lowell Call.— Born in Medora. Ill , October 24.
1894; home. Louisiana. Mo.; graduate of William Jewell
College (B. A.) 191s; principal Salisbury High School and
superintendent of schools at Clarksville two years; appointed,
after examination (June 18. 1917). Consular Assistant Septem-
ber 4, 191 7; on detail in the Department of State; appointed
Consul of class seven September 5. 1919; class six June 4. 1920;
class five August 23, 1922; detailed to London July 7, 1923;
appointed Consul of class four June 5. 1924; Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Piokett, Archibald S.— Bom in Luray. Va., October 8. 1878;
educated at the Howard University (Washington, D. C.) com-
mercial department (1902) and law department (1906); ap-
pointed clerk in the Department of State at $900. under Execu-
tive order, April 16, 1909; class one January 3, 1910; class two
June 22. to be effective July i, 1916; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Plsar, Charles J.— Bom in Sheboygan. Wis., June 8. 1890;
home. Sheboygan; attended pubUc schools and business col-
lege at Sheboygan; engaged in newspaper business in She-
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
i8i
boygan four years; secretary to the auditor of the Deering
Works, International Harvester Co., Chicago, three years;_
private secretary to the president of Carleton College, North'
field, Minn., one year; with R. G. Dun & Co. in Buenos Aires'
Argentina, two years; clerk in the American Consulate-General
at Buenos Aires 1914-15; appointed Vice-Consul at Buenos
Aires December 4, 1915; retired March 31, 1917; appointed Vice-
Consul at Cape Town September 14, 1917; appointed, after
examination (May 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three September 27, 1919; assigned to Cape Town December 11,
1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 24,
1920; class one November 17, 1921;. Consul of class seven June
22, 1922; remained at Cape Town, on detail; appointed Consul
of class six August 33, 1922; assigned to Rangoon March 12,
1924; appointed Consul of class five June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
♦Pltcaim, Hugh. — Retired as Consul-General at Hamburg
November, 1908. Died in Hamburg July 19, 1911. Register
of 1913.
Place, Frank.— Bom in Fall River, Mass., February 12.
1S96; educated in the public schools; employed in a cotton
mill 1910-1917; clerk, Bureauof War Risk Insurance. July.
1919, to November, 1920; appointed clerk at $900 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, February 2, 1921: at
$1,000 October i, 1921; at Si, 100 October i, 1923; class one April i,
1924; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
Playter, Harold. — Bom in Girard, Kans., October 9, 1877;
home, Los Angeles, Calif.; graduated frorn Collegiate School,
Santa Barbara; took mining course at University of California
one year; employed as a mill man 1899-1907; clerk and super-
intendent in mining companies: collector for a gas company in
1907; in a cyanide plant in Mexico 1909-1914, and 1916-1919;
engaged in farming and writing short stories 1914-1916; ap-
pointed, after examination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven,
September 5, 1919; assigned to Saltillo October 19, 1919; to
Corinto July 21, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight Jioly i, 1924, class seven August 8, 1924.
putt, Edwin August.— Bora in Baltimore, Md., October 2,
1891; home, Hamilton. Md.; graduated from Baltimore Poly-
technic Institute 1910; employed as accountant 1910-1912; en-
gineer in Baltimore sewerage and building departments 1912-
1915; contractor in 1915; engineer, Reclamation Service in
Montana, 1916-17; serv'ed in the United States Army 1917-
1919; manager import and export house in France and Ger-
many, and agent for American machinery in France 1919-1921;
appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three October 26, 1921; assigned to Sofia Decem-
ber 14, 1921; to Constantinople August 21, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two November 23, 1923; class one
May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
* Plumacher, Eugene H. — Retired as Consul at Maracaibo
April, 1910. Died in Washington, D. C, September 25, 1910.
Register of 1913.
Poindexter, Miles.— Bom in Memphis. Tenn., April 22, 1868;
graduated from Washington and Lee University (LL.,B.)i89i;
practiced law in Walla Walla and Spokane. Wash., elected
prosecuting attorney of Walla Walla County 1892; assistant
prosecuting attorney of Spokane County 1898-1904; judge of
the Superior Court 1904-1908; Member, Sixty-first Congress
1909-1911; United States Senator from Washington 1911-1923;
appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
to Peru February 19, 1923.
Points, James Franklin.— Bom in Staunton, Va., October 15.
1878; educated in the public schools of Staunton; employed by
the Southern Railway Co., in Washington, New York, and
Augusta; with Western Union and Postal Telegraph Compa-
nies; and with the Great Northern Railway, Spokane and
Wenatchee, Wash.; engaged in various branches of the automo-
bile business in Washington, D. C, 1914-1918; appointed Vice-
Consul at Vancouver, July 27. 1918; at Halifax November 4,
1919; at Toronto January 17, 1920; at Sault Ste. Marie January
24, 1924; at Kingston, Jamaica, March 18, 1924.
Pomeroy, Floyd Stanley.— Bom in Lee County, III., July 8,
1905; graduated from high school 1923, and from business college
1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, December 29, 1924.
• Pontius, Albert William.— Died at his post (Mukden)
February 2s. 1923. while a Consul-General of class four. Reg-
ister of 1922.
Poole, Do Witt Clinton.- Born in Vancouver Barracks.
Wash., October 28, i88j; home, Moline, 111.; graduate of the
University of Wisconsm (A. B.), 1906, and George Wash-
ington University (M. Dip.), 1910; engaged in newspaper
work in Moline, Illinois 1906-1910; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 27, 1910), Consular Assistant December 50, 1910;
Deputy Consul-General at Berlin October 7, 191 1; V'ice and
Deputy Consul-General March 11,1912; Vice and Deputy Con-
sul General at Paris February 26. 1914; Vice Consul at Paris
February 6, 191s; detai-led in the Department of State Sep-
tember 30, 1915: appointed Consul of class eight July 13, 1916 ;
detailed for duty in the Consulate General at Moscow July
17, 1917: detailed to ArchanLzel as Special Assistant to the
Ambassador with the diplomatic rank of Counselor of Embassy
October 5, 1918; appointed Consul of class four September 5.
1919: detailed to the Department of State as Chief of the
Division of Russian Affairs October 1,1919; unassigned March-
October, 1920; appointed Consul of class three June 4, 1920;
detailed to the Department of State October 18, 1920; desig-
nated Acting Chief of the Division of Russian Affairs April
27. 1921; expert assistant. Conference on the Limitation of
Armament, November 3, 1921; appointed Consul-General
of class four November 23, 1921; designated Chief of the
Division of Russian Affairs December 20, 1921; appointed
Consul-General of class three March i, 1923; assigned to Cape
Town October i, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class two July i, 1924.
Poole, William Andrew.— Bom in Savannah, Ga., May 29,
1873; attended Pacolet (S. C.) High School; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, at $1,400, in the Department of State, December
31, 1917; at $1,600, July I, 191S; clerk of class three, under Civil
Ser\-ice rules, February i, 1921; at $i,S6o July i, 1924.
*Pooley, Robert Preston.— Retired as Consul at St. Helena
June, 1908. Register of 1913.
Pope, Lewis Dale.— Bom in Fairmount. Md.. October 30,
1897; attended the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, 190S-1911.
and the Virginia Military Institute. 1912-1916; served in the
United States Navy August, 1917, to January, 1918. and in
United States Marine Corps, January, 1918 to June, 1920;
clerk in the Consulate at Christiania December. 1920; appointed
Vice-Consul at Halifax, March i, 1922; at Fredericton Novem-
ber 28, 1922; at Halifax January 2, 1923; at Sault Ste. Marie
January 31, 1923; at Sydney, Nova Scotia, May 24, 1923; at
Kingston, Jamaica, July 16, 1923; at Martinique March 7, 1924.
Porter, Thurston Robert.— Bom in Raymond, Nebr., Decem-
ber 14, 1885; home, Washington, D. C; spent one year at Ohio
State University; writer with several newspapers in the United
States and in Paris, 1904-1918 and 1919-1922; served with the
committee on public information, Paris. January-May, 1918;
employed in the Office of the Auditor for the War Department
in Paris March, 1918-June, 1919: appointed marshal of the
United States Court for China March 14, 1922.
♦Potter, Julian. — Retired as Consul at Nassau January, 1913.
Register of 1913.
*Pottle, Edward Roland.— Retired as Vice Consul de carriere
of class three, assigned to Bilbao, February, 1922. Register
of 1922.
Potts, Roy Frazier.— Born in Marion, Ind., December 19,
1903; attended Indianapolis (Ind.) high school 1917-1920, and
Wabash College 1920-1923; served in the United States Naval
Reserve one year; employed as accountant 1923; part-time in-
structor of languages at Wabash College; clerk in the American
Consulate at Para March 23 to June 20, 1924; appointed \"ice
Consul at Para June 21, 1924.
Poulet, Acton. — Bom in White Cloud, Kans., January 21,
1876; graduate of Yale University (B. A.) 1897; employed by
the Standard Oil Co. of New York 1909-1923; appointed Vice-
Consul at Saigon April s, 1922.
Powell, Estella A.— Bom in Bloomington, 111.; attended high
school and Illinois State Normal University; employed as sten-
ographer by private concerns; appointed a clerk at $1,200, in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, June 25, 1924;
at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Power, Ruth Carter. — Born in Washington, D. C; attended
public schools; Business High School three years; employed
in the Department of Agrictilture six months; in War Trade
Board three months; Food Administration nine months; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,020 in the Department of
State November 23, 1918, at $1,080 November 1, 1919; appointed
a clerk at $1,000, under civil service rules, October 16. 1920;
class one, Novembers, 1921; at Si. 500 July i, 1924.
Powers, Mary Llttlepage.— Bom in Berryville, Va.; graduate
of the State Normal School. Farmville, Va.. 1904; student of
music, Crane Normal Institute. Potsdam. N. Y., 1904; teacher
l82
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
in the schools of Virginia and Mississippi seven years; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, at $1,020, in the Department of State,
September 7. 191S; at Si. 080 January i, igig; clerk at S900. under
Civil Service rules. Feljniary i. 1021; at $1,000 August 16. 1921;
at Si. 100 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; class one
October i, i9.;3; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
*Prees, Griffith W.— Retired as Consul at Swansea June, 1907.
Register of 1913.
Preil, Helen Gutman.— Bom in Dean wood, D. C; grammar
and business school education; employed as cashier in market
two months; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at S960, in the
Department of State October 24, 1918; at S900, under Civil
Service rules, February i, 1921; at $1,000 March i, 1922; at
$1,140 September i, 192;; class one November 2, 1922; at $1,440
July I, 1924.
Prendergast, Walter Thomas.— Bom in Clarion, Ohio, May
II, 1898; home, Marion; graduated from Harvard University
(A. B.) 1922; appointed, after examination (July 10, 1922),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four September 22,
1922, and assigned to the Department of State; assigned to
Brussels November 13, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i, 1924; class seven November 17, 1924.
Preston, jr., Austin Roe.— Bom in Buffalo, N. Y., August 9,
1894; home, St. Albans, N. Y.; graduated from Taft School
1914, and attended the University of Edinburgh during the
summer session; graduated from Yale University (A. B.)
1918; served in the United States Anny 1917-igig; insurance
agent 1920-1922; appointed, after examination (June 26, 1922),
Vice-Consul dc carriere of class three September 30, 1922; as-
signed to Melbourne November 6, 1922; to Auckland April 27,
1923; to Tokyo December 13, 1923; appointed Vice Consul de
carriere of class two >Iay 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924.
Price, Ernest Batson.— Bom in Henzada, Burma, of Ameri-
can parents, October 13, 1890; home, Rochester, N. Y.; took a
full course at Wayland Academy, Wisconsin, and graduated
from the University of Rochester (A. B.), 1913; spent vacations
in farm work in Wisconsin, 1904-1908, and as guide in Algon-
quin National Park, Canada, i9og-i9i3; taught school in North
Dakota, 1908-09, and was a census enumerator, 1910; appointed,
after examination (January 19, 1914), Student Interpreter in
China April 4, 1914; Interpreter at Tientsin July 20, 1916; also
Vice-Consul at Tientsin August 7, 1916; appointed Assistant
Chinese Secretary to the Legation to China March 2, 1918;
appointed Vice-Consul at Peking June 19, 1919; appointed \'ice-
Consul de carriere of class one October iS. igig- assigned to
Foochow May 4, 1920; detaikd to Canton October iS, 1920;
assigned to Canton November, 15, 1920; appointed Consul of
class six November 23. 1921; assigned to Foochow December 37,
1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924.
*Price, Milton Murat.— Died in Paris October 35, 1906. while
Consul at Jerez de la Frontera. Register of 1913.
♦Price, William Jeimlngs.— Retired as Minister to Panama
December, 1921. Register of 1918.
♦Prlckltt, William A.— Retired as Consul-General at Auck-
land February, 1914. Register of 1913.
Prince, John Dyneley.— Bom in New York April 17, 1868;
home, Ringwood Manor, N. J.; graduated from Columbia
University (A. B.) 1888; Johns Hopkins University (Ph. D.)
1892; attended University of Berlin 1889-90; member of expe-
dition to Babylonia 188S-89; professor Semitic languages 1892-
1902; dean of Graduate School, New York University, 1895-1902;
professor of Slavonic languages at Columbia University. 1915-
igji; member of several literary and scientific societies; member
Assembly of New Jersey 1906-1909 (speaker igog); member
Senate of New Jersey 1911-1913 (president igi2); Acting Gover-
nor of New Jersey 1912; author; appointed Envoy Extraordi-
nary and ^finister Plenipotentiary to Denmark September 24.
1931.
Prince, Kirby L.— Bom in Warrenton. Va., October i, 1899;
educated in the public schools and at Wood's Commercial
School, Washington, D. C.; clerk in Navy Department October,
1916, to December. 1917; served in the United States Navy one
year; clerk, temnorarily, in the War Department and with the
Shipping Board, January, 1919, to January, 1920; appointed a
clerk at $i,oco, in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, April 24. 1920; resigned November 17. 1920; reappointed
at $r,ooo December 2. 1920; at Si.oSo September i, 1923; at
$1,140 December 30. 1922, effective January i, 1923; class one
October i, '923; at $1,500 July i. 1924.
Prince, jr., Ulysses S. G.— Bom in Leesburg, Va., November
»2, 1899; attended the public schools of Washington, D. C,
and spent one year in high school; employed as elevator con-
ductor, 1915-1917; appointed, temporarily, at $600 in the De-
partment of State, October i, 191 7; at S792 March i, 1918; ap-
pointed an assistant messenger, under Civil Ser\'ice rules.
April 2. 1918; messenger April i, 1922.
Pringle, Edward Edmond.— Bom in Eastport, Me., May 10.
1902; high-school graduate and attended a business college; clerk
for a private concern 191S-1921; served temporary appointments
as clerk in the United States Veterans' Bureau, the Treasury
Department, and the Department of Labor ig22-i924; appointed
a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules. January 23, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924; at $1,500 December
15. 1924-
Proctor, Robert Alexander.— Bom in the District of Colum-
bia, May 24, 1881; attended public schools, and National Uni-
versity two years; graduated from Georgetown University
(LL. B.) 1915; employed in War Department 1911-1916; prac-
ticed law in the District of Columbia igiS-igig; appointed a
clerk at $1,400, temporarily, in the Department of State April
31, 1919; at $1,600 October 5, effective October i, 1920; clerk of
class three, under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class
four April i, 192 1; appointed Passport Agent in the Passport
Bureau of the Department of State in Chicago at $2,750 Feb-
ruary 28, ig23; at 82,800 August i, 1924.
Prosl, Beatrice Frances.— Bom in New York City; attended
high school in Waterbury , Conn. ; employed as stenographer and
bookkeeper by private firms 1922-1924; appointed a clerk, at
$1,320 in the Department of State, imder Civil Service mles,
September 27, 1924.
Pryor, Ralph Walton.— Bom in Mount Rainier. Md., March
29, 1907; public school education; employed as messenger boy
by two private concerns 1923; appointed a messenger boy [at $420
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, March
3, 1924; at $1,020 July I, ig24.
Purcell, Laurence John.— Bom in Harrisonburg, Va..
February 12, iSg6; high-school graduate; attended Georgetown
University two years and Baltimore City College one year;
employed as a clerk in a business concern two years; with
Civil Service Commission four months; appointed clerk at
$1,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
December 30, 1919; class one April i, 1922; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Purdy, Henry Terry.— Born in Brooklyn. N. Y.. February
22, 1S66; attended public schools in New York City; consulting
and constructing engineer, contractor, and manufacturers'
agent; appointed Consular Agent at Puntarenas, Costa Rica,
December 6, 192 1.
Purdy, Milton Dwight.— Bom in Mogador, Ohio, November
3, 1866; home JMinneapolis, Minn.; graduated from the Univer-
sity of Minnesota (A. B.) 1891, (LL. B.) 1S92; admitted to the
bar 1892; served as assistant city attorney of Minneapolis 1893-
1897; assistant county attomey i897-g8; assistant United States
Attorney 1901-02; Assistant to Attomey General of the
United States igo3-i9os; Assistant Attomey General of the
United States 1905-1908; United States District Judge, Minne-
sota, 1908-09; on special mission to the Philippines regarding
alien property 1923; appointed Judge of the United States
Court for China Febniary 19, ig24._a ^
Purdy, Robert de Choudens. — Bom in Cold Springs. N. Y.,
November 11, 1864; attended public school in Cold Springs,
N. Y., and a private school in Poughkeepsie; employed by
various fruit companies in Tela, Honduras, igo2-igi2; with
the United Fruit Co. and a railroad company in Tela igi2-
1922; Consular Agent at Tela February 18, 1915, to January 31,
1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Tela May 9, 1922.
Putnam, John Risley.- Bom in Long Branch, N. J., August
16, 1876; home. Hood River, Oreg.; educated at St. John's
School, Sing Sing, N. Y.. under private tutors, and at the
public schools oi Saratoga Springs, N. Y.; assistant in the
Chinese maritime customs service, 1896-1908; road builder in
New York, igog-io; farmer in Oregon, 1910-1915; county com-
missioner of Hood River County, 1913; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 19, 1914), Consul of class eight March 2, igis;
detailed as Vice-Consul at Barcelona and entered on duty
May 13, igi5; assigried to Valencia October 18, 1915; appointed
Consul of class seven October 24, 1918; class six September 5,
1919; class five June 4, 1920; detailed for duty in the American
Consulate General at Habana for commercial work, June g,
1921; appointed Consul of class four August 23, 1922; detailed
to Shanghai March 30, 1923; to Nanking, temporarily, July 21,
1923: to Foochow, temporarily, September 19, 1923; assigned
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
183
to Changsha December 12, 1923; to Chefoo January 9, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
♦Putney, Albert H. — Retired as Consul of class five, on detail
in the Department of State, February, 1920. Register of 1918.
Quarton, Harold Barlow. — Born in Algona, Iowa, February
8, 1888; home, Algona; graduated from Grinnell (Iowa) College
(Ph. B), 1908; took three months' graduate work in the Uni-
versity of Colorado; graduated from George Washington Uni-
versity (M. Dip.), 1912; employed in mail department of a
national bank in Des Moines, Iowa, 1908; principal of the high
school at Victor, Iowa. 1909; principal of the high school at
Aspen. Iowa, 1910-11; appointed, after examination (January
31, 1912), Consular Assistant March 13, 1913; Deputy Consul-
General at Berlin May 37, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Berlin July 27, 1914; Vice-Consul at Berlin Febru-
ary 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Rotterdam February 24, 1917: Con-
sul of class eight February* 19, 1918; detailed to Rotterdam
February 20, 191S; to Helsingfors June 12. 1918; assigned to
Malmo May 3. 1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5.
1919; detailed to Viborg May 22, 1920; to Riga March
I, 1922; appointed Consul of class five Augfust 23, 1922: as-
signed to Reval October 14, 1922; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924.
♦Quay, Jerome A. — Died at his post (Florence) September
24, 1910. Register of 1913.
Qulgley, Stephen Hugh.— Born in Rockville, Md., September
19, 1877 ; attended private and public schools; graduated from the
Baltimore City College, academic course, in 1897; studied under
private tutors; attended business colleges in Baltimore and
Washington; stenographer inthe Montgomery County Circuit,
Court tsi.xth Maryland judicial district) at various times
1900-1901; employed in the engineer department of the
District of Columbia municipal government. 1901-02; ap-
pointed clerk in the Department of State at $900, under Civil
Service rules, October 23. 1902; at $1,000 July i. 1903; class two
June 15. 1904; class three May 24, 1905, to take effect July i, 1905;
Acting Chief of the Bureau of Appointments from August 27
to December 2, 190S; detailed to represent the Department of
State on the Committee on Grades and Salaries in the Execu-
tive Departments Xovember, 190S; appointed clerk class four
November 2. 1908; class two June 23, 1909, to take effect July i,
1909; class three December i, 1913; class four September i, 1922;
at $2,100 July I, 1924.
Quintan, Joseph Bernard. — Bom in Burlington, Iowa. Feb-
ruary 5, 1857; educated in private and public schools; admitted
to the bar in Missouri; salesman, law clerk, teacher, stenogra-
pher and bookkeeper in various cities in the United States and
Mexico; worked in Coast and Geodetic Survey, Treasury De-
partment, Post Office Department, War Department, Geolog-
ical Survey, and the United States Commission on Industrial
Relations; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department
of State, January 21, 1915; permanently a clerk of class one,
under Executive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916;
resigned November 19, 1918; reappointed clerk "of class one
July 17, 1919; class two September i, 1922; class three October
6, 1923; class four; February' i, 1924; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Raedy, Margaret Hayes. — Bom in Washington, D. C; at-
tended public schools and business college; employed as ste-
nographer by prviate firms 1914-1917; by War Department
1917-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Departmentof
State, under Civil Service rules, September 8, 1924.
Ragan, Earl Gordon.— Bom in Washington, D. C, March 8,
1907; attended high school two years; messenger boy in the
Department of Commerce several months; appointed a messen-
ger boy at $420 in the Department of State, under Civil Sen-ice
rules, March 15, 1924; at $1,020 July i, 1934.
Ragland, Joseph Pemberton. — Bora in Richmond, Va., May
16, 1897; home, Washington, D. C; graduated from George-
town University (Ph. B.) 1919, (A. M.) 1920, and (M. F. S.)
1923; employed as an assistant investigator. United States
Bureau of Efficiency, 1919-1924; clerk in Bureau of Internal
Revenue, Treasury Department, and Bureau of War Risk
Insurance one year each; appointed, after examination (June
23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, also Vice Consul
of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Monterey Novembers,
1924.
• Ragsdale, James W.— Retired as Consul-General at Hali-
fax July, 1913. Register of 1913.
*Rairden, Bradstreet S. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired from active service
as Consul at Curacao July, 1924, under the provisions of the Act
of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Rairden, Frank Bradstreet.— Retired as Student Interpre-
ter in Turkey, also Vice-Consul at Cairo, April, 1915. Register
of 1914.
Ramer, John E. — Born in Missouri in 1870; home, Hotcbkiss,
Colo.; stock raiser; served as county clerk of Larimer County,
Colo., four years; deputy secretary of state and secretary of
state of Colorado four years; appointed Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Nicaragua October 8, 1921.
Ramsey, Henry Oscar.— Born in Florence, Colo., March at,
1893; attended Pierre High School four years and business
college in summer of 1916; employed with the State tax com-
mission, Pierre, S. Dak., four years; served in the United States
Navy June 11, 1918 to October 14, 1919: appointed Vice Consul
at Viborg, April 30, 1921; at Belfast February 17, 1922; at New-
castle-on-Tyne April 19, 1924, but did not proceed to post; at
Belfast >Iay 21, 1924.
Rand, Egbert Baxter. — Bom in Shreveport, La., December
27, 1898; home, Shreveport; attended Gulf Coast Military
Academy 1913-1915, United States Naval Academy 1915-1917,
and United States Coast Guard Academy 1917-18; supercargo
United States Shipping Board 1919-20; purser for an independ-
ent shipping corporation 1920-21; secretary in finn of cotton
biokers 1921; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1923),
Student Interpreter in Japan January 23, 1924; Foreign Service
Ofticer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Rand, Elbridge Dexter.— Bom in Burlington, Iowa. July 7.
1887; home Los Angeles, Calif.; educated by tutors in the
United States and Europe and graduated from Montclair
Military Academy; attended Harvard University one year;
rancher in California 1915-1917; served in the United States
Army as lieutenant and captain November, 1917, to October,
1919; served with the Peace Commission at Paris and as Assist-
ant Military Attache at Brussels 1919; appointed drafting
officer at $2,500 in the Department of State October 6, 1919; at
$3,000 March i, 1921; resigned March 31, 1921; appointed, after
examination (July 11, 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class tour August 24, 192 1; assigned to the Department of
State, temporarily, September 19, 192 1; assigned to Tangier
March 13, 1923; appointed Secretary of class three January 23,
1924; Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Randolph, John. — Bom in Warsaw, N. Y., June s, 1878;
home, Niagara Falls, N. Y.; attended the pubiic schools of
Warsaw and Niagara Falls, N. Y., and Niagara Falls High
School four years; graduated from Cornell University (B. A.)
1903; spent one and one-half years in Europe studying French
and German; conducted the mail-order department of a manu-
facturing concern in Adams, N. Y., 1903-1907; clerk in the
American Legation at Madrid 1907-1910; while in Spain was for
two years correspondent of the Associated Press; sales man-
ager for a nursery company in Newark, N. Y.; conducted a
mail-order department for a lumber company in North Tona-
wanda, N. Y.; assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Sec-
ond Pan-American Scientific Congress, held in Washington,
D. C December, 1915-January, 1916; appointed clerk in the
American Consulate-General at Moscow September 2, 1916;
Vice-Consul at Moscow, March 29, 191 7; at Odessa January
14, 1919; at Tiflis May 7, 1919; appointed, after examination
(May 12, 1910). Consul of class seven April 29, 1920; remained at
Tiflis on detail; detailed to Constantinople March 5, 1921; ap-
pointed Consul of class six November 3, 1921; detailed to the
Departmentof State December 22, 1922; to Bagdad March 16,
1923; appointed Consul of class five June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Rankin, Robert Leon.— Born in Sunnyburn, Pa., April 5,
1891; home, Berlin, N. J.; graduated from Lafayette College
(Ph. B.) 1914; employed as an instructor and school principal
1914-1917; physicist and supervisor in the Bureau of Standards
1917-1919; appointed, ater examination (IMay 13, 1919), Consul
of class seven September 5, 1910; detailed to Warsaw October
39, 1919; to Berlin September 28, 1920; detailed to Frontera
June 9, 1922; assigned to Frontera October 2, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i. 1924; assigned to
Newcastle, Australia, f)ctol)er 23, 1924.
Rasmusen, Bertil Mathias.— Born in Roland, Iowa, Novem-
ber 30, 1862; educated in public schools and the Eastern Iowa
Normal School; banker; employed in the Railway Mail Service,
1889-1899; military postal ser\'ice in Cuba in 1899; Philippine
postal service in 1900; appointed Consular Agent at Stavanger
August 34, 1903; Consul June 33, 1905; Consul at Bergen January
13, 1910; Consul of class eight by act approved February 5, 1915;
appointed Consul of class seven October 18, 1915, and assigned
to Goteborg; assigned to Fernie March 20, 1917; to Moncton
August 31, 1918; appointed Consul or class six September 5,
1919; class five June 4, 1920; Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
1 84
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Ratay, John P. — Captain, United States Army, assigned to
duty as Language Officer at Peking June 27, 1924.
Ravndal, Christian Magelssen.— Born in Beirut, Syria, of
American parents, January 6, 1S99; home, Decorah, Iowa;
graduated from Luther College (A. B.) 1920; served in the
United States Anny 1917-1919; clerk in the AJnerican Mission at
Vienna 1920-1922; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921),
Consular Assistant April 29, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at
Vienna April 29, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Vienna March 2, 1933;
appointed Vice Consul de carrifere of class two November 23,
1923; class one May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924; assigned to Frankfort on the Main August 7,
1934; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class nine, also con-
sul, August 8, 1924.
Ravndal, Gabriel Bie. — Bom in Norway June 37, 1865; natu-
ralized; home, Sioux Falls, S. Dak.; graduate (B. A. and M. A.)
of the Royal University of Norway; studied at the University
of Minnesota; engaged in newspaper work; member of House
of Representatives of South Dakota; appointed, after examina-
tion (January 15, 189S), Consul at Beirut January 22, 1898;
Consul at Dawson City June 5, 1905; Consul-General at Beirtrt
June 23, 1906; Consul-General at Constantinople December 19,
1910; delegate on the part of the United States to the Fifth
International Congress of Chambers of Commerce, Boston,
September 24 to 28, 1912; Consul-General of class three by act
approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul-General of class
two March a, 1915; detailed to Paris April 9, 1917; assigned to
St. Nazaire November 5, 1917; to Nantes January 2, 1918;
directed March 4, 1919 to return to Constantinople; designated
American Commissioner at Constantinople May 3, 1919, and
ser\'ed in that capacity to Februarj', 1921; appointed Foreign
Ser\'ice Officer of class one July i, 1924.
♦Ray, John Arthur. — Retired as Consul of class six, assigned
to Lourenco Marques June, 1931. Register of 1918.
Ready, Michael Joseph. — Bom in Washington, D. C, Feb-
ruary 16, 1907; completed public schools and attended high
school 1919-1921; appointed a messenger boy at $420 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December 3,
1923; position allocated to Custodial three at $1,020 July i, 1924.
Real, Samuel C— Bom in Tuscola, 111., June 14, 1868; home,
Tuscola; attended the University of Illinois; graduate of North-
western University (LL. B.) and of Columbian University
(B. S.); employed in the 1900 census; became city attorney of
Tuscola, 111., in 1893; reelected in 1895; owner and business man-
ager of the Tuscola Journal; State examiner of corporations in
Illinois, 1908; appointed, after examination (April 7, 1908),
Consul at Port Louis June 22, 190S; Consul at Tansui May 31,
1909; Consul at Calgary September 18, 1913; Consul of class
seven by act approved February 5, 1915; Consul of class six
September 17, 1915, and assigned to Rangoon; assigned to
Guatemala July 14, 1916; unassigned; July 10, 1917, to May 25,
191S; assigned to Calgary May 25, 191S; appointed Foreign
Ser\-ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Rector, Berry. — Born in Virginia; attended public schools,
and business school one year; employed several months in a
business college; appointed a clerk at $i,coo in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, August 19, 1920; at $1,100
March i, 1924; class one May 31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,440
July I, 1924; at $1,500 August 16, 1924.
Redecker, Sydney B.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January
a3, 189s; home, Brooklyn; graduated from commercial school;
attended New York Preparatory School one and a half years;
Alexander Hamilton Institute two years, and studied under
private tutor; employed by various concerns 1909-1917; in
the United States Navy 1917-1919; Secretary to the United
States Minister to Poland 1919-1921; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three May 2;. 1021: assigned to Rotterdam June 11, 1921; ap-
pointed Vice-ConbUl de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; class
one February 26, 1923; assigned to Medan August 17, 1923;
appointed Foreign Serv'ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Rediker, Frank Howard. — Born in West Concord, Minn.,
April 13, 1901; attended grammar school, high school, and
business college in Minneapolis; employed as clerk with a
grain company in Minneapolis, 191 7-18, and with the American
Graves Registration Service; clerk in the American Consulate
at Nantes; appointed Vice-Consul at»Stuttgart July 19, 1923; at
Hamburg April 28, 1923.
Redmond, John William.— Born in Taneytown, Md., Feb-
ruary 27, 1889; educated in public and private schools in Bal-
timore, Md.; graduate of Sadler's Business College, Baltimore;
employed in various lines of commercial business in Maryland
and California 1908-1917; enlisted in the Engineer Corps,
United States Army, December 14, 1917; honorably discharged
as regimental sergeant major April 19, 1919; appointed clerk,
temporarily, in the office of the chief clerk. Railway Mail
Service, Los Angeles, Calif., December 13, 1919; appointed
clerk at $1,600 in the Passport Bureau of the Department of
State at San Francisco, under Civil Service rules, January 19,
1920; at $1,800, July I, 1921; assistant passport agent at $2,000
December 31, 1921, effective January i, 1922.
Reed, Dwight M. — -Bom in Codel, Kans., January 17, 1900;
graduated from Fowler (Kans.) High School, and attended
Kansas University while enlisted in the Students' Army
Training Corps; clerk in the Post Office Department Septem-
ber, 1921, to April, 1922; appointed a clerk at $900 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, August i, 1923; at
$1,000 November 6, 1923; at$i,iooMay 31, effective June i, 1924;
at $1,380 July I, 1924.
Reed, Edward Lyndal.— Born m Philadelphia, Pa., May
20, 1895; home, Wayne, Pa,; graduated from Williams College
(A. B.J 1916; studied at the University of Pennsylvania 1919-
20; served in the United States Marine Corps May, 1917, to
January, 1919, retiring as a second lieutenant; member of a
firm of importers and exporters in New York in 1919; ap-
pointed, after examination (October 18, 1920), Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four November 15, 1920: assigned
to Buenos Aires, December 28, 1920; appointed Secretary of
class three September 22, 1922; assigned to Panama September
29, 1922; to the Department of State November 7, 1923; ap-
pointed a member of the United States-Panama Commission
to negotiate an arrangement to take the place of the Taft
Agreement February ir, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924; class five September 20, 1924.
*Reed, Eugene C. A. — Retired as Consul of class six, detailed
to Paris, January 1922. Register of 1922.
Reed, Leslie Edgar.— Born in St. Paul, Minn., June 12,
1890; home, St. Paul: attended the public schools of St.
Paul and graduated from the University of Minnesota (A. B.),
1913; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consular
Assistant April 4, 1914; assigned to London August 19, 1914;
appointed Vice-Consul at London May 13, 1915; on detail in
the Department of State April-July, 1917; appointed Consul
of class seven September 5, 1919; remained at London on detail;
appointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920; class five November
19, 1921; assigned to Bremen August 3, r923; appointed Consul
of class four Jime 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924.
Reeder, Charles Augustus. — Born March 4, 1874; appointed
assistant messenger in the Department of State February 10,
1910; messenger June 22, to be effective July i, 1916.
Reeves, Harman. — Bom in Dunedin, New /Zealand, Sep-
tember 1^, 1871; attended Otago Boys' High School and Otago
University; employed as a stockbroker and land estate and
insurance ageflt in Dunedin twenty years; appointed Consular
Agent at Dunedin April 6, 1920.
Reichert, Dorothy Irene. — Bom in Cedar Rapids, Iowa;
graduated from high school 1920; employed as a stenographer
by several commercial concerns; appointed a clerk of class one
in the Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, August
17, 1923; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Reid, Ruby Francesca. — Bom in Essex, Iowa; attended high
school Butler. Mo., Western Normal College Shenandoah,
Iowa, and Chicago University; bachelor of science 1913; school-
teacher 1913-1918; clerk. War Trade Board, 1918-19; typist,
War Department, 1919-1921; appointed a temporary clerk,
at $900 in the Department of State, imder Civil Service rules.
March 9, 1922; permanently at $900 August 16, 1922; at $1,000
December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,100 April i,
1924; at $1,380 July I, 1924.
♦Reid, WhUelaw. — Died in London December ij, 1912;
while Ambassador to Great Britain. Register of 1913.
Relneck, Walter S.— Bom in Gibsonburg, Ohio, December
II, 1887; home, Fremont, Ohio; attended Gibsonburg High
School; St. Joseph's College, Rensselaer, Ind., 1909-1912 (A. B.);
University of Innsbruck, Austria, 1912-1914; employed in
banks in Gibsonburg and Fremont, Ohio, 1903-1908; employed
during vacations 1910-11 gathering records foran oil company
in Gibsonburg; employed in the American Embassy at Vienna
since 1914; appointed clerk in the Embassy July i, 1916; re-
mained in Vienna, in charge of American archives in the
Spanish Embassy after severance of diplomatic relations
between United States and Austria; resigned November 9,
1920; appointed, after examination (January 94, 1921), Vice-
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
i«5
Consul de carriereoi class three May 2;, 1921; assigned to Buda-
pest July II, 1921; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class
two May 26, 1922; class one February 26, 1923; Consul of class
seven December 19, 1923; remained at Budapest on detail;
appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
*Reinsch, Paul Samuel. — Retired as Minister to China,
1919 Died in Shanghai, China, January 26, 1923. Register of
191S.
Remillard, Horace.— Born in Roxbury, Mass., August s, 1885;
home, Roxburj'; graduate of Harvard t'niversity (A. B.) 1909;
edited high-school paper two years; Harvard University guide
in summer vacations; translated for publication '' Le Xouveau
Cyaee": appointed, after examination (May 5, 1909), Student
Interpreter in China June 2, 1909; Deputy Consul-General at
Hankow January 10, 1912; also Interpreter October 15, 1912;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Hankow July 21, 1913;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at Tientsin
March 17, 1914; V'ice and Deputy Consul and Interpreter at
Tsingtau April ?, 1914; A'ice and Deputy Consul-General and
Interpreter at Hankow July 31, 1914; Vice-Consul at Hankow
February 6, 191 5; Vice-Consui and Interpreter at Foochow July
19, 1916; Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Swatow September 6,
1916; Consul of class nine April 16, 1917; assigned to Saigon
April 21. 1917; appointed consul of class eight September 14,
191 7; served temporary detail at Batavia 1919; appointed
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned to Huelva July i,
1920; detailed to Rome March 12, 1924; appointed Foreign
Ser\'ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to Rome
August 15, 1924.
Reynolds, Edwin Conger. — Bom in Dexter, Iowa, March 23,
1891; home. Dexter; graduated from high school 190S; attended
Drake University one year, and graduated from State Uni-
versity of Iowa (A. B.) 1912; newspaper reporter 1912-1915;
assistant professor of English, State University of Iowa, 1915-
1917; served in the United States Army 1917-1919, retiring with
the rank of first lieutenant; managing editor of the Paris,
France, edition of a Chicago newspaper 1919-20; engaged in
private business 1920-1922; appointed, after examination
(June 26, 1922), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September
30, 1922; assigned to Halifax November 6, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign Ser\-ice
Officer, unclassified, Julj- i, 1924; assigned to Stuttgart Sep-
tember 9, 1924.
Rhodes, Russell H. — Boni in Hartford. Conn., August 30.
1894; attended public and high schools in Hartford; graduated
from Dartmouth College (A. B.) 1918; employed with the
Hartford Courant 1918-19; appointed Vice-Consul at London,
September 6, 1919.
Richards, Raymond Orel. — Born in Appleton, Me., May 16,
1901; attended high school 1914-1917, and a business college
1918; employed as clerk by a wholesale fish corporation 1921-22;
chief clerk, International Joint Commission, 1922-23; clerk in
the American Consulate at Santo Domingo June to November,
1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Santo Domingo November 15,
1923.
^Richardson, Charles Francis Phelps.— Retired as Secretary
of the Legation at Copenhagen June, 1909. Register of 1913.
Richardson, Dorsey. — Bom in Dorchester County, Md.,
June 20, 1896; graduated from Johns Hopkins University
"(A. B.) 1915, (A. M.) 191S, (Ph.D.) 1920; served m the United
States Army August, 191 7, to November, 1919; member Baltic
mission relief administration May-August, 1919; appointed
captain in reserve corps. United States Anny, January- 20, 1920;
appointed drafting officer at $2,500 in the Department of
State July 24, 1920; at $3,500 June 17; effective July i, 1921;
resigned February 15, 1923; European Director, United States
Lines, February 15, 1923, to July 31, 1924; reappointed draft-
ing officer at $3,800 in the Department of State August i, 1924;
and designated Assistant Chief of the Division of Western
European Affairs, at $4,200 September i, 1924; at $4,400 Novem-
ber I. 1924.
Richardson, Elliott Verne.— Bom in Newburyport. Mass.,
March 4. is6f<; home. New York City; graduate of Princeton
Universitj' (A. B.) 1888; took post-graduate courses at Prince-
ton and Johns Hopkins Universities; served on the U. S. S.
Badger, April 27-October 27, 1S98; salesman, 1888-1894; private
secretary, 1896-97; newspaper correspondent and journalist;
clerk in Consulate at Sydney, New South Wales. June i, 1909;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General March 25, 1910;
Vice-Consul February 6, 1915; appointed, after examination
(April I, 1912), Consul of class nine March 2, 1915; on detail as
Vice-Consul at .Sydney, Australia, 191 5-16; on detail in the
Department of State March 15-July 10, 1916; assigned to Monc-
ton July 8, 1916; appointed Consul of class eight September 14,
1917; assigned to Punta Arenas August 31, 1918; detailed to
Quebec December 19, 19:8; assigned to Karachi March 20, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; class
five November 23, 1921; assigned to Coblenz December 27,
1921; detailed to Berlin J^Iay 17, 1922; assigned to Pemambuco
August 17, 1923; appointed Consul of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924; detailed to
make an economic survey of Haiti October 16, 1924.
♦Richardson, Harry Bentley.— Retired as Consular Assistant:
also Vice and Deputy Consul at Belgrade May, 1913. Register
of 1913.
♦Richardson, John B.— Retired as Consulat Jalapa August
1907. Register of 1913.
Richardson, jr., John Samuel.— Bom in Boston. Mass.,
January 9, 1S90; home, Boston; attended Roxbury Latin
School 1901-02; Dartmouth College 1902-1911 (A. B.); employed
as insurance adjuster in Boston 1912; railroad claim adjuster
1Q12-1915; served as lieutenant in the United States Army
>Iay 3, 1917, to January 16, 1919; oil scout January 16, 1919 to
June 16, 1919; stock salesman; appointed Vice-Consul at Rot-
terdam November 15, 1920; at Queenstown January 21, 1922;
atCobh February 27, 1924; appointed, after examination (Janu-
arj' 14, 1924), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924;
assigned to Cobh June 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Richardson, Norval. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class one, unassigned, June, 1924. Register of 1924.
Richmond, Stoughton James.— Bom in Washington. D. C,
November 10, 1904; graduated from high school, and attended
GeorgetowTi Foreign Service School 1923-24; employed by
Department of Labor January-June, 1924, and by War Depart-
ment June-August, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, August 7, 1924,
Riddiford, George Gerald.— Bom in Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan-
uary- 24, 1896; attended high school four years and George
Washington Law School six months; stenographer in the War
Department 1917-1S; served in the United States Army 1918-19;
stenographer for a railroad company five months; stenogra-
pher in the United States Public Health Ser\-ice 1920-1923,
appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State
under Civil Service rules, November 3, 1923; at $1,440 July i,
192.1.
Riddle, John Wallace.— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa., July
12, 1S64; home, Farmington. Conn.; graduated from Harvard
University (A. B.) iS87;^attended Columbia University Law
School 1888-1S91 and Ecole des Sciences Politiques, Paris,
1891-1S93; received certificate of proficiency in the Russian
language from College de France. 1893; appointed Secre-
tary of Legation to Turkey .\pril 15, 1893; Secretary of
Embassy to Russia November 4. 1901; Agent and Consul-
General at Cairo September 8, 1903; Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Roumania and Serbia March 8.
1905; Ambassador to Russia December 19. 1906; retired in
September, 1909; served in the Military Intelligence Branch oi
the United States Army at the War College 1917-18; ap-
pointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to
Argentina November 18, 1921.
♦Ridgely, Benjamin H. — Died in Monterey, October 10, 1908,
while Consul-Geueral at Mexico City. Register of 1913.
Riggs, Benjamin Reath.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., August
19, 1.SQ2; home, Philadelphia; received his early education at
schools in France and Switzerland and graduated from Colum-
bia University in 1915; scr\'ed as private secretary to the Ameri-
can Ambassador in Rome and as an assistant in the Embassy
in Rome July, 1916, to December, 1919; appointed, after exam-
ination (May 12, 1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of
class four December 20, 1919; assigned to Rome December 37,
1919; to Madrid January 7, 1922; appointed Secretary of class
three March 23, 1922; assgined to Bucharest March 3, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Rlnker, Ella Ruth.— Born in Mount Jackson, Va.; attended
the public schools of Virginia, Woodstock High School,
Harrisonburg State Female Normal School, and took course
at Steward's Business College, Washington; taught in the
public schools of Virginia; stenographer in the Bureau of
Education, Washington, D. C; appointed a clerk, temporarily,
at$90o,in the Department of State December n, 1917; at$i,o8o
July I, 1918; at $1,140 September i, 1918; at $1,200 January i,
1919; at $1,080 July I, 1919; clerk at $1,000, under Civil Service
rules, October 16, 1930; class one January 9, 1922; at $1,500 July
I, 1924-
Ritsher, Walter Holmes.— Bom in Chicago, 111., December
18, 1898; attended high school 1913-1917; graduated from Beloit
1 86
BIOGRAPHICAIv STATEMENT.
College (A. B.) 1921; served in the United States Army April.
1918. to February, 1919; instructor in an American university
at Beirut, Syria, 1921-1924; clerk in the American Consulate
at Beirut 1924; appointed Vice-Consul at Beirut October 13,
1924.
*Rlves, George Barclay.— Retired as Special Assistant in
the American Embassy at Berlin, 1917. Register of 1916.
Roach, jr., Charles Preston.— Bom in Port Royal, Va..
January 26, 1890; public school education; employed by the
Capital Traction Co., Washington, D. C, 1912-1918; salesman.
1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $960, in the Depart-
ment of State December 18. 1918; at $t.o8o February i, 1919;
at $1,200 April i, 1919; at $1,330 November i, 1919; at $1,400
January i, 1930; at $1,600 October i, 1920; clerk at $1,000, under
Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; class one August 16, 1921;
class three September i, 1921; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
Roach, Elizabeth Coakley.— Born in King George, Va.;
completed normal school courses and passed examination for
public-school teacher 1910; clerk in business house seven
jnonths; teacher in public school two years; clerk in the War
Department five months in 1919; appointed a clerk at $900 in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January 8,
1921; at $1,000 September i, 1922; at $1,100 March i, 1924; class
one May 31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Robbins, Warren Delano.— Bom in Brooklyn, N. Y., Sep-
tember 3, 1885; home. Tuxedo, N. Y.; attended Groton
School and graduated from Harvard University (A. B.).
1908; served as private secretary to the Ministers to Portugal
and Argentina 1909-10; appointed, after examination (Janu-
ary 16. 1911). Third Secretary of the Embassy at Paris March 2,
1911; Second Secretary of the Embassy at Mexico City April 24,
1914, but owing to subsequent closing of Embassy did not
proceed there; appointed Secretary of the Legation at Guate
mala May 22, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class
three by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to duty in
the Division of Latin American Atlairs, Department of State,
January 26. 1916; attached to the person of the Vice President
of the Council of Ministers of France during his visit to Wash-
ington as a guest of the United States April 24. 1917; attached
as a representative of the Department of State to the Belgian
Commission upon its visit to the United States June 13, 1917;
assigned to Buenos .'Vires July 13, 1917; appointed Secretary
of class two August 23, 1917; assigned to Santiago December
J, igiS; appointed Secretary of class one December 20, 1919;
assigned to the Department of State February 26. 1920; Acting
Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs and designated
as Counselor June 14, 1920; designated for duty in connection
with the Conference on the Limitation of Armament Novem-
ber 10. 1921; designated Chief of the Division of Near Eastern
Affairs December 20, 192 1; designated and assigmed as Coun-
selor of the Embassy at Berlin March i, 1922; appointed For-
eign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
♦Robert, Albert W. — Retired as Consul at Algiers December,
igii; died in Troy, N. Y., February ao, 1913. Register of 1913.
Roberts, David W.— Ensign, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo, May 14, 1924.
Roberts, Joseph F. — Clerk in the post office at San Francisco,
Calif.; designated as United States Despatch Agent at San
Francisco November 12, 1920.
Roberts, Quincy Franklin.- Bom in Cass County, Tex., De-
cember 6, 1893; home, Wichita Falls, Tex.; graduated from
Lawton (Okla.) High School, and attended the United States
Naval Academy one ^ear; employed by a wholesale produce
firm in Wichita Falls, Tex.; appointed, after examination
(January 25, 1915), Consular Assistant March 24, 1915; Vice-
Consul at Venice May 27, 191;; Vice-Consul at Geroa November
5, 1915; at Saloniki January 7, 1919; appointed Vice Consul
de carriere of class three September 27, 1919; assigned to
Saloniki October 22, 1919; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of
class two Alay 24, 1920; assigned to Apia July 8, 1920; appointed
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Robertson, Frederick Joseph.— British subject, born in
St. Georges, Bermuda, March 26, 1885; manager for a firm of
druggists in St. Georges; has acted as American Consular
Agent on various occasions; appointed Consular Agent at
St. Georges August 17, 1917.
Robertson, Mary Waddill.— Born in Rocky Mount, Va.;
educated in the public schools and at a business college; typist
for various concerns one year; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January u,
1921; at Si, 000 September I, 1922; at $1,100 March i, 1924; class
one May 31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
♦Robertson, Randolph. — Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Nuevo Laredo, July, 1921. Register of 1918.
Robertson, William Henry. — Bora in Botetourt County, Va.,
June 36. 1863; home. Richmond. Va.; education obtained by
private tuition, at private schools, and at the University of
Virginia; engaged in business in VVashington, D. C, 1884-85;
entered financial business in New York and Washington in
1901; appointed Commercial Agent at Moncton October 28,
1885; Commercial Agent at Yarmouth February 15, 1886; Com-
mercial Agent at Port Hope January 31, 1888; Consul at St.
Gall January 13, 1889; retired May 5, 1891; appointed Consul at
Hamburg June 8, 1893; retired 1897: appointed Consular
Agent at Amprior December 5, 1900; retired March, 1901;
appointed, after examination (July 9, 1907). Consul at Goteborg
August 15, 1907; Consul-General at Tangier January 13, 1909;
Consul-General at Callao May 3, 1910; Consul at Manchester
June s. 1913; Consul of class two by act approved February s,
1915; appointed Consul-General of class two February 32, 1915,
and assigned to Buenos Aires; assigned to Halifax October 3,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Robinette, Myrtle Eva.— Born in Artemus, Pa.; educated
in public schools; clerk in a mercantile establishment two
months; in War Department April 17 to July 3, 1918; in Zone
Finance office July 5, 1918, to April 19, 1920; appointed a clerk
at $1,100 in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
April 16, 1920; class one August 16, 1921; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
* Robinson, Fred Robin.— Died in Utica, New York, July 22,
1923, while Consul of class six, assigned to Saltillo. Register of
1922.
Robinson, Thomas Hastings.— Bom in South Bethlehem,
Pa., January i8, 1893; home, New York City; graduated from
Princeton University (A. B.) 1914; Lehigh University (B. S.)
1916; employed by several manufacturing companies, and as an
instructor in a military academy; served in the United States
Army 1917-18, retiring with the rank of second lieutenant;
appointed, after examination (January 16, 1922), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Birmingham
August 28, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924.
-Died at his post (Berne) April 3,
♦ Roche, James Jefirey.-
1908. Register of 1913.
♦ Rockhill, William Woodville.— Retired as Ambassador to
Turkey November. 1913. Died at Honolulu, Hawaii, Decem-
ber 8, 1914. Register of 1913.
*Rockwell, Almon Ferdinand. — Retired as Vice Consul de-
carriere of class three, assigned to Frankfort on the Main, April
1924. Register of 1924.
Roddy, Marguerite R.— Bom in North Platte, Nebr.; grad-
uated from grammar school and from high school; employed
as stenographer by private concern 1920-1924; appointed a
clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, imder Civil Service
rules, November i, 1924.
Rodgers, C. R. P. — Commander, United States Navy; as-
signed to duty as Naval Attache at The Hague May 7, 1933.
♦Rodgers, James Linn.— Retired as Consul General of class
two, assigned to Montreal, October, 1920. Register of 1918.
♦ Rodgers, James Donald Cameron.— Retired as Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class two, assigned to Tirana, March,
1923. Register of 1922.
Roland, Helen Charlene. — Bom in Melvin, 111.; attended
high school and business college; employed by private con-
cerns July-November, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, December 8,
1924.
Roll, Sigurd Emil.— Born in Chicago, 111., October 14, 1893;
attended school in Chicago and high school in Christiania,
Norway; employed in a clerical capacity and as salesman in
Christiana, Norway, 1909-1913; attended school in Chicago
1913-1916; with insurance company in Norway 1917-18; clerk
in the American Legation in Christiana 1918-19; agent for
American goods in Norway 1920-21: appointed Vice-Consul at
Kouigiberg November 15. 1921; at Fiumi January 3, 1924; re-
signed June 30, 1924; reappointed Vice-Consul at Oslo August
15, 1924.
Roll, William George.— Born in Milwaukee, Wis., July 4,
1893; attended school in Christiania 1899-1909; Rotterdam
Technical School 1913-13; Lane Technical High School,
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT,
187
Chicago, 111.. 1917; employed as clerk in Christiania 1910-1913,
by a teleeraph company in Brussels four years; inspector of
shipbuilding in San Francisco one year; chief clerk at Chris-
tiania City Hall, 191 7-18; appointed Vice-Consul at Ribe. Den-
mark, AugU'-t 19, 1918; at Copenhagen February i. 1919; at
Bremen November 15, 1921.
Romeyn, Nina Genevieve. — Bom in Fort Scott, Kans.; edu
cation received from private teachers, in private and public
schools, the Classical School for Girls at Indianapolis and at
George Washington University; employed as clerk in the busi-
ness office of the Daughters of the American Revolution; Span-
ish copyist in the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission; ap-
pointed clerk in the Department of State at $900. under Civil
Service rules, November 25, 1903; at Si.ooo June 6, 1906; tliss
one March 4, 1907; class two April 7. 1917; class three, October
I. 1918; class four December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1930;
at $2, 100 July I, 1924.
Roosa, Isaac Percival.— Bom Januari' 28, 1854; attended
Monticello Academy and graduated from Cornell University,
1S74; in foreign freight department. Pennsylvania Railroad,
New York, for several years; appointed Deputy United States
Despatch Agent at New York February, 18S6; Despatch Agent
October 31, 1890.
♦ Roosevelt, George W.— Died at his post (Bmssels) April 14.
1907. Register of 1913.
* Rosenberg, Louis James. — Retired as Consul at Peraam-
buco January, 1910. Register of 1913.
Ross, Sallie Francisca.— Bora in McClung. Va.; educated in
the public schools; teacher at Hot Springs, Va., 1917-1920;
clerk. United States Shipping Board, six months; appointed a
clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, January 8, 1921; at $1,000 January 2s, 1922; at $1,100 Oc-
tober I, 1923; class one April i, 1924; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Roth,JamesHenry.— Born in Ventura, Calif., August 22, 1887;
educated in the grammar and high schools of Ventura; cashier,
bookkeeper, and stenographer in the Ventura office of the J. K.
Armsby Co. seven and one-half years; bookkeeper and stenog-
rapher for the Eastern Motor Car Co., Los Angeles, five months;
bookkeeper, stenographer, and salesman in Herraosillo, Mexico,
until spring of 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Guayaquil Jan-
uary 8, 1916; resigned May 31, 1918; appointed ViceConsul at
Callao-Lima September 17, 1918; at Pernambuco, October 29,
1921; at Manaos March 16, 1923.
• Rowen, John English.— Retired as Consul at Punta Arenas
June, 191 1. Register of 1913.
Rowley, jr., Eugene Cooper.— Born in Madison, Wis., Janu-
-ary 31, 1894; attended public schools in Madison, high school
in Williamsburg. Va.; completed commercial course at Temple
School, Washington, 1915; graduated in aeronautics from
Georgia Institute of Technology 1917; graduated from George-
town University (LL. B.) 1920; (LL. M.) 1921; admitted to
the bar of the District of Columbia 1920; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, in the Department of State April i, 1915; perma-
nently at $900. under Executive order, June 22. to be effective
July I, 1916; at $1,000 October 18, 1916; class one July 28, cflec
tive August I, 1917; resigned October 3, 1917; served as second
lieutenant in the Air Service, United States Army, October.
191 7 to February, 1919; reinstated as clerk of class one in tht
Department of State February 12, 1919; appointed clerk of
class two September 26, 1919; class three July i, 1921; resigned
January 24, 1922; United States Naturalization Examiner,
Department of Labor, at Portland, Oreg., January, 1922, to
August, 1923; reinstated in the Department of State as a clerk
of class two August 15, 1923; at $i,.S()o July i, 1924.
Rowley, sr., Eugene Cooper. — Bom in Ossin, Iowa, Febmary
■10,1867; attended the public schools of Madison. Wis.; Madison
High School two years; graduate of Richmond Academy
and the University of Wisconsin (LL. B.); justice of the peace
in Madison, Wis., two years and in York County. Va.. two
years; practiced law in Madison. Wis., 1890-1903; in \'irginia
1903-1911; special agent Bureau of the Census one year; spe-
cial supervisor and special agent Indian Service two years;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,400 in the Department of
State June 15, 1917; at $1,500 October i, 1917; at $1,800 April
16, 1918; clerk of class four, under Civil Service rules, Au«u^t i,
1919; appointed Passport Agent in the Passport Bureau of the
Department of State in Seattle at $2,500, June 18, effective
July I, 1921; at $2,750 July i, 1922; at $2,800 August i, 1924.
*Rublee, William Alvah.— Died at his post (Hongkong)
April IS. 1910. Register of 1913.
*Ruddock, Albert Billings.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class two. unass'gned. June, 1924. Register of
1924.
♦Ruffln, John N. — Retired as Consul at Asuncion August,
1907. Register of 1913.
RuBner, Walter Stanton. — Bom in Indiana. Pa., August 34,
189s; graduated from Greensburg (Pa.) High School 1913;
Leech's Business College 1914; attended Georgetown Law
School one year; stenographer and bookkeeper in the West-
moreland National Bank of Greensburg, Pa., 1914-1916; clerk to
a Congressman. igi6; clerk in the Coast and Geodetic Survey
1916-17; appointed Vice-Consul at Prince Rupert November
3,1917; at St. NazaireMarch 12, 1919: at Ghent January 3, 1920;
at Leipzig November 15, 1921; retired October 18. 1922; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Yokohama December 13, 1923.
Rule, Blanche Vincent.— Bom in Washington, D. C; at-
tended Business High School. Washington, four years; stenog-
rapher in life insurance otTice and a railroad office May-Decem-
ber, 1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,000 in the
Department of State November 26. 1917; at $1,200, March i,
1918; clerk of class one, under Civil Service rules, October i,
1919; class two September i, 1922; at $i,S6o July i, 1924.
Russ, Edward Bartlett.— Born in Louisiana, Mo., February
10. 1868; educated in public schools of Harrisburg, Pa.; ap-
pointed copyist at $900 in the Pension Office October 28, 1890;
clerk at $1,000 January i, 1897; class one July i, 1897; transferred
to the Department of State as clerk class one July 30, 1901;
appointed clerk class two February 13, 1904; class three De-
cember 31, 1910, to be effective January i, 1911; class four, tem-
porarily, August I, 1918; appointed a special assistant at $2,000
December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; Chief of Bureau
at $2,100 July I, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500 June 17, effective
July I, 1921; at $2,,?oo July i, 1924.
♦ Russell, jr., Charles Howland. — Retired as Secretary of
Embassy or Legation ol class three, assigned to Buenos Aires,
May, 1921. Register of 1922.
♦Russell, Charles Wells.- Retired as Minister to Persia Sep-
tember, 1914. Register of 1913.
Russell, George M.— Lieutenant colonel. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Military Attach^ at Mexico Septem-
ber 18, 1923.
Russell, Harry Earle.— Born in Kalamazoo, Mich., Septem-
ber 16, 1889; home. Battle Creek, Mich.; graduate of University
of Michigan (A. B.), 1913, (LL. B.), 1915; employed as a clerk
and as a teacher; practiced law in Battle Creek, 1915-16; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 26, 1916), Consular Assistant
August 30, 1916; Vice-Consul at Saloniki October 25, 1916; at
Smyrna June 9, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carrivre of
class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Smyrna October 32,
1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 34,
1920; assigned to Rome August 29, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class one November 17, 192 1; Consul of class seven
June 22, 1922; remained at Rome on detail; assigned to Casa-
blanca March 12, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i, 1924.
Russell, William W.— Born in Washington, D. C, December
3, 1859; educated at the Rockville Academy and the United
States Naval Academy; civil engineer and served on various
surveys in South America, Mexico, and the United States;
lieutenant on the cruiser America when that vessel was deliv-
ered to Brazilian authorities; appointed Secretary of the Lega-
tion at Caracas November 15, 1895; Secretary of the Legation
at Panama City Fefjruary 5, 1904; Charge d' Affaires ad interim
from February 13. 1904; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Colombia March 17, 1904; Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Venezuela
June 21, 1905; appointed Commissioner to the National Expo-
sition in Quito, Ecuador, and served from August 19, 1908. to
January 12, 1909; appointed Minister Resident and Consul-
General to the Dominican Republic June 24, 1910; Envo>- Ex-
traordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Dominican
Republic July 6, 1911; retired August, 1913; reappointed Au-
gust 16, 1915.
♦Ryan, John Latta.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation, assigneil to San Salvador, June, 1918. Register of
1917.
Ryan, jr., Thomas J. — Ensign, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo September 11, 1923.
♦Ryder, Frederick M. — * * ♦ Appointed Foreign Ser\-ice
Officer of class three July i, 1924. Retired from active service
32952—25-
-13
i88
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
as Consul-General at Vancouver July, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of May 24, 19:4. Register of 1924.
Ryerson, James.— Born in Canada October 9, 1846; father
naturalized in Chautauqua County, N. Y., during his minority;
educated in Canada and at Allegheny College, Jleadville, Pa.;
enlisted in Company E, Thirteenth Ohio Cavalry, Februari",
1864, and served until February, 1865; carpenter; appointed
Consular .\cent at Gait February 33, 1899.
Sack, Francis Mellville.— Born in Whitestone, N. Y., June
IS, 1892; graduate of Columbia University (B. S.), 1911; Medico-
Chirurgical College (Phar. D.); newspaper reporter; appointed
clerk in the American Legation at San Salvador August 21,
1916; also Vice-Consul at San Salvador October 6, 1916; Vice-
Consul at Habana October 16, 1917; at Piedras Negras October
33, 1919; at Niagara Falls April 23, 1921.
♦Sackett, Martin Russell.— Retired as Consul at Prescott
February, 1915. Register of 1914.
Sadler, Mary A. — Bom in Tarentum, Pa.; appointed a
temporary clerk in the Department of State, at $990, May 7.
1918; at $i,oSo January i, 1919; at $1,140 July i, 1919; clerk at
$1,140, under Civil Service rules, September 19, 1919: class one
August 16, 1921; at Si, 500 July i, 1924.
♦Salisbury, Allred.— Retired as Student Interpreter in Japan
October, 1908. Register of 1913.
Salisbury, Laurence Eustis.— Born in Chicago, 111., March 13,
1S94; home, Chicago; graduated from the University of Chicago
High School; University of Chicago (Ph. B.) 1916; postgraduate
work in English 1919; English instructor in Japan 1916-17;
served in the British Army as second lieutenant 1917-1919;
appointed, after examination (January' 19, 192c), Student
Interpreter in Japan May 20, 1920 ; Vice-Consul and Inter-
preter at Kobe July i, 1922; Foreign Service Ofilcer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924; assigned to Nagasaki November S, 1924.
Salmon, David Alden. — Born in Westport, Conn., January
30, 1S79; attended high school and business college; employed
in clerical capacity; appointed clerk at $900 in the War De-
partment May 4, 1898; at $1,000 March 15, 1899; class one July
I, 1900; class two April 21, 1902; class three February i, 1904;
transferred to the Department of State as clerk class two July
7, 1906; appointed clerk class four March 4, 1907; acting chief
of the Bureau of Indexes and Archives March 25-April 30, 1916;
appointed chief of the Bureau of Indexes and Archives May i,
1916; drafting officer at $2,500 December i, 191 7; directed July
26, 1919, to proceed to the American Missions in Paris, Rome,
London, Berne, Brussels, Tlie Hague, and Madrid to investigate
the methods of handling correspondence, etc.; appointed draft-
ing officer at $3, oooMarch 1, 1921; at$3, 500 June 17, effective July
I, 1921; designated archivist in connection with the Conference
on the Limitation of Armament September i, 192 1; designated
Archivist in connection with the American Delegation to the
Conference on Central American Affairs, Washington, Decem-
ber I, 1922; at S3. 800 July I, 1924.
Salz, Edwin.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., October 30, 1896;
attended public and high schools of New York; City College
of New York one year; employed as clerk in export house.
New York City; secretary and assistant accountant in American
export agency, Coquimbo, Chile; appointed Consular Agent
at Coquimbo March 30, 1921.
Sammons, Thomas.— Born in New York State February 7,
1863; studied law at Albany, N. Y.; attended Albany Law
School and studied international law and diplomacy at George
Washington University; telegraph operator, 1S79-1884; editor
and publisher, 1888-1898; private secretary to a United States
Senator, 1898-1905; appointed Consul-General at Newchwang
March 8, 1905; assigned to Mukden and Antung in May, 1906,
in connection with the negotiations for the opening of these
ports under the treaty of 1903; appointed Consul-General at
Seoul March 30, 1907; Consul-General at Yokohama August 27,
1909; delegate on the part of the United States to the Fifth In-
ternational Congress of Chambers of Commerce, Boston, Sep-
tember 24 to 28, 1912; Consul-General at Shanghai November
24. 1913; Consul-General of class two by act approved February
5, 1915; assigned to Melbourne September 8, 1919; unassigned
from November 19, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class one July i, 1924.
Sampselle, Ben Belen. — Born in Hawkinstown, \'a., Novem-
ber 12, 1894; attended high school 1912-1914, and two commer-
cial colleges 1915-1917; served in the United States Army
1917-18; retiring with the rank of second lieutenant; employed
as physical instructor two months 1919, and as salesman 1919-
1921; clerk in the American Consulate at Nuevitas, Cuba,
1921-1924; appointed Vice-Consul at Habana October 17, 1924.
*Sanders, John Oliver. — Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Maracaibo, May, 1924. Register of 1924.
Sands, Rosa Virginia.— Bom in Brooklyn, N. Y.; educated
in private schools in Switzerland, Italy, Austria, and England;
principal of a private school 1912-1917, and an assistant secre-
tary in the Navy League seven months; clerk in the War
Department April, 1918, to April, 1919; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, at $1,200 in the Department of State May i, 1919;
at $1,500, under Civil Service rules, February 14, 1920; resigned
October 15, 1921; reinstated as a clerk of class two November
16, 1922; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
*Sands, William Franklin.— Retired as Special Assistant in
the American Embassy at Petrograd May, 1917. Register of
1916.
Saniord, Horace Monroe.— Born in New Haven, Conn., Oc-
tober 12, i860; educated in public schools; appointed Vice and
Deputy Consul-General at Ottawa September 9, 1898; Vice-
Consul at Ottawa February 6, 1915.
Sangston, Howard Eli.— Born April 22, 1879; appointed la-
borer in the Department of State July i, 1905; assistant mes-
senger November I, 1905; messenger July i, 1915; clerk at $960
December 18, 191S; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
Santos, Alberto.- Born in Ecuador May 10, 1871; attended
St. James College, Maryland, tliree years; is an importer and
exporter; appointed Consular Agent at Bahia de Caraquez
September 10, 1900.
* Sargent, Clarence E.— Retired as Marshal at Newchwang
December, 1912. Register of 191 2.
* Sarle, Amos L. — Retired as Marshal at Hankow March,
1906. Register of 1914.
* Sartoris, Algernon.— Retired as Secretary of the Legation
at Guatemala May, 1909. Register of 1913.
* Sartorius, Herman U. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four, unassigned, June, 1921. Register of 1922.
Sauer, Emil.— Born in Lange, Tex., June 10, 1881; home.
Doss, Tex.; educated at the University of Texas (B. Lit.),
and at the Harvard University Graduate School (A. M.);
teacher and instructor; special agent United States Census
Office, March to November, 1910; examiner United States
Tariff Board, 1910-11; appointed, after examination (June 27,
1910), Consul at Bagdad August 19, 1911; Consul at Goteborg
November 24, 1913; Consul of class eight by act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven March a, 1915;
Consul of class six October 18, 1915, and assigned to Cologne;
assigned to Maracaibo April 26, 191 7; detailed to Copenhagen
July II, 1919; appointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919;
detailed to Coblenz October 31, 1919; to Cologne November 24,
1919; appointed Consul of class four June 4, 1920: assigned to
Cologne November 15, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class five July i, 1924; assigned to Pemambuco October 23,
1924.
Savage, Herbert B.— Born in Scotland Neck, N. C, Novem-
ber II, 1893; public-school education; appointed, temporarily,
at $600 in the Department of State November 13, 1917; appointed
an assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules, October 14,
1918.
Savage, John Marbacher. — Born in Rahway, N. J., Decem-
ber 10, 1864; home, Newark, N. J.; educated in private schools
in New Jersey and studied law for two years; was Vice and
Deputy Consul at Belfast, 1885-1889; Vice Consul at Dundee
1893-94, and Consul at Dundee, 1894-1897 ; with Brookfield Linen
Co., in Belfast, 1897-98, and was manager of the New York
branch of that company for nearly nine years; was representa-
tive of the Lurgan Weaving Co., of Ireland, and for several
years vice president and director of the Fenunore Knitting
Mills of Cooperstown; engaged in banking and brokerage
business in New York, 1912-13; appointed, under Executive
Order of April ai, 1914, Consul at Sheffield July 27, 1914; Con-
sul of class seven by act approved February 5, 1915; detailed
to Southampton June 20, 1919; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919, and assigned to Soutliampton: appointed
Consul of class five June 4, 1920; Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924.
Savage, John N.— Born in Scotland Neck, N. C, .September
6, 1883; transferred from the National Museum and appointed
assistant messenger in the Department of State September 30,
1916.
Savoy, Edward Augustine.— Born May 2, 1855; appointed la-
borer in the Department of State July i, 1871; assistant messen-
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
189
ger June 15, 1884; messenger June 15, 1898; detailed as messen-
ger to the Paris Peace Commission September 17, 189S, to De-
cember 24, 1S98; appointed chief messenger November 30,
1901; clerk classone February 23, 1915, under Executive Order
of October 5, 1914; class two March i, 1921; atSi, 500 July i, 1924.
Sawyer, John B. — Born in Appleton, Wis,, January 17, 1881;
educated in the public and hish schools and the University of
California (B. S.), 1902; Chinese inspector under the Depart-
ment of Commerce and Labor; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul-General at Hongkong August 23, 1911; Vice-Consul at
HonL;kong February 6, 1915; retired January, 1917; appointed
Vice-Consul at Shanghai April 23, 1918; at Hongkong February
19, 1921; at Shanghai April 12, 1921.
* Sawyer, Leroy Robinson.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Cartagena, July, 1923. Register of 1922.
Sayers, Thomas. — Born in Philadelphia. Pa., January 14.
1874; appointed coal passer. United States Navy, March 26,
1898; laborer in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing July
26, 1901: laborer in the Department of State June 17, 1910;
assistant messenger July i, 1910.
Scanlan, John Joseph.— Born in Washington, D. C, July 11,
1892; graduate of Georgetown University (LL. B.), 1916; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State Janu-
ary 21, 1915; permanently at $1,000, under Executive order,
June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; class one March 15, 1917;
detailed for duty in the Passport Agency, New York, April 6,
1917; appointed a clerk in the American Embassy at Paris
January 3r, 1918; Vice-Cousul at Paris ^fay 3, igiS; reinstated
as a clerk of class two in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, February 4, 1919; appointed clerk of class three
November i, 1919; special assistant at $2,000 January 31,
effective February i, 1920; drafting officer at $2,500 January
16, 1922; designated Assistant Chief of the Division of Passport
Control November i, 1922; at 82,800 July i, 1924.
Scanlan, Martin F. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Assistant Military Attache at Rome JIarch 26, 1924.
Scarborough, Walter Boyd. — Bom in Ada, Okla., February
8, 1903; graduated from high school and attended George
\Vashington University Law School; einployed as clerk in
Treasury Department 19^3-24; transferred from Treasury De-
partment and appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of
State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, August 16, 1924.
Scavarda, Dominick Albert. — Bom in Canon City, Colo.,
January 24, 1905; attended grade school nine years and a busi-
ness college two years; employed as a typist nine months;
appointed a clerk at S900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, July 23, 1923; at $1,000 November r, 1923;
at $1,320 July I. 1924.
Schafer, Consuelo Anna. — Bom in Washington. D. C; edu-
cated in public grammar schools; attended Steward's Business
College six months; clerk in the Navy Department. 1917-18;
appointed a clerk, at Si, 000, in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, March 21, 1922; at $1,100 October i, 1923;
class one April i, 1924; at $r,soo July i, 1924.
Schloss, Theresa Catherine. — Bom in Sheboygan, Wis.-
attended high school and business college; employed as stenog
rapher by private firm; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December i,
1924.
♦Schmedeman, Albert George.— Retired as Minister to Nor-
way August, 1921. Register of 1918.
* Schmucker, George Bertram.- Retired as Consul at Ense-
nada June, 1911. Register of 1913.
Schnare, Lester L. — Bom in Mondovi, Wis.. May 15, 1884;
home. Macon. Ga.; attended the public schools of Wisconsin
and Georgia; graduated from George Washington University
(LL. B.) 1913; took courses in diplomacy 1913-14 and in Ger-
man and Spanish 1914-15; taught school in Georgia 1902-1905;
city editor of a Fitzgerald (Ga.) newspaper 1905-06; stenog-
rapher and typewriter iu the Pcnsacola (Fla.) navy yard
1906-07, and in the Bureau of Immigration 1907-1912; law
clerk, Bureau of Immigration, 1912-1915; appointed Vice-
Consul at Shanghai February 4. 1916; Vice-Consul at Canton
May 19, 191 7; Vice-Consul at Yokohama July 29, 191S; special
assistant in the Department of State at $3,000 October i, 1918;
drafting officer at $2,500, July i, 1919; appointed, after exam-
ination (May 12, 1919). Consul of class seven September 5,
1919; detailed to Yokohama March 20, 1920; detailed, tem-
porarily, to Kob6 September 7, 1920; returned to Yokohama
April, 1921; detailed to Kobe July 9, 1921; assigned to Swatow
February 2, 1922; to Cartagena August 3, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Schneider, Elsie Marie.— Born in Washington. D. C; edu-
cated in the public schools; employed in an insurance office,
1917-1S; appointed a clerk at $i.oSo, temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State, May 12, 1919; clerk at $i.oooi under Civil Service
rules, February i, 192 1; at $1,140 September i, 1922; class one
December s, 1922; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Schoellkopf, Walter Horton.— Born in Buffalo. N. Y.. Octo-
ber 18, 1S82; home, Buffalo; graduated from Pennsylvania Mili
tary College (C. E.) 1904, and attended Cornell University and
the University of Wisconsin one year each; engaged in the m
agement of an estate 190S-1917; served in the United States
Armf as captain and major August, 1917-March, 1919; ap-
pointed, after examination (-May 19, 1919), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four September 5, 1919; assigned to
Paris October 7, 1919; to Panama May 26, 1921; appointed Sec-
retary of Embassy or Legation of class three January 18, 1922;
assigned to La Paz March i, 1922; unassigned March 13 to Sep-
tember 12, 1922; assigned to the Department of State Septem-
ber 12, 1922; to Buenos Aires July 24. 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Schoenfeld, Hans Frederick Arthur. — Bom in Providence,
R. I., January 31, 18S9; home, Washington, D. C; educated at
Friends' Select School, Washington, and George Washington
University (A. B., A. M.); studied law, 190S-1910; assistant
and instructor in history at the George A\'ashington L'niversity,
1907-1910; appointed Consular Agent at Caracas September 17,
1910; confidential clerk to the Assistant Secretary of State Jan-
uary 4, 1912; appointed, after examination (December 4, 1911),
Third Secretary of the Embassy at Constantinople Februan* 15,
1912; Secretary of the Legation to Paraguay and Uruguay
August 12, 1913; Secretary of the Legation at ilontevideo July
16, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by act
approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Christiania April 13,
1916; to Bucharest March 11, 1919; to Copenhagen, as Charge d'
Affaires, November 4, 1919; appointed Secretary of class two
December 20, 1919; assigned to Rio de Janeiro July 29, 1920;
appointed Secretary of class one August 24, 1921; assigned to
Vienna October 22, 1921; designated and assigned as Counselor
of Embassy at Mexico City ^larch 5, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Schoenfeld, Rudolf Emil. — Bom in Washington, D. C, Janu-
ary 35, 1895; home, Washington; graduate of George Washing-
ton University (A. B.), 1915; University of Beme (Ph. D.)
1920; clerk in United States Efficiency Commission three and
a half months; teacher in the National Cathedral School for
Boys one year; appointed, after examination (June 26. 1916),
Consular Assistant August 30. 1916; \"ice-Consul at Zurich
October 26, 1916; \'ice-Consul at Berne January 10. 1917; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 27,
1919; assigned to Beme October 22, 1919; appointed \'ice-
Consul de carriere of class two !May 24, 1920; detailed to assist
the American Consul General attached to the office of the
Commissioner at Berlin July 12, 1921; assigned to Berlin No-
vember IS, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
one February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19. 1923;
remained at Berlin on detail; detailed to Stettin Febmary 28,
1924; to Berlin May 22, 1924; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer
of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Cologne October 15, 1924.
Schoenrich, Edwin.— Bom in Baltimore. Md., January to,
189s; home, Baltimore; graduated from Washington College
(A. B.) 191 7; attended Boston University and National Uni-
versity of Mexico one summer each; graduated from George-
town Foreign Service School (M. F. S.) 1924; serv'ed in the
United States Army September, 191 7, to April. 1918; instructor
in several schools and colleges 1919-1922; special research expert
for United Sfcites Tariff Commission 1922-1924; appointed, after
examination (June 23. 1924). Foreign Ser\'ice Officer, unclassi-
fied; also Vice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to
Valparaiso November 8, 1924.
♦Scholle, Gustave.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Lega
tion of class two; assigned to Habana, July, 1918. Register of
Schooley, George Rozel.— Bom in Cumberland. Md., Sep-
tember 2, 1901; attended the public schools and a business
school in Washington. D. C, employed in the War Depart-
ment 1918-19; clerk in the office of the Federal Board for
Vocational Education three months; appointed a clerk at
$qoo in the Department ol State, under Civil Scr\'ice rules.
March 11, 1920; at $1,000 May i, 1920; at $1,140 September i,
1922; class one October 16, 1922; class two March i, 1924; at
$1,680 July I. 1924.
IQO
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Schott, William Walter.— Bom in Leavenworth, Kans.,
October 7. 1894; home. Leavenworth; attended Western
Military Academy; graduated from the United States Naval
Academy 1916; serv'ed in the United States Navy 1916-1920,
retiring with the crade of lieutenant; secretary United States
contingent to Allied Naval Armistice Commission, and to
Naval Inter-Allied Commission of Control, 1919-20; appointed,
after examination (January 10. 1922"!, Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three May 26, 1922; assigned to Frankfort on the Main
August 28, 1922; to Palermo November 20, 1923; appointed
Foreign Ser\'ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to
Gibraltar July 17, 1924; to Palermo October 28, 1924.
*Schoyer, Balkam.— Died near Beme, Switzerland. April 2,
1910, while Secretary of the Legation at Beme. Register of
1913.
Schultze, George H. — Born in Germany June 19. 1857; natu-
ralized in Hamilton County, Ohio, October 5, 1878; educated
at high school (gymnasium) in Germany and business college;
engaged in mercantile business; served in United States Army;
appointed copyist in the Patent Office at $720 September 11,
1891; model attendant at $800 February i, 1895; copyist at $900
March 21, 1896; transferred to the Department of State as clerk
at $900 January 24, 1901; appointed clerk class one February i,
1902; class two March i, 1906; class three March 4, 1907; class
four July 28, to be effective August I, 1917; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Schumacher, Leo Emil. — Bom In St. Louis, Mo., January 16,
1890; attended high school 1903-1907, and graduated from St.
Louis University Law School (LL. B.) 1914; pursued night-
school courses at the St. Louis University and Washington
University two years; employed as stenographer 1907-1909,
and as draftsman for the City of St. Louis 1909-1913; secretary
to a bank official 1913-1920; clerk in a bank 1920-21; credit
manager for a clothing company 1921-1923; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate General at Berlin December, 1923 to July, 1924;
appointed Vice Consul at Berlin July 26, 1924.
* Schumann, Walter. — Retired as Consul at Mainz August,
1907. Register of 1913.
Schurman, Jacob Gould.— Bom in Freetown, Prince Edward
Island, May 22. 1854; naturalized in Tompkins County, N. Y.,
in 1892; home, Ithaca. N. Y.; graduate of the University of
London (A. B.) 1S77. (A. M.) 1S78; studied at Paris and Edin-
burgh; (Sc. D.) Edinburgh 1878; pursued his studies in several
other European universities. 1878-1880; is an LL.D. of Colum-
bia. Yale, Edinburgh, Williams. Dartmouth, Harvard. Brown,
and University of Pennsylvania; professor of English literature,
political economy, and psychology, Acadia College 1S80-18S2;
professor of metaphysics and English literature Dalhousie
College, 1882-1886; Sage professor of philosophy Cornell Uni-
versity 1886-1892; president of Cornell University 1892-1920;
president of the first Philippine Commission. 1899; Stafford
Little lecturer Princeton 1914; first vice president New York
State Constitutional Convention 191s; member. New York
State Food Commission 191 7-18; author of several philosophical,
historical, and religious books; appointed Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary to Greece and Montenegro
August 16, 1912; retired August 17. 1913; appointed Envoy
Extraordinary and ^Minister Plenipotentiary to China June 2.
192..
Schurz, William Lytle. — Bom in Lebanon, Ohio. November
25. 1SS6; graduated from the University of California (LL. B.)
ign. (LL. M.) 1912. (Ph. D.) 1915; member of the faculty of
the University of Michigan; appointed a Trade Commissioner
to make economic investigations in Bolivia and Paraguay
January 20. 1919; Commercial Attach^. November 12. 1920.
and assigned to the Embassy at Rio de Janeiro.
♦Schutt, Warren Ellis. — Retired as Consular Assistant, also
Vice and Deputy Consul at Kehl February, 1912. Register of
1913.
Schuyler, Montgomery.— Bom in Stamford. Conn.. Septem-
ber 2, 1877; home. New York City, graduate of Columbia Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1899. (A. M.) 1900; university scholar in Indo-
Iranian languages 1899-1900; univer.'.ity fellow 1900-1902;
author of books and many articles on oriental and literary
subjects; appointed Second Secretary of the Embassy at Petro-
grad May 14, 1902; Secretary of the Legation and Consul-Gen-
eral at Bangkok October 10, 1904; Secretary of the Legation
and Consul-General to Roumania and Servia June 28, 1906:
Secretary of the Embassy at Petrograd January 10. 1907; at
Tokyo, December 21, 1909; at Mexico City February 1. 1912;
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Ecua-
dor March i. 1913; special agent of the Department of State to
assist the Ambassador to Russia 1914-15; served as a captain
in the United States Army on the General Staff and in Siberia
April, 1918 to August, 1919; appointed major in the Ordnance
Reserve Corps in December 1919; drafting officer in the Depart-
ment of State April 11, 1921. and placed in charge of the Divi-
sion of Russian Affairs; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to Salvador May 4. 1921.
Schwartz, Blanche Beatrice.— Bom in Washington. D. C.
attended Business High School 1914-1918; clerk in the Amer-
ican Red Cross national headquarters 1917-1922; stenographer
for a railroad association January, 1922, to May, 1923; clerk in
the Treasury Department May-August, 1923; appointed a
clerk of class one in the Department of State, under Civil
Service rules, Augfust 1, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
*Scidmore, George H.— Died at his post (Yokohama) while
a Consul-General of class two, November 27, 1922. Register
of 1932.
Scott, Albert William, — Bom in Lexington, Ky., November
IS, 1895; attended manual training high school 1915; Junior
College of Kansas City 1916-17; University of Grenoble,
France four months in 1919; employed as order clerk 1914-15;
private and corporal. United States Marine Corps. 1917-1919;
appointed Vice-Consul at Dunfermline. January 30. 1920; at
Hull, September 19, 1921.
Scott, George. — Born December 25, 1872; employed in the
Isthmian Canal Commission 1904-1907; appointed laborer in
;he Department of State August 20, 1907; assistant messenger
March 2, 1908; messenger February 2, 1921; chief messenger
June 30, effective July i, 1923.
Scott, John Alexander.— Bom in Austin, Minn., January 3,
1897; attended grammar school in South Pasadena. Calif.. 1909-
1913; Polytechnic High School in Los Angeles. Calif.. 1914-
1916; employed in a clerical capacity by business houses in
Los Angeles to 1918; stenographer and clerk in the General
Administration Bureau, Bureau of Ordnance, Washington,
1918; appointed Vice Consul at Bordeaux October 5, 1918; at
Strasbourg November 19, 1920; at Dresden December 29, 1921.
Scott, Lila Curtiss.— Born in Canaan, Conn.; high-school
graduate; nurse for a State hospital 1917-18; clerk for a political
organization 1919-20; clerk in Census Bureau and United States
Coal Commission 1920-1924; appointed a clerk at $1,140, tempo-
rarily, in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
October 6, 1924.
Scott, Walter. — Born June 30, 1874; attended public school;
employed as printer and lithographic pressman in the Hydro-
graphic Office, Navy Department, for fourteen years; employed
as lithographer in the Department of State April 4, 1904.
Scott, Winfleld Harrison.— Bom in Alexandria. Va., January
13, 1892; home, Washington. D. C; attended Business High
School in Washington, Georgetown Law School three years,
and Bliss School of Languages two years; served in the United
States Army June, 1916 to October, 1919, retiring as first lieu-
tenant; clerk in the Consulate at Alexandria April, 1921, to Feb-
ruary, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Alexandria February 27,
1922; appointed, after examination (June 26, 1922), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Alexan-
dria March 2, 1923; to Bombay November 28, 1923; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer, imclassified, July 1, 1924; detailed to the De-
partment of State September 13, 1924.
Scott, Winthrop Ramsdell.— Bom in Paris. France, of Ameri-
can parents December 7. 18S8; home. Manistee. Mich.; gradu-
ated from the University of Michigan (B. Arch.) 1911; em-
ployed as an architect in Chicago nine months; instructor in
Case School of Applied Science. Cleveland, five years, and
manager of the ornamental brick department of a Cleveland
company two years of same period; served in the United
States Army as lieutenant and captain September, 191 7. to
July. 1920; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920),
Consul of class seven June 4. 1920; detailed to Paris. August a,
1920; to Nancy June 28. 1923; assigned to Cape Haitien Septem-
ber 21. J923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
Scotten, Robert McGregor.— Born in Detroit, Mich.. August
18, i8gi; home. Detroit; spent a year in University of Michigan;
graduate of Yale University (A. B.), 1914; taught in the Yale
Mission School at Changsha, China, 1914-15; took a course at
Harvard University, 1915-16; appointed, after examination
(April 10, 1916), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class five
May 17, 1916; assigned to Berlin June 6, 1916; appointed Sec-
retary of class four August 3, 1916; assigned to Madrid February
12, 1917; appointed Secretary of class three July 13, 1917;
assigned to Guatemala October 14, 1919; iinassigned April 8.
1920; assigned to Paris February 28, 1921; to Berlin January 17 ,
192a; appointed Secretary of class two March 23, 1922; assigned
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
191
to Constantinople May 5, 1922; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class four July i, 1924; assigned as First Secretary of
Embassy at Rio de Janeiro November 15, 1924.
Sears, Floyd. — Bom in New York City May 5, 1896; at-
tended high school two years; clerk and stenographer for a
Boy Scout association 1912-1917, and secretary for a film cor-
poration 1917-18; served in the United States Marine Corps
May, 1918, to March, 1919; stenographer for a steamship com-
pany in Lima, Peru, 1920-1923; appointed Consular Agent at
Salaverry October i, 1923.
* Seeger, Eugene. ^Retired as Consul-General at Rio d«
Janeiro May, 1906. Register of 1913.
Seibold, Leonelda Selkirk. — Bom in Cumberland, Md.;
graduated from Saint Edwards' Academy, Cumberland, from
Notre Dame Seminary, Columbus, Ohio, and from business
college, Cumberland; stenographer for a hardware firm in
Washington, D. C, 1912-1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily
at $1,100 in the Department of State March 14, 1918; at $1,300
July i; at $1,260 September i; at $1,320. December i, 191S; at
$1,400 October 5 eflective October 1. 1920; clerk at $1,000,
under Civil Service rules, February i. 1921; class one March i,
1921; class two September 16, 1932; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Seltzer, George Edward.— Bom in Vilna. Russia, December
II, 1888; father naturalized in Brooklyn, N. Y., 1897; home,
Brooklyn; attended the grammar and high schools of Brook-
lyn, 1895-1908; Harvard University, 1908-1911 (A. B.). 1912;
New York University School of Commerce, 1912-1914, book-
keeper and office manager in New York, 1913-1917; d :k and
accountant in offices in Argentina, Urugiiay, and Paraguay,
1917-18; appointed Vice-Consul at Asuncion October 7, 1918;
appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three. October 26. 1921, and assigned to
Salina Cruz; assigned to North Bay February 12, 1934; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 10, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Seltzer, Harry Gabriel. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
assigned to the Department of State, July, 1917. Register
of 1916.
Settle, Ada Gertrude. — Bom in Londonderry, Vt., attended
high school and college; clerk in Government departments
March-October, 1919; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, March 25. 1920; at
$1,100 April I, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Severe, Marc L. — Bom in Knight County, Iowa, June 14,
1891; has a public school and college and business college
education; clerk and stenographer in business concerns 191 1-
1914; held temporary positions in several Departments of the
Government 1914-15; appointed a clerk in the navy yard at
Norfolk, January 24, 1916; transferred to the Department
of State as clerk at $900 June 20. 191 7; appointed clerk at $1,000
October 3. 191 7; clerk in the .American Embassy at Paris May
6, 191S; Vice-Consul at Paris. April 15, 1919.
* Sewell, William L.— Died in Canada March 25, 1906, while
Consul at Pernambuco. Register of 1913.
♦ Seyfert, Augustus G.— Retired as Consul at Owen Sound
October, 1912. Register of 1913.
Shand, Miles Martin. — Born in New Brunswick. N. J., Jan-
uary 10, 1859; educated in the public schools of New Bruns-
wick; appointed temporary clerk in the Department of State
March 20, 1882; permanently at $1,0100 August 5, 1882; class one
July I, 1889; class two May 11. 1893; detailed on special mission
to consulates in the West Indies April-May, 189S; appointed
clerk class three June 25. to be effective July i, 1900; class four
July I, 1903; Chief of the Bureau of Appointments November
2, 1908; member of the Board of Examiners for the Diplomatic
Service; appointed drafting officer at $3,000 June 17. effective
July I. 1921.
Shaner, Maurice P.— Bom in Pottstown, Pa., June 7, 189S;
attended Lehigh University 1920, and George Washington
University Law .School 1921-1924; chief clerk for the American
Mining Congress in Washington, D. C. 192 1; clerk in the
American Agency, Norwegian Claims Arbitration, Januarj'-
November, 1922; appointed stenographer in the American
Agency. American and British Claims Arbitration. November
2, 1922; also Special Disbursing Officer of the Agency.
♦Shank, Samuel Herbert.— Retired as Consul of class six.
assigned to Queenstown. December i, 1919. Register of 1918.
♦ Shank Un, Arnold.— Retired as Consul-General of class three
assigned to Mexico City October, 1915. Register of 1914.
Shantz, Harold. — Bom in Rochester. N. Y., January 10,
1894; home. Rochester; graduated from University of Roches-
ter (B. .S.) iQrs; employed as newspaper reporter and corre-
spondent; insurance solicitor; assistant secretary. Rochester
Chamber of Commerce; in charge export department of a
button manvifactory; served in the United States Anny June,
1916 to April. 191 7; student in barracks May-August. 1917,
and as lieutenant and captain August, 1917 ,to December, 1918;
appointed, after examination (June 27. 1921). Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three C>ctober 26. 192 1; assigned to Calcutta
December 14, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carrifere of class
two February 26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923; Consul of
class seven June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924; assigned to Toronto July 7, 1924.
Sharp, Charles Van.— Bom in Victor, Colo., April 27, 1897;
attended ,St. James English College (Punta Arenas, Chile);
clerk for a commercial concern January to July. 1913; clerk in
the American Consulate at Punta Arenas 1913-1924; appointed
Vice Consul at Punta Arenas March 26, 1924.
♦Sharp, Hunter. — Died at his post (Edinburgh) December 17,
1923, while a Consul of class three. Register of 1932.
♦ Sharp, William Graves.— Retired as Ambassador to France
April. 1919. Died at Elyria, Ohio, November 17, 1933. Regis-
ter of 191S.
Sharps, Lloyd. — Born October 15, 1861; appointed laborer
in the Department of State October 8, 1898; assistant messen-
ger July I, 1903; messenger July i, 1907.
♦ Shaughnessy, Walter D.— Retired as Consul at Aguascali*
entes April, 1910. Register of 1913.
Sbaw, Gardiner Howland.- Born in Boston, Mass., June 15,
1893; home, Boston; graduated from Harvard College (A. B.)
1915; attended Harvard Law School and Harvard Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences two years; appointed, temporarily,
at $1,200 in the Department of State Octobers. 1917: appointed,
after examination (June 25, 191 7), a Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class four May 3, 1918; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State May 29, 1918; to the American Commission to
Negotiate Peace July 11 to December 20, 1919; appointed Sec-
retary of class three December 20, 1919; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State January 7. 1920. effective from December 20, 1919;
to the American Commission at Constantinople May 26, 1931;
appointed Secretary of class two September 22, 1922: Foreign
Service Officer of class four July i, 1924; class three Novem-
ber 17, 1924.
Shaw, George Price.— Bom in Pittsburg, Kans., vSeptcmber
15, 1892; home, San Diego, Calif.; educated in public and com-
mercial schools, in naval officers' training school, and by pri-
vate tutors; employed in railway work, with a lumber com-
pany, in mining, and as clerk six years; instmctor in Spanish;
with the Civil Service Commission two mosths, and the Ship-
ping Board two years; ensign in the United States Navy one
year, 191S; appointed, after examination (January 19. 1920),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three. May 24. 1920; assigned to
Tampico November 29, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere
of class two May 26, 192 3; assigned to Puerto Cortes December 22,
1933; appointed Vice-Consul de carrifere of class one February
36, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; assigned to
Puerto Cortes December 23, 1933; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Tegucigalpa
Octobei 22, 1934.
♦ Shea, Joseph Hooker.— Retired as Ambassador to Chile May
1921. Register of 1918.
Shedd, Margaret Ruth.— Bom in Rochester, N. Y.; gradu-
ated from the Robert Emmet Grammar School, Chicago, and
from Western High School, Washington, D. C; took course at
Washington Business and Civil Service School; employed in
offices in Washington, March 36, 1918, to July, 1918; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, at $1,140 in the Department of State
August I. iQiS; at Si. 500 November i. 1919; clerk cf class one,
under Civil Service rules, January 12, 1921; class two December
30, 1922, effective January i, 1933; class three May 31 effective
June I, 1934; at $i,86o July i, 1924.
Sheffield, James Rockwell. — Born in Dubuque, Iowa, in
1864; graduated from Vale University and Harvard University;
serv'ed one term as a member of the Assembly of New York in
1893; president of the Board of Fire Commissioners in New York
City 1895-1898; president of two clubs; engaged in the practice
of law several years and served as a receiver for a public utilities
corporation; appointed .\mbassador ^Extraordinary and Pleni-
potentiary to ^iexico September 9. 1924.
192
BIOGRAFHICAL STATEMENT.
*Shepard, Donald D'Arcy.— Retired as Consul of class five,
assigned to Malaga, February 1924. Register oi 1924.
» Shepard, James M.— Retired as Consul at Hamilton, Onta-
rio, December, 1914. Register of 1914.
Shepler, Raymond Vance.— Bom in Byesville. Ohio. Novem-
ber 30. iSg-i; graduated from Ohio State University (A. B.)
1916; (LL. B.) 1920; enlisted in the United States Army Octo-
ber I, 1917; second lieutenant March 1 to July 15, 1919; ap-
pointed a l;iw clerk at $2,000 in the Department of State, under
Civil Sers-ice rules. July 17. 1920; at 82,250 December 30, 1922,
efifective January i, 1923; at $3,000 July i, 1924.
Sherman, Anthony.— Born in Waltham. .Minn., October 28,
1894; attended the University of Southern Minnesota four years;
took a correspondence course with Franklin Institute, and
studied Spanish at the Milton School, Washington, D. C. ;
stenographer and clerk in Austin and Cloquet, Minn., 1912-13,
clerk in the Bureau of Construction and Repair, Navy Depart-
ment, 1913-1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Rio Grande do Sul
April 2, 1917; A'icc-Consul at Porto Alegre June 18, 191S; at
Guadalajara November 4. 19:9; at Nuevo Laredo July i. 1920;
at Guadalajara November i, 1921; at Frontera November 10,
1923; at Guadalajara February 20, 1924.
Sherman, Harry Tuck.— Born in Bucksport, Me., August
13, 1866; educated in public schools in Boston, two years in
Brown University, and three years Middle Temple Law School,
London; clerk in shipping house in Antwerp; engaged in
newspaper work as proprietor and editor and in other literary
pursuits; appointed clerk in the Consulate at Antwerp July 10,
1890; resigned January i, 1891; reappointed July i, 1892; retired
June 30, 1.S93; appointed Deputy Consul-General September
7, 1901; Vice and Deputy Consul-General May 10, 1907; Vice-
Consul February 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Cork May 22, 1917;
at London March 3, 1918; at Antwerp December 17. 1918.
* Sherrill, Charles Hitchcock.— Retired as Minister to Argen-
tina July, 1911. Register of 1913.
Shipley, Milford Argyle.— Bom in Washington, D. C, July
I, 1900: public-rchool education: employed in War and Interior
Departments September 15, 1917, to Tune 19, 1920; appointed a
clerk at Sgoo in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, August 7, 1920; at $1,000 February 7, 1921; at $1,100 De-
cember 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; class one October i,
1923; at Si,44o July I, 1924.
Shipley, Ruth Bielaski.— Bom in Montgomery Coimty, Md.:
educated in public schools; clerk in the patent office 1903-1909
appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State,
August 2";, 1914; permanently a clerk of class one, under Exec-
utive order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1918; appointed
clerk class two June 16, 1917; class three, temporarily, May i,
191S; class four March i, 1919; appointed a special assistant at
Si.ooo December 31, 1919, effective January 1, 1920; drafting
officer at S2.500 March i, 1921; at $2,800 July i, 1924; at $3,000,
November i, 1924.
Shipman, Samuel Richard.— Bom in Leesburg, Va., March
23, 1S71; educated in the grade schools of Fairfax County, Va.;
farmer and proprietorof country store 1S91-1913; salesman 1913-
14: employed in various Government bureaus 1914-1919; ap-
pointed _an assistant messenger in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, January 16, 1919.
* Shirley, John H.— Retired as Consul at Charlottetow n
May, 1903. Register of 1913.
Shockley, William Penn.— Born in Milford, Del.. July 3,
1869; attended the public schools of Delaware and gradu-
ated from Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. (Ph. B.), 1894; mem-
ber of the town council of Dover, Del., two years; admitted
to the bar and practiced law in Dover, 1897-1913; appointed
Deputy Consul at Bordeaux October 3, 1913; Vice-Consul at
Bordeaux February 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Genoa February
7. 1917-
* ShoecraJt. Eugene Claire.— Retired as .Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class two. assigned to Budapest, January, 1924.
Register of 1924.
Sholes, Walter H.— Born in Brooklyn, N. V., February 17,
1883; home, Oklahoma City; educated in public schools, Em
erson Institute, George Washington University, and in Berlin
Germany; newspaper correspondent and editor in Oklahoma
and Washington; appointed, after examination (May 36, 1909),
Consul at Aden August 19, 1911; Consul at Nantes September
I, 1913; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5,
1915; assigned to St. Michael's March 2, 1915; to Berne Sep-
tember 17, 1915; on detail in the Department of State May-
September, 1917; appointed Consul of class si-t September 11,
1917. and assigned to Ntievo Laredo; to Goteborg March 10.
1919; appointed Consul of class five September 5, 1919; Foreign
Service Officer of class six July i. 1924.
Shorter, Ransellear Freeman.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
August 27, 1901; high-school education; employed as porter
and elevator conductor 1920-21; elevator conductor Superin-
tendent's Office, State, War, and Navy Building 1921-1923;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed an
assistant messenger, under Civil Ser\-ice rules, June 7, 1923.
* Shotts, George W. — Retired as Consul of class eight, assigned
to Sault Ste. Marie, October, 1922. Register of 1922.
Shreve, Edgar Allan.— Born in Dunn Loring. Va., Septem-
ber J I, 1882; attended public school; graduated from the Wash-
ington Business High School in 1901 and from the Bliss Elec-
trical School in 1902; employed as clerk in real -estate office,
igoi-02; manager of printing company, 1902-1908; appointed
clerk in the Department of State, temporarily, September 16,
190S; retired March 15. 1909; appointed clerk in the Interior De-
partment, Bureau of Indian Affairs, temporarily, at ^5900,
March 29. 1909; appointed clerk in the Department of State, at
$900, under Civil Service rules, April 2d, 1909; at $1,000 Decem-
ber 20, 1909; class one October 21, 1910; class two June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; class three March i, 1919; secretary of
the hoards of examiners for the foreign ser\'ice. March 13, 1919,
to June 24, 1921; appointed clerk of class four March 16, 1923;
at .$2,100 July I, 7924; desigfnated assistant Chief of the Office of
the Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel
Board August 19, 1924.
Shuler, Adeline Creighton.— Bom in Vance, S. C; attended
Asheville Normal School and graduated from M'inthrop College
(A. B.) 1922; employed as stenographer June, 1922 to January,
1924; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, February I, 1924; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Shutan, William H. — Major, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military- Attache at Habana Januarys 2, 1923.
Sickel, Francis Jay.— Born in Bristol, Pa., September 21,
1887; graduated from Central High School (Philadelphia) 1905;
employed in a clerical capacity by several manufacturing con-
cerns 1906-1918; served in the United States Marine Corps
1918-1923; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, August 2, 1923; at $1,100 May
31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,380 July i. 1924.
* Sickles, Stanton.— Retired as Secretary of the Legation to
Greece and Montenegro August, 1908. Register of 1913.
Siegel, Charles.— Born in Macon, Ga., December 28. 1895;
attended public schools, and Business High Night School
1914-1917; clerk for a casualty company 1912; apprentice in a
dental laboratory 1912-13; messenger boy. Pension Bureau,
1913-1915, General Land Office 1915-1917; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, in the Department of State June 22, 1917; per-
manently at $900, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, October 17, 1917;
at $1,000, May i, 191S; class one, August i, 1918; class two De-
cember 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924
Sigmond, Frithjof Carl.— Bom in Zumbrota, Minn., April 26,
1883; attended the public schools of Minnesota and studied
five years in the schools of Norway; clerk in Chicago and
Portland, Oreg.. five years; messenger in Consulate at Stavan-
ger nine months; appointed \'icc and Deputy Consul at Sta-
vanger August 16, 191 1; Vice and Deputy Consul at Bergen
November 6. 1914; Vice-Consul at Bergen by act approved
February 5, 1915; retired June, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at
Stavangcr May 8, 1919.
*Silliman, John Reid.— Died at his post (Guadalajara)
January 17, 1919. Register of 1918.
Silvers, Edward Everett. — Bom in Morristown. N. J., August
7, 1896; home. Morristown; attended Pratt Institute, Brooklyn,
N. Y., 1914-15; Emerson Institute, Washington, D. C, 1915-
1917; University of Nancy, France, 1919; stenographer for a
commercial concern 1914-15; claim clerk for the Holland-Amer-
ican line six months in 1915; clerk in the A\'ar Department, office
of the Quartcnnaster General July, 1915, to October, 1917; served
in the LInited States Army November, 1917; to July, 1919; clerk
in the American Consulate at Seville 1919-20; appointed Vice-
Consul at Vigo September 27, 1920; at Malaga July 11, 1921; at
Seville May 17, 1922; appointed, after examination (January i6,
1922), Vice-Consul decarriere of class three Alay 26, 1922; detailed
to Almcria June 21, 1922; assigned to Seville June 23, 1922; to
Almeria August 21, 1922; to Seville November 7, 1922; to Cadiz
November 8, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two November 23, 1923; assigned to Seville December 21, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
193
Simmons, Edward Thomas.— Born in Philadelpliia June 23,
i'St; appointed an assistant messenger in the Department of
i^tate August 4. 1916.
Simmons, Paul Alexander. — Born in Philadelphia, Pa.,
May II, 1S89; appointed an assistant messenger in the Depart-
ment of State September 22. 1917; messenger September i. 1921.
Simons, John Farr. — Bom in Orange, N. J., January 3. 1892;
home. New York City; attended school at Elizabeth, N. J.,
1902-1909; graduated from Princeton University (B. A.) 1913;
employed as tutor in England and Switzerland 1914-15; em-
ployed by a thimble manufacturing concern in Philadelphia
1916; appointed Vice-Consul at Vienna January 19, 1917; Vice-
Consul at Paris July 13, 1917. transferred to Vienna August 13,
1919; appointed, after examination (June 24, 191S), Vice-Consul
de carriire of class three >Iay 24, 1920; as^igtied to Paris Novem-
ber 5, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two Xo-
vember 17, 1921; class one Jlay 26, 1922; Consul of class sevcu
March i, 1923; remained at Paris on detail; appointed Consul
of class six December 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class
seven July i, 1924.
Simoason, Richard De Witt.— Born in Hamilton, Ohio,
January 23, 1901; attended University of Oregon October,
1919, to Jtme, 1920, and Fairmont College 1921-1924; employed
in a bank three years; proof reader for a newspaper company
1920-1922; clerk in the American Consulate General at Calcutta
February 27, 1924, to July 13, 1924; appointed Vice-Consul at
Calcutta July 14, 1924.
*Simpich, Frederick. — Retired as Consul of class three, de-
tailed to the Department of State, March, 1923. Register of 1922.
Simpson, Julia Fuller.— Born in Wenona, 111.; graduate of
Business High School, Washington, D. C, 1905; stenographer
and bookkeeper in Washington, D. C, 1905-1908; appointed
a clerk, temporarily, at S720 in the Department of State July 7,
1917; at S990 March i, 191S; at Si, 200 July i, 191S; at $1,320
November i, 1919; at $1,400 October 5, effective October i,
1920; clerk of class one. under Civil Service rules. December 15,
1920; class two .\ugust 16, 1921; at Si, 860 July i, 1924.
Sinclair, Neil.— British subject, born on Prince Edward
Island. 1S43; merchant; appointed Consular Agent at Sum-
merside October 8, 1907.
* Singh, Sehawa. — Retired as Marshal at Nanking May,
1906 Register of 1914.
*Sink, H. Hoyle. — Retired as marshal at .\moy July, 1917.
Register of 1916.
Sisler, Clarence Eugene.— Bom in Washington, D. C. June
16, 18S1; graduate of the Washington high school, 1S99; special
courses in Young Men's Christian Association, Gonzaga Col-
lege, and Sprague Correspondence School of Law; stenogra-
pher, bookkeeper, timekeeper, and chief clerk purchasing
department of the Washington Railway & Electric Co., 1S99-
1904; appointed clerk in the Depot Quartermaster's Depart-
ment at Large, War Department, under Civil Service rules,
March S, 1904; transferred to the Department of State as clerk
at $goo December 2, 1904; appointed clerk class one July 2,
1906; class two July i, 1908; class three May i, 1916; class four,
August I, 191S; at $2, 100 July i, 1924.
Skinner, James Sidney. — Born in Liberty, Tex., May 22,
1865; educated in private schools and Washington and Lee
University; cotton factor and commission merchant in Galves-
ton, Tex.; appointed inspector in customs service at Galveston,
December, 1904; resigned June 8, 1905, to accept appointment
in the Department oi State; appointed clerk at S900, under
Civil Service rules, June 6, 1905; class one July 2, 1906; class
two Marcli 4. 1007; class three July 24. 1914; class four July i,
1921; at $2,100 July I, IJ24.
Skinner, Robert P.— Born in Massillon, Ohio, February 24,
t866; home. Massillon; public and high school education; news-
paper publisher, 18S6-1.S97, in Massillon; appointed, after ex-
amination (November 6, 1897), Consul at Marseille December
18, 1897; Consul-General April 9, 1901; commissioner and pleni-
potentiary to establish relations and to negotiate a treaty
between the United States and lithiopia June 22. 1903; Consul-
General at Hamburg June 10, 1908; on special detail for the pur-
pose of adjusting the claims of tlie creditors of the Republic of
Liberia in Great Britain, France, Germany, and the Nether-
lands March 2, to June 6, 1912; appointed Consul-General at
Berlin November 34, 1013; Consul-General at London June 26,
1914; Consul-General of class one by act approved February s,
1915; appointed American representative on the Nitrate of
Soda Executive, composed of delegates of the Allied Powers
for the control and purchase of certain supplies February 5.
191S; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924;
assigned to Paris August 6, 1924.
Skinner, Sidney Allan.— Born in Washington. D. C, Au-
gust 7, 1S91; educated in private schools of Texas; is a high-
school graduate and took a course in a business school; stenog-
rapher with electric companies, 1913-14; appointed a clerk,
temporarily, in the Department of State, CDctober 21, 1914;
pennanently, a clerk of class one, under Executive order of
June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk, class two,
April 13, 1917; clerk to the American Commission to Nego-
tiate Peace Xovcnil)er 30, 1918; reappointed clerk of class two
in tlie Department of State July i, 1919; appointed clerk of
class three December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920; at
Si, 860 July 1, 1924.
Slater, Fred C. — Bom in Germany November 10, 1S64; father
naturalized during his minority; home. Topeka, Kans.; at-
tended the pubHc schools and graduated from the high school
of Junction City, Kans., in 1887; practiced law for seventeen
years in Topeka; appointed, after examination (April 7, 1908),
Consul at Sarnia July 16, 1909; Consul of class eight by act ap-
proved February 5, 1915; appointcti Consul of class seven
September 5, 1919; assigned to Newcastlc-on-Tyne September
16, 1919; to Corunna September 7, 1922; to Fort William and
Port Arthur April 18, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class eight July i. 1924; assigned to Sarnia December 12,
1924.
Slaughter, Imogen.— Bom in Danville. Va.; attended public
schools, Randolph Macon Institute one year, normal schools
two years, business colleges one year; clerk in various Govern-
ment bureaus and in a business house one and a half years;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, January 17, 1921; at Si, 000 October 16. 1922;
at Si, TOO October i, 1923; class one February i, 1924; at $1,440
July I. I9:!4.
Slawson, David Henry.- Bora in Greenville, Mich.. July 11,
1886; clerk in the American Consulate General at Paris October
I, 1916, to December 31, 1924; appointed Vice-Consul at Paris
January- 2, 1925.
♦Sleeper, Jacob. — Retired as Secretary of the Legation at
Beme March, 1910. Register of 1913.
Sloan, Alexander K. — Bom in Greensburg, Pa., November
IX, 1SS2; home, Greensburg; graduated from Princeton L'ni-
versity (A. B.) 1907; attended University of Pittsburgh 1915-16;
representative of an American smelting company one year:
licad master of a school in Tacoma. Wash., 1908-1910; general
manager of a commercial concern in Seattle, Wash., 1910-11;
engaged in buyin? and selling coal properties in Alaska, Brit-
ish Columbia, and Washington igir-1917; served as first
lieutenant. United States Army, General .Staff; appointed,
after examination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de carricre of
class three January 15, 1921; assigned to Ceiba March 15, 1921;
appointed Consul of class seven June 20. 1921; assigned to
Ceiba June 23, 1921; detailed to Budapest September 21, 1923;
appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Ofiicer of class eight Jiily i, 1924.
♦Slocum, Clarence Rice.- Died at his post (Fiume) February
as. 1912. Register of 19:3.
Smale, William Apsley.— Bom in Beloit, Wis., April 17I
1896; home, San Diego, Calif.; attended the San Diego. Calif.,
High School 1910-1914; De Paul University of Law and a
commercial school 1913-16; University of Illinois 1910-17;
employed in various capacities in California and Illinois
three years; served as second lieutenant United States Army
1917-18; aid-de-camp to Maj. Gen. Morrison December 17.
191'^. to Januarj' 13, 1919; appointed clerk in the .\merican
Consulate at Mexicali Febmary 23. 1919; Vice-Consul at
Mexican April 3, 1919: at Nogales October 4, 1920; at Habana
March 2, 1921; at Matanzas March 30, 1923; at Habana July
14, 1913; appointed, after examination (Januari' 15, 1923), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three October 6, 1923; assigned to
Habana October 12. 1923; to Nassau March 26, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
♦Smith, Abraham E.— Died at his post (Victoria. British
Columbia), January 18, 1915. Register of 1914.
♦Smith, Arthur Donaldson.— Retired as Consul at Aguas-
calientes Ai^il, 1911. Register of 1911.
Smith, Arthur James.— Bom in New Orleans, La., March
13. 1S77; watchman in the Navy Department 1903-1917; ap-
pointed assistant messenger in the Department of State Octo-
ber 8, 1917.
♦Smith, Calvin Franklin.— Retired as Consul at Zanzibar
April, 1908. Register of 1913.
194
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Smith, Carothers H. — Born October 17, 1S77; appointed
laborer in the Department of State July 2, 1906; assistant mes-
senger July I,- 1907.
Smith, Clarence Thomas.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
March 17, 1903; attended high school 1918, and business college
1920; employed by private concerns 1918-1924; appointed a
clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, July 16, 1924.
Smith, Elizabeth Bertha. — Bom in Ocala, Fla.; graduated
fronr high school; spent one year at Northwestern University;
employed as a stenographer in Florida 1915-1917; with the
Fuel Administration and the War Department 1917-1919;
appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, August 6. 1919; class two December 30, 1922,
effective January i, 1923; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Smith, Elizabeth Louise. — Bom in Otterbein, Ind.; attended
high school one year, and a business college; stenographer for
State chemist January, 1922, to June, 1924; appointed a clerk
at $1,500 in the Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules
August 5, 1924.
Smith, Ethelbert Talbot.— Born in Goshen, N. Y., July
21, 1892; home, Hartford, Conn,; graduated from Trinity Col-
lege (A. B.) 1913; Columbia University (LL. B.) 1916; admit-
ted to the bars of Connecticut and New York; employed as
high-school teacher; physical director; law clerk; in claim de-
partment of insurance company; practiced law; served in
United States Army as sergeant, lieutenant, and captain,
June, 1917, to April, 1919; appointed, after examination (June
27, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 26,
1921; assigned to Tientsin, December 14, 1921; appointed Vice-
Consul de carri&re of class two February 26, 1923; assigned to
Berlin April 27, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
one November 23, 1923; Consul of class seven June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
*Smith, Felix Willoughby.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Tiflis, March 1919. Died at Battle Creek, Mich.,
January 11, 1920. Register of 1918.
Smith, Frances Ionia. — Bom in Washington, D. C. ; attended
the public, high, and normal schools of Washington, D.C, busi-
ness college, and Polytechnic Night School, Los Angeles,
Cal.; teacher in the public schools of Washington, 1891-1897;
taught shorthand in a business college five months; stenogra-
pher and office assistant three months; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, at $1,080 in the Department of State September
5, 191S; at S:,2oo November i, 1919; clerk at $1,100. under Civil
Service rules. December 31. 1920; effective January i. 1921;
class one August 16, 1921; class two October i, 1923; at $1,680
July I, 1924.
Smith, Gaston.— Born in New Orleans. La.. February 14,
1871; home. New Orleans; educated in public and private
schools; clerk and cashier, 1890-1898 and 1901-1905; second lieu-
tenant. Second Louisiana Regiment, United States Volunteer
Army, 1898-99; United States Government service, 1905-06;
Philippine service, 1906-1911; appointed, after examination
(June 2 7, 19 10), Consulat A guascalientes August 19,1911; Consul
of class ni-Be byact approved February 5,1915; appointed Consul
of class eightMarch 2, 1915; Consul of class seven September 14,
1917, and assigned to Bluefields; did not go to Bluefields; as-
signed to Almeria November 5. 1917; to Malaga July 25, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six September 5. 1919: assigned to
Georgetown April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer of
class seven July i, 1924.
Smith, Glenn Alrln.- Bora in Avondale, Tenn., September
27. 1876; attended public schools and Knoxville Business
College; graduated from the National University Law School,
Washington, D. C. (LL. B), 1921; (M.P.L. and LL. M.)
National University Law School and American University,
1922; member of the bar of the District of Columbia;
clerk in railway and other offices 1892-1900; appointed clerk at
$1,000 in the office of the Chief Signal Ofhcer, War Department,
temporarily, December 24, 1898; clerk at $900 in the Adjutant
General's Office, War Department, January 17, 1900; at $1,000
August 29, 1904; class one December 14, 1905; transferred to the
Department of State as clerk at $900 January 30, 1909; appointed
clerk of class one December i, 1909; class two June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; class three May i, 1920; class four January
16, 1922; at $2,100 July I, 1924.
Smith, Harold Leslie.— Bom in Shippensburg, Pa., Novem-
ber 15, 1894; graduated from Swarthmore College (A. B.) 1917;
employed in survey work and in a bank in Coatesville, Pa..
1912-13; with the Chautauqua Association of Pennsylvania
1914-1917; served in the United States Army in 1918-19;
with the American Peace Mission in Paris; with the Director
of Polish Relief 1919-20; appointed visa clerk in the American
Consulate at Antwerp January 12. 1921; Vice-Consul at Ant-
werp June8, 1921; atMalagaMay 17, 1923.
Smith, Hawley Armistead.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
October 16, 1892; attended the public schools of Washington,
graduating from Eastern High School in 1913: Dartmouth
College one semester; George Washington University one
semester; employed in various capacities during vacations;
playground director in Washington, D. C, ten months in
1916; entered officers training camp at Fort Meyer, Va., in
1917; received commission as captain in United States Army
and served five months with combatant division in France;
appointed Vice-Consul at Bristol February 24, 1919; at Beme
November 6, 1922; at Brussels April 5, 1924.
Smith, Helen Loretta.— Born in New York City; attended
high school 1913-1917; employed as stenographer by private
concerns 1917-1924; appo'nted a clerk at $1,320, temporarily, in
the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, December
1, 1924-
*Smith, James A. — Died in Monte Carlo September 29, 1920,
while en route to his post (Hongkong). Register of 1918.
Smith, Leland Leslie.— Bom in Portland, Oreg,, June 29,1885;
home, Portland; attended Portland Academy, Stanford Univer-
sity, the Ecole Internationale at Paris, and the Portland Busi-
ness College; with a security and mortgage concern in Portland
1908-1917; served in United States Army abroad 1917-1919;
Assistant Military Attach^ in Rumania 1919-20; appointed,
after examination (June 28, 1920), Consul of class seven June
13, 1921; assigned to Saigon July 21, 1921; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to Tunis
October 23, 1924.
*Smith, Madison Roswell.— Retired as Minister to Haiti
July, 1914. Register of 1913.
Smith, Marc. — Bora in Hamilton, Ohio, July i, 1875; home.
New York City; graduated from the Technical School of Cin-
cinnati, 1895; employed as stenographer and secretary in Cin-
cinnati, Paris, and New York City 1897-1919, including service
in the American Hospital, Paris. August, 1913, to September,
1918; appointed Vice-Consul at Odessa. December i, 1919; at
Jerusalem March 23, 1920; at Munich November 15. 1921.
Smith, Orlando Fairfax. — Born in Washington, D. C,
March 3, 1S86; public school and business college education;
stenographer in the District government offices 1908-1914;
appointed a temporary clerk in the Department of State
November 21, 1914; clerk of class one, under Executive order,
June 22, effective July i, 1916; clerk in the New York Passport
Bureau January-December, 1916; appointed clerk of class two
in the Department of State May i, igiS; clerk in the Embassy
at Paris October 4, 1918; reappointed a clerk of class one in the
Department of State February 10, 1919; class two March i. 1919;
resigned June 10, 1919; reappointed a clerk of class two October
I, 1919; class three January 25, 1922; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
* Smith, Reginald F.— Retired as Marsha! at Chefoo May,
1914. Register of 1913.
♦Smith, Samuel. — Retired as Consul at Moscow August,
1908. Register of 1913.
*Smith, Sydney. — Retired as Consul of class eight, assigned
to Ensenada December 1919, Register of 1918.
Smith, Sydney Yost.— Born in Washington, D. C, Novem-
JDer 28, 1857; educated in public schools and academy of Wash-
ington; bookkeeper in real-estate office; assistant official re-
porter. House of Represeatatives; appointed clerk in Pension
Office June 17, 1S80; resigned June 30, 1881, to accept appoint-
ment as clerk in Department of State; appointed temporary
clerk at $900 July 1, 1881; class one August 5, 1S82; class two,
temporary, July 24, 1884; class one December 19, 1884; class
two August 16, 1886; class three July i, 1889; class four Sep-
tember 5, 1891; Chief of the Diplomatic Bureau April 8, 1897;
member of the Board of Examiners for the Diplomatic Sers-ice;
disbursing officer of the delegation of the United States to the
Fourth International Conference of American States, Buenos
Aires, 1910; detailed as drafting expert to the American Com-
mission to Negotiate Pence November 30, I9I^; appointed
drafting officer at $3,000 July i. 1919; at $3,500 January 16, 1922;
at $3,800 July I, 1924.
Smith, Walter Evans.— Bom in Chattanooga, Tenn., June i,
1S98; attended high school; graduated from Washington and
Lee University (LL. B.) 1920; employed by a map company
in New York; instructor at the Hankow (China) Christian
College 1920-21; appointed Vice-Consul at Nanking July i, 1921.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
195
♦Smith, William Walker.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class one, assigned to the Department of State,
June, 1924. Register of 1924.
*Smith-Lyte, William.— Retired as Marshal at Constanti-
nople June, 1911. Register of 1910.
Smyth, Cecelia Rose. — Bom in Yonkers. N. Y.; attended
public schools, iind graduated from hiKh school 1917; employed
as clerk by several commercial concerns and tlie United States
,Signal Corps in New York City December, 19 17. to March 15,
1921; appointed a clerk of class two in the Passport Agency of
the Department of State in New York, under Civil Service
rules, March 15, 1921; at Si,68o July i, 1924.
Smyth, Robert Lacy.— Bom in Foochow, China, of American
parents December 18, 1894; home. Berkeley, Calif.; graduated
from the University of California (A. B.) 1917; employed in
surveying work and in the University of California; served in
American field service in France six months in 191 7 and in the
Foreign Legion of the French army October, 1917, to July, 1919,
retiring as a second lieutenant; appointed, after examination
(June 28, 1920), Student Interpreter in China August 27, 1920;
appointed Vice-Consul and Interpreter at Chungking January
2, 1923; at Hankow January 26, 1923; at Chungking May 13,
1934; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924,
•Snodgrass, John Harold.— Retired as Consul-General of
class two, assigned to Moscow January, 1917. Register of 1916.
Snyder, Alban Goshom.— Born in Charleston, W. Va., No-
vember 5, 1876; educated in the pubUc schools of Charleston
and the Washington and Lee University; employed as clerk
in the American Consulate at Ciudad Porfirio Diaz Novem-
ber I, 189S; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Ciudad
Porfirio Diaz May 8, 1899; retired October 26, 1901; appointed
Secretary of the Legation and Coasul-General at Bogota Feb-
ruary 12, 1903; served as Charge d'Affaires ad tntertm from
December 19, 1903, to December 8, 1904, and from May 24,
190s, to November 27, 1905; appointed Consul-General at
Buenos Aires June 22, 1906; Consul-General at Panama City
January 11, 1909; Consul-General of class four by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Christiania February 10, 1921;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924,
Snyder, Mary E.— Bom in Newport, Pa.; attended high
school at Newport; clerk in the Bureau of War Risk Insurance
May-August, 1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the
Department of State at $960 August 13,1918; at $1,020 Decem-
ber I, 191S; at $i,oSo March i, 1919; at Si, 140 November i, 1919;
at $1,200 October 5, effective October i, 1920; clerk at $900,
under Civil Service rules, February i, 1921; at Si. 000 Augur-t
16, 1921; at $1,100 March i, 1924; class one May 31, effective June
I, 1924; at $1,440 July I, 1924.
*Snyder, Nicholas R. — Retired as Consul of class five, as-
signed to Reichenberg July, 1917. Register of 1916.
Sokobin, Samuel.— Bora in Newark, N, J., April 28, 1893;
home, Newark; is a high-school graduate and spent one and
a half years at Cornell University; employed with various busi-
ness concerns and as a playground inspector during summer
vacations; statistical clerk for the New Jersey State Board of
Public Utility Commissioners, 1913-14; appointed, after exami-
nation (January 19, 1914), Student Interpreter in China April
4, 1914; Vice-Cousul at Tientsin, December 18, 1915; Inter-
preter at Shanghai, July 20, 1916: also Vice-Consul at Shanghai,
August 7, 1916; retired June, 191 7; appointed Vice Consul and
Interpreter at Nanking, May i, 1918; Vice-Cousul and Inter-
preter at Antung, March S, 19:9; Vice-Consul at Chungking
August 21, 1919; al=;o Interpreter August 25, 1919; Vice-C'onsul
and Interpreter at Swatow .August 9, 1920; at Kalgan Novem-
ber I J, 1920; appointed Consul of class six November 23, 1921;
remamed at Kalgan on detail; appointed Foreign Servce
Officer of class seven July i, 1924; class six August 8, 1924; as-
signed to Mukden September 12, 1924.
Solbert, Oscar N.— Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Military Attache at London .\pril 17. 1919.
♦Sorsby, William Brooks. — Retired as Minister to Bolivia
December, 1908. Died .March 26, 1912. Register of 1913.
*Soule. Edgar Clark. * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class eight July i, 1924. Retired as Consul at Cardiff
August, 1924, Register of 1924.
South, John Glover.- Bom in Frankfort, Ky., January 23,
1873; liome, Frankfort; attended public and private schools
and the University of Arkansas; graduated from University
of Louisville (M. D.) 1897; practiced medicine in Frankfort
1897-1921; president State board of health 1907-1921; president
Kentucky State Medical Association 1918-1920: vice president
of an oil company and a bank director; appointed Knvoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Panama
October 8. 1921,
Southard, Addison E.— Born in Louisville, Ky., October 18,
1884; home, Louisville; attended pubhc school in Louisville
and in Lebanon, Ohio, and the Lebanon University: assistant
to the superintendent of a sugar estate in Mexico, 1904-^35; en-
gaged in newspaper work in Lebanon, 1905-06; employed as a
stenographer with various firms. 1906-1908; under the Gov-
ernment of the Philippine Islands, 1908-1916, as confidential
clerk. Department of the Interior; chief clerk, cashier, and dis-
bursing officer Bureau of Science: business manager Philip-
pine Journal of Science; private secretary to the Secretary of
the Interior; secretary Philippine General Hospital Board;
member committee to verify worn and mutilated Philippme
silver certificates: appointed, alter examination (January 25,
1915), Consul of class nine September i, 1916; assigned to Aden
September 13, 1916; appointed Consul of class eight September
14, 1917; on detail in Abyssinia October-November, 1917; de-
tailed to Persia and left Aden ior Teheran May 16. 1918; ajj-
pointed Consul of class six September 5, 1019; cl.ass five June
4, 1920; detailed to Jerusalem November 11, 1920: appointed
Consul of class four November 23, 1921 ; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State July 24, 1922; appointed Consul of class three
March i, 1923; delegate to the World Motor Transport Congress,
Detroit, May, 1924; Consul General of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Southgate, Richard Brigham.— Bom in Worcester. Mass.,
May 5, iSg^; home, Worcester; graduated from Harvard
University (A. B.) 1915, and attended Harvard Law School
one year; employed with the War Trade Board four months,
in the American Embassy in Paris nine months, and in the
Department of State two months in 191S-19; appointed, alter
examination (May 19, 1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class four September s. 1919; assigned to Rome October 14,
igig; to the Department of State May 26, 1921; appointed
Secretary of class three August 24, 1921; designated for duty
in connection with the Conference on the Limitation of Arma-
ment September 17, 1921; assigned to Guatemala December 15,
1921; to Constantinople November 14, 1922; to the Depart-
ment of State August 6, 1923; appointed Secretary of class two
January 23, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class four July i,
1924.
Southworth, William Berry. — Bom in Duliith. Minn., May
28, 1896; home, Meadville, Pa.; graduated from Har\-ard
University (A. B.) 1918; took summer course in Columbia
University igig; employed as a private secretary, map sales-
man, playground director, and clerk; with the American
Red Cross in Europe nineteen months; in Census Bureau two
months; appointed, after examination (January 26, 1920);
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four April 7, 1920;
assigned to Lima June 14, 1920; to Mexico City August i, 1921;
appointed Secretary of class three September 22, 1922;
assigned to the Department of State March 20, 1923; to Asuncion
January 15, 1924; appointed Foreign Sers'ice Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
*Spahr, Herman Louis. — Retired as Consul of class six, as-
signed to Montevideo January, 1917. Register of 1916,
Spamer. Carl Ober. — Bom in Baltimore. Md., July 21. i.''84;
home, Baltimore; graduated from the Baltimore City College
1905, and from the law department of the University of Mary-
land (LL. B.) 1914; attended Johns Hopkins University sum-
mer school 1914-15; graduated from George Washington Uni-
versity (A. B.) February, 1916, (A. M.) June, 1916; admitted
to the Maryland bar August, 1914; employed at the St. Louis
Exposition during the summer of 1904; in printing ami pub-
lishing business in Los Angeles, Calif., 1905-1907; taught Eng-
lish in the Goveniment schools of Japan 1907-1010; traveled in
Cliina, India, Egypt, Palestine, and Europe 1910-11; clerk in
the Department of State April-June, 1916; Vice-Consul at
Basel August, 1916 to July, 1917; employed on confidential work
in Director's office. United States Food Administration,
August, 1917; to March, 1919: special expert and examiner,
Division of Operations, United States Shipping Board I^mer-
gency Fleet Corporation, April-October, 1919: appointed,
after examination (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven Septem-
ber 5, 1919; assigned to Medan May 26, 1920: detailed to Rotter-
dam August 17, 1923: appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Ofliccr of class
eight July i, 1924; detailed to Amsterdam July 11, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven August 8, 1924.
Spangler, Frank Le Roy. — Bora in Perry, Kans., September
24, 1895; home, Lecompton, Kan.; attended the University of
Kansas, 1914-1917; George Washington University, 1918;
learned the printing trade in Lecompton, Kans,, 1906-1912;
employed in various printing and newspaper offices in Kansas
32952—25-
-14
196
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
to 1917; in the composing room oi the W'ashinsrton (D. C.) Post
and by various printing establishments in Washington, 1917-18;
appointed, after examination (June 24. ipiS). a Consular Assist-
ant October 7, 191S; detailed to Helsingfors April 23, .1919;
appointed Vice-Consul at Helsingfors April 17, 1920; appointed
Vice-Consul de carricre of class three May 25, 1920, and assigned
to Helsingfors; appointed Vice-Consul de carrriee of class two
Xovember 17, 1921; assigned to Berlin December 13. 1921; to
Sofia April 27, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, un-
classified. July I. 1924.
Sparadoski, Genevieve Elizabeth. — Bom in Waterbury,
Conn.; educated in a convent and at business schools; stenog-
rapher. Polish Relief CorBmittee, October, 1915. to December,
1916: with business house 1917; clerk in the War Department
February, 191.';, to January. 1920; stenographer to a ^Iember of
Congress one year; appointed a clerk of class one in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, August 21, 1920; at
Si, 500 July I, 1924.
Spencer, Nettie S.^ — Bom in Cincinnati, Ohio; graduated
from Business High School (Washington, D. C.) 1906; stenog-
rapher lor private concern and for two patent attorneys two
years; served temporary appointments with various govern-
ment department? six years; appointed a clerk of class one in
the Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules, April 3.
1924; at Si, 500 July i, 1924.
Spencer, Willing.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 29,
1877; home. Philadelphia; educated in private schools in Phil-
adelphia, Massachusetts, Switzerland, and Germany; gradu-
ate of Harvard University (A. B.), 1899; took a year's instruc-
tion at the ficole Libre des Sciences Politiques, Paris, 1900;
graduated from the University of Pennsylvania law school,
and was admitted, after examination, to the Philadelphia bar,
1903; practiced law iu Philadelphia seven years; appointed,
after examination (March i. 1910). Third Secretary of the Em-
bassy at Petrograd March 31. 1910; clerk class one in the De-
partment of State, under Executive order. January 26, 1911;
class four June 27, 191 1; Second Secretary of the Embassy at
Berlin August 19, 1911; Secretary of the Legation at Caracas
February 11, 1914; Secretary of the Legation at Panama Janu-
ary 7. 1915; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by
act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Tegucigalpa March
9. 1916. to be Charge during absence of Minister; to San Josd.
Costa Rica, to he Charg^ during absence of Minister January 3,
1917, but did not enter on duty at that post; assigned to
Tokyo March 6, 1917; appointed Secretary of Embassy or Le-
gation of class two August 23, 1917; assigned to Peking Decem-
ber 29, 1917; to Tokyo June 19, 1918; reassigned to Peking
October 15. 1918; assigned to Lima March 5. 1920; to Teguci-
galpa July 29, 1920; appointed Secretary of class one August
24, 192 1 ; designated and assigned as Counselor of Embassy at
Madrid January 4, 1922: at Buenos Aires September 7, 1922;
appoint::d Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Spiker, Clarence Jerome.— Born in Washington, D. C, June
14, 18S8; home, Washington: graduate of Central High School,
took courses in Technical High School, and graduated from
George Washington University (A. B.). 1914; spent vacations
in work for law firms and in a railway office; clerk, draftsman,
and field location work in Water Department, District of Co-
lumbia, 1906-1914; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1914), Student Interpreter in China April 4. 1914; Vice-Consul
at Shanghai August 21, 1916; also Interpreter at Shanghai
August 25, 1916: designated to exercise judicial authority and
jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases, temporarily, Septem-
ber 17, 1918; appointed Vice-Consul at Antung August 21.
1919; also Interpreter August 25, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class one l^Iay 4, 1920, and assigned to Peking;
assigned to Chungking April 16, 1921; appointed Consul of class
seven March i, 1923; assigned to Chungking March 28, 1923; to
Swatow October .30, 1923; appointed Consul of class six Decem-
ber 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Sprague, Richard Louis.— Born in Gibraltar, of American
parents, >Iay 26. 1871; education received by private tuition;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Gibraltar June 20, 1893,
appointed Consul July 18, 1901; Consul of class eight by act
approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class six Sep-
tember 5, 1919; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924.
* Sprigg, Cirroll. — Retired as Diplomatic Agent and Consul-
General at Cairo, October, 192 1. Register of 1922.
Sprigman, Mary.— Bom in Washington, D. C; educated in
public schools; employed with United States Shii^ping Board
July 22. 1919. to -August 17, 1920; appointed a clerk at Si, 000 in
the Department of .'^tate. under Civil Service rules, August 18,
1920; at $1,100 December 30, 1922. effective January 1, 1923; class
one Xovember i, 19^3; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Springer, Joseph Alden.— Born in Portland. Me., May 17,
1844; educated in the United States and Cuba; engaged' in
patent and banking business in Habana, 1899-1902; appointed
temporary Consular Agent at Cardenas June i, 1867; retired
in 1868; appointed, after examination. Consular Clerk January
8, 1870; also Vice-Consul-General at Habana August 21, 1885;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General June 24, 1896; retired as Vice
and Deputy Consul-General April 21, 1898; resigned as Consular
Clerk July 1, 1899; reappointed Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Habana June 23, 1902; Vice-Consul at Habana Feb-
ruary 6, 191S.
Springs, Laertes Pittman.— Bom in Winston-Salem, N. C,
February 3, 1891; attended StaiitUon Military Academy, high
school, and George Washington University Law School; with
the American Expeditionary I'"orces abroad; employed with a
shipbuilding corporation at Alexandria. Va.. 1919; appointed
clerk in the American Consulate General at Rotterdam April,
192c; appointed \ice-Consul at Cherbourg December 29, 1921.
Squire, Paul Chapin.— Bom in Arlington, Mass., August 5,
1890; home, Boston; graduated from Harvard University (A.
B.) 191 1 ; engaged for several years as a wholesale and retail
provision dealer, and in a music store in Boston; appointed,
after examination (Alay 12, 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three September 27, 1919; assigned to St. Nazaire October
22. 1919; to Nantes December 29. 1919; appointed Consul of
class seven April 13, 1920; assigned to Dunkirk April 17, 1920;
to Lille May 17, 1922; appointed Consul of class six August 23
1922; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
* Squiers, Herbert Goldsmith.— Retired as Minister to Pan-
ama December, 1909. Died in London, England, October 19,
1911. Register of 1913.
♦Stabler, Jordan Herbert.- Retired as Chief of the Division
of Latin-American Affairs of the Department of State August,
1919. Register of 191S.
Staflord, Maurice Laclede.— Bom in Windsor. Mo., April 14,
1S85; home. Coronado, Calif.; attended AAMlliam Jewell College
and the University of California one year each; in new,=paper
work in vSt. Louis, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Washington. Chi-
cago, Atlanta, and San Diego ten years; appointed, after exam-
ination (May 12. 1919), Consul of class seven September 5, 1919;
assigned to S.intander October 29, 1919; to Barranquilla Decem-
ber 27, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924; class seven August 8, 1924.
Stambaugh, George Bingham.— Born in Marietta, Pa., Octo-
ber 16, 1S80; attended various business schools and George
Washington University; graduated from the Washington
College of Law (LL. B.) 1921; admitted to the bar of the Dis-
trict of Columbia; stenographer, typewriter, and accountant
with three business concerns in Pennsylvania five years;
appointed clerk in the Bureau of Standards, Department
of Commerce and Labor, at S720, under Civil Service rules,
November 15, 1904; storekeeper at $900 February i. 1905; at
$1,000 July I, 1905; transferred to the Department of State and
appointed clerk at $900, under Civil Service rules, December
7, 1905; clerk at $1,000 July 2. 1906; class one March 4, 1907;
class two July i, 1908; class four June 22. to be effective July
I, 1916; special assistant at $2,000 ilarch i, 1921; at $2,160 May 31
effective Jime i, 1924; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
Stambaugh, 2d, John. — Bom in Youngstown, Ohio, October
13, 1892; home, Youngstown; graduated from Cornell Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1915; employed in the steel business 1915-1923;
served as a private. First Ohio Cavalry, July, 1916, to April,
1917; captain in United States Army July. 1917 to April, 1919;
appointed, after examination (July 10, 1922), Secretary of
Ernbassy or Legation of class four September 23, 1922, and
assigned to the Department of State; assigned to Rome No-
vember 13, 1922; to The Hague June 3, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
* Stanard, Hugh Conway.— Retired as Consular Assistant,
unassigncd, June, 1920. Register of 1922.
* Stangeland, Charles Emil.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class three, assigned to London, August,
1915. Register of 1914.
Stanley, Elsie M. A. — Born in Boston, Mass.; high-school
graduate and took a commercial course; stenographer with a
Boston firm and a Member of Congress for a year and a half;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State
September i, 1914; permanently at $1,000, under Executive
order, June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk
class one. temporarily. December 7. 1917; class two December
31. 1920, effective January i, 1921; class three March i, 1924; at
$1,860 July I, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
197
Stanton, Edwin Forward. — Born in Bouckvillc, N. Y., Feb-
ruary 22, 1901; home Los Angeles, Calif.; attended Brcek's
Memorial School, South India, 1912-1916; Erasmus Hall High
School, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1917-1919; University of Southern
California February-June 1920; bank messenger in New York
Cky July 3 to September 6, 1918; statement clerk in a New
York bank July-Scptcmber 1919; typist in office of the registrar,
University of Southern California; stenographer for a firm in
Los Angeles 1920-21; appointed, after examination (January
24, 1921), Student Interpreter in China April 23, 1921; appointed
Vice-Consul at Mukden September 28, 1923; Vice-Consul at
Kalgan March 15, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924-
Stapleton, William Maynard. — Bom in Lewisburg, Pa.,
August 7, 1894; home, Lancaster, Pa.; graduated from Dickn-
son College (A. B.) 1917, (LL. B.) 1921, (A. M.) 1921; served m
the United States Army December, 1917, to July, 1919, retiring
with the rank of first lieutenant; teacher in high school at
Lancaster, Pa., 1922, and practiced law 1922-1924; appointed,
after examination (June 23, 1924), Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, also Vice-Consul of career, October 16, 1924; as-
signed to Sydney, New South Wales, No\'ember S, 1924.
Starbuck, George Benjamin. — Bom in Troy. N. Y., August
34, 1866; educated in private and public schools of Troy and
Utica; clerk in several banks in Utica; with various concerns
in Cuba, 1908-1915; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Cien-
fuegos November 15. 1912, but declined; appointed Vice-Consul
at Cienfuegos November 15, 1915.
Starkey, George Charles. — British subject, bom in London,
England, March 30, 1S72; secretary of the East London Board
of Executors and Trust Company, (Ltd.); appointed Consular
Agent at East London September 4. 1917.
Stairett, Henry Prince. — Born in Boston. Mass., December
14, 1885; home, Dade City. Fla.; attended schools and busmess
college in Maine; took a course in economics and political sci-
ence. University of Adelaide, 1919-1921; clerk and stenographer
in United States. 1903-1905; clerk in Consulate at Santiago de
Cuba, 1905-06; in engineer office. United States Army, Cuba,
1906; clerk in Santiago and Habana, 1906-07; appointed Deputy
Consul General at Habana October 3, 1907; appointed, after
examination (April i. 1912), Consul at Cartagena Septem-
ber 15. 1913; Consul at Owen Sound April 24, 1914; Consul of
class eight by act approved February 5, 1915; assigned to Fort
William and Port Arthur March 22, 1915; appointed Consul of
class seven July 12, 1916, and assigned to Mombasa; assigned to
Adelaide May 25. 1918; appointed Consul of class six September
S, 1919; class five June 4, 1920; assigned to Batavia February 10,
1921; appointed Consul of class tour November 21, 1921; assigned
to Sydney, Australia, July 21, 1922; detailed to the Department
of State (October 11, 1922; appointed Consul of class three March
I, 1923; assigned to Belfast March 30. 1923; appointed Consul
General of class four June 5, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of
class three July i, 1924.
Staten, Verne Glenn.— Bom in Downs, 111., October 15, 1S90;
attended high school at Bloomington, 111., 1903-1909; graduated
from Illinois Wesleyan University (LL. B.) 1913; admitted to
Illinois bar December 10, 1913; engaged in the practice of law
and the real estate business at Bloomington, 111.; served as sec-
ond lieutenant in the United States .^rmy .September 4, 1917,
to June 28. 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Hongkong February
24, 1921; at Amoy, July 16, 1921; at Swatow November 6, 1922;
at Amoy January 5, 1923; at Tientsin September 28, 1923.
* Stearns, Foster. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class three, assigned to Paris, April, 1924. Register of
1924.
*Stedman, Nathan Parker.— Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, assigned to Santiago, Chile,
March. 1919. Register of 191S.
Steele, Joseph Douglass. — Bom in Greenville, Va., Septem-
ber II, 1870; public-school education; employed by the Bal-
timore & Ohio Railway Co., i886-i8Sg, by the Western Union
Telegraph Co., 1S89-1918; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
$1,600 in the Department of State September 19, 1918; resigned
December 3, 1920; telegrapher with the Western Union Tele-
graph Co. December, 1920, to February, 1921; appointed clerk
of class three in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, March i6, 1921; at Si. 860 July i, 1924.
Steger, Christian Talbot.— Bora in Danville, Va., Febmary
3, J8p3; home, Richmond, Va.; graduated from the University
of Virginia (A. B.) 1913. (A. M.) 1915; instnutor, University of
Virginia 191^-1915; hiyh -school teacher, Richmond 1915-1917;
educational secretary Y. M. C. A.. 1917-18; served in tlie United
States Army as sergeant June i to December 21, iqi8; appointed.
after examination (May 12. 1919), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three September 27, 1919; assigned to Rome December 19,
1919; to Dresden November 15, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922;
Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at Dresden
on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924.
*Steinhart, Frank.— Retired as Consul-General at Habana
June, 1907. Register of 1913.
Stejneger, Inga.— Bom in Oslo, Norvvay; attended high
school, business college, and schools in Germany and Norway;
stenographer in private concerns January-July, 1924, and in
Civil Service Commission September-November, 1924; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,140 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, NovemVjer 10, 1924.
Slender, Charles Adolpb. — Bom in Brooklyn, N. Y., January
16, 1893; attended high school 1907-1909, and New York Prepa-
ratory School 1910; clerk in the United States Postal Service
1912-1917; ser.-ed in the United States Navy April, 1917, to
July, 1919; employed as officer on merchant vessels 1919-1924;
clerk in the American Consulate at Batavia March, 1924;
appointed Vice-Consul at Batavia November 29, 1924.
Stephan, Charles Hans.— Bora in Brooklyn, N. Y., October
14, 1892; high-school graduate and took correspondence school
course for two years; employed as clerk, stenographer, and
bookkeeper with several concerns 1907-1913; in the Philippine
service 1913-1917; appointed clerk in the American Legation
at Peking July i, 1917; Vice-Consul at Vladivostok October
30, 1917; at Harbin May 18, 1923.
♦Stephens, Joseph Grigg. — Retired as Consul of class eight,
assigned to I'lymouth, January, 1920. Died in England De-
cember 22, 1920. Register of 1918.
Sterling, Frederick Augustine.— Born in St. Louis, Mo.,
August 13, 1S76; home, Sei-mom, Tex.; educated in Switzer-
land, Smith Academy, St. Louis, and graduated from Harvard
University (A. B.), 1898; one year in law department. Wash-
ington University, St. Louis; o^'^'ner and manager oi cattle
ranch eight years; manufacturer of woolen goods two years;
appointed, after examination (January 16, 1911), Third Secre-
tary of the Embassy at Petrograd March 2, 1911; Second Secre-
tary of the Embassy at Petrograd August. 22, 1912; detailed to
observe the elections for the Constituent Assembly of Santo
Domingo December, 1913; appointed Second Secretary of the
Legation at Peking February 11, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three February 22, 1915. to be effective from
Febmary 5, 1915; assigned to Peking March 6, 1915; to Petro-
grad July 14, 1915; to the Department of State as .Acting Chief
of the Division of Western European .\fiairs- June 24, ici6;
assigned to Paris January' 30, 1918; appointed Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class two August 27, 1918; class one De-
cember 20, 1919; designated Junior Counselor of Embassy at
Paris June 12, 1920; designated and assigned as Counselor of the
Embassy at Lima April 16, 192 1; of the Embassy at London
June 18, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class one
July I, 1924.
Stevens, Harry Edward. — Bom in Galveston, Tex., Decem-
ber 31, 1S97; h«me, Alameda, Calif.; attended high school
(Oak Cliffe, Tex.) 1909-10, and graduated from a business
college in Reno, Nev., 1911; graduated from Oakland (Calif.)
High School 191S, and the University of California (.\. i<.)
1921; took post graduate courses at the University of Caliloni'a
1922; served in the United States Navy 1913-1917. and in
the students' anny training corps 1918-19 while attending the
University of California; employed by a railroad company
1911-12; assistant to librarian, Oakland, Calif., 1921-22; appoint-
ed, after examination (June 26, 1922), Student Intorvircter in
China September 18, 1922; Foreign Ser\-ice Officer, unclassified,
July I, 1924; also Vice Consul of career, and assigned to Canton
November 20, 1924.
♦Stevenson, Robert E.— Retired as Marshal at Tientsin De-
cember. 1908. Register of 1914.
Stevenson, Ronald Duncan.— Bora in Philadelphia, Pa.,
January 23, 1900; home, Philadelphia; graduated from the
University of Pennsylvania (A. B.) 1922, (A. M.) 192.^; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 25, 1923), Consular Assistant
August 28, 1923; detailed to the Department of State September
5, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Rio dc Janeiro November i,
1923; at >Iontcvideo November 9, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Buenos
Aires December 8, 1924.
Steward, Elwood M. S.— Captain, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Military' Attach^ at La Paz; also at Lima
February 27, 1923.
198
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT
Stewart, Francis Robert.— Bom in Evansville. Ind.. August
7, 1874; home, New York City; educated in the public and
high schools of Indiana; employed as stenographer and in
various confidential positions in New York City, 1894-1905;
member Astor Battery United States Army, in the Spanish-
American War; general manager of a chemical company for
several years; clerk in the Consulate General at Hamburg, 191 1;
appointed Deputy Consul-General at Hamburg January 24,
191 2; also Consular Agent at Cuxhaven August 12, 19 13; Vice
and Deputy Consul-General at Hamburg August 3, 1914; Vice-
Consul at Hamburg February 6, 1915; Vice-Consul at Vera
Cruz February 27, 1917; appointed, after examination (June 18,
1917), Consul of class eight September 14, 1917; on detail at Vera
Cruz to April i, 1919; detailed to the Department of State
February 28, 1919; to Berne June 20, 1919; appointed Consul of
class six September s, 1919; detailed to Coblenz October 30,
1919; to Hamburg December 6, 19 19; to Bremen September 20,
1921; assigned to Bremen November 15, 1921; appointed
Consul of class five November 23, 1921; assigned to Santiago
de Cuba August 3, 1923; appointed Foreign Sersdce Officer of
class six July i, 1924.
*Stewart, Glenn. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three, assigned to the Department of State,
November 1920. Register of 1918.
Stewart, James Bolton.— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa., Novem-
ber 37. 1882; attended Central High School, Philadelphia; took
special courses at Temple University and Foster School of
Languages, 1913-14; and studied under private tutor; with
business concerns in various capacities. 1901-1905; cost keeper
and surveyor United States Reclamation Service in Montana,
1906-07; hydrographic engineering work with Water Resources
Branch of United States Geological Survey, 1908-1915, in
Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Minnesota, and
Hawaii; appointed Vice-Consul at Pemambuco July 14, 1915;
appointed, after examination (January 25, 1915), Consul of
class eight September 14, 1917; assigned toChihuahua January
10, 1918; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; de-
tailed to Tampico July 18, 1922; appointed Consul of class five
August 23, 1922; assigned to Tampico October 2, 1923; appointed
Consul of class four December 19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer
of class five July i, 1924.
Stewart, Nathaniel Bacon.— Bom in Butler Ga.. January 4,
1871; home, Americus, Ga.; attended the public schools of
Butler; graduated from the University of Georgia; attended
the George Washington University law school; employed
under the Navy Department, 1893-1897; under the War De-
partment, 1897-1899; transferred to the engineer department
of the city of Habana in 1899, and appointed paymaster in
1902; returned temporarily to the War Department; appointed
provincial treasurer in the Philippine Islands July, 1902; ap-
pointed, after examination (July 7, 1907), Consul at Castella-
mare di Stabia August 15, 1907; Consul at Madras June ic,
1908; Consul at Durban December 19, 1910; Consul at Milan
July 14, 1913; Consul-General at Large July 17, 1914; Consul-
General of class three April 29, 1920; class two November 19.
192 1 ; directed May 18, 1920, to remain in the Department of
State on detail; assigned to Tokyo December 13, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Stewart, Warren Curley. — Bom in Washington, D. C, July
9, 1S98; attended the public schools of Baltimore, and Baltimore
Polytechnic Institute 1911-1915; apprentice with a steel corpo-
ration 1915-1917; served in tlie United States Army 1917-1919;
clerk in the zone finance office six months, 1919; with the
Ordnance Reserve Depot at Curtis Bay, Md., December, 1919,
to August, 1921; clerk in the American Consulate at Dunferm-
line August, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Dunfermline
February 16, 1922; at Halifax August 30, 1924.
Stewart, Worthington E.— Bom near Ravenna, Mich., De"
cember i, 1876; attended public schools in Michigan; took
course in law under private tutor; member of the bar of the
District of Columbia; employed in stenographic and clerical
positions with various comm'r"~''il and legal firms; apppinted
clerk in the Department of SV • - at $900, under Civil Service
rules, September 8, 1906; class one March 4, 1907; class two
November 2, 190S; class three January 3, 1910; class fourMarch i,
1919; in charge of the Diplomatic Bureau December, 1918,
to September, 1919, and October, 1920, to June, 192 1; appointed
special assistant at $2,000 December 31, 1919, effective Jan-
uary I, 1920; drafting officer at $2,qoo June 17, effective
July I, 1921, and designated Acting Chief of the Diplomatic
Bureau; appointed drafting officer at $3,000 September 30, 1922;
designated Chief of the Diplomatic Bureau October 14, 1922;
at $3,800 July I, 1924, designated Chief of the Office of the
Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board
August 19, 1924.
Stiles, Edith Famum.— Bora in Somervillc, Mass.; high-
school education; attended Wellesley College two years; busi-
ness college one year; confidential clerk to insurance medical
examiner fifteen years; clerk, Office of the Surgeon General
one year; in the Office of the Director of Purchase nine months;
appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, April 7, 1920; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
Stiles, George Kean.— Bom in Baltimore, Md., November
14, 1873; home, Baltimore; educated in public schools and at
Baltimore City College; associate editor Baltimore Herald,
1901-1903; trade editor Merchants and Mamxfacturing Journal
1904-1906; on editorial staff Baltimore Evening News 1906-
1908 and 1912-1915; special newspaper work in Europe 1908-
1912; author; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914),
Consul of class eight March 2, 1915, and assigned to Teneriffe;
appointed Consul of class seven September 14, 1917; class six
September 5, 1919, and assigned to Patras; assigned to Sta-
vanger April 28, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i, 1924.
*Stimson, Frederic Jesup.— Retired as Minister to Argentina
March, 1921. Register of 1918.
♦ Stone, Benjamin F.— Retired as Consul at Huddersfield
May, 1906. Register of 1913.
* Storer, Bellamy. — Retired as Ambassador to Austria-Hun-
gary March, 1906. Died in Paris, France, November 12, 1922.
Register of 1913.
Story, Harry Walter.— Bom in Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela,
of American parents, December 19. 1892; attended private
academy and high school 1909-1912 and Southern Dental College
(D. D. S.) 1915; clerk in the American Consulate at Santiago
de Cuba 1918-1923; appointed Vice Consul at Santiago de Cuba
April 27, 1923.
*Stovall, Pleasant Alexander.— Retired as Minister to Switzer-
land May, 1920. Register of 1918.
Straight, Eugene.— Bom in Albany, N. Y., December 8,
1866; educated in public schools; employed on sheep ranches
1884-1916; caretaker of artillery horses, while in transit, for
foreign and domestic shipments 1916-1919; watchman in Treas-
ury Department 1920-21; caretaker for invalid 1921-1924; ap-
pointed a messenger at $900 in the Passport Bureau of the Depart-
ment of State in New York City, under Civil Service mles, No-
vember 5, 1924.
* Straight, Wlllatd D.— Retired as Consul General at Muk-
den June, 1909. Died in France December i, 1918. Register
of 1913-
♦ Strassburger, Ralph Beaver. — Retired as Second Secretary
of Embassy at Tokyo in 1914. Register of 1914.
* Straus, Oscar Solomon. — Retired as Ambassador to Turkey
December, 1910. Register of 1913.
Streeper, Robert Bissell.— Bom in Columbus, Ohio, Febm-
ary 18, 1S99; home, Columbus; attended high school, and Ohio
State University 1919-1923; served in the United States Army
May, 1917, to April, 1919; employed as transportation manager
for Near East ReUef seven months 1922; foreign trade secretary
for a chamber of commerce 1923; appointed, after examination
(January 14, 1924), Vice Consul de carriere of class three Jime
13, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924;
assigned to Canton July 31, 1924.
• Strickland, Peter.— Retired as Consul at Goree-Dakar July,
1906. Register of 1913.
Strother, Shelby French.— Bom in Covington, Ky., Novem-
ber 14, 18S0; home, Louisville, Ky.; graduate (A. B., LL. B.)
University of Louisville; attended Har\'ard College five years,
University of Chicago summer term, University of Virginia
summer term; admitted to the bar in Kentucky; salesman, law
publications, in St. Paul. Minn.; Boston, Mass.; Philadelphia,
Pa,; and in Ontario and Quebec, Canada; reporter on Boston
newspapers; manager of a publication in Toronto; practiced
law in Louisville, Ky.; on editorial staff of a law-publishing
house in New York; appointed, after e.Kamination (June iS,
1917), Consul of class eight February 5, 191S; detailed to
Archangel and arrived there August 9, 1918; appointed Con-
sul of class seven September 5, 1919: detailed to London Septem-
ber iS, 1919; to Amsterdam October 27, 1919; to the Department
of State, September 11. 1920; assigned to Guadeloupe Decem-
ber i6, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class nine
July I, 1924.
Sturgeon, Leo Dallas.— Bom in Pomona, 111.. July 19, 1896;
home, Chicago; attended the University of Nebraska one year;
employed as clerk with several firms 1916-1920; served as a
sergeant in the United States Army September 5, 1918, to
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
199
September i, 1919; appointed, after examination (June 28,
1920), Student Interpreter in Japan, August 27, 1920; Vice
Consul and Interpreter at Yokohama August 15, 1922; at Dairen
October 17, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassi-
fied, July I, 1924.
Sturgis, Hugh Legare. — Bom in Murray. Ky., December 19,
1S97; attended Western High School. Washington, D. C; a
business college; University of South Carolina two years;
graduated from George Washington University (A. B.) 1921;
employed in the Bureau of Mines. Department of Interior
191 6-1 7; clerk in the Interstate Commerce Commission four
mouths. 1918; three months United States Army; Federal
Trade Commission October. 191S. toScptember. 1919; appointed
a clerk at Si. 100 in the Department ol Slate, under Civil Serv-
ice rules, February 18. 1920; class one August 16, 1921; class two
September 16, 1922; at $1,680 July i. 1924.
* Statesman, James F.— Retired as Minister to Bolivia July,
1910. Died in Washington. December 15. 1917. Register of
1913.
Styles, Francis Holmes. — Born in Lansdowne, Pa., Decem-
ber 15, 189s; home, Falls Church. Va.; graduated from high
school; Washington and Lee University (A. B.) 1918; attended
Georgetown Foreign Service School 1919-20; employed as sur-
veyor's assistant during sununer vacations; served in the
United States Army, May-December. 1918. retiring as second
lieutenant; clerk in the Treasury Department 1919; appointed,
after examination (January' 19, 1920). Consular Assistant May
20. 1920; Vice Consul de carriere of class three November 17,
1921; assigned to Bordeaux May 16. 1922; appointed Vice Consul
de carriere of class two February 26, 1923; assigned to Loanda
November 20, 1923; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class
one November 23, 1923; Foreign Service Ofi'icer, unclassified,
July I, 1924; class eight, also Consul, August 8, 1924.
* Sullivan, James Mark.— Retired as Minister to the Domini-
can Republic September. 1915. Died in Ireland August, 1920.
Register of 1914.
Sullivan, Lucien Norrls. — Bom in Indianapolis, Ind., April
16, 1869; home, Bethlehem, Pa.; graduated (B. A.) from tlie
Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Ind.; took post-
graduate course at Lehigh University (M. S.); employed as
draftsman in the Union Iron Works, San Francisco, 1891-1S93;
in milling company and other firms two years; inspector of
public works at Indianapolis, 1895-96; connected with con-
tracting firm in establishing drainage system at San Antonio,
Tex., 1896-97; draftsman with beet-sugar and ice-manufactur-
ing machinery company in 1899; with Bethlehem Steel Co. two
years; instructor at Lehigh University, 1902-1906; engineer at
Pachuca, Mexico, 1906-7; appointed, after examination (April
7, 1908), Consul at La Paz, Mexico, May 31, 1909; Consul at
Newcastle, Australia, December 19, 1914; Consul of class seven
by act approved Februarj' s. 191 ■;; appointed Consul of class six
September s. 1919; class five June 4, 1920; instructed July 16,
1921, to proceed to Washington for new assignment; detailed
to the Department of State March 2, 1922; assigned to Cadiz
May 17, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
Sullivan, William B. — Captain, United States Navy; assigned
to duty as Language Officer at Tokyo June 21, 1923.
Summerlin, George Thomas.— Bom in Rayville, La, Novem-
ber ir, 1872; educated in private schools, Louisiana State Uni-
versity. Agricultural and Mechanical College, and graduated
from the United States Military Academy, 1896; commissioned
additional second lieutenant Sixth United States Cavalry,
second lieutenant Eighth Cavalry, captain and adjutant
Thirty-second Volunteer Infantry, first lieutenant Fourth
Cavalry, captain Tenth Cavalry, captain Fifth Cavalry; re-
signed from Army May 17, 1903; appointed clerk, Division of
Information, Department of State. July i, 1909; Second Sec-
retary of the Embassy at Tokyo April 7, 1910; Second Secretary
of the Legation at Peking July 6, 191 1; Secretary of the Lega-
tion at Santiago. Chile. February n, 191.1; Secretary of the
Embassy at Santiago, Chile, August 7, 1914; Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class one by act approved February 5.
1915; assigned to Mexico City February 2, 1917; designated
counselor of Embassy at Mexico City. January 7, 191S; on
detail in the Department of State, temporarily. December 3,
1918, to January, 1919; designated and assigned as Counselor of
Embassy at Rome March 5, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class one July i, 1924.
* Summers, Maddln.— Died at his post (Moscow) May 4, 1918,
while a Consul General of class four. Register of 1917.
Summers, Natalie GoraynoS. — Bora in Moscow, Russia;
educated by private teachers; appointed a clerk, temporarily.
at $1,800 in the Dcpartrnent of State October is, 1918; clerk of
class four, under Executive order, December 11, 1920; at $2,040
July I, 1924.
Sunderland, Margaret Cofiey.— Bora in Nash, Va.; educated
in public and business schools and spent one year at Virginia
Christian College; employed in Navy Department. 1918-19;
Bureau of War Risk Insurance, 1919; appointed a clerk, at $900,
in the Department of State, vmder Civil Service rules, Decem-
ber 29, 1919; at $1,000 October i, 1921; at $1,100 May 31, effective
Jime I, 1924; at $1,380 July i, 1924.
Sussdorff, jr., Louis Albert.— Born in Elmhurst, Long Is-
land. January 7, 1888; home. New York City; graduate of
Harvard University (A. B.) 1910, (LL. B.) 1914; appointed,
after examination (November 17, 1913), Third Secretary of
the Embassy at Paris May 22, 1914: Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class five by act approved February 5, 1915:
assigned to Rio de Janeiro March 6, 1915; appointed Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class lour May 10, 1916; class three
August 1, 1916; assigned to Asuncion July s, 1917; to the
Department of State, temporarily. August 24. igi8; to Berne
April 4. 1919; to Helsingfors January 15, 1921; appointed Secre-
tary of class two August 24. 192 1; assigned to The Hague Sep-
tember 27, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class four
July I, 1924; class three September 20, 1924.
*Swaim. Charles Luther— Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Vice-Consul at Dublin, February, 1922. Register of 1918.
*Swalm, Albert W.— Died at his post (Hamilton, Bermuda)
August 24, 1922, while a Consul of class four. Register of 1922.
Swaney, Alexander Grant.— Bom in Kalispell. JMont., No-
vember 24. 1895; attended high school 1911-1914, and University
of Montana three years; served in the United States Army
1917-1919; retiring with the rank of captain; clerk in the
American Consulate at Edinburgh June, 1920; appointed Vice
Consul at Edinburgh September 14, 1920; resigned September
20. 1920; clerk in the American Consulate at Cheioo October,
1923; appointed Vice Consul at Cheioo July 19, 1924.
Swann, James S. — Born April 2, 1859; appointed laborer
in the Department of State November 8, 1893; assistant mes
senger July i, 1902; packer October 16, 1907.
Sweet, Florence Graham.— Bom in Arlington, Tenn.; edu-
cated in public, normal, and business schools; employed a :
teacher, clerk, and stenographer; clerk in the War Department
October, 191 7, to October, 1920; appointed a clerk of class one
in the Department of State, under Civil Serv'ice rules. October
7, 1920; at $1,440 July I, 1924; at $1,500 August 16, 1924.
Swenson, Laurits Selmer. — Bora in New Sweden, Minn.,
June 12. 1865; home. Minneapolis; graduate of Luther College
(A. B.. A. M.) 1886; took a postgraduate course at Johns Hop-
kins University; principal of Lutheran Academy, Albert Lea,
Minn., 18S8-1897; member board of regents of University of
Minnesota 1895-1897; writer on educational subjects; vice
president Union State Bank and Mercantile State Bank;
president Wiprud Land & Colonization Co.; appointed Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Denmark Octo-
l)er 4, 1897; resigned March, 190;; appointed Envoy Extraor-
dinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Switzerland December
21, 1909; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
to Norway April 27. 191 1; retired October 8. 1913; appointed
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Nor-
way October 8. 192 1.
Swett, Trevor W.— Captain, United States Army; assigned
to duty as Military Attach^ at Tallinn, Riga, and Ko\tio
October i, 1924.
Swift, Merritt.— Bom in Washington, D. C, December 20,
18R7; home, Washington; educated in private schools; studied
architecture; employed by firm of architects two years; in
Government service in Manila four years; clerk Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce,
nine months; clerk in American Legation, Brussels, January
1917, to September, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 19,
1919), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class (our, Septem-
ber 5, 1919; assigned to Brussels September 9, 1919; to Bogota
March 25, 1920; to Vienna May 26, 1921; appointed Secretary of
class three August 24, 1921; assigned to Tirana, March 27. 1923;
to Peking February- 27, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class six July i, 1924.
Sycks, Dana C. — Bora in Delaware, Ohio, November 17,
1880; home, Delaware; attended public schools and spent two
years in Ohio Wesleyan University; employed in savings bank
in Delaware, 1901-1903; with insurance agency in St. Louis,
1903-1906; with mining company at Guadalajara, 1906-1909;
200
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
with American Sugar Co_. in Cuba. 1910; engineer with the
Isthmian Canal Commission, 1910-1913; appointed, after ex-
amination (January 25, 1915), Consular Assistant May 20, 1915;
Vice-Consul at Palermo May 27, 1915; Vice-Consul at Catania
June 12. 1915; Vice-Consul at Turin December 15, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; remained at
Turin on detail; appointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920;
Foreign Scr\ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Syphax, Colbert Stewart.— Bom March 18, 1871; appointed
laborer in the Department of State July i, 1905; assistant mes-
senger July 2, 1906.
Taggart, Giles Russell.— Born in Clarksboro, N. J., July 20,
1870; home, Woodbury, N. J.; attended Princeton University
one year; University of Pennsylvania one and one-half years;
graduated from George Washington University (B. S.) 1900
and (LL. B.) 1906; admitted to the District of Columbia bar,
1906; clerk in lawyers' offices and glassworks office in Wood-
bury, N. J., 1886-1891; clerk in the Department of Justice,
1895-1900; Department of Agriculture, 1900-1903; Department
of Commerce and Labor, 1903-1908; special attorney, Depart-
ment of Commerce and Labor. 190S-1912; writer of special
feature articles for newspapers, 191 1; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 27, 1910), Consul at Cornwall March 13, 1912;
Consul of class nine by act approved February 5, 1915; as-
signed to Fort William and Port Arthur September 5, 1917;
appointed Consul oi class eight September 14. 1917; class seven
SepteJiber 5, 1919; assigned to London. Ontario. April 16. 1020;
appointed Consul of class six June 4, 1920; Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
Tait, George. — Bom in Amherst County, Va.. August 14,
1893; home. Monroe, Va.; graduated from the University of
Virginia (LL. B.) 1917, and admitted to the Virginia bar; pur-
sued courses at Georgetown University, and at several educa-
tional institutions in France; practiced law in New York City
1917-18; assistant to contractor. Quartermaster Corps, War
Department, 1918; served in the United States Army, 1918-19,
retiring with the rank of second lieutenant; appointed, after
examination (June 25, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three October 6, 1923; assigned to Rio de Janeiro November 19,
1923; appointed Foreign Scr%'ice Officer, unclassified. July
I, 19=4-
Talbott, Sheridan.— Bom in Bardstown, Ky., September 29,
1889; home, BardstoTSTi; attended Marquette University 1906-
191 1, and Georgetoi;\'n Foreign Seri'ice School two years; em-
ployed by a harvester company 1910-1913, and by a warehouse
company 1914-1916; ser\fed in the United States Army 1916-
1920. retiring with the rank of first lieutenant; secretary to a
Member of Congress 1921-1923; appointed, after examination
(June 25. 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 6.
1923; assigned to Habana November 16, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Tanis, Richard Cornelius.- Born in Holland March 21, 1877;
naturalized in Paterson. N. J., i?99; educated in public and
private schools, at George Washington University, and by pri-
vate tutors; employed as clerk, letter carrier, and steliographer
for seventeen years; appointed clerk in the Department of State
at $1,000. under Civil Service rules. March i. 1910; class one
October 5. 19:1; class two September 22. 1914; designated
temporarily as Assistant Chief of the Division of Mexican
Affairs July 28, 1915; appointed clerk class four June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; special assistant at $2,500 June 16. 1919;
drafting officer at $2,500 July i, 1919; at $3,000 January 16, 1922;
at $3,800 July I, 1924.
Tanner, Robert Henry. — British subject, bom in Melbourne,
Australia, July 26. 1874; employed in clerical capacities by
business houses in Brisbane twenty-seven yea?s; appointed
Consular Agent at Brisbane October 7, 1918.
♦ Tappin, Charles Frances.— Retired as Marshal at Nanking
December, 1911. Register of 1910.
* Tarler, George Cornell.— Retired as Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class two, unassigned. December. 1921. Register
of 1918.
Tarisse, Edwin.— Born in Pennsylvania June 26, 1871; edu-
cated in public schools; clerk in stock broker's and railway
offices and to a Member of the House of Representatives and
a Senator; appointed clerk at $1,200 in the Interstate Com-
merce Commission May 29, 1890; resigned July i, 1895; ap-
pointed confidential clerk to the Chief of the Bureau of Indexes
and Archives, Department of State, at $900. January 6, 1896:
clerk class one Dec^nber 31, 1896; class two April 17, 1900;
class three December i, 1909; class one September i, 1910; class
two July 24, 1914; class three June 22, to be effective July i.
1916; class four December 31, 1919, effective January i, 1920;
at $2,100 July I, 1924.
Tasker, Viola.— Born in Miners Mills, Pa.; attended gram-
mar schools of W^ilkes-Barre. Pa., and Wilkes-Barre Business
College; employed by law firm in Wilkes-Barre. July,
1913, to May, 1915; Smithsonian Institution (Division of
Plants) June. 1915, to August. 1918; Treasury Department.
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. November, 1918, to
August, 1919; Federal Board for Vocational Education, August,
1919, to October, 1919; appointed clerk of class one, in the De-
partment of State, under Civil Service rules, November i;,
1919; class two -March i, 1924; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Tatem, John William.— British subject, bom in Turks
Islands, British West Indies. Jime 8, 1884; with a steamship
company seven years; with a firm representing American busi-
ness interests in San Pedro de Macoris five years; Honorary-
British Vice Consul two years, resigned in 1922; appointed
Consular Agent at San Pedro de Macoris November 17, 1924.
Tayares, Antonio Jose. — Brazilian citizen, bom in Maranhao,
Brazil, December 12, i860; educated in Brazil and England;
engaged as partner in business; Consular Agent at Maranhao.
Brazil. September 27, 1890, to November 2, 1891; appointed
Consular Agent at Maranhao June 26, 1923.
Taylor, Eli.— Born in New York City May 2, 1873; attended
the New York public schools, high school, and commercial
school; clerk in insurance office four years; reporter and ad-
vertising solicitor for New York Evening Post thirteen years;
appointed Deputy Consul-General at Buenos Aires October
4, 1910; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Buenos Aires
June iS, 1913; Vice-Consul at Buenos Aires February 6, 1913;
Vice-Consul at Sydney. Australia. July 14. 1915: at Shanghai
February 27, 1919; at Mukden December, 15 1921; at Dairen
September 18, 1923; at Mukden November 22, 1923; at Dairen
Jime 16. 1924; at Mukden July 12, 1924; at Acapulco October
23, 1924.
Taylor, Howard Charles.— Bom in Meckling, S. Dak., August
19, 1899; home, MeckUng; attended high school, and graduated
from the University of South Dakota (A. B.) 1921; served in
the United States Army Jun^Dccember, 1918; bookkeeper in
a bank 1920-21; clerk in the American Consulates at Kovno and
Stuttgart 1921-1924; appointed, after examination (June 23,
1924), Foreign Service Officer, unclassified; also Vice Consul of
career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Stuttgart October 21, 1924.
Taylor, Julian.— Born in Washington, D. C. May 22. 1853;
attended St. John's Academy, the Episcopal High School,
and Blackburn's vSchool, at Alexandria, Va.; graduate of Uni-
versity of Virginia (M. A.). 1874; taught in Hanover (Va.)
Academy, 1S74-1876; took a partial law course in the Univer-
sity of Virginia, 1876; admitted to the bar in 1877; admitted to
the New Orleans bar in 1878; studied abroad; instructor in
modem languages. University of Virginia, 1881-1S85; appointed
clerk class one in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules. July i, 1SS5; class four October i, 18S7; at $2,100 July
I, 1924.
Taylor, Laurence Mathews.— Bom in Allegheny, Pa., Jan-
uary 10, 1876; graduated from Cleveland Medical College
(M. D.) 1903; attended New York Post Graduate College and
Hospital 1914, and Tulane Medical College 1916; graduated
from Ohio State University 1921. and National University of
Mexico 1923; employed by a railroad company six years;
practicing physician and surgeon sixteen years; surgeon United
States Public Health Ser\'ice 1915-1917; served in the United
States Army 1917-1919. retiring with the rank of major; served
as Acting Consular Agent at Tuxpam at various times during
seven-year period; appointed Consular Agent at Tuxpam
June 18, 1924.
♦Taylor, Morgan Ott.— Retired as a Consular Assistant, also
Vice-Consul at Schaf'lhausen, August. 1919. Register of 1918.
* Taylor, P. Emerson.— Died at his post (Trinidad) April 8,
1913. Register of 1913.
♦Taylor, Samuel M.— Died at his post (Birmingham) De-
cember 7, 1916. Register of 1915.
♦Taylor, jr., William Ambrose.—* * * Assigned to San
Salvador January 7. 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i. 1924; assigned to the Department of State
July 18, 1924. Retired August. 1924. Register of 1924.
Taylor, William Henry.— Born in Wilmington. Del.. March
18, 1893; home, Ardmore, Pa.; graduated from Yale Univer-
sity (Ph. B.) 1914; vice president of a fiber company; partner
in a paper manufacturing company and a coal and coke com-
pany; served in the United States Army August, 1917, to May,
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
20I
1919, retiring with the rank of captain; appointed, after exami-
nation (July 10, 1922), Secretari' of Embassy or Legation of class
four September 22, 1922, and assigned to the Department of
State; assigned to Budapest November 13. 1922; to London
February' 2, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924; class seven November 17, 1924.
Teall, Gir\'an.— Bom in Little Falls, N. Y., March 29, 189S;
attended high school 1912-1916, and St. John's ililitar^- Acad-
emy 1916-17; pursued a course in art 1917-18; served in the
Students' Anny Training Corps at Syracuse L'ni\ersity one
month 19 iS; special war course West Point Military Academy
one month 191S; employed as auditor in the New York State
Income Tax Bureau 1918-1921; clerk in the American Consulate
at Toronto 1921-1924; appointed Vice-Consul at Toronto June
27, 1924.
♦Teichmann, William C— Retired as Consul of class six. as-
signed to Bluefields, September, 1917. Register of 1916.
*Tennant, Henry Fry.— Retired as a Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, unassigned, April, 1917. Register
of 1916.
Tennant, Robert A.— British subject, bora in Scotland, 1867;
steamship agent; appointed Consular Agent at Galway May
4. 1901.
*Tenney, Charles Daniel. — Retired as Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class one, unassigned, February, 1922.
Register of 1922.
Tenney, Raymond Parker.— Born in China September 13,
1887. of American parents; home, Cambridge, Mass.; educated
in China, California, Paris, Ohio. New York, at Har\-ard Uni-
versity three years, and Harvard University law school one
year; appointed, after examination (May 5, 1909), Student
Interpreter in China June 2, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Tientsin September ti, 191 1; also Interpreter October
20, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul-General and Interpreter at
Canton November 22, 1912; Assistant Chinese Secretary to the
Legation at Peking September 11, 1913; Consul of class eight
February 19, 1918; detailed to Peking February 20, 1918; detailed
to Shanghai and desi^ated to exercise judicial authority and
jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases April 17, 1918; aptx)inted
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned to Canton May
10, 1922; to Tsinan March 30, 1923; to Mukden March 12, 1924;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
* Tenney, William H. — Retired as ^Marshal at Chefoo Janu-
ary, 1911. Register of 1910.
TenniUe, Claybome.— Born in Mt. Meigs, Ala , August 25,
1S90; appointed laborer in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, September 18, 1916; assistant messenger
August I, 1917; resigned September 23, 1918; reappointed an
asisistant messenger, temporarily, at S720 December 4, 1918;
appointed assistant messenger January 7, 1919; messenger
April I, 1922.
♦Terres, John B. — Died at his post (Port an Prince) Novem- ■
ber I, 1320. Register of 1918.
Terry, Prentiss M. — Bom in Nashville, Tenn., August 13,
1894; graduated from the University of Louisville; served in
United States Army* 1917-1919, retiring with the rank of second
lieutenant; manager of a campaign for funds for the University
of Louisville in 1920; member of American Relief Administra-
tion from May, 1919, to June, 1923; appointed Assistant Trade
Commissioner at Vienna June i, 1923; Trade Commissioner
April I, 1924; Assistant Commercial Attache at Brussels
December 26, 1924.
Tewell, Harold Strong. — Born in Drayton, N. Dak., January
7, 1892; home, Portal, N. Dak.; attended public schools at
St. Thomas and Pembina, N. Dak., eight years; high school at
Condo, N. Dak., 1906-1910; State University, Grand Forks,
N. Dak., r9io-ii; bookkeeper and stenographer in Grand Forks
two years; deputy collector and inspector of customs. Treasury
Department, Portal, N. Dak., four and one half years; inspec-
tor. United States Immigration Service, Winnipeg, Manitoba,
and Noyes, Minn., one and one half years; appointed Vice-
Consul at Winnipeg, February 6, 1920; appointed, after exam-
ination (January 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriO;re of class three
October 26, 1921; assigned to Winnipeg, November 14, 1921;
to North Bay February 7, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul de car-
ri^reof class two February 26, 1923; class one November 23, 1923;
assigned to Vancouver February 12, 1924; appointed Consul of
class seven June 3, 1924; Foreign ,Ser\'ice Officer of class eight
July I, 1924.
*Thackara, Alexander M.— * * * Appointed Foreign Serv-
ice Officer of class one July i, 1924. Retired from active serv-
ice as Consul General at Paris July, 1924, under the provision
of the Act of May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Thaw, jr., Benjamin.— Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., December
II, i88S;home, Pittsburgh; graduate of Yale University (Ph. B.)
1909 and studied later in the law department, University of
Texas and the LTniversity of Zurich; engaged in railwa-j- survey- .
ing work in Wyoming in 1915; appointed, after examination
(April 10, 1916), Secretary' of Embassy or Legation of class four
August 7, 1916; assigned to Paris August 10, 1916; appointed
Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned to Warsaw, No-
vember IS, 1920; appointed Secretary of class two August 24,
1921; assigned to Brussels August 8, 1922; to Santiago July 23,
1923 ;appointed Foreign Sers'ice Officer of class four July i, 1924;
assigned as First Secretar\- of Embassy at Buenos Aires July
17. 1924-
Theaker, Anna R.— Born in Charleston, 111.; graduated from
Charleston High School and attended summer schools in Illinois,
Michigan, and Tennessee; taught school in Illinois, Ohio, and
Michigan, and traveled for five years; clerk, War Trade Board
and Zone Finance Office; appointed clerk at 81,400 temporarily,
in the Department of State May 8, 1920; at Si, 000, under Civil
Service rules, July i, 1920; class one December i, 1921; at $1,500
July I, 1924.
Thiel, Cyril L. F.— Bom in Chicago, 111., June 11, 1903; home,
Chicago; attended Holy Cross College two iears; graduated
from Georgetown LTniversity (A. B.) 1924; attended George-
town Foreign Service School two years; appointed, after exam-
ination (June 23, 1924), Fore gn Service Officer, unclassified:
also \'ice Consul of career, October 16, 1924; assigned to Cal-
cutta November 8, 1924.
Thomas, Edgar. — Born in Atlanta, Ga , September 18, 1890;
appointed office apprentice, Bureau of Standards, September
24, 1908; assistant messenger in the Department of State Jan-
uary 18, 1916.
Thomas, Edward B.— Bom in Ohio, 1891; legal resident of
the State of Illinois; commercial agent of the Department of
Commerce attached to the office of the Commercial Attach^
in Russia; appointed Vice-Consul at Moscow IMav 8. 1918; at
Harbin, August 31, 1920; appointed, after examination (Jan-
uary 24, 1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three May 23,
1921; assigned to Harbin, June 11, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; detailed to Chita Septem-
ber 9, 192 1 ; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one Feb-
ruary 26, 1923; assigned to Harbin April 20, 1923; appointed
Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at Harbin
on detail; detailed to Kobe February 21, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Thomas, Frederick Lake.— Born in Rochester, N. Y., Feb-
ruary 8, 1892; home, Rochester; graduated from University of
Rochester (B. S.) 1916; served in the United States Army June.
igiotoMay, 1919, retiring as lieutenant; salesman with calcula-
ting-machine company 1919-1921; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 27, 1921), Vice-Coijsul de carriere of class three Octo-
ber 26, 1921; assigned to Bombay December 14, 1921; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two February 26, 1923; assigned
to Calcutta July 25, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class one November 23, 1923; Consul of class seven June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924; assigned to
Mukden October 23, 1924.
Thomas, George Alonzo.— Born in Atlanta, Ga., September
8, 1895; served in United States Army thirteen montii.s; ap-
pointed at $720, temporarily, in the Department of State May
10, 1919; assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules, Novem-
ber 28, 1919.
Thomas, Jr., John R.— Lieutenant Colonel, United States
Army; assigned to duty as ^lilitary Attach^ at Brussels July
I, 1922; at Paris August 11, 1922.
* Thomas, Leonard M.— Retired as Secretary of the Legation
at Madrid June, 1907. Register of 1913.
Thomason, Oscar.— Bora in Camden, N. J., July 21, 1865;
attended Rome (N. Y.) Academy 1886-87; Vineland (N. J.)
High School, 1888-89; University of Pennsylvania 1893; em-
ployed as scliool teacher in New Jersey, 1895-1910; salesman
for an American firm at Nairobi, British East Africa; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Nairobi January 7, 1920.
* Thompson, David E.— Retired as Ambassador to Me.tico
December, 1909. Register of 1913.
* Thompson, Edward H.— Retired as Consul at Progreso
September, 1909. Register 01 1913.
202
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
* Thompson, Paul Dean. — Retired as Vice-Consul de car-
riere o( class one, assigned to Barcelona, December, 1921. Reg-
ister ot 1922.
* Thompson, Richard Nelson. — Retired as Secretary ol Em-
bassy or Legation of class four, assigned to Asuncion, August,
1923. Register of 1922.
* Thompson, Robert J. — Retired as Consul at Aix la Chapelle
January, 1915. Register of 1914-
Thompson, Samuel Reid. — Born in Media, 111., December 11,
18S9; home, Los Au«eles, Calif.; attended the University of
Xebraska and Cooper College one year each; graduate of Uni-
versity of Redlands (B. A.) 1912; took a short course in the
California State Normal School 1913; teacher in the Philip-
pines two years; appointed clerk in the American Consulate at
Rosario November 1916; Vice-Consul at Rosario February 21,
1917; appointed, after examination (June 24, 1918), Vice-Consul
de carriere of chiss three September 27, 1919; assigned to Rosario
October 22, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of classtwo
May 24, ic)2o; assigned to Valparaiso September 12, 1921; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 17, 1921;
Consul of class seven June 22, 1922; assigned to Concepcion
June 26, 1922; appointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924; Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to Bristol
July 23, 1924.
* Thompson, Thomas Percivale.— Retired as Marshal, also
Vice-Consul, at Foochow May, 1915. Register of 1914.
Thomson, Alfred Ray. — Born in Linden, Md., January 16,
1889; home. Silver Spring, Md.; attended the public schools of
Maryland and District ol Columbia and spent two years in
George Washington University; assistant observer and clerk in
United States Weather Bureau, 1907-1911; appointed, after
examination (January 30, 191 1), Consular Assistant March 10,
1911; Deputy Consul-General at Berlin February 21, 1912; Vice
and Deputy Consul-General at Berlin April 22, 1914; Vice and
Deputy Consul at Saloniki July i, 1914; Vice-Consul at Bel-
grade February 26, 1915; Vice-Consul at Saloniki March 20,
1915; detailed to the Department of State November 13.1916;
appointed Consul of class nine April 19, 1917; detailed for
duty in the Consulate General at Moscow July 17, 1917; ap-
pointed Consul of class eight September 14, 191 7; detailed to
Odessa Februarys, 1918; to Irkutsk March 21, 1918; on detail
at Omsk April i to July 16, 1918; at Omsk, July 14, to -, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six September s, 1919; detailed to the
Department of State February 27, 1920; appointed Consul of
class five June 4, 1920; detailed, temporarily, as Consul in
Charge at Charlottetown June 11, 1920; assigned to Zagreb
July I, 1920; appointed Consul of class four November 23, 1921;
detailed to Copenhagen August 18, 1922; assigned to Madras
August 3, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class five
July I, 1924.
*Thomson, Thaddeus Austin.— Retired as Minister to Co-
lombia November, 1916. Register of 1915.
* Thorling, Charles Hilary.— Retired as Vice-Consul de car-
riere of class two, assigned toSingapore, December, 1922. Reg-
ister of 1922.
*Thornberry, Risher W.— Retired as Marshal at Chefoo
May, J 906. Register of 1914.
♦Thornton, William Otis.— Retired as Consul of class eight
November, 191 7. Register of 1918.
Thrall, Ralph Ambrose. — Bom in Minneapohs, Minn., De-
cember 22. 1S93; attended public schools and the University of
Minnesota: employed as a bank clerk in Minneapolis 1900-1917;
secretary and treasurer of a ranching company at Lethbridge
I9i9-i92(; appointed Consular Agent at Lethbridge November
4, 1921.
Thurston, Walter Clarence.— Bom in Denver, Colo., December
5, 1894; home. Phoenix, Ariz.; educated in the public schools of
Denver and Phoenix, at the Staunton Military Academy', and by
tutors; private secretary to the president of an oil company in
Mexico; clerk to special Department representatives in Mexico
November, 1914-December, 1915, and May-November, 1916; in
charge of American interests in Mexico City three months; ap-
ponited clerk in the American Legation at Guatemala March 26,
1917; designated special agent of the Department of State in Gua-
temala with the lionorary rank of Charg^ d 'Affaires December
22, 1917; appointed, after examination (June 35. 1917), Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class four May 3, 1918; assigned
to Guatemala June i, 1918; appointed Secretary of class three
March 14. 1919; assigned to the Department of State January 5,
1920; unassigned January-June. 1920; assigned to the Departl
ment of State June 14, 1920; to Beme, July 19, 1920; to San Josfe
Costa Rica, November 16, 1920; to London, March i, 1922;
appointed Secretary of class two September 22, 1922; assigned
to Managua January 31, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser\'ice Officer
of class four July i, 1924.
Tillett, Percy O.— Bom in Fort Hunt, Va.. October 11, 1896;
educated in public schools and at the Temple School of Short-
hand, Washington, D. C; employed by a refining company at
South Washington, Va., 1913-1917; appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, at $900 in the Department of State September 4, 1917;
at $1,100 March :, 1918; at $1,140 February- i, 1919; clerk in the
Diplomatic Service and assigned to Enibassy at Paris Decem-
ber I, iqig; appointed clerk at Si. 000. in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, July iq, 1920; class one. Decem-
ber 31, 1920, effective January i, 1921; at 81,500 July i, 1924.
Tilton, Daniel Henry.— Bom in Washington, D. C, April i,
i.'<99; high-school graduate; employed by a bank May, 1917, to
May, 1919; clerk in the Veterans' Bureau 1919-1923; appointed
a clerk at Si ,000 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, January 9, 1923; at $1,100 May 31 effective June i, 1924; at
$1,500 July I, 1924.
Tinsley, Howard Carnes. — Bom inMilledgeville, Ga., August
2, 187S; educated at the Georgia Jlilitary Academy; engaged in
a secretarial capacity in Georgia 1900-1912 and in 1917; ste-
nographer with law firm in Jacksonville 1913-1916; Army field
clerk 1917-1920; with a United States Senator 1920; appointed
clerk in the American Consulate at Montevideo, January, 1921;
Vice-Consul at Montevideo December 30, 192 1.
Tittman, jr.. Harold H.— Born in St. Louis, Mo., January 8,
1893; home St. Louis; attended Smith Academy, St. Louis,
1906-1909; Taft School, Watertown, Conn., 1909-1912; graduated
from Yale College (A. B.) 1916; salesmian for the Wagner
Electric Co., St. Louis, eight months; enlisted in United States
Army April 17, 1917; served as flying cadet and was com-
missioned first lieutenant October, 1917; honorably discharged
May 3, 1920; appointed, after examination (October 18, 1920),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four November 15,
1920; assigned to Paris May 26, 192 1; appointed Secretary of
class three December 4, 1922; Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924.
Tobin, Edward J.— Born in Cairo, III., Jime 9, 1S91; educated
in public schools; engaged in cafe business. 1914-1917; in United
States Array. 191 7-1920; messenger in Bureau of the Census
Septcraljcr-January. 1921; appointed an assistant messenger
ill the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, January
29. 1921.
Tobin, Richard M. — Bom in San Francisco, Calif., April 9,
1866; home, San Francisco; secretary and a director Hibemia
Savings and Loan Society of California; president of the Asso-
ciated Banks of San Francisco, and chairman of the San Fran-
cisco group of the California Bankers' Association; served in
the United States Navy December, 191 7, to April, 1919; was a
representative of the United States cable censorship; assistant
Naval Attache in Paris and attached to the American Commis-
sion to Negotiate Peace; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to the Netherlands March 5, 1923.
Tolman, George Leighton.— Bom in New York City October
4, 1894; attended schools in Paris, Montreux. and Berlin; Colum-
bia University; law school of the University of Virginia; LTni-
versity of Denver (LL.B.) 1920; appointed Vice-Consul at
Prague June 27, 1921; at Bergen April 5, 1923.
Tomasello, Paul. — Bom in Hammonton, N. J., June 29, 1903;
graduated from the Vincland (N. J.) High School 1921, and
attended a night school; employed for short periods with a drug
company; appointed a clerk at $1,000 in the Department of
State, under Civil Service rules, April 3, 1923; at $1,100 March i,
1924; class one May 31, effective June i, 1924; at $1,500 July i,
1924.
* Tompkins, Ralph Hawthorne.- Retired as Consul of class
seven, detailed to Amsterdam, July, 1923. Register of 1922.
Tonner, John A.— Born in Canton, Ohio, October 8, 1867;
appointed confidential clerk in the Department of State
for thirty days at $1,200, on probation, June 21, 1897; per-
manently at same salary July 23, 1897; at $1,600 April i, 1901;
resigned November i, 1905; reappointed clerk class three July
2, 1906, under the provisions ot legislative act approved June
22, 1906; appointed clerk class four June i, 1909; Chief, Bureau
of Rolls and Library, November 30, 1909: special assistant at
$2,ioo, July I, 1921; at $2,400 July i, 1924.
"Tonner, Laura R.— Bom in Rockville, Md.: educated in
private school; appointed in the Government Printing Office
Febmary 28, 1887; detailed to the Department of State Sep-
tember 27, 1890; transferred to the Department of State as clerk
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
20.^
at $9cx), under Civil Ser\-ice rules, October 7, 1902; appointed
clerk class one March 4, 1907; class two June 22, to be effective
July I, 1916; at Si. 680 July i, 1924.
Totten, Ralph James. — Bom in Nashville, Tenn., October i,
18S0: home. Nashville; attended Montgomery Bell Academy,
Nashville, eight years, and business college; employed in the
Southern Express Co. and the Plant Railway System at Tampa,
Fla.; assistant bookkeeper and assistant manager and head of de-
partment in various Nashville business firms. 1899-1907; offi-
cer of National Guard of Tennessee and District of Columbia;
instructor Congress Heights ritle range; appointed, after ex-
amination (November 20, 1907). Consul at Puerto Plata June
10, 1908; Consul at Maracaibo March 7, 1910; Consul at Trieste
August 23, 1911; Consul at Montevideo September 18. 1913;
Consul-General at Large April 27, 1914; Consul-Gcneral of
class three August 29, 1922; assigned to Barcelona September
30, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class two July i,
1924.
Touchette, Joseph Irenee. — Bom in North Grosvenordale,
Conn., May 13, 1896; home. New Bedford, Mass.; studied under
private tutors and graduated from a business college 1913;
attended Hebron Academy 1916-17; accountant for a commer-
cial manufacturing concern 1913-1916; ser\^ed in the United
States Army September, 1917, to August, 1919; European
representative of a sales corporation 1920-21; clerk in the
American Consulate at Nancy 1923-24; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 25, 1923), Vice Consul de carriere of class three
January 5, 1924; assigned to Nancy January- 16, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
* Touhay, St. Leger A. — Died at his post (Bari) May 15, 1907.
Register of 1013.
Tower, Arthur Frederick. — Bora in Glidden, Iowa, July 27.
1899; home, Rochester, N. Y.; attended high school 1912-1916;
graduated from Hamilton College (A. B.) 1921, and pursued
business college course five months; served in the United States
Army January 21, 191S, to July 13, 1919; employed in various
capacities 1919-1922; an insurance inspector 1922-23; appointed,
after examination (January 15, 1923), Consular Assistant
February 26, 1923; detailed to the Department of State April 27,
1923; appointed Foreign Serv'ice Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
* Tower, Charlemagne. — Retired as Ambassador to Germany
June, 1908. Died in Philadelphia February 24, 1923. Regis-
ter of 1913-
Tower, Walter S. — Born in West Bridgewater, Mass., July
26, 1881; attended grade and high schools and graduated from
Harvard University (A. B.) 1903, (A. M.) 1904; received degree
of Ph. D. from University of Pennsylvania in 1906: assistant
professor of geography. University of Chicago, 191 1; Director
of Division of Planning and Statistics, United States Shipping
Board, during the World War; trade adviser of a steel corpora-
tion in New York; appointed a Special Trade Commissioner
of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Depart-
ment of Commerce, July 11, 1921; Commercial Attache Sep-
tember 16, 1921, and designated for duty at London September
23, 1921.
Towers, John H. — Commander, United States Navy; as-
signed to duty as Assistant Naval Attach^ at Paris; also at
London, Rome, and The Hague February 21, 1923; at Berlin
April I, 1924.
* Townsend, George Arlington.— Retired as Consular As-
sistant, unassigned, August, 1921. Register of 1922.
* Townsend, Robert Swan.— Retired as Vice Consul de car-
rifere of class two, assigned to Lourenco Marques, June, 1921.
Register of 1922.
Toyer, William Elmer.— Born in Washington, D. C, April
22, 1899; attended pubUc schools, and Dunbar High School
three years; served twenty-two months in the United States
Army 1917-1919; employed in the Zone I'-inance Office April,
1919, to September, 1920; appointed assistant messenger in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules. March 2fi. 1921.
Tracy, George Bentlcy. — Bom in Honcsdalc, Pa.. September
28, 1881; attended Bri^rhton High School (Boston) 1896-1898;
English High School (Boston) 1898-1900; emplojed as salesman
for a leather company in Boston 1900-1905; fruit grower, Isle
of Pines, 1905-1910; partner in a furniture business 1910-1917; in
charge of warehouse and dock of steamship company. Isle of
Pines, 191S; estate manager. Port au Prince, Haiti, 1918-1920;
appointed Vice-Consul at Nueva Gerona August 25, 1920.
Tracy, Harold Francis.— Bom in Bridgeport, Conn., January
12, 1902; attended Brown University 1918-1920, and Holy
Cross College one semester, 192 1; attended Georgetown Law
School 1923; appointed a clerk at $900, temporarily, in the
Department of State, under Civil Ser\'ice rules. March 28,
1923; permanently December i, 1923; at Si. 000 March 10, 1924;
at Si,58o July i, 1924.
Travers, Howard Karl.— Bom in Central Valley, N. Y.,
February 19, 1S93; home. Central Valley; attended Central
Valley public school; graduated from Central Valley High
School 190S: American School of Accountancy 191 1 ; Pace School
for Certified Accountancy 1912; United States School of MiUtary
Aeronautics, Princeton University, and the School of P'ire for
Aerial Observers, Fort Sill. Okla.; employed as paymaster and
cashier by iron manufacturing company at Hillbum. N. Y.,
and Niagara Falls, Ontario; bookkeeper for a sliipbuilding
company at Newburgh. N. Y.; first-class private. Company E,
Third New York Infantry, Nationr.l Guard. 1916; cadet and
second hcutenant in the United States Air Service 191S; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Hull August 13. 1919; at Naples April
17. 1920; appointed, after examination (June 28. 1920). Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three May 25, 1021; assigned to Naples
June II, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
May 26, 1922; class one February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven
December 19, 1923; remained at Naples on detail; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Treat, R. Albert Wallace.— Bom in Gays, 111., December 23,
1895; home, Paj-ne, Ohio; attended public schools and North-
western University 1914-1916; employed with Chautauqua sys-
tem two summers, and September, 1916, to June, 1917; in the
United States Army Ambulance Service in France June, 1917, to
May, 1919; with United States Rehef Administration May-No-
vember, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Smyrna, March 8, 1920;
after examination (January 19. 19^0), Vice-Consul de carriere
of class three May 24. 1920. and assigned to Smyrna; appointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class two November 17, 1921; class
one May 26. 1922; Consul of class seven March i, 1923; remained
at Smyrna on detail; appointed Consul of class six December
19, 1923; detailed to Angora January 7, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Ofiicer of class seven July i, 1924; returned to Smyrna
September 10, 1924; detailed to Angora October 25, 1924.
Tredwell, Roger Culver. — Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January
12, 1885; home, Bloomington, Ind.; graduate of St. Paul's School
and of Yale University, 1907; attended university at Grenoble,
France, 1908; in business in Bloomington, Ind., 1907-08, and in
New York, 1908-09, appointed, after examination (November 10,
190S), Consular Assistant April 14, 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul-
General at Yokohama May 16. 1910; Deputy Consul-General
at London August 12, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul at Burs-
lem September 8, 1911; in charge September, 1911. to March,
1912; reappointed Deputy Consul-General at London May 21,
1912; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Dresden
May 31, 1912; assigned to duty at the Consulate-General at
London July 27, 1912; assigned to duty in the Department
of State October 14, 1912; appointed Consul at Bristol Sep-
tember 29. 1913; detailed to London September 30. 1913; in
charge at Amsterdam March-May, 1914; Consul at Leghorn
August 4, 1914; detailed to Naples October. 1914; Consul of class
seven by act approved February 5. 191 5; appointed Consul of
class six March 2, 1915; assigned to Turin September 17, 1915;
to Rome July 8, 1916; to the Department of State June 15, 1917;
to Petrograd July 17, 1917; detailed to \'oIogda Febmary, 1918;
to Moscow, April, 1918; proceeded to Tashkent May, 191S; de-
tailed to American Commission to Negotiate Peace at Paris
May, 1919; appointefl Consul of class four September 5. 1919;
detailed to the Department of State September 13. igig; ap-
pointed Consul of class three June 1. 1920; Consul-General at
Large November 23, 1921; Consul General of class three June s,
1924; Foreign Service Officer of class two July i, 1924.
* Trimmer, Edwin W.— Retired as Consul at Niagara Falls
January, 1915. Register of 1914.
Troutman, Harry Lamar. — Bom in Macon. Ga., July 22. 1892;
home, Macon; attended public school 1S98-1905; grad-
uated from Gresham High School (Macon) 1908; employed in
clerical capacities in Macon, 1908-1916; employed as clerk in
Cleveland, Ohio, 1916; superintendent of mercantile agency
in Macon April, 1918; seaman, second-class. United States
Naval Reserve Force, 1918-19; appointed Vice-Consul at Milan
July 9, 1919; appointed, alter examination (June 26, 1922), Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to
Milan March 2, 1923; to Messina July 21, 1923; to Budapest
December 13, 1923; appointed Vice Consul de carritre of class
two May 10, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
Tuck, S. Pinkney.— Bom in Staten Island. N. Y.. May 31,
1891; home. New Brighton, N. Y.; attended Closelet School,
204
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
Lausanne, Switzerland, (our years; Ridgefield School, Ridge-
field. Conn., three years, and graduated from Dartmouth Col-
lege, A. B. (igi.i); appointed Deputy Consul at Alexandria,
Egypt, September ii. 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul May
25, 1914; Vice-Consul by act approved February 5, 1915; ap-
pointed, after examination (June 26. 1916). Consular Assistant
August 30, 1916; Consul of class seven September 5, igrg; re-
mained at Alexandria on detail; detailed to Sarosun January 2.
1919: to Constantinople January 14, 1921; to Paris August .>5.
1921; to .Alexandria September 2c. 1921; appointed Consul of
class six November 23, 1921; detailed to Cairo February 2, 1922;
assigned to Vladivostok August 21, 1922; appointed Consul of
class five March i, 1923; detailed to the Department of State
May 26, 1923; appointed Consul of class four June 5, 1924; For-
eign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924; assigned to Geneva
October iS, 1924.
Tumulty, Delia. — Bom in Roscommon, Ireland; graduated
from the Convent of Mercy, Roscommon, 1911; took a busi-
ness course at the Temple School, Washington, D. C. ; em-
ployed as teacher 1909-1911; governess 1914-1917; auditing
clerk November, 1917, to March 4, 191S; clerk. United States
Food Administration, March-November, 1918; appointed a
clerk, temporarily, at $1,020, in the Department of State
November 23, 191S; at $960 July i. 1919; at Si. coo, under Civil
Serxnce rules, December 16, 1919; at $1,100 March i, 1924; class
one May 31 effective June i, 1924; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Turlington, Edgar Willis.— Bom in Smithfield, N. C, Octo-
ber 24. 1S91; graduate of the University of North Carolina
(A. B.) 1911 and Oxford University, England (B. A.) (Juris-
prudence) 1913 (B. C. E.) 1914; instructor in University of
North Carolina 1915-1917; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at
$1,800 in the Department of State June 24. loiS.- at $2,000. Janu-
ary I, 1920; Assistant Solicitor at $2,500, February 16, 1920; at
$3,000, June 16, 1920; appointed a drafting officer at $3,500,
August 16, 1922; at $3,800 July i, 1924.
* Turner, Arthur Campbell.— Retired as Secretary of the Le-
eation to Uruguay and Paraguay June, 1911. Register of 1913.
Turner, Effle Katherine.- Bom in St. Albans, W. Va.;
received her education in public, normal, and business schools;
appointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State,
August 7, 1914; permanently, at $900, under Executive order,
June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk at $1,000
April 13, 1917; class one, August i, 1918; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Turner, Mason.— Bom in New York City May 28. 1891 ; home,
Torrincton, Conn.; graduated from Williams College (A. B.)
1915; with a hardware manufacturing company 1915-1917, and
1919-1923; served in the United .States Army 1917-1919, retiring
with the rank of second lieutenant; appointed, after examina-
tion (June 25, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
October 6, 1923; assigned to Colombo November 19, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
Turner, William Taylor.— Bom in Kobe, Japan, of American
parents temporarily residing abroad, September 20, 1900;
home, Emory University, Georgia; attended Meridian College
two years and graduated from the University of Georgia (B. S.)
192 1 ; teacher in a college in Kobd 1921-1923; appointed, after
examination (January, 1924), Student Interpreter in Japan,
April 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*TwelIs, John Steel.— Retired as Consul at Carlsbad June,
1306. Died in New York March 15, 1921. Register of 1913.
Udy, Stanley Hart.— Born in Bartonsville, Pa., April 7, 1889;
graduate of the University of Chica.'<o (Ph. B.), 1916, (J. D.)
1919; clerk in a freight office at Dunkirk, N. Y., 1907-0S; clerk in
the Department of State 1908-1911; on detail with the agency
of the United States in the United States- Venezuela Arbitra-
tion in 1910; disbursing officer, Costa Rica-Panama Boundary
Arbitration, 1911-1913; special employee in the Department of
Justice 1916-17; first lieutenant. United States Army, 191 7-18;
made study of and prepared bulletin on the judicial organiza-
tion of Illinois for the use of delegates to the Illinois Constitu-
tional convention 1919-20; assistant professor of law, Univer-
sity of Missouri 1920-21; appointed an Assistant Solicitor in
the Department of State at $3,000 July 6, 1921; Associate Coun-
sel of the United States in the Norwegian Claims Arbitration
June 2, 1922; Associate Counsel in the American and British
Claims Arbitration October 17, 1922.
Unckles, Roderick William.— Born in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
November 18, 1870; attended public school in Brooklyn; em-
ployed in a clerical capacity by the American Consular Agent
at Port Limon; with the Isthmian Canal Commission 1904-
1906; the Guayaquil & Quito Railroad 1906-07; the Isthmian
Canal Commission 1907-1914; the Pacific Railwaysof Nicaragua
1914-1920; a mercantile corporation in Nicaragua 1920; ap-
pointed Vice Consul at San Jose, Costa Rica, December 2, 1921 ;
at Port Limon October 10, 1923; at San Salvador January 29,
1924; at San Jose August 20, 1924, at Port Limon October 17,
1924; at San Jose December 22, 1924.
Underwood, Wilbur Walker St. John.— Born in Washington,
D. C, May 29, 1876; educated in public schools of Washington
and the Columbian University; appointed clerk in the Depart-
ment of State at S900, under Civil Service rules, October 4, 1899;
at $1,000 July I, 1901; class one July i, 1902; class two March
4, 1907; class four June 22, to be effective July i, 1916; at $2,100
July I, 1924.
Upson, William Ford.— Appointed Commercial Attache at
Vienna July 28, 1924.
* Vail, Delmar J.— Died at his post (Charlottetown) October
30, 1906. Register of 1913.
Vallance, William Roy.— Bom in Fowlerville, N. Y., De-
cember 6, 1SS7; graduate University of Rochester (A. B.)
1910; attended Harvard Law School 1911-12; .graduate, Colum-
bia University (LL. B.) 1914; member of the bar of the State
of New York, and of the Supreme Court of the United States;
practiced law in Rochester June, i9r4-May, 1915; in Herkimer
May, 1915-December, 1917; attended Officers' Training Camp
at Ft. Nia.gara, N. Y., August-October, inclusive, 1917; attor-
ney for Mohawk village April-September, 1917; appointed a law
clerk at $2, 00c in theDepartmcntof State, January 3, 1918, under
the provisions of the Executive order <jf March 26, 1917; at $2,250
August 7, 1918; legal draftin.g assistant, temporarily, at $2,500
November 18, i9i4; assistant solicitor at $2,500 May 24, 1919;
at $3,000 December 31, 1919, efl'ective January i, 1920; special
assistant at $3,500 June 1, 1920; assistant to counsel, American
Delegation, International Conference on Electrical Communi-
cations at Washington, September-December, 1920; drafting
officer at $3,500 April 16,1921; at $4,000 December 30, 1922, ef-
fective January i, 1923; appoiutecl to represent the Depart-
ment of State at a conference of representatives of other De-
partments and the commercial radio companies, which met at
New York on March 16, 1923, to formulate plans for handling
International radio accounts; expert assistant to represent the
Department of State at the conference held at Ottawa to dis-
cuss ways and means of preventing the smuggling of liquor
from Canada into the United States, November 24, 1923; desig-
nated Technical Expert to assist the American Delegation at the
Meeting of the Inter-American Committee on Electrical Com-
munications held at Mexico City, May 27, 1924; appointed
drafting officer at $4,000 July i, 1924; representative of Depart-
ment of State on the board to discuss and determine quotas
that may be reported to the President as required by pro-
visions of the Immigration Act of 1924, October 11, 1924; at
$4,200 November i, 1924.
* Van Buren, Harold S.— Died at his post (Nice) Febmary
12,1907. Register of 1913.
Vance, Marshall Mounts.— Born in 'Middletown, Ohio, July
26, 1889; home, Dayton, Ohio; attended Ohio Wesleyan Uni-
versity, University of Pennsylvania (B. S.), 1912, and Yale
University; connected with the North American Civic League
for Immigrants, Long Island Sound district, 1913-14; with the
Standard Oil Co. in Java 1914-1916; special investigator in
government research bureau; salesman and inaiiaKer in India;
in the Foreign Department of the National Cash Register Co.
at Dayton 1920-21; appointed, after examination (June 28, 1920),
Consul of class seven June 9, 1921; assigned to Colombo July 22.
1921; appointed Consul of class six March i, 1923; detailed to
Windsor, Ontario, June 30, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to Fort William and
Port Arthur December 12, 1924.
van den Arend, Frederik. — Bora at The Hague, Netherlands,
October 5, 1894; father naturalized in El Paso County, Colo.,
1912; home, Fairview, N. C; graduated from Harvard Univer-
sity (A. B.) 1917; employed with an exporting and importing
firm in New York City and in Madagascar 1919-1922; appointed,
after examination (June 25, 1923), Vice-Consul de carriere of
class three October 6. 192;; assigned to Leipzig November 19,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i,
1924.
Van Dyke, Edmund Weston. — Born in New York City No-
vember 20, 1869; graduate of Columbian University (LL. B.)
1893; justice of the peace in the District of Columbia 1898-99;
chief of the legal department of a telephone company in Wash-
ington, D. C, 1900-1904; editor of a magazine in Cleveland,
Ohio, 1913-14; appointed a clerk at $2,400 in the War Trade
Board, November 9, 191 7; drafting officer at $2,500 in the De-
partment of State November 1, 1921; at $2,700 July 1, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
205
♦van Dyke, Henry. — Retired as Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary to the Netherlands and Luxemburg
1917. Register of 1916.
* Van Dyne, Frederick. — Died at sea April ai, 1915, while en
route to his post (Lyon). Register of i9i4-
*Van Dyne, George Wheeler. — Retired as Vice-Consul de
carriere of class two, assigned to Dublin, October, 1920. Reg-
ister of 1922.
Van Home, Thomas B. — Bom in Franklin. Ohio, October 9,
187s; attended the public schools of Franklin eleven years,
Denison University one year, and the University of Michigan
three years; dentist; appointed Consul at Rosario June 30,
1905; was detailed as Vice-Consul in charge of the Consulate
at Montevideo June 10, 1908, to August 4, 190S; resigned as
Consul at Rosario October i, 1909; appointed Vice and Deputy
Consul at Rosario October is. 1910; Vice-Consul at Rosario by
act approved Febuiary s, 191s-
Van Houten, Archibald Charles.— Bom in Salt Lake City,
Utah, July 13, 1873; educated in the public and high schools
of British Columbia; druggist in Nanaimo, B. C, since 1898;
appointed Consular Agent at Nanaimo, May 31, 1918.
* Van Rensselaer, William Stephen.— Retired as Secretary
of Embassy or Legation of class four, assigned to Madrid,
July, 1918. Register of 1917-
Van Sant, Howard D. — Born in Camden, N. J., April 13,
1S65; home. Island Heights, N. J.; educated at the State Model
School, Trenton, N. J., and the public school at Toms River;
engaged in real-estate business and conveyancing fifteen years;
was town councilman three years, justice of the peace two years,
mayor of Island Heights, N. J., six years; appointed, after ex-
amination (January s, 1905), Consul at Guelph January 11,
1905; Consul at Kingston, Ontario, September 15, 1905; Consul
at Dunfermline January 11, 1910; Consul of class seven by act
approved February s, 1915; Foreign Service Officer of class nine
July I, 1924-
Van Valin, Forrest D. — Bom in Unionville, Pa., October
15. 1879; educated in the grammar schools of Unionville; clerk
in the War Department 1909-1922; appointed a clerk of class
one in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
March 10, 1922; class two October i, 1923; at $i,6So July i, 1924.
Vebber, John Michael. — Bom in Milwaukee, Wis., March 31,
1S99; attended high school three years; employed as a clerk by
a boiler manufacturing concern four years; clerk in the Ameri-
can Consulate at Adelaide, Australia, July 5, 1921, and in the
American Consulate General at Melbourne, Australia, 1923;
appointed Vice-Consul at jSIelboume July 27, 1923; at Apia
April 2, 1924.
Veeder, Mary Green. — Bom in Washington, D. C; high-
school education; served temporary appointments in the
Treasury Department, the United States Naval Hospital, and
the United States Public Health Service 1920-21; clerk in the
United States Veterans' Bureau 1921-22; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a clerk of class one, under
Civil Service rules, August i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
* Vignaud, Henry. — Retired as Secretary of the Embassy at
Paris March, 1909. Died in Paris September 16, 1922. Reg-
ister of 1913.
Villedrouin, St. Charles. — Born in Haiti December 10, 1873;
naturalized in New York in 1894; in business at Jeremie;
appointed Consular Agent at Jeremie June 15, 1903.
Vincelette, Leo Joseph. — Bom in Holyoke, Mass., December
24, 1901; graduated from St. Anne's Academy(Uuanton, Vt.)
1920, and attended Quanton High School two years; served in
the United States Army eleven months; clerk in the office of
the personnel adjutant, Walter Reed General Hospital, Sep-
tember, 1920, to July, 192 1 ; appointed a clerk at $900 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules. May i, 1922;
at $i,ooo December i, 1922; at $1,100 May 31 effective Jime i,
1924; at $1,500 July I, 1924.
* Viney, John Irwin. — Retired as Student Interpreter, also
Deputy Consul-General at Shanghai June, 1910. Register of
1913.
Vipond, Benjamin Leslie. — Born in Canada July 24, 1872;
naturalized; attended high school and pursued special courses
in accountancy, architecture, and engineering; employed as
purchasing agent and foreman by several commercial concerns
seven years; clerk in the Government Printing Office 1903,
and 1907-1915; Post Office Department 1905-1907; Department
of Agriculture 1915-1917; United States Shipping Board 1917-1S;
served in the United States Army 1918-19, retiring with the
rank of captain; auditor. Treasury Department, 1919-20, and
chief clerk. National l^ark Service, Department of the Interior,
1920-1923; appointed a drafting olticer at $2,500 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, November i, 1923,
at $3,000 July I, 1924.
Voetter, Thomas Wilson.— Born in Salem, Ohio, July 10,
1S69; home, Santa Fe, N. Mex.; attended the Pittsburgh pubhc
and high schools; graduated from Cornell University in 1892;
employed in electrical work, iS92-iSc)4; served in Pennsylvania
naval militia, 1893-94; employed in iron foundry, 1S94-95; in
employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1895; in the Indian
Service, 1901-1907; appointed, after examination (July 7, 1907),
Consul at Saltillo August 15, 1907; Consul at La Guaira August
19, 1911; Consul of class seven by act approved February 5,
1915; appointed Consul of class five March 2, 1915, and assigned
to Antofagasta; detailed to Valparaiso September 28, 1918;
returned to Antofagasta November 27, 1919; assigned to Caracas
December 27, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924; assigned to Curacao July 23, 1924.
Vogenitz, Hernan Cortez. — Born in Newcomerstown, Ohio,
February 22, 1890; high-school education; employed in the
works of James B. Clow & Sons, of Chicago, at Newcomers-
town 1909-1916; clerk in the American Consulate General at
Habana since January i, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Ha-
bana November 11, 1918; at Lisbon March 2, 1921; at Oporto
November 25, 1922; at Lisbon April 6, 1923; at Funchal October
2, 1923; at Lisbon March 24, 1924; at Progreso June 9, 1924.
*Vongehr, Otto Ewald.— Retired as marshal at Tientsin
June, 1917. Register of 1916.
Von Struve, Henry Clay.— Born in Shovel Mount, Tex.. July
30. 1S74; home. Plainview, Tex.; graduate of University of
Texas (LL. B.), 1894, (LL. I\I.), 1896; prepared a digest and
forms for ancillary proceedings in Texas courts, 1894-95; li-
brarian law department. University of Texas, 1S95-96;
teacher of German and Latin, Brenham High School, 1897-98;
grammar school principal and teacher of German at Her-
mana. Mo., 1899-1900; practiced law at San Antonio and Gon-
zales, Tex., 1901-1906; notary public, 1897-1914; editor of a
German newspaper for eight months; bookkeeper and as-
sistant cashier of banks in Gonzales and Plainview, 1907-1914;
appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914), Consul at
Cura.ao April 24, 1914; Consul of class eight by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Erfurt July 8, 1916; detailed for
duty in the office of the Foreign Trade Advisers, Dep.irtment
of State, November 3, 1917; detailed to Habana September iS,
1918; appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919, and
assigned to La Guaira; appointed Consul of class six June 4.
1920; assigned to Antilla October 9, 1920; detailed to Mexicali
February 7, 1922; assigned to Mexicali October 2, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
von Tresckow, Egmonf Charles. — Bom in Mamaroncck,
N. Y., June 18, 1872; home, Camden, S. C; studied under pri-
vate tutors; attended German school in Austria three years;
University of South Carolina (LL. B.); summer school. Uni-
versity of Virginia; engaged in journalistic work five years;
general practice of law 1900-1916; member of various civic clubs
of Camden, S. C; served on the Mexican border in the South
Carolina National Guard June-December, 1916; major United
States Array, August, 1917, to October, 1919; practiced law and
engaged in real estate development 1919-1921; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1920), Consul of class seven June 9,
1921; assigned to Arica July 21, 1921; appointed Consul of class
six June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924.
*Von Zielinskl, Carl Maria Johan. — Retired as Consular
Assistant June, 1917. Register of 1916.
*Vopicka, Charles J. — Retired as Minister to Rumania
December, 1920. Register of 1918.
Vosholl, William Henry.— Bom in Warrenton. Mo., Novem-
ber 19, 1886; graduated from Central Weslcyan College (B. S.)
1907. (M. S.) 1910; Missouri University (E. E.) 1910; engaged in
electrical engineering for various concerns in the United States
and Chile eight years; appointed Vice-Consul at Iquique. March
22, 1921.
Vyse, William Clarke.- Bom in Babylon, Long Island,
N. Y., June 16, 1895; attended a military academy in New York
City 1905-1907; Randolph-Macon Acadeiny 1907-1912; Lhiited
States Naval Academy 1912-1914; George Washington Law
School, 1917; Princeton University, 1918; employed as real estate
salesman, Washington, D. C, 1914-1917; served in the United
States Army 1917-1919; with American Red Cross April-
2o6
BIOGRAPHICAI. STATEMENT.
November, 1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Ottawa June i,
1920; at Winnipeg October 14, 1922; at Paris December 20, 1923.
Wadsworth, Craig Wharton. — Born in Philadelphia, Pa.,
January 12, 1872; home, Geneseo, N. Y.; educated at the Hill
School and spent one year at Harvard; member of First United
States Cavalr>' in the Spanish-American War; on staff of gover-
nor of New York, 1899-1900; appointed Third Secretary of
Embassy at London May 14, 1902; Second Secretary at London
March 10, 1905; resigned August 6, 1909; appointed, after exami-
nation fMay 27, 1912), Secretary of Legation and Consul-General
at Teheran August 22, 191 2; Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class three by act approved February 5, 1915; appointed
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two March 2, 1915;
assigned to Bucharest March 6, 191 5; assigned to Montevideo
April i^. 1916; inchargeatBuenos Aires August lo-September 26,
1916; assigned to Rio de Janeiro May 25, 1918; appointed Secre-
tary of class one June 28, 1920; assigned to Beunos Aires July 24,
1920; designated and assigned as Counselor of the Embassy at
Brussels May 2&, 1921; unassigned from September 27, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class two July i, 1924
assigned as Counselor of Legation at Lima December 23, i924'
Wadsworth, George. — Bom in Buffalo. N. _Y., April 3,
i^o:?; home, Buffalo; attended the public and high schools of
Buffalo 1898-1910; Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., 1910-1914
(E. E.); teacher in the Syrian Protestant College, Beirut,
Syria, 1914-1917; clerk in the American Consulate General at
Beirut 1916-17; appointed Vice-Consul at Nantes November
19, 1917; at Constantinople, July 9, 1919; appointed, after ex-
amination (June 24, 1918) Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
September 27, 1919; assigned to Constantinople October 22,
1919; to Sofia April 24, 1920; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of
class two. May 24, 1920; assigned to Alexandria, September 25,
1920; to Constantinople April 26, 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class one November 17, 1921; Consul of class seven
June 22, 1922; remained at Constantinople on detail; detailed to
Cairo August 21, 1922; appointed Consul of class six March i,
1923; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924; de-
tailed to the Department of State August 1, 1924.
Wakefield, Ernest A. — Bom in Gardiner, Me., January 4,
1S6S; home, Augusta, Me.; public-school education; engaged in
life-insurance business; appointed, after examination (January
26. 189S); Commercial Agent at Orillia January 27, 1898; Consul
May 21, 1900; Consul at Rangoon, June 10, 1908; Consul at Port
Elizabeth January 11, 1910; Consul of class six by act approved
February 5, 1915; detailed to Femie January 31, 191S; assigned
to Prince IRupert August 31, 1918; appointed Foreign Service
C)fFicer of class eight July i, 1924.
Waldron, Elma Vaughan. — Bom in New York City Novem-
ber i8, 1885; educated in the public schools of Brooklyn, N.Y.;
engraver, general office assistant, and bookkeeper 1899-1915;
sergeant. Customs Intelligence Bureau of the port of New York,
April, 1918, to July, 1919; appointed at £1,200. in the Passport
Bureau of the Department of State in New York City, under
Civil Service rules, August 26, 1919; at $1,400 July i, 1922;
at Si,63o July i, 1924.
Walk, Maurice. — Bom in Chicago. 111., June 22, 1897; home,
Chicago; graduated from the University of Chicago (Ph. B.)
1919, (J. D.) 1921; employed as a clerk, investigator, and sales-
man; served in the United States Navy October-December,
1918; appointed, after examination (June 27, 1921), Vice-Consul
de carriere of class three October 26, 192 1; assigned to Hamburg
December 14, 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere ol class
two November 23, 1923; assigned to Hongkdfcg January 2, 1924;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one May 10, 1924;
Foreign Sers'ice Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*WaIker, Edward B. — Retired as Consul at Burslem Sep-
tember, 191 1. Register of 1913.
Walker, Ernestine M.^Bom in Buckland, England; educa-
ted at Ursuline Convent, O.xford, England; pursued university
courses and studied in France two years; teacher in English
College. Mexico City, two years; stenographer in Cincinnati
one year; appointed clerk at $1,200. temporarily, in the Depart-
ment of State July 25, 1919: at $1,000, under Civil Service rules,
October 16, 1920; class one August 16, 1921; at $1,440 July i, 1924.
Walker, Jay. — Born in Washington, D. C, August 2, 1895;
attended Mount Royal College two years, and the University
School one year; employed as a salesman in New York City
two years; served in the United States Army (Ambulance
Service) June 11, 191 7, to April 25, 1919; employed by tlie
American Red Cross in Europe several months; clerk in the
American Consulate at Riga, Latvia, November, 1920; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul at Riga December 29, 1920; retired Octo-
ber 31, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Kovno July 7, 1922;
at Danzig May 5, 1924.
Walker, Ralph Carlyle.— Bom in Manassas, Va., September
15, 1892; attended public and high schools; employed as mes-
senger by the American Red Cross, 1914-1917; assistant mes-
senger in the War Department June, 1917, to June, 1923;
transferred to the Department of State and appointed an
asisstant messenger, under Civil Service rules, July 17, 1922.
♦Wallace, Hugh Campbell.— Retired as Ambassador to
France July, 1921. Register of 1922.
♦Wallace, Thomas Ross.—* * * Appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class nine July i, 1924. Retired from active
service as Consul at Martinique July, 1924, under the provisions
of the Act of :May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
♦Wallace, William Kay. — Retired as Second Secretary of the
Legation at Habana March, 191a. Register of 1913.
Waller, George Piatt. — Born in Montgomery, Ala., Sep-
tember 7, 1S89; home, Montgomery; attended public and private
schools in Montgomery; Marion (Ala.) Institute two years;
University of Virginia five years; engaged in newspaper and
magazine work and was principal of Cliilhowie (Va.) High
School, 1912-13; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Yar-
mouth February iS, 1913; Vice and Deputy Consul at Carlsbad
July 7, 1914; Vice Consul at Carlsbad liy act approved Feb-
ruary 5, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Athens July 14, 1915;
Vice-Consul at Patras May 16, 1916; Vice-Consul at Athens
September 6, 1916; Acting Commercial Attach^ at Athens May
15-23, 1917; appointed after examination (May 12, 1919) Vice-
Consul de carriere of class three September 27, 1919; assigned to
Athens October 22, 1919; resigned December 4, 1919; reappointed
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 15, 1920, and
assigned to Kobe; appointed Vice Consul de carriere of class two
November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; assigned to Bizerta
June 15, 1922; to Ceiba September 21, 1923; appointed Consul of
class seven December 19, 1923; assigned to Ceiba Decemlier 22,
1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight July i,
1924.
Walsh, Harry Leo. — Bora in Baltimore, Md., May 19. 1886;
home. Melvale Heights, Md. ; employed with a Baltimore news-
paper 1902-1904; stenographer in offices in Baltimore 1904-
1907 and in several Government departments 1905-1911; re-
porter on a Baltimore newspaper 1908-1910 and 1913-1918;
appointed, after examination (June i8, 1917), a Consul of class
eight February 5, 1918; assigned to Manzanillo August 31, 1918;
appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; detailed to
Nucvo Laredo August 6, 1921; appointed Consul of class six
November 23, 192 1; assigned to Nuevo Laredo October 2, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Walsh, Humphrey Martyn.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
May 15, 1902; graduated from high school, and attended the
University of Maryland three years; graduated from George
\^''ashington University (A. B.) 1924; employed in a real estate
office March-July, 1924; appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the
Department of State, under Civil Service rules, July 14, 1924.
Ward, Frank X.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa.. October 4, 1882;
completed course at parochial school in Philadelphia; grad-
uated from Georgetown Law School (LL. B.) 1913; employed
in railroad ticket office, 1896-97, and in office of manufacturing
concern, 1897-1905; appointed clerk in the Isthmian Canal
Commission, under Civil Service rules, April 4, 1905; trans-
ferred to the Department of State as cleijc at $900 June 30, 1910;
at $1,000 November 13, 1911; resigned December 14, 1913; ap-
pointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in the Department of
State September i, 1917; clerk of class two, under Civil Service
rules, April 16, 1918; class three December 31, 1919, effective
January i, 1920; law clerk at $2,000, July i, 1920; at $2,250 Feb-
ruary 16, 1921; at $2,500 September 16, 1922; assistant solicitor
at $2,500 December 30, 1922, effective January i, 1923; at $3,000
July I, 1924.
Warden, Sam James.— Born in Knoxville, Term., December
18, 1893; educated in the public schools of Knoxville and at a
business college; stenographer in railroad and legal work
1910-11; in office of United States marshal, eastern district of
Tennessee, 1911-1913; Bureau of Insular Affairs 1913-1916;
clerk in the American Embassy at Petrograd; clerk to the
American Military Mission to Russia; appointed clerk in the
Consulate at Vladivostok March, 1918; resigned February 22,
1919; appointed Vice-Consul at Vladivostok December 17,
1919; at Yokohama October 8, 1920; at Montreal December
18, 1923.
♦Wardman, George B.— Retired as Commercial Agent at
Aguascalientes July, 1906. Register of 1913.
Wame, Clyde Arlington.— Born in Romulus, N. Y., May 19,
1897; attended Ithaca High School, Cornell University, and
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
20-
the Merchants and Bankers School, N'ew York City; served in
the United States Army 1918-19; accountant with the Cerro de
Pasco Copper Co., in Peru 1919-1921; appointed Consular
Agentat Cerro de Pasco June 23, 1921; at La Oroya July 3, 1922.
* Warner, Southard Parker. — Died at his post (Harbin) May
9, 1914. Register of 1913-
Warren, Avra Melvin. — Born in Ilchester, Md., August 26,
1893; home, Hllicott City, Md.; graduated from Johns Hop-
kins University (A. B.) 1915; employed in forestry work in
Maryland, 1915-1917; in military training Camp May-August,
1917; in United States Army August, 1917, to August, 1919.
discharged as second lieutenant; with a grain exporting com-
pany in Baltimore, 1919-20; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1920), Consul of class seven, June 4, 1920; assigned
to Cape Haitien, August 2, 1920; appointed Consul of class six
November 23, 192 1; assigned to Karachi December 27, 192 1; ap-
pointed Consul of class five March i, 1923; assigned to Nairobi
January 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six
July I, 1924; class five August 8, 1924.
*Warren, Charles Beecher. — Retired as Ambassador to
Japan March, 1923; also as Ambassador to Mexico, August,
1924. Register of 1922.
Warren, Fletcher. — Born in Wolfe City, Tex., March 3,
1896; home, Wolfe City; graduated from the University
of Texas (A. B.) 192 1; served in the United States Army, Janu-
arj', 1918-October, 1919; appointed , after examination (June 27,
1921), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October 26, 1921;
assigned to Habana December 14, 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul
de carriere of class two February 26, 1923; class one November
23, 1923; Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924;
class eight, also Consul, August 8, 1924.
Warren, James Rudolph. — Bom in Washington, D. C, July
30, 1896; public-school education; employed by the District
of Columbia three years; chauffeur in the Quartermaster Gen-
eral's Office, War Department, 1918-1922; transferred to the
Department of State and appointed a chauffeur at $900, under
Civil Service rules, August 7, 1922; at Si, 080 December i, 1923;
at $1,260 July I, 1924.
Warren, Robert. — Bom in Washington, D. C. December 17,
1889; attended the public schools of Washington; janitor, police
court, Washington, D. C. 1909-1915; chauffeur 1916-17; ap-
pointed, temporarily, at $720 in the Department of State
October 30, 1917; at $840 August i, 1918; at $720 July i, 1919;
assistant messenger, under Civil Service rules, February i,
192 1 ; messenger May 16, 192 1; chauffeur at $1,080 July i, 192 1; at
$900 December i, 1923; at $1,140 July i, 1924.
Wash, Carlyle H. — Major, United States Army; assigned to
duty as Assistant Military Attache at Paris June 7, igaa.
Washburn, Albert Henry. — Bom in Middlcboro. Mass., in
1866; graduated from Cornell University (Ph. B.) 1889; George-
town Law (LL.B.) 1893; consul at Magdeburg, Germany,
1890-1893; assistant United States attorney for district of
Massachusetts, 1897-1901; special United States Treasury
counsel on customs cases 1901-1904; practiced law in New
York and Boston; delegate to Massachusetts Constitutional
Convention, 191 7; permanent member United States legal
advisory board for Commonwealth of Massachusetts; president
Association of the Customs Bar; lecturer on political science
and international law at Dartmouth College; appointed En-
voy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Austria
February 10, 1922.
Washington, Horace Lee.— Born in Washington, D. C, June
4, 1864; educated at the Boston Latin School, Friends' College
(Providence), and the University of Virginia; Fellow, Royal
Geographical Society, 1912; engaged in the practice of law;
appointed confidential clerk to the Third Assistant Secretary
of State June 4, 1892; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Cairo
October i, 1894; Consul at Alexandretta October 30, 1896;
Consiil at Valencia June 13, 1899; Consul at Geneva October
31, 1900, to take effect January i, 1901; Consul-General at Cape
Town March 18, 1905; Consul-General at Large May '8, 1906,
to take effect July i, 1906; Consul-General at Marseille June
10. 1908; Consul at Liverpool May 31, 1909; Consul of class one
by act approved February s, 1915; appointed Consul General of
class two March i, 1923; assigned to Liverpool March 28, 1923;
detailed to the Department of State March 4, 1924; returned
to Liverpool April 23, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class one July i, 1924; assigned to London August 6, 1924.
Waterman, Henry Samuel.— Bom in Port Townsen J . Wash. .
March 20, 1882; home, Seattle, Wash.; attended public Schools
in Seattle and San Francisco, schools in Germany anrl Switzer-
land three and one-half years, academy at San Rafael two years.
and high school, Seattle, one year; graduate of the University-
of California (B. S.), 1903; engaged in mining in Me.xico, Cali-
fornia, and Nevada 1903-04; mining and construction engineer
in Seattle 1905-06; member of firm of surveyors, assayers, and
mining engineers in Valdez, Alaska, 1906-1909; manufacturer
and contractor building materials, Seattle 1910-1914; appointed
clerk in the American Consulate at Moscow December 28, 1916;
Vice Consul at Christiansand I''cbruary 6, 191S; at Guatemala
June 5, 1919; appointed, after examination (Januari' 25, 1915),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three September 27, 1919; as-
signed to Guatemala October 21, 1919; to Coriuto November 3,
1919; appointed Consul of class seven April 9, 1920; assigned to
Corinto April 17. 1920; to San Jose July 20, 1921; appointed
Consul of class six November 19, 192 1; Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
* Waters, Daniel J.— Retired as Consular Assistant, also
Vice-Consul at Dresden, February, 1916. Register of 1915.
*Waters, Harold Gorman. — * * * Appointed Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924. Retired as Vice
Consul of career, assigned to Buenos Aires, September, 1924.
Register of 1924.
Waters, Thomas William.— Born in New Orleans, La.,
April 21, 1856; educated in public and private schools and
attended a business college in 1878; general commercial ex-
perience in the United States and in Nicaragua, and engaged in
private business 1870-1921; appointed V^ice-Consul at Blue-
fields, July 13, 1921.
Watson, Arthur Oilman.- Bom in Boston. 'Mass., September
23, 1S84; attended school in Boston and graduated from
high school in 1900; employed as clerk, chemist, and later as
salesman with a typewriter company; assistant and manager
of the Arabian Trading Co., Mombasa, British East Africa;
resigned in 1913; reentered the company's service at Aden;
appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Aden January 14, 1915;
Vice-Consul at Aden by act approved February 5, 191 5; re-
signed June 30, 192 1 ; reappointed Vice-Consul at Aden August
17, 19^3-
Watson, Hugh.— Bom in Birkenhead, England, Febmary
17, 1882; naturalized; attended public schools in England
1888-1897, and an evening commercial school; clerk in the
American Consulate at Liverpool, 1899-1920; employed by
trans- Atlantic steamship lines 1920-1923; appointed Vice-
Consul at Liverpool May 18, 1923.
Watson, Hugh Hammond.— Born in Bradford, Vt , Novem-
ber 10, 1885; home, Montpelier, Vt.; graduate of University of
Vermont, 1906; clerk in Three Rivers Consulate, 1907-08: ap-
pointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Three Rivers December
28, 1907; Vice and Deputy Consul ianc^ clerk) at Yarmouth
Maya, 1908; Vice and Deputy Consul at Belfast August 8, 191 1;
Vice-Consul at Belfast by act approved February 5, 1915; ap-
pointed Vice-Con.sulat Liverpool July 14, 1915; appointed, after
examination (November 10, 1908), Consul of class eight Febru-
ary 19, 1918, and remained at Liverpool on detail; appointed
Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned to Lille July 21,
1921; appointed Consul of class five November 23, 1921; assigned
to Lyon May 17, 1922: appointed Consul ol class tour December
19, 1923; Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Watson, John Jordan Crittenden.— Born in Frankfort, Ky.,
February 18, 1878; home, Louisville, Ky.; spent three years
in high schools, one year in University of Pennsylvania Law
School, and graduated from Centre College, Kentucky, Law
School (LL. B.), 1899; practiced law, 1899-1909; employed as
life insurance solicitor, telephone service solicitor, and real
estate salesman in Louisville, 1909-1913; appointed, alter exam-
ination (January 19, 1914), Consul at Roubaix April 24. 1914;
Consul of class eight by act approved February 5. 1915; assigned
to St. Pierre-Mtquelon July 17, 1915; to Yarmouth October a?.
1916; appointed Consul of class seven September 5, 1919; class
six Jime 4, 1920; assigned to Barbados October 19, 1920; ap-
pointed Consul of class five November 23, 1921; Foreign Service
Officer of class si.x July i, 1924.
Watson, Lillian Adelaide.— Bom in Philadelphia. Pa.; at-
tended the public schools of the District of Columbia, and
graduated from Business High School, Washington, 1918; em-
ployed as stenographer by a patent law firm in Washington.
D. C, 1917-18; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,100 in
the Department of State June 24. 1918; at $1,140 July i. 1918;
at $1,200 September I. 1918: at Si, 000, under Civil Service rules,
January 6, 1919; class one March i, 1910; class two July i, 1921;
class three February i, 1924; at $i,86o December i, 1924.
Watt, Elbert Henry.— Bom in Washington, D. C, August
a6, 1S84; employed with the Western Union Telegraph Co. in
Washington 1901-1903 and 1911-1917; in Baltimore 1906-190S;
208
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
with the Postal Telegraph Co.. Washington 1003-1905; in Balti-
more 1910-11; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $1,200 in
the Department ol State November 19, 1917; at $1,400 Decem-
ber 13, 1917; at $1,600 July I, 1918; clerk of class three, under
Civil Ser\-ice rules, February i, 1921; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
*Watts, Ethelbert.— Retired as Consul-General of class four,
on detail at Hamilton. Bermuda, June, 1919. Died in Phila-
delphia, Pa., July 13. 1919- Register of 191S.
Weaver, Frederick Stinton. — Bom in London. Ontario, of
American parents. May 25. 1S99; attended Polytechnic High
School (Los Angeles, Calif.) 1917-18, and the University of
Southern California, while serving in the Students' Army
Training Corps, October-December, 1918; pursued extension
service courses at the University of Washington 1919-1921;
clerk in the American Consulate General at Vancouver Sep-
tember, 1921, to May, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Van-
couver May 2. 1923; at Prince Rupert May 19, 1923.
Webber, Leroy.— Bom in Buffalo, N. Y., July 7, 1891; home,
Buffalo; educated in the public and high schools of Buffalo;
secretary in railroad and business offices in Buffalo several
years; clerk in the American Consulate at Glasgow March-July,
1913; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Glasgow July 19,
1913; Vice-Consul at Nottingham February 20, 1915; at Palermo
January 3, 1920; appointed, after examination (June 28, 1920),
Vice-Consul de carriere of class three October i, 1920, and as-
signed to Palermo; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class
two November 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; Consul of class
seven March i, 1923; detailed to Hongkong March 5, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Ser%'ice Officer of class eight July i, 1924;
assigned to Amoy August 18, 1924.
* Webster, William H. H.— Died at his post (Niagara Falls)
April IS, 1911. Register of 1913.
Weddell, Alexander Wilbourne. — Born in Richmond, Va.,
April 6, 1S76; home, Richmond; educated in private schools,
Richmond high school, and George Washington University
(LL. B.) 1908; special courses. University of Catania (Italy),
1913-14; University of Lausanne, July-August, 1924; employed
by various Richmond business concerns, 1892-1904; private
and acting first sergeant, Henrico Light Dragoons, Virginia
State Militia; clerk. Library of Congress, 1904-1907; private
secretary to the Minister to Denmark and clerk in American
Legation at Copenhagen. 1908-1910; appointed, after exami-
nation iMay 26. 1909). Consul at Zanzibar January 11,
1910; Consul at Catania August 22, 1912; Consul-General at
Athens April 24, 1914; appointed Consul-General of class five
February 22. 1915, effective i^^ebruary s. 1915; assigned to
Beirut December 16, 1916 , but did not proceed; attached to
the Diplomatic Agency at Cairo February 6-April 10, 1917;
reassigned to Athens April lo. 1917; Delegate of the United
States on Inter-Allied Commercial Bureau, Athens. May 7,
1917; Delegate of War Trade Board for Greece January 15, 1918;
Provisional Delegate of the United States on Inter-Allied Mili-
tary Commission for Greece February 13, 1918; Delegate of the
United States on Inter-Allied Financial Commission at Athens
February 13, 1918; Charg^ d'Affaires ad interim at Athens Sep-
tember 12 to October s. 1918; Commercial Adviser to the Lega-
tion in Athens, with diplomatic rank, August i, 1919; ap-
pointed Consul-General of class feur September 5, 1919; as-
signed to Calcutta July i. 1920; appointed Consul General of
class three November 19, 1921; delegate of the Department of
State to the Ninth Foreign Trade Convention held at New Or-
leans May, 1923; detailed to the Department of State September
15, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class two July i,
1924; assigned to Mexico August i, 1924.
Weeks, Mangum. — Bom in Washington, D. C, January 5,
189s; graduated from the University of North Carolina (A. B.)
1915; graduate student at Johns Hopkins University 1915-16;
attended Harvard Law School I9i6-i9i8and 1919-20; employed
by a law firm 1918-19; research assistant in the Library of
Congress 1921-22 and October, 1923, to April, 1924; employed as
assistant to counsel. Bureau of the Budget, April, 1922, to
October, 1923; appointed a drafting officer at $2,500 in the
Department of State May i, 1924; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
♦Weltzel, George T. — Retired as Minister to Nicaragua July,
1913. Register of 1913.
Welch, Florence L.— Born in Battle Creek, Mich.; public
school education; employed as typist six months; with United
States Shipping Board July 15, 1918. to February 28, 1919;
appointed a clerk at $900 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, March i, 1919; at $1,000, August 16, 1919; at
$1,100 March i, 1924; class one May 31 effective Jime i, 1924;
at $1,500 July I, 1924.
Welch, William Henry. — Bom in Roscoe, 111., June 21, 1873;
attended public schools 18S4-1889; employed in private con-
cerns 1882-1894; served in United States Army 1894-1897;
held various municipal and governmental pqsitions 1897-1911
and 1912-1923; clerk in Interior Department July i, 1923-Jan-
uary 22, 1924; in Department of Commerce, January 22, 1924,
to November 28, 1924; transferred from the Department of
Commerce and appointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, November 28, 1924.
*Welden, EUwood Austin. — Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Deputy Consul-General at Budapest, October, 1909. Reg-
ister of 1913.
* Welles, Sumner. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy or Lega-
tion of class two, assigned to the Department of State as Chief
of the Latin American Division, March, 1922. Register of 1918.
Wells, Edward — Born in Washington, D. C. January 5,
1904; attended high school six months; appointed messenger
boy at $420 in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules. May 11, 1920; position allocated to Custodial three at
$1,020 July I, 1924.
*Wells, Francis. — Retired as Vice-Consul de carriere of class
three, unassigned, January, 1923. Register of 1922.
Wells, John Brawden. — Born in North Carolina. July 19,
1892; educated in public and business schools; employed with
Southern Railway Co., 1910-1914: appointed a clerk, tem-
porarily, in the Department of State, November 29, 1915;
permanently at $1,000, under Executive order, June 22, to be
effective July i, 1916; appointed clerk class one May 11, 1917;
class two September 8, 1921; at $1,680 July i, 1924.
Wenger, Aloysius. — Bom in Switzerland April 3. i868; natu-
ralized in New Orleans August 18, 1898; educated in Switzer-
land, France, and United States; studied law in Philadelphia,
graduate (Ph. D.) of Jesuit College of New Orleans; teacher in
colleges South and East nine years; appointed clerk at $900 in
Bureau of Pensions July 26, 1900; at $1,000 September 26, 1901;
class one February 16, 1904; transferred to the Department of
State as clerk class one October 7, 1907; appointed clerk class
two November 30, 1908, to take effect January i, 1909; class
threejune27, 191 1; class four June 16, 1919; at $2,100 July i, 1924
*West, George N. — Retired as Consul-General of class five,
assigned to Vancouver, March, 1919. Died in Natick, Mass.,
March 26, 1920. Register of 1918.
West, Leland Stanford. — Born in Richmond, Va., September
10, 1888; attended Washington public schools; employed as
elevator operator by a hotel and a railway company in Wash-
ington eleven years, and by the Superintendent of Public Build-
ings and Grounds three and one-half years; appointed assistant
messenger in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, December 31. 1920, effective January i, 1921.
* Westacott, Richard.— Died January 28, 1922, while a Con-
sular Assistant, also Vice-Consul, at London. Register of 1918.
Westcott, Charles Drake.— Born in Philadelphia, Pa., August
3, 1871; home, Philadelphia; took electrical engineering courses
at Lehigh and Cornell LTniversities; graduated from Columbian
College with degree? of LL. B., LL. M., and D. C. L. ; employed
as assistant engineer with BrookljTi Railway Company 1894-
1896; assistant attorney. Department of Justice, with Spanish
Treaty Claims Commission 1902-1909; attorney and consult-
ing engineer Washington and Habana 1909-1917; major. Ord-
nance Department of the United States Army January, 1918, to
October, 1919; author of many technical and engineering papers
and reports; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1920),
Consul of class three to assist in economic investigational work
June 4, 1920; detailed to Paris June 29, 1920; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Westervelt, William I. — Lieutenant colonel. United States
Army; assigned to duty as Assistant Military Attach^ at Paris
May 17, 1923.
Wetmore, John Howard. — Born in Concord. Mich., Decem-
ber 5, 1868; attended Ann Arbor (.Mich.) High School, 1884-
1887; University of Michigan, 1887-1889; employed in a bank at
Cheboygan, Mich., 1890-1900; assistant cashier and stock-
holder in the City National Bank of Marion, Ohio, 1901-1918;
appointed Vice-Consul at Toronto August 30, 1918; at North
Bay May 27, 1920; Vice-Consul at Breslau February 21, 1932.
Wharton, Clifton Reginald. — Bom in Baltimore, Md., May
11, 1899; graduated from Boston University Law School
(LL. B.) 1920, (LL. M.) 1923; served in United States Army,
1918; admitted to the Bar of Massachusetts 1920; practiced law
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
209
in Boston 1920-1924; physical instructor 1922-1924; clerk in
Veterans' Bureau May, 1924; appointed a law clerk at $1,860
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, August
16, 1924.
Wheeler, Post. — Born in Owego, N. Y., August 6, 1869;
home, Ellensburg, Wash.; educated at Rugby and a graduate
of the AVilliam Penn Charter School and of Princeton Uni-
versity, A. B. (1891;, Litt. D. (1893); instructor in English,
Princeton University; took course medical department, Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, and post-graduate course at the
Sorbonne, Paris, 1S94-95; correspondent in Paris and Jlorocco
of the Westminster Gazette and the New York livening Post;
editor, Nev,- York Press, 1896-1900; engaged in mining in Alaska
and Washington two years; author of a university textbook
and several volumes of critiques and poems; colonel and judge
advocate general on staff of the governor of Washington; ap-
pointed, after examination, Second Secretary of the Embassy
to Japan July 21, 1906; Secretary of the Embassy at Petrograd
December 21, 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at Rome February
1, 1912; appointed Secretary of the Embassy at Tokyo June 3,
1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act ap-
proved February 5. 1915; designated and assigned as Counselor
of the Embassy at Tokyo March 26, 1917; en dispontbilite 1918-
19; designated and assigned as Counselor of the Legation at
Stockholm January i8, 1919; of the Embassy at London March
2. 1921; on leave of absence since February 20, 1924; appointed
Foreign Serv'ice Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Wheeler, Willard H. — Born December 29. i868; appointed
an assistant messenger in the Department of State June 28,
to be effective July i, 1916; messenger October 7, 191S.
* White, Charles Dunning. — Retired as Minister to Honduras
November, 1913. Register of 1913.
White, Donald Sherman.— Bom in Washington, D. C,
March 29, 1892; graduated from Shortridge High School (Indian-
apolis, Ind.) 1910, and Bowdoin College (A. B.) 1916; graduate
work at Princeton University 1917; Federal court reporter
1911-12, and a newspaper representative in Paris, France, 192c:
ser\-ed in the United States Army 1917-1919; retiring with the
rank of second lieutenant; representative of a tourist company
in Paris, France, 1921-22; employed in the Immigration Bureau,
Department of Labor, 1922-23; clerk in the American Consulate
at Vienna, May 3, 1923, to August 28, 1923; appointed Vice-
Consul at Vienna August 29, 1923.
White, Francis.— Bom in Baltimore, Md., March 4, 1892;
home, Baltimore; graduate of Yale University (Ph. B.), 1913;
studied one year each in Paris and Madrid, 1913-1915; ap-
pomted, after examination (June 28, 1915), Secretary of Em-
bassy or Legation of class five July 28, 1915, and assigned to
Peking; appointed Secretary of class four February 3, 1916;
Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned to Teheran
January- 30, 1918; to Habana, December 12. 1919; appointed
Secretary of class two June 28, 1920; assigned to Buenos Aires.
November 16, 1920; assigned to the Department of State
March i, 1922; designated Acting Chief of the Division of Latin
American Affairs June 5, 1922; Chief April 14, 1923; appointed
Secretary of class one January 23, 1924; appointed a member of
the United States-Panama Commission to negotiate an ar-
rangement to take the place of the Taft Agreement February
II, 1924; Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
♦ White, Henry. — Retired as Ambassador to France Novem-
ber, 1909. Register of 1913. Appointed a Commissioner Pleni-
potentiary of the United States to Negotiate Peace Novem-
ber 30, 1918.
♦White, Jay.— Died at his post (Naples) May 23, 1918.
Register of 1917.
White, John Campbell. — Born in London, England, of Ameri-
can parents. March 17, 1884; home, Washington, D. C; grad-
uate of Harvard University (A. B.), 1907, and took law course
at Harvard, 1907-08; private secretary to Ambassadors in Rome
and Paris, 1906-07; with St. Paul Pioneer-Despatch. 1909;
and Baltimore Sun, 1910-1913; appointed, after examination
(November 17. 1913), Third Secretary of the Embassy at
Mexico City April 24, 1914, but did not proceed there;
appointed Secretary of the Legation and Consul-General
at Santo Domingo May 22, 1914; Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class three by act approved February 5, 1915;
assigned to Petrograd March 6, 1915; to Athens May 25, 1916;
assigned to Tokyo December 28, 191 7; assigned to Bangkok
to be Charge May 10. 1918: assigned to Warsaw August 18, 1919;
appointed Secretari- of class two December 20, 1919; assigned
to the Department of State October 16, 1920; to Caracas May
26, 192 1 ; to Prague February 26, 1923; appointed Secretary' of
class one May 3, 1924; assigned to Riga June 10, 1924; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
* White, Thaddeus C— Retired as Marshal at Shanghai
February, 1913. Register of 1912-
Whitehouse, Sheldon. — Born in New York City February s,
1883; home. New York City; educated at Famborough School and
Eton College, England, and at Yale University and New York
Law School; ser\'ed as private secretary to the Ambassador to
Great Britain one year; appointed, after examination (May 17,
1909), Secretary of the Legation at Caracas August 4. 1909; was
Charge there for a year; Second Secretary of the Embassy at
Paris March 2, 1911; detailed to Embassy at Constantinople
October-December, 191 1; appointed Secretary of the Legation
at Managua February 11, 1914, but did not go there; appointed
Secretary of the Legation to Greece and Montenegro June 24,
1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by act ap-
proved February 5, 1915; assigned to Petrograd May 25, 1916;
appointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class two
August 3, 1916; assigned to Stockholm January S, 1918; ap-
pointed Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one
August 27, 191S; designated and assigued as Counselor of the
Legation at Stockholm August 30, 1918; assigned to Paris
December 30, 1918; to the Department of State October 18.
1919; unassigned April 20 to November 2, 1920; reassigned
to the Department of State, November 3, 1920; designated
and assigned as Counselor of the Embassy at Paris April i6.
1921; designated September 3, 1921, a delegate on the part of
the United States to the Sixth General Conference on Weights
and Measures to be held at Paris in .September, 1921; ap-
pointed Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of class one July i, 1924-
Whitfield, James Vivian. — Bom in Seven Springs, N. C.
July 23, 1894; home, Wallace, N. C; attended a military school,
Charlotte, N. C, and graduated from the University of North
Carolina, (A. B.) 1915; (A. M.) 1919, commandant and teacher
at a militant school, Charlotte, N. C, 1916; instructor at the
University of North Carolina 1917-1919; appointed Vice-Consul
at Montevideo July 8, 1919; at Bahia Blanca April 10, 1920; ajo-
pointed, after examination (January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de
carriere of class three November 30, 1920; assigned to Habana
December 27, 1920; to JIatanzas May 12, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carriere of class two May 26, 1922; class one February
26, 1923; Consul of class seven December 19, 1923; remained at
Matanzas on detail; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
eight July i, 1924.
*Whitlock, Brand.— Retired as Ambassador to Belgium
December, 1921. Register of 1922.
Whitney, Byrle A. — Bom near Quimby, Iowa, June 19, 1901;
graduated from high school, and from tlie University of Iowa
(A. B.) 1923; employed by commercial concerns 1923-24; ap-
pointed a clerk at $1,320 in the Department of State, under
Civil Ser\'ice rules. November 18, 1924.
Whittington, William Vallie. — Bom in Benton. 111., Decem-
ber 10, 1904; graduated from high school 1923; attended George-
town Law School one year; typist in a circuit clerk and re-
corder's office 1922-23; stenographer in a lawyer's office Febru-
ary-September, 1923; appointed a clerk at S900 in the Depart-
ment of State, under Civil Service rules, February 11, 1924;
at Si, 000 May 31, effective Juu# I, 1924; at $1,320 July i, 1924.
* Wicker, Cyrus French. — Retired as Secretary of Embassy
or Legation of class three, imassigned, November, 1916. Reg-
ister of 1915.
Wightman, Chauncey Beach. — Born in Watertown. S. Dak.,
July 19, 189S; graduated from Portland (Oreg.) High School,
1920, and attended the University of Washington 1920-21;
served in the United States Army 1917-1919; employed by a
playground association during summer vacation 1920; clerk
in the American Consulate at Callao-Lima March-September,
1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Callao-Lima September 14,
1923.
*Wilber, David F.— Retired as Consul-General of class three,
assigned to Wellington, April, 1923. Register of 1922.
Wilcox, Henry Tabor.— Born in Asheville. N. C. April s.
1&88; home, Vineland, N. J.; attended X'ineland (N. J.) liigh
school three and one-half years; took courses in banking and
finance and banking and commercial law at the American
Institute of Banking; employed in various capacities by the
Vineland Trust Co., 1907-1912; appointed Consular Agent at
PortofMaria June 13, 1912; appointed, after examination (Janu-
ary 25, 1915), Consul of class nine, September 17. 191.?; on detail
as Vice-Consul at Port Antonio, October 191.';. to June, 1916;
assigned to Guadeloupe April 24, 1916; appointed Consul of
class eight September 14, 191 7; detailed lo Paris August 29,
2IO
BIOGRAPHICAL, STATEMENT.
1919; appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assifrned
to V^igo December 27, 1921; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
* Wilder, Amos Parker. — Retired as Consul-General at
Shanghai February, 1914. Register of 1913-
Wiley, John Cooper. — Born in Bordeaux, France, of Ameri-
can parents September 26. 1893; home, Indianapolis, Ind;
received his education from tutors and spent one year at Union
College and one and a half years at Georgetown University Lavsr
School; clerk in the American Embassy at Paris eight months
1915-16; appointed, after examination (April 10. 1916), Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of cla.ss five May 17, 1916;
assigned to Paris June 13, 1916; appointed Secretary of class
four August 3, 1916; Secretary of class three July 13, 1917;
assigned to The Hague January 30. 191S: to Santiago Decem-
ber 12, 1919: to Buenos Aires April 10, 1920; to Caracas July
24, 1920; to the Department of State February 17 1921; ap-
pointed Secretarj' of class two August 24, 192 1; assigned to
Copenhagen October 20, 1921; to Madrid September 7, 1922;
to Lima September i, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class four July i, 1924.
Wiley, Samuel Hamilton. — Born in London, England, of
American parents June 19, 1888; home, Salisbury, N. C; spent
two years at Trinity Park School, three years in academic
department and two years in law department. University of
North Carolina, and was licensed to practice law in 1912; em-
ployed three years in mining business in Mexico; practiced
law in Salisbury 1912-1914; appointed, after examination (Jan-
uary 19, 1914). Consul at Asuncion, April 27, 1914; Consul of
class nine by act approved February 5, 1913; appointed Consul
of class eight March 2, 1915; assigned to St. Pierre-Miquelon
October 27. 1916; to Oporto August 31, 191S; appointed Consul
of class seven November 19, 1921; Foreign Service Officer of
class eight July i, 1924.
Wilkinson, James Richard.— Bom in Greenville, S. C,
August 19, 189?; home, Madison, Wis.; attended high school
and Furman University Fitting School in Greenville; gradu-
ated from Davidson (N. C.) College (B. S.) 1915 and the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin (LL. B.) 1919; served in the United States
Army 1918-19; with law firm in Madison and with the Madison
Extension Division, Commercial Law Department 1919-20;
connected with the Internal Revenue Service, department of
Wisconsin, 1920; appointed, after examination (January 24,
1921), Vice-Consul de carrifere of class three May 25, 1921; as-
signed to Havre July 21, 1921; to Zurich January 30, 1922;
appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two May 26, 1922;
class one February 26, 1923; Consul of class seven December
19, 1923; remained at Zurich on detail; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class eight July i, 1924.
Wilkinson, Stanley L. — Bom in Danville, Pa.. August 21,
1892; educated in the public and high schools of Danville, Pa.;
stenographer and clerk in real estate office, Cape May, N. J.,
1911; employed by the Bell Telephone Co. in Philadelphia and
Bloomsburg, Pa., 1911-1913; appointed Vice and Deputy Con-
sul at St. John, New Brunswick, April 27, 1914; Vice-Consul
at St. John, New Brunswick, by act approved Februarys,
1915; appointed Vice Consul at Tegucigalpa October 27, 1915;
Vice-Consul at Nogales March ^, 191S; Vice-Consul at Mata-
moros April 16, 1918; at Tela December 22, 1920; at Puerto
Castilla November 27, 1923; at Tela March 3, 1924.
Will, James Everett.— Born in Mount Jackson, Va., October
25, 1894; educated in public schools and at a business college;
worked on farm and taught school in Virginia two years; ap
pointed a clerk, temporarily, in the Department of State, July
10, 1915; permanently a clerk of class one, under Executive
order. Tune 22, to be effective July 1, 1916; class two November
I, 1918; at $1,680 July I, 1924.
Will, Marvin Wilbur.— Bom in Mount Jackson, Va., April 10,
1889; educated in public schools of Virginia and at Strayer's
Business College in Washington, D. C ; taught school in Vir-
ginia 1907-1910; census clerk July 28, 1910, to January 10, 1912;
clerk in the Navy Department at Norfolk, Va., March-July,
1912; temporarily employed in the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission, the Department of Commerce, Civil Service Commis-
sion, and the Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1912-13; appointed
clerk in the Department of State at $900, under Civil Service
rules, December 18, 1913; at $1,000 October 5, to take effect
October 7, 1914; class one June 22, to be effective July i, 1916;
class two, December i, 1917; class three, August i, 1918; class
four March i. 1921; drafting officer at $2,300 June 17. effective
July I, 1921; at $2,800 July i, 1924.
*Willard, Charles Nelson.— Retired as Consul of class seven,
assigned to Ceiba, October 1919. Register of 1918.
*Willard, Joseph Edward.— Retired as Ambassador to Spain
June 1921. Died in New York City April 4, 1924. Register of
191S.
Willey. Richard Rhoads.— Bom in New York City August
II, 1896; home, New York City; attended school in BrooklyTi
and graduated from Dartmouth College (A. B.) 1918; salesman
for a book concern in New York City; employed in the Con-
sulate at Dublin; appointed Vice-Consul at Dublin October
6, 1921; appointed, after examination (January 14, 1924), Vice
Consul de carriere of class three June 13, 1924, and assigned to
Dublin; appointed Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July
I, 1924-
Williams, Arthur Rheaume. — Bom in Denver, Colo., Novem-
ber 12, 1892; attended the University of Colorado two years and
graduated from the University of Pennsylvania (B. S.) 1921 ;
cashier for telegraph company 1914-1917 and 1919-1922; served
in the United States Army December, 191 7 to September, 1919;
clerk in the American Consulate at La Guaira 1922; appointed
Vice-Consul at La Guaira April 24, 1922; at Caracas June 32,
1922.
* Williams, Charles Henry.— Retired as Marshal at Shanghai
June, 1917. Register of 1916.
* Williams, Charles Louis Loos. — Retired as Consul at Nan.
king April, 191s. Register of 1914.
♦Williams, jr., Curtis Chandler.— Retired as Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class three, assigned to Bangkok,
October, 1922. Register of 1922.
* Williams, Daniel Webster.— Retired as Consul at Cardiff
June, 1907. Register of 1913.
♦Williams, Edward Thomas.— Retired as Chief of the Divi-
sion of Far Eastern Affairs, Department of State, September,
1918. Register of 1917.
* Williams, George Fred.— Retired as Minister to Greece and
Montenegro July, 1914. Register of 1914.
Williams, Harrison C— Bom in Virginia September 20, 1893;
attended pubUc schools; served in the United States Navy
April 4, 1910, to April 6. 1914; employed by furniture com-
panies and at the United States navy yard, Washington, D. C,
1914-1921; appointed assistant messenger in the Department
of State, under Civil Service rules, November 22, 192 1.
Williams, Herbert Oswald. — Bom in Columbus, Ohio, June
30, 1873; home. Sacramento, Calif.; graduated from Ohio
State tjniversity (A. B.) 1894, (A. M.) 1900; Bethany College
(A. M.) 1895; post graduate work at Universities of Nebraska
and California; employed as clerk in a railway office and travel-
ing book salesman; proiessor in Cotner University one year;
taught in high schools 1896-190S; principal of high school,
Santa Barbara, CaUf., 1908-igio, and Sacramento 1910-1920;
with the French Army Y. M. C. A. 1918-19; appointed, after
examination (January 19, 1920), Consul of class seven June 4,
1920; on detail in the Department of State August, 1920 to
December, 1921; assigned to Brest December 27, 1921; detailed
to Havre October 6, 1922; appointed Consul of class six March
I, 1923; assigned to Brussels October 11, 1923; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Williams, jr., John Skelton.— Bom in Richmond, Va.,
August 12. 1897; graduated from the University of Virginia
(B. S.) 191 7; attended the Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology 1919; attached to the Navy mobiUzation office of the
United States Shipping commissioner at Norfolk; appointed
Vice-Consul at Athens July i, 1920; at Bucharest July 16, 1921;
at Manchester January 3, 1923; at Leeds July 18, 1923.
* Williams, John T.— Retired as Consul at Sierra Leone
April, 1906. Register of 1913.
Williams, Reginald Herbert. — Bom in New York City Octo-
ber 6, 1859; studied under private tutors and attended Keeble
Hall and Williams College; admitted to the New York bar in
May, 1885; law secretary in the Superior Court of the City of
New York, 1S91-1896. and in the Supreme Court of the State
of New York, 1896-1909; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at
St. Gall May 6, 1914; Vice-Consul at St. Gall by act approved
February 5, 1915; appointed Vice-Consul at Limoges January
17, 1916.
* Williams, Robert Kern.— Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Vice-Consul at Santo Domingo, February, 1916. Register
of 191S.
Williams, William G.— Bom in New London, Conn., April
17, 1871; public-school education; worked at various occupa-
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
211
tions 1907-1918; appointed, temporarily, at $780 in the Depart-
ment of State August S, 19:8; assistant messenger under Civil
Service rules October 14, 191S.
*Williamson, Adolph Ancrum.— Retired as Consul of class
five, assigned to Kobe. January' 1920. Register of 1918.
Williamson, Harold Long.— Bom in Chicago, III., April 4.
1891; home, Chicago; graduated from Vale University (Ph. B.)
and attended the University of Chicago and Hars'ard Univer-
sity each one year; with an electric castings concern and in a
banking house in Chicago two years; lieutenant in United
States Army October, 1917 to December 31. 1918; appointed,
temporarily, an assistant in the American Legation at Habana
January 22. 1919; appointed, after examination (June 25, 1917),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four March 14. 1919;
assigned to Habana May 2, 1920; to the Department of State
September 14. 1920; appointed Secretary of class three June 28,
1920; assigmed to Warsaw May 26, 1921; to Bogota July 23, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 192J;
detailed to the Department of State November 8, 1924.
Willoughby, Charles A.— Captain, United States Army;
assigned to duty as Mihtary Attache at Caracas, Bogota, and
Quito April s, 1924.
Willoughby, Westel Robinson. — Bom in Washington, D. C,
November i, 1895; graduated from Princeton University (Litt.
B.) 1916; studied at Institute for Government Research 1922;
served in the American Ambulance Service 1916-17; officer,
American Expeditionary Forces in France, 1917-1919; office
manager, export firm in New York City, 1919-20; engaged in
merchandising business in New York City 1920-21; appointed
a drafting officer at $2,300 in the Department of State June 12,
1922; at Sj,ooo April I, 1924.
*WiUrich, Gebhard. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class five July i, 1924. Retired from active duty as
Consul at St. Gall July, 1924, under the provisions of the Act of
May 24, 1924. Register of 1924.
Willson, Digby Arthur.— Born in New York City October
27, 1892; home. New York City; educated in the public schools,
Stuyvesant High School and Rhodes Preparatori" School, of
New York, and took correspondence courses in law and foreign
trade, 1916-1918; employed m clerical capacities by business
houses in New York City seven years; clerk in the American
Consulate at Tampico; appointed Vice-Consul at Tampico,
December 19, 1917; Vice-Consul at Hamilton, Bermuda, Octo-
ber 5, 1918; at Aleppo June 9, 1919; appointed, after examination
(January 19, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three Octo-
ber I, 1920, and assigned to Aleppo; assigned to Budapest July
15, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two Novem-
ber 17, 1921; class one May 26, 1922; Consul of class seven March
I, 1923; remained at Budapest on detail; assigned to Asuncion
September 21, 1923; appointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i, 1924.
Willson, Gilbert Rtaoads. — Born in Lee Center, N. Y., April
»3, 1881; home, Brownsville, Tex.; graduate of Valparaiso
University (B. S.); teacher in public schools ot New York and
Idaho 1900-1909; supervising teacher at Iriga, Philippines, 1909-
1913; immigrant inspector at Brownsville and Buffalo 1913-
1917; appointed, after examination (June 18, 1917), Consul of
class eight September 14, 1917; detailed for duty in the Bureau
of Citizenship, Department of State, December 4, 1917; assigned
to Matamoros August 31, 1918; appointed Consul of class six
September s. 1919; Foreign Service Officer of class seven July i,
1924; assigned to Yarmouth August 28, 1924.
Wilson, Charles B. G.— British subject, born in Peru Janu-
ary 28, 1879; office manager for mercantile firm; appointed
Consular Agent at Paita August i, 1908.
Wilson, Charles Stetson.— Born in Bangor, Me., in 1S75;
graduate of Harvard University; appointed Secretary of the
Legation to Greece, Roumania, and Serbia March 7, 1901;
attended the coronation of King Peter of Serbia at Belgrade
September 21, 1904; appointed Secretary ot the Legation to
Greece and Montenegro and of the Diplomatic Agency in Bul-
garia March 10, 1905; Secretary of the Legation at Habana
July 18, 1906; Secretary of the Legation at Buenos Aires May
10, 1907; Second Secretary of the Embassy at Rome August
4, 1909; Secretary of the Embassy at Rome December is,
1910; Secretary of the Embassy at Petrograd February i, 1912:
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved
February 5, 1915; assigned to Madrid February 2, 1916; desig-
nated and assigned as Counselor of the Embassy at Madrid
October 3, 1916; assigned to Sofia asChargd d'Affaires October
33. 1918; appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-
potentiary to Bulgaria October 8, 1921.
Wilson, Edwin Carleton.— Bora in Palatka, Fla., February 7.
1893: home, Palatka; spent three years at the University of
Michigan and one year at Harvard University; in Ambu-
lance Service in France ^larch-September. 1915, and October,
1916 to January, 191 7; served in the United States Army
(second lieutenant) September 19, 1917 to January 31, 1919;
appointed, aiter examination (January 26, 1920), Secretary of
Embassy or Legation of class four April 7, 1920; assigned to
Santiago, June 14. 1920; to Tegucigalpa August 9. 1921; to the
Department of State, February 8, 1922; appointed Secretary
of class three September 22, 1922; detailed as Secretary of the
\merican Delegation to the Conference on Central American
Affairs, Washington, D. C, December i. 1922; detailed as
Assistant Secretary of the Delegation of the United States to
the Fifth International Conference of American States,
Santiago, Chile, March i, 1923; Acting Chief Clerk, Department
of State, June i to July 9, 1924; appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class six July i, 1924; class five August 8, 1924.
Wilson, George Perry.— Bom in Pittsburgh, Pa., Ju^e 8,
1870; attended the public and high schools of Pittsbu; h;
graduated from Harvard University (A. B.) 1S93; admittf( to
the Allegheny County, Pa., bar in 189S; practiced lav in
Allegheny County, 1898-IQ18; appointed Vice-Consul at Vilan
July 3, 1918; at Genoa July 7, 1919; at Catania July 23, 1920; at
Fiume May 7, 1924.
♦ Wilson, Henry Lane. — Retired as Ambassador to Mexico
October, 1913. Register of 1913.
Wilson, Hugh Robert. — Born in Evanston. 111., January 39,
1885: home, Evanston; attended Hill School, Pottstown, Pa.,
four years; graduated from Yale University (A. B.), 1906;
studied at the ficole Libre des Sciences Politiques, Paris;
traveled one year; employed in various capacities by a firm
of wholesale furnishers for men, in Chicago, three and one-
half years; private secretary to the American Minister to Por-
tugal, 1911; appointed, after examination (December 4, 1911),
Secretary of the Legation at Guatemala February i, 191a;
Second Secretary of the Embassy at Buenos Aires July 16,
1914; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by act
approved February s, 1915; assigned to Berhn June 2, 1916; as-
signed to Berne February 3, 1917; to Vienna March 15, 1917;
to Berne April 18, 1917; appointed Secretary of Embassy or
Legation of class two August 27, 1918; assigned to the Depart-
ment of State, December 10, 1919; appointed Secretary of class
one December 20, 1919; assigned to Berlin January 24, 1920;
designated as Counselor of Embassy and assigned to American
Commission at Berlin, June 14, 1920; to the American Embassy
at Tokyo August 19, 192 1; to the Embassy at Mexico Septem-
ber 28, 1923; assigned to the Department of State ^larch i, 1924;
designated Chief of the Division of Current Information March
10, 1924; designated a member of the Executive Committee of
the Foreign Service Personnel Board, representing the Diplo-
matic Service, June 19, 1924; appointed Foreign Service Officer
of class one July i, 1924.
* Wilson, Huntington.— Retired as Assistant Secretary of
State March 19, 1913. Register of 1913.
Wilson, jr., Orme.— Bom in New York City. November 13,
1885; home. New York City; graduated from Harvard Uni-
versity (A. B.) 1907; member of investment securities firm
seven years; treasurer of an alkali company ten years; vice
president of an oil corporation four years; served with Council
of National Defense four months; statistician Quartermaster
Generals Corps six months; first lieutenant in the United States
Army September, 1918, to March, 1919; appointed, after exam-
ination (January 26, 1920), Secretary of Embassy or Legation
of class four April 7, 1920; assigned to Brussels, June 14, 1920;
to Beme December 15, 1921; appointed Secretary of class three
September 22, i922;assigned to the Department of State Novem-
ber 2, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July
I ,1924-
*Wllson, Rljiley.- Died in Hartford, Conn., October 2, 1917,
while Consul of class eight, unassigned. Register of 1916.
Wilson, Thomas Murray.— Bom in Memphis, Tenn., July
29, 1881; home, Jlemphis; received his education in a military
school, business college, under tutors, and at a summer artillery
school in France; employed in cotton business, in a bank, and
in farming 1S99-1916; served in the L'nitcd States Anny as a
lieutenant and captain 1917-1919; appointed, after examina-
tion (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven September 5, 1919;
detailed to Hankow October 21, 1919; to Tientsin April 8, 1920;
detailed to Tsinan, temporarily, July 16, 192 1; on temporary
detail at Amoy November-December, 1921; appointed Consul
of class six November 19, 1921; assigned to Madras December 27,
1921; detailed to Bombay May 25, 1922; appointed Consul of
class five March i, 1923; detailed to the Department of State
212
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
September 21, 1923; appointed Consul of class four June 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class five July i, 1924.
Wilson, jr., Walter B. — Bom in Greenville, N. C, October
15, 18S4; attended Homer Military School 1900-1901; University
of North Carolina 1902-03; pursued business college course
1904; assistant treasurer of Pitt County, N. C, eight years;
assistant paymaster. United States Shipping Board, ten
months, and supercargo one year; clerk in the American Con-
sulate General at Shanghai 1923; appointed Vice-Consul at
Shanghai November 22, 1923.
Wilson, Warden McKee. — Bom in Spokane, Wash., Sep-
tember 12, 1892; home, Indianapolis, Ind.; graduated from
Cornell University (A. B.) 1915; clerk in American Embassy
at Mexico City two months; ser\'ed in the United States Army
as a lieutenant March, 1918, toMay, 1919; engaged in oil develop-
ment in New Mexico 1919-1921; appointed, after examination
(July II. 1921), Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four
August 24, 1921; assigned to the Department of State Septem-
ber I, 1921; designated for duty in connection with the Confer-
ence on the Limitation of Armament September 26, 1921; as-
signed to Berlin December 17, 1921; appointed Secretary of
class tliree September 22, 1922; assigned to Vienna June 20, 1923;
appointed Foreign Service Officer of class six July i, 1924.
Winans, Charles Sumner. — Born in Tyre, N. Y., January 25,
1S63; home, Chelsea, Mich.; educated in the Chelsea pubhc
schools and Albion College; for several years wholesale and retail
merchant and importer of American goods into Chile; president
and business manager of Iquique English College sbc years;
appointed Consul at Iquique May 21, 1900; Consul at Valencia
March 30, 1907; Consul at Seville May 31, 1909; Consul at
Nuremberg June 24, 1914; Consul of class five by act approved
February 5, 191 5; assigned toCienfuegosMay 25, 191 7; appointed
Consul of class four September 14, 1017; detailed to London
September 8, 1919; appointed Consul ol class three June 4, 1920;
detailed to Prague June 29, 1920; assigned to Prague Novem-
ber 9, 1920; appointed Consul General of class four Jtme 5, 1924;
Foreign Service Officer of class three July i, 1924.
Winship, North.— Born in Macon, Ga., December 31, 1885;
home, Macon; attended the public schools of Macon and took
special courses in George Washington University; graduated
from Mercer University (B. L.), 1910; employed in various
clerical positions, 1904-1907; secretary of manufacturing plants
1907-1910; admitted to the bar in Georgia June 8, 1910; ap-
pointed, after examination (May 26, 1909), Consul at Tahiti June
24, 1910; Consul at Owen Sound July 14, 1913; Consul at Petro-
grad April 24, 1914; Consul of class six by act approved Febru-
ary 5, 1915; appointed Consul of class five April 16, 1917; as-
signed to Milan July 17, 1917; appointed Consul of class four
September 5, 1919; class three, June 4, 1920: assigned to Bom-
bay December 27, 1921; unassigned from July 4, 1922; detailed
to Flume March 30, 1923; assigned to Fiume April 2, 1924; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924; as-
signed to Cairo December 2, 1924.
Winslow, Alan Francis.— Bom in River Forest. 111., October
2, 1895; home. River Forest; educated in public schools of
lUinois. in Munich, and at Chicago Latin School; attended
Vale University nearly two years; served in the Air Service
of the French Army nine months, and as a captain in the Air
Service of the United States Army in Europe February, 1918,
to March, 1919; appointed, after examination (May 19, 1919),
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class four September 5,
1919; assigned to Prague October 2, 1919; appointed Secretary
of class three March 23, 1922; assigned to the Department of
State April 29, 1922; on detail as Assistant to the Undersecre-
tary of State Avigust 15 to December 22, 1922; assigned to Berne
September 27, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
six July I, 1924; class five August 8, 1934.
*Winslow, Alfred A. — * * * Appointed Foreign Service
Officer of class three July i, 1924. Retired from active servace
as Consul General at St. Johns, Newfoundland, July, 1924,
under the provisions of the act of May 24, 1924. Register of
1924.
* Winslow, Edward D.— Retired as Consul-General of class
five, unassigned, August, 1917. Register of 1916.
Winslow, Lawrence Lanier. — Born in Bayside, N. Y., May
37, 1883; home, New York City; educated at St. Marks School,
at schools in France, and spent one year at Columbia Univer-
sity; employed in banking houses in New York City for several
years; private secretary to the Ambassador to Germany, 1913-
1915; appointed, after examination (November 30, 1914), Secre-
tary of Embassy or Legation of class five July 28, 191 5, assigned
to Berlin July 29, 1913; appointed Secretary of class four May
10, 1916; assigned to the Department of State February 28,
1917; appointed Secretary of class three July 13, 1917; assigned
to London November 21, 1919; appointed Secretary* of class
two December 20, 1919; assigned to Mexico City August 3,
1921; to Santiago, Chile, April i, 1924; appointed Foreign
Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Winslow, RoUin Robbins.— Bom in Benton Harbor, Mich.,
August II, 1893; home, St. Joseph, Mich.; graduated from the
University of Michigan (A. B., LL. B.) 1920; admitted to the
ISIichigan bar January 1920; employed in a mill office 1911-1913;
member of the Michigan Naval Reserves 1910-1912; ser\'ed
with the Y. M. C. A., in Italy 1918-19; appointed, after exam-
ination (June 28, 1920), Vice-Consul de carriere of class three
September 7, 1920, and assigned to Florence; resigned May 20.
192 1 ; reappointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class three April
24, 1922; assigned to Vladivostok May 19, 1922; to Batavia
January 9, 1923; appointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class two
February 26, 1923; assigned to Soerabaya April 17, 1923; ap-
pointed Vice-Consul de carriere of class one November 23, 1923;
Foreign Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924.
*Winthrop, Robert Mason. — Retired as Secretary of the Le-
agtion to Greece and Montenegro January, 1910. Register of
I9K.
*Wise, John Douglas. — Retired as Consul of class seven, on
detail at Bordeaux. November. 1920. Register of 191S.
Wissa Bey, George. — Egyptian subject, born in Assiut in
1871; engaged in farming and commerce; appointed Consular
Agent at Assiut June 25, 1903.
Withey, Howard Francis.— Bom in Reed City, Mich., March
26, 1S84; home. Reed City; graduated from the University of
Michigan (LL. B.) 1907; practiced law eleven years in Michigan
and was city attorney for Reed City several times; member of
the Michigan National Guard 1904-05; appointed, after exami-
nation (May 12, 1919), Consul of class seven. September 5, 1919.
assigned to Tahiti October 21, 1919; detailed to Copenhagen
July 12, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class eight
July I, 1924.
Woel, J. WiUiam. — Born in Haiti February 22, 1862; natu-
ralized; educated in France and England; merchant; appointed
Consular Agent at Gonaives September 8, 1899.
Wolcott, Henry Merrill. — Born in Colchester, Vt.. November
8, 1879; home. New York City; graduate of BurUngton high
school and Burlington Business College; clerk United States
naval station, San Juan, 1902-1904; clerk to post-office inspec-
tor. New York, 1904-05; business stenographer, 1905-66; ap-
pointed Vice and Deputy Consul (and clerk) at Santiago de
Cuba June 9, 1906; Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Mexico
City May 14, 1912; clerk in the Consulate-General at Habana
July 21, 1913; appointed, after examination (January 19, 1914),
Consul of class nine March 2, 1915; on detail as Vice Consul at
Habana from March 2, 1915; appointed Consul of class seven
July 14, 1916, and assigned to Lagos; did not go to Lagos; on
detail at Caimenera, Cuba, April-August, 1917; on detail at
Nuevitas August- November, 1917; assigned to Nuevitas
November s. 1917; to Santiago de Cuba November 30, 1917;
assigned to Torreon August 31. 1918; detailed to the Depart-
ment of State July 13. 1919; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919; assigned to Bilbao, September 8, 1919;
appointed Consul of class five June 4, 1920; Foreign Service
Officer of class six July 1, 1924.
Wolpe, Ethel Dixie.— Bom in Charles Town. W. Va.; grad-
uated from Emerson Preparatory Institute and from a business
college; attended George Washington University two years;
employed as typist by the American Forestry Association ten
months; stenographer in a patent attorney's office one year;
served in the XInited States Naval Reserve Force December 4,
191 7 to August I, 1919; clerk in the Navy Department two
months, 1919, and in the Department of State October 13,
1919 to July IS, 1921; employed in the Legation of Panama
October 13, 1921 to June 3, 1922; reinstated as a clerk at $1,000
in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules, June s.
1922; appointed clerk of class one December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
♦Wood, Charles M.— Died at his post (Rome) May 22, 1908
Register of 1913.
Wood, Corey Frank. — Bom in Belchertown, Mass., March 25,
1S66; attended high school, and Wesleyan Academy two years
each; completed a business college course; engaged in private
business enterprises 1S83-1887; employed in various capacities
1887-1897; mahogany forester in JSIexico 1897-1912; fanner 1912-
1917; buyer of dyewoods for private concern in.Mexico 1917-
1920; manager of a dyewood corporation in Haiti '920-1923; ap-
pointed Vice Consul at Cape Haitien !March 25, 1924.
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
21
Wood, Harold C. — Bom in Boston, Mass., February 19, 1896;
attended high school 1911-1915; Boston College one semester
and a business college one year; served in the United States
Army July 25. 1917, to May 15, 1919; stenographer, United
States Army Balloon School (Arcadia. Calif.). March- August,
1920; appointed Vice-Consul at Guaymas February 17. 1922;
at Salina Cruz October 8, 1923.
Wood, John Quinby.— Born in Bucksport, Me., June 24, 1867;
home, Honolulu, Hawaii; graduate oi Wesle^-an University
(A. B.), 1890, and of Har\'ard University, (LL. B.), 1900; an
instructor in Oahu College, Honolulu, 1S90-1S93; commissioner
of education of the Republic of Hawaii for one year; is a member
of the bar of IMassachusetts and Hawaii and practiced law in
Hawaii xmtil 1S99; spent six years in Italy and France studi-iug
the languages and history of these countries and practicing
international law; practiced law in New York and Boston,
1906-190S; attached to the Consulate at Milan 1908-09; ap-
pointed Deputy Consul at Tililan January' 20, 1909; Vice and
Deputy Consul April 17, 1909; appointed, after examination
(April 7, 190S), Consul at Venice January 12. 1910; Consul at
Tripoli August 2, 1910; Consul-General at Adis Ababa Novem-
ber 24, 1913; Special Conunissioner to negotiate a new treaty
with Abyssinia January'. 1914; Consul at Chemnitz December
29, 1914; Consul of class six by act approved February 5, 1915;
Consul of class five September 14, 191 7; on detail at Marseille
May 16 to November 14, 1917; assigned to St. ^Michaels Novem-
ber 5, 1917; detailed to Tiflis January 31, 1919; to Havre, tempo-
rarily. August 28, 1919; detailed to Coblenz October 31, 1919; to
Munich, temporarily, December 6, 1919; detailed to Frankfort
on the iVIain April 26, 1920; appointed Consul of class three
June 4, 1920; detailed to Tampico April 4, 1922; to Vera Cruz
July 18, 1922; assigned to Vera Cruz October 2, 1923; appointed
Foreign Service Officer of class four July i, 1924.
Wood, Jolin R. — Bom in Dupont, Ga.. February 7, 1894;
educated in the public schools and attended business college
in Jacksonville, Fla. ; stenographer for commercial concern
1914-1916; assistant city passenger and ticket agent 1917; served
in the United States Army August, 1917, to.\ugust, 1919; clerk
in the American Consulate General in Paris 1919-1922; appoint-
ed Vice-Consul at Paris March 27, 1922.
Woodard, Granville Oscar. — Bom in La Crosse, Wis., April
14, iSgs; home. Riverside, Calif.; attended high school 1908-
1912, and the University of Southern California 1912-13; grad-
uated from the University of California (A. B.) 1922; employed
by a sugar refining company three years; ser\"ed in the United
States Army 1917-1919, retiring with the rank of first lieutenant;
appointed, after examination (January 15, 1923), Vice-Consul
de carri^re of class three February 26, 1923; assigned to Tientsin
April 27, 1923; appointed Foreign Service Officer, imclassified,
July I, 1924.
Woodbridge, Woodrow. — Captain, United States Aimy;
assigned to duty as Language Officer at Peking July 7, 1921.
Woodford, Archer. — Bom in Paris, Ky., June 11, 1899; at-
tended the University of Michigan one year and graduated from
Centre College (A. B.) 1920; attended summer school at the
University of Michigan and Centre College; served in the
United States Army October-December. 191S; assistant pro-
fessor in the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas 192 1-
1923; clerk in the American Consulate at Sao Paulo May, 1923,
to February 24, 1924; appointed Vice Consul at Sao Paulo Feb-
mar>' 25, 1924-
*Woods, Gyms E.— Retired as Ambassador to Japan July,
19:14. Register of 1924.
Woods, Damon Clinton.— Bom in Corsicanus, Tex.. May 3.
1888; home, Waco. Tex.; graduated from the University of
Texas (LL. B.) 1910; practiced law at Waco, 191C-1918, and
assistant county attorney during part of that time; served
with the American Red Cross 1918-19; appointed, after exami-
nation (May 12, 1919). Consul of class seven. September 5, 1919;
detailed toMarseille, October 29, 1919; assigned to Cape Haitien
December 27, 1921; detailed to Paris September 21, 1923; ap-
pointed Consul of class six June 3, 1924; Foreign Service Officer
of class seven July i, 1924.
Woods, Leslie Earle.— Bora in Cairo, III., July 9, i899;home,
Cambridge, Mass.; completed high school in 191 7; attended
Franklin Institute and Dussault School nine months 1918-19;
school of military aeronautics three months; clerk for various
commercial concerns nine months; clerk in the division quarter-
master's office 1919-1921; transferred to the Department of
State, and appointed clerk of class one, under Civil Service
rules, February 24, 1921; appointed, after examination (June 27,
19J1), Vice-Consul de carrifere of class three May 26, 1922; as-
signed to Strasbourg December 23, 1922; appointed Vice-
Consul de carridre of class two November 23, 1923; Foreign
Service Officer, unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Biarritz
December 12, 1924; returned to Strasbourg.
Woodward, George Carlton.— Born near West Chester, Pa.,
December 7, 1874; home, Philadelphia, Pa.; educated in pub-
lic schools and Pierce Business School; law clerk and stenogra-
pher in Alaska seven years, appointed Vice and Deputy Consul
(and clerk) at Dawson October 26, 1904; Vice and Deputy
Consul-General at Vancouver September 3, 1910; Vice-Consul
at Vancouver February 6, 1915; appointed, after examination
(May 26, 1909), Consul of class nine March 2, 1915; on detail at
Vancouver to April. 1917; assigned to Matamoros March 20,
1917; appointed Consul of class eight September 14, 1917;
assigned to Campbellton August 31, 1918; appointed Consul
of class seven September 5, 1919; Foreign Ser\-ice Officer of
class eight July i, 1924.
* Worden, James Perry. — Retired as Consul at Bristol Janu-
ary, 1908. Register of 1913.
* Worman, James H. — Retired as Consul at Three River*
June. 1908. Register of 1913.
Wormuth, Romeyn. — Bom in Port Leyden, N. Y., January
31, 1876; home, Syracuse, N. Y.; graduate of Cornell Univer-
sity (A. B.) 1901; taught school for short periods; assistant
principal, Troy Academy, 1901-02; practiced law at Port
Leyden and Syracuse. 1904-1918; police justice four years and
village clerk of Port Leyden four years; appointed, after exami-
nation (June 18, 191 7), a Consul of class eight Febraary s, 1918;
assigned to Esbjerg, Denmark, June 7, 1918; detailed to Copen-
hagen July 7, 1919; appointed Consul of class seven September
5, 1919; assigned to Newcastle, New South Wales, July 13, 1921;
detailed to Sydney, Australia September 30, 1922; appointed
Consul of class six March i, 1923; detail to Sydney ended and
returned to Newcastle August 20, 1923; appointed Foreign
Sers'ice Officer of class seven July i, 1924; assigned to St. John
October 23, 1924.
Worster, Stephen Carlton.— Born in Eliot, Me., June 30,
1900; educated in the Eliot High School, 191 2-1916; Dover Busi-
ness College 1916-1 7 ; stenographer for General Staff . War Depart-
ment, April, 1918, to November, 1919; stenographer-clerk.
El .Salvador Silver Mines Co., El Salvador. November, 1919,
to November, 1920; clerk in the American Consulate at Man-
zanillo, March 14, 1921; clerk in the American Consulate at
Torreon April, 1921; appointed Vice-Consul at Torreon June
27, 1921; Vice-Consul at Winnepeg March 7, 1922; retired Oc-
tober IS, 1922; appointed Vice-Consul at Nogales September 22,
1923.
Wriglit, Frank Thomas.— Bom in Churchland, Va., January
28, 1890; laborer on farm four years; orderly at Freedman's
Hospital 1908-1912 and 1913-1916; skilled laborer at the Govern-
ment Printing Office August, 1917, to February, 191S; elevator
conductor under office of the Superintendent of Buildings and
Grounds, Februarj', 191S, to July, 1920; appointed a laborer
(unskilled) in the Department of State, under Civil Service
rules, July 31, effective August i, 1920.
♦Wright, Herbert R.— Retired as Consul of class nine, as-
signed to Puerto Cabello, March, 1917. Register of 1916
Wright, Jennie Viola. — Bom in Woodland, Mich.; attended
public schools and a business college; employed as clerk in
Byron, Mich., 1906-1912; clerk in the War Department 1918-
1920; appointed a clerk at Si. 100 in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, April 16, 1920; class one December 30,
1922, effective January i, 1923; at Si, .wo July i, 1924.
Wright, Joshua Butler.— Born in Irvington, N. Y., October
iS, 1S77; attended Lawrenceville school and graduated from
Princeton University (B. S.), 1899; engaged in banking in New
York City six years, and agriculture and stock raising in
Wyoming two years; meml^er of Squadron "A" Cavalry,
N. G. N. Y. five years; appointed, after examination (May 17,
1909), Secretary of the Legation at Tegucigalpa August 4.
1909; appointed Secretary of the Legation and Consul-General
to Roumania. Serbia, and Bulgaria February i, 1912, but did
not go to post ; assigned to special duty in the Department of
State; appointed Secretary of the Legation at Hatiana Septem-
ber 12, 1912, but did not go there ; appointed Secretary of the
Legation at Brussels October 4, 1912; secretary of the American
delegation to the Opium Conference at The Hague Jime 14,
1913; Secretary of the Emljassyat Rio de Janeiro Jfuly 2, 1913;
Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class one by act approved
February 5, 19 15; assigned to the Division of Latin-American
Affairs, Department of State, July 2,8, 1915; designated Acting
Chief. Division of Latin-American Affairs, October 8, 191s,
and assumed duties in December, 1915; designated and as-
signed as Counselor of the Embassy at Petrograd October 2,
1916; assigned to the Department of State May 14. 1918:
214
BIOGRAPHICAL STATEMENT.
desisnatcd and assigned as Counselor of the E-mbassy at Lon-
don September 19, 1918; assigned to the Department of State
October 4, 1921, for duty in connection with the Conference
on the Limitation of Armament; designated Expert Assist-
ant, Conference on the Limitation of Armament, November 3,
1921; appointed a Commissioner to represent the United States
at the Brazihan Centennial Exposition July 17, 1922; ap-
pointed Third Assistant Secretary of State January 30, 1923;
Secretary of the American Delegation to the Fifth Inter-
national Conference of American States at Santiago, Chile,
February-May, 1923; entered upon duties as Third Assistant
Secretary of State June 11, 1923; designated Chairman of the
Board of Review of the Department of State January 2, 1924;
member of the Forcigii Service Personnel Board June 19,
1924; title of "Third Assistant Secretary of State" changed to
"Assistant Secretary of State" July i, 1924.
* Wright, Luke E.— Retired as Ambassador to Japan Sep
tember, 1907. Died in Memphis, Tenn., November 17, 1922.
Register of 1913.
Wright, Maitland Schoolcraft.— Born in Pope County, Minn.,
July 17, 1870; educated in public schools and normal school
of Moorhead, Minn.; telegraph operator; appointed teleg-
rapher in the Navy Department during the Spanish-American
War; transferred, under Civil Service rules, to the office of
Superintendent State, War, and Navy Building June 23,
1899; transferred to the Department of State as clerk at $900
January 10, 1902; appointed clerk at 81,000 July i, 1903; class
one, temporarily, March 23, 1904; permanently June 15, 1904;
class two March 4, 1907; class three October 21, 1910; designated
as representative of the Department of State on the General
Supply Committee August 22, 191 7; appointed clerk of class
one March i, 1919; at $2,100 July i, 1924.
Wright, Meador. — Bom in Stewartsville, Va., September 29,
1896; attended Hampden-Sidney College 1917-18, George Wash-
ington Law School 1921-22, George Washington University
1922-1924; employed by private concerns 191 5-1924; appointed
a clerk at $1,140, temporarily, in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, November 24, 1924.
* Wright, William F.— Retired as Consul-General at Munich
May, 1907. Register of 1913.
Wvles, Charl Curtys Lee Beauregard. — Bom at Harmony,
Md., June 15, 1873; attended a business college ten months and
a medical school two years; served in the United States Army
1898-1921; appointed clerk in the American Consulate at
Frankfort on the Main October 16, 1922; Vice Consul at Frank-
fort on the Main August 7, 1924.
Wynkoop, Janet McGill.— Born in Leesburg, Va. ; educated
in public schools; employed in the Council of National Defense
March i, 1917,10 September i, 1919; in Department of Justice
September 6, 1919, to July 31, 1920; appointed a clerk of class
one in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules,
July 31, effective August i, 1920; at $1,500 July i, 1924.
* Wynne, Robert J.— Retired as Consul-General at London.
August, 1909. Died in Washington, D. C, March 11, 1922.
Register of 1913.
Xanthaky, Theodore Anthony. — Bom in New York City
December 27, 1897; attended the High School of Commerce
1911-191S, and New York University 1915-1917; employed as
clerk by an export house 1917-1919; and by a bank 1919-20;
clerk in the American Consulate General at Rio de Janeiro
1923; appointed Vice-Consul at Rio de Janeiro September 24,
1923-
*Yelverton, E. Harrison.— Retired as Consular Assistant,
also Vice-Consul at London, August, 1919. Register of 1918.
Yerby, William James.— Born in Phillips County, Ark., Sep^
tember 22, 1867; home, Memphis, Tenn.; attended the Ten-
nessee public schools and Le Moyne Institute; graduated from
Roger Williams University and Meharry Medical CoMege of
Walden University; publisher six years and practicing phy-
sician eight years; appointed, after examination. Consul at
Sierra Leone June 28, 1906; Consul of class nine by act ap-
proved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul ot class seven Feb-
ruary 22, 1915, and assigned to Dakar; appointed Consul of
class six June 4, 1920; Foreign Ser\'ice Officer of class seven
July I, 1924'
Yingling, Raymond Thomas.— Born in Westminster, Md.,
January 14, 1898; graduated from Western Maryland College
(A. B.) X918; student at Georgetown University Law school;
in War Department June-October, 1918, and January, 1919,10
September, 1920; in Georgetown University October-December,
1918; appointed a clerk of class one in the Department of State,
under Civil Service rules, September 30, 1920; class two Sep-
tember 16, 1922; law clerk at $2,000 Febmary 10, 1923; at $2,400
July I, 1924.
Yost, Hartley F.— Born in Switzerland September 30. 1877;
home, Osborne, Kans.; father naturalized in 188S; educated in
the public schools of Kansas and Washburn College; attended
six sessions of Normal Institute; taught school intermittently,
1896-1905; in business one year; clerk of the district court
of Osbome County, Kans., and part owner of the Osbome
County News, 1906-1908; appointed, after examination (Nov-
ember 20, 1907). Consular Assistant June 24, 1908; Deputy
Consul-General at ' Paris April 20, 1909; Consular Agent at
Almeria March 3, 1913; detailed for duty temporarily in the
Consulate-General at Barcelona !May 13, 1916; resumed duties at
Almeria August 29, 1916; detailed to Genoa and assumed duties
June 7, 1917; appointed Vice-Consul at Cienoa August 21, 1917;
detailed to the Department January 16, 1918; appointed Vice-
Consul Santa Rosalia June 15, 191S; appointed Consul of class
eight July 6, 1918; assigned to Santa Rosalia July 22, 191S; to
Guaymas November 22, 1918; appointed Consul of class seven
September s, 1919; class six June 4, 1920; assigned to Torreon
December 17, 1923; appointed Foreign Ser^'ice Officer of class
seven July i, 1924.
Young, Arthur Nichols.— Born in Los Angeles, Calif., No-
vember 2X, 1890; graduated from Occidental College (A. B.)
1910; Princeton University (A. M.) igir, (Ph. D.) 1914; in-
structor in economics at Princeton University 1915-1917; re-
search associate, University of California, 1917-18; adviser on
taxation to the Mexic.-m Government, 1918; Trade Commis-
sioner to investigate financial conditions in Spain for the
Department of Commerce, 1919; draftint; officer in the Depart-
ment of State December, 1919, to July, 1920; financial adviser
to the Government of Honduras July, 1920, to September, 1921;
appointed a drafting officer at $4,500 in the Department of
State October 28, 1921; designated Economic Adviser in charge
of the Office of the Economic Advisei September i, 1922;
drafting officer at $5,200 July i, 1924; associated with the
American Observer with the Reparation Commission, Paris,
during the work of the Dawes Commission, 1924.
Young, Evan Erastus.— Born in Kenton. Ohio, August 17,
1878; home, Plankinton, S. Dak.; attended Hiram College,
Ohio, the South Dakota School of Mines, and graduated from
the University of Wisconsin law school; three years' anny serv-
ice in the Phihppines; appointed, after examination (August
10, 1905), Consul at Harput August 12, 1905; Consul at Saloniki
June 10, 1908; Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs,
Department of State, November 24, 1909; Envoy Extraordin-
ary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Ecuador July 6, 191 1; ap-
pointed in the Department of State and designated as Foreign
Trade Adviser September 4, 1912; delegate on the part of the
United States to the Fifth International Congress of Chambers
of Commerce, Boston, September 24 to 28, 191 2; appointed
Consul-General at Halifax June 5, 1913; Consul-General of class
five by act approved February i, 1915; appointed Consul-Gen-
eral of class four October 24, 1918; at Constantinople from
January 19, 1920; designated American Commissioner to the
Baltic Provinces in Russia March 25, 1920; appointed Consul-
General of class three June 4, 1920; class two November 23, 1921
ordered to proceed to Washington September 19, 1922; detailed
to the Department of State February 15. 1923; designated Chief
of the Division of Eastern European Aflairs July 3, 1923; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924.
Young, Fred Rex.- Bom in Defiance, Iowa, April 12, 1886;
attended high school in Defiance three years ; teacher 1904-1910;
assistant postmaster at Defiance 1910-1917; deputy county
treasurer at Washburn, N. Dak., 1917-18; clerk in the Bureau
of Ordnance, War Department. April-December. 191S; ap-
pointed a clerk at Si, 000 in the Department of State, under
Civil Service rules, December 17. 191S; class one August i, 1919;
class two March i, 1921; class three December 30, 1922, effective
January i, 1923; at $1,860 July i, 1924.
*Young, George William.— Retired as Consul of class six,
detailed to Stoke-on-Trent, February, 1922. Register of 1922.
Young, Harry Robert. — Born in Kittanning, Pa., November
24, 1884; attended West Virginia University, 1908-09. Dickinson
College 1910; employed by several banking institutions 1910-
1914; clerk in American Embassy at Vienna November 9,
1915, to May, 1916; appointed special representative of the De-
partment of State for duty in missions and consulates in con-
nection with accounts pertaining to European war matters
May 13, 1916; special disbursing officer of the Department of
State, November 27, 1916; disbursing officer of the special com-
mittee to proceed to France January 2, 191S; appointed a
drafting officer at $2,500 in the Department of State January 31,
effective February i, 1920; special disbursing officer of the
Department of State to accompany the Secretary of State on
his Mission to South America November 22, 1920; appointed a
drafting officer at $3,000 June 12, 1922; designated Assistant
OBITUARY.
215
Chief of the Bureau of Accounts and disbursing oflScer June
19, 1922.
Young, Hattie V. — Bom in Defiance, Iowa; graduated from
high school and attended college three years; assistant book-
keeper for a mercantile company; assistant to county treasurer
for McLean County, Washburn, N. Dak.; in Bureau of War
Risk Insurance six months, 1919-20; clerk in the Bureau of
the Census, Department of Agriculture, and the United States
Shipping Board several months each; appointed a clerk at
$qoo in the Department of State, under Civil Service rules.
January 8, 1921; at Si, 000 January 16, 1922; at $1,100 March i,
1924; class one May 31, effective June 1, 1924; at $1,440 July i,
1924.
Young, James Barclay. — Born in Washington. D. C., Feb-
ruary 14, 1S84; home, Philadelphia. Pa.; attended public
schools ten ^'ears; graduated from the William Penn Charter
School (Philadelphia) and the University of Pennsylvania
(B. S-); reporter for Washington. Philadelphia, and New York
newspapers; private secretary to his father while the latter was
in Congress; read law; appointed, after examination (July 7.
1908). Consular Assistant July 19. 1909; Vice and Deputy Consul
at Milan September S. 1909; Deputy Consul-General at Berhu
March 16, 1911; Vice and Deputy Consul at Breslau April 28,
191 1 ; reappointed Deputy Consul-General at Berlin May 26.
191 1 ; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Genoa
February 19, 1912; Vice and Deputy Consul at Milan July 22.
1913; reappointed Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Genoa
August 29, 1913; Vice-Consul at Genoa February 6, 1915; ap-
pointed Consul of class eight March 2, 1915, and assigned to
Tunis, but did not go there; on detail as Vice-Consvtl at Bel-
grade April-November. 1915; at Vienna December, 1915, to
July 22, 1916; assigned to Fivune July 24, 1916; appointed Consul
of class seven September 14, 191 7; served temporary detail
in the Department of State; appointed Consul of class six
September 5, 1919; assigned to Venice, April 16, 1920; appointed
Consul of class five June 4, 1920; class four August 23, 1922;
Foreign Sen'ice Officer of class five July i, 1924.
*Young, Wallace J.— Died in Rockville, Md., December 4.
1923. while a Consul of class four, en route to his post. Regina,
to which he was assigned August 3, 1923. Register of 1922.
Young, Whitney.— Bom in Chicago. 111., January 31, 1S96;
home. New York City; graduated from high school, and from
Harvard College (A. B.) 1919; served in the United States
Army 1917-18. retiring with the rank of second lieutenant;
employed by a rubV^er company as assistant branch manager
1919-1921; connected with two banking concerns 1921-1923;
appointed, after examination (January 14, 1924), Vice Consul
de carriere of class three June 13, 1924; Foreign Service Officer,
unclassified, July i, 1924; assigned to Kobe July 31, 1924.
Young, William C— Bom in Christiansburg. Ky.. December
1. 1879; graduated from Washington and Lee University (A. B.)
1901; taught school 1902-03; clerk in the Office of the Quarter-
master General six months 1918; with Treasury Department
in France August. 1918. to April, 1919; clerk in the Consulate
General at London 192 1; appointed Vice-Consul at London
January 27. 1922.
Young, William Warren. — Born in Perrys Corner, Del.,
April 27, 1872; attended Baker University three years; em-
ployed as farmer at Le Loup, Kans.; telegrapher and station
agent in Mexico 1900-1905; cashier and telegrapher. Morenci
Southern Railroad, Arizona. 1905-06; agent and customhouse
agent for Nacozan Railroad Co.. Agua Prieta, Sonora. 1906-
1920; appointed Consular Agent at Agua Prieta, October 11,
1920.
* Zabriskle, Luther Kimbell.— Died at his post (Aguascali-
entes) January 17, 192 1. Register of 1918.
Zacharias, Ellis M.— Lieutenant commander. United States
Navy; assigned to duty as Assistant Naval Attach^ at Tokyo
October 13, 1920.
Zirkle, Vernon Buford.— Bora in Mount Jackson. Va.. Feb-
mary 2, looi; educated in the public schools of Virginia, grad-
uated from Mount Jackson High School; worked on farm and in
a country store; appointed a clerk, temporarily, at $900 in the
Department of State August 12, 1918; at $1,020 February i. 1919;
at $1,000. under Civil Service rules, July i, 1919; class one,
December 31. 1920. effective January i, 192 1; class two No-
vember I, 1923; at Si,6So July i. 1924.
OBITUARY.
Bell, Edward. — Bom in New York City August 9, 1882;
graduate of Harvard University (B. A.), 1904; in broker's ofiSce,
1904-05; appointed Deputy Consul-General at Cairo July 3, 1909;
Vice and Deputy Consul-General at Cairo November 18, 1909;
appointed, after examination (January 16, 1911), Secretary of
the Legation at Teheran March 2, 1911; Second Secretary of
the Legation at Habana February 15, 1912; clerk in the Depart-
ment of State under the provisions of Executive order of De-
cember i, 1910. October 14, 1912; secretary to the special mission
representing the President at the inauguration of Gen. Mario G.
Menocal as President ol Cuba at Habana May jo. 1913; ap-
pointed Second Secretary of the Embassy at London Septem-
ber 4. 1913; Secretary of Embassy or Legation of class three by
act approved February s, 191 5; appointed Secretary of class
two July 13, 1917; class one August 27. 1918; designated and
assigned as Counselor of the Embassy at Tokyo December 11,
1919; assigned to the Department of State for du'v in connec-
tion with the Conference on the Limitation if Armament Sei>»
tember 28, 1921; expert assistant, Conference on the Limitation
of Armament November 3. 192 1; designated Chief of the Division
of Current Information. Department of State, February 15. 1922;
designated Counselor of Embassy and assigned to Peking
September 30. 1932; appointed Foreign Service Officer of class
one July i, 1924. Died at his post (Peking) October 28. 1924.
♦Cheney, Elias H.— Retired as Consul at Curasao June. 1914.
Died in Lebanon, N. H., August 26, 1924. Register of 191^.
Dyer, Francis John. — Born in Dyersville, Iowa. June ai,
1864; home, San Francisco, Calif.; spent two years at North-
western University and one year at the University of Cali-
fornia; was assistant postmaster at Athens, Nebr., in 1884,
postmaster at Pender, Nebr.. in 1S85. and at South Riverside,
Calif., for a short time in 1889; employed with lumber firms in
Iowa and Nebraska. 1S83-1887; engaged as reporter, editor
and owner of newspapers and periodicals in Corona. Los
Angeles, and San Francisco, 1887-1905, and in New York City,
1906; Washington correspondent of California and other papers,
1906-191^; Washin;;ton commissioner for the Panama California
Exposition, 1911; appointed, after examination (January 19,
1914). Consul of class nine March 2. 1915; assigned to Swansea
April 3, 1915, and was in charge of office May 6 to 10, 1915; on
detail in the Department of State May 26 to October 33, 1915;
assigned to Ceiba September 17, 19 15; to Tegucigalpa March
20, 1917; appointed Consul cf class eight April 16, 1917; detailed
to Nogales, February 25, I9i9;a3signed to Nogales, May 32, 1919;
appointed Consul of class six September 5, 1919; assigned to
Coblenz May 17, 1922; appointed Foreign Service Officer of
class seven July i, 1924. Died at his post (Coblenz) December
26, 1924.
* Higgins, John C. — Retired as Consul at Dundee Septem-
ber. 1909. Died in Wilmington, Del., June 18, 1924. Regis-
ter of 1913.
Murphy, George H.— Bora in Scupperaong, N. C, Septem-
ber 28, i860; educated in pubhc and private schools in North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Delaware; teacher in Rugby
Academy, Wilmington. Del.; appointed, after examination
(June, 18S6), Consular Clerk June 22, 1S86; Vice and Deputy
Consul at Cliemnitz September 7, 18S6; Deputy Consul-Gen-
eral at Berlin March 7, 18S9; Vice and Deputy Consul-General
April S. i8go; Consular Agent at Hanover December 23, 1S90;
\'icc-Commcrcial Agent at Luxemburg June 30, 1893; on
detail in the Department of State February 13, 1896, to Sep-
tember 20, 1899; appointed Vice-Consul at Colon January 17,
1898; designated to inspect consulates on the west coast of
Colombia, Central America, and Mexico March 17. 189S;
designated to inspect certain consulates in Mexico November
19. 1S9S; appointed Vice and Deputy Consul at Bremen Sep-
tember 20, 1899; Vice and Deputy Consul at Magdeburg
February 5. 1900; Vice and Deputy Consul-Geueral at Frank-
fort December i, 1900; designated to inspect certain consulates
in Germany November 18, 1904; appointed Consular Agent at
St. Catharines March 13, 1905; Consul-General at Large May
23, 1906, to take effect July i, 1906; Consul-General at Cape
TowTi April 27. 1914; Consul-General of class three by act
approved February 5, 1915; appointed Consul-General of class
two March 2. 1915; assigned to Zurich October ao, 1920; ap-
pointed Foreign Service Officer of class one July i, 1924. Died
at his post (Zurich) October 16, 1924.
*Willard, Joseph Edward.— Retired as Ambassador to Spain
June 192 1. Died in New York City April 4, 1924. Register
of 191S.
2l6
OBITUARY.
XVllI. LIST OF PERSONS WHO HAVE SERVED AS OFFICERS OF CAREER IN THE FOREIGN SERVICE
SINCE JANUARY 1, 1906, AND WHO HAVE DIED IN THE SERVICE OR SINCE THEIR SEPARATION FROM
THE SERVICE. THE EDITION OF THE REGISTER IN WHICH THE BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH LAST
APPEARED IS GIVEN OPPOSITE EACH NAME.
Aleer, William E
Anderson, George B. . . .
Arnold, Olney
Atwell, William P
Ayme, Louis H
Bacon, Robert
Baker. Orlando H
Bell, Edward
Bergh, Roberts. S
Berliner, Solomon
Beutelspacher, Gustave.
Bickford, George F
Bluthardt, Theodore J. .
Bordewich, Henry
Botkin, Theodosius
Bragg, Edward S
Bray, John P
Brissel, Charles F
Bryan, Charles Page
Bryce, Lloyd
Burnell, Albro L
Byington, A. Homer
Caldwell, John L
Calhoun, William James
Canada, William W
Carroll, B. Harvey
Carroll, Philip
Caughy , Charles M
Cheney, Arthur S
Cheney, Elias H
Cheshire, Fleming D —
Clare, Arthur J
Crowniushield, Caspar S
Crum, William D
Curtice, Raymond S. . .
Curtis, James L
Cutting, jr., W. Bayard.
Daniels, Charles N
Davis, George F
Dawson, Thomas C
DeCastro, Hector
DeSauUes, John L
DuBois, James T
Dudley, Irving B
Dyer, Francis J
Ellis, George W
Ewing, John
Fee, William Thomas. . .
Fennell, Charles B
Fleming, Ruius
Fowler, John
Card, Allen
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
July
May
May
Aug.
Oct.
Feb.
Nov.
Oct.
July
Jan.
Mar.
May
June
Dec.
Oct.
Mar.
Apr.
Mar.
Dec.
Dec.
Sept.
May
Mar.
Dec.
Aug.
Dec.
Aug.
June
Oct.
Sept.
Dec.
Feb.
Oct.
Mar.
Dec.
Feb.
May
Jan.
Aug.
May
Nov.
Dec.
Nov.
June
Apr.
Oct.
Apr.
Dec.
Oct.
jf Death.
Edition.
19. 1917
1916
2, 1910
1913
5. 1916
1915
28, 19U
1913
16, 1912
1913
29, 1919
1913
6,1913
1913
28, 1924
1924
17, 1923
1924
14, 1910
1913
9, 1916.
1913
22, 1923
1924
14, 1906
1913
19, 1912
1913
27, 1918
1917
20, 1912
1913
20, 1917
1916
31. 1916
191S
12, I918
1913
2, I917
1913
19, I92I
1918
29, I9IO
1913
6, 1922
1918
19, 1916
1913
17.1921
1917
31, 1922
1922
IS, 1906
1913
27. 1913
1913
28, 1908
1913
28, 1924
1913
13, 1922
191S
22, 1915
1914
26, 1910
1913
7, 1912
1913
IS, 1922
1922
24, 1917
1916
10, 1910
1913
17, 1916
191S
13. 1912
1913
1, 1912
1913
30, 1909
1913
3. 1917
1914
27, 1920
1913
27,1911
1913
26, 1924
1924
28, X919
1913
24, 1923
1917
1,1919
1918
25, 1918
1917
3, 1920
1918
31. 1923
1914
27, 1911
1913
Gassett, Walter
Gore, John A
Gottschalk, Alfred L. M. .
Gracey, Samuel L
Greene, William Maxwell.
Griffiths, John L
Guild, Curtis
Guthrie, George W
Hale, Edward J
Halstead , Marshal
Hamm, Theodore C
Handley, William W
Raskins, Thomas W
Haywood, W^illiam
Hazeltine, Ross
Heenan, Thomas E
Heimrod, George
Heingartner, Alexander. . .
Hendrick, Michael J
Henry, Harold Oliver
Higgins, Edward
Higgins, John C
Hill, Frank D
Hinckley, Thomas
HoUoway, William R
Hotschick, George M
Howells, Joseph A
Hunter, William Dulany. .
Iddings, Lewis M
.Tde, Henry Clay
Jackson, John B
Jewett, Milo A
Jones, Arthur Mason
Jones, John Edward
Kelley, William F
Kellogg, James C
Kerens, Richard C
King, Hamilton
King, Pendleton
Kirjassoff, Max D
Kitchen, William W
Lang, Paul
LeRoy, James A
Loop, Carl R
McCormick, Robert S
McCuUough, Charles A. . . . ,
McFarland, Silas Clark
McGoogan, George B
McKieman, Charles P. . . . .
McLean, Arthur
McMackin, John ,
McNally, James C
Date of Death. Edition.
July
18, 191S
1914
Jan.
26, 1917
I916
June
14, 1918
1917
Aug.
19. 1911
1913
Aug.
25, 1920
1914
May
17,1914
19'3
Apr.
6, 1915
1913
Mar.
8, 1917
1916
Feb.
16, 1922
igig
Jan.
29, 1908
1913
Nov.
6, 1914
1913
Sept.
27,1919
1918
July
12, 1908
1913
Dec.
19, 1906
1913
July
S. 1922
1922
June
25, 1914
1913
Dec.
12, 1921
1913
Mar.
30, 1917
1916
Sept.
9, 1922
1933
Jan.
I, 1913
1913
Nov.
17, 1919
1918
June
18, 1924
1913
May
23, 1912
1913
Nov.
6, 1918
1917
Dec.
30, 1911
1913
July
12, 1911
1913
Aug.
10, 1912
1913
Dec.
II. 1923
1918
Dec.
26, 1921
1913
June
13. 1921
1913
Dec.
20, 1920
1916
Feb.
25. 1921
1918
Dec.
6, 1917
1914
May
20, 1918
1917
Mar.
4, 1916
191S
Nov.
18, 1916
1913
Sept.
4, 1916
1913
Sept.
2, 1912
1913
July
31, 1913
1913
Sept.
I, 1923
1924
Oct.
16, 1913
1913
Oct.
31. 1911
1913
Feb.
—.1909
1913
July
29, 1923
1924
Apr.
16. 1919
1913
Apr.
30, 1914
1913
Oct.
24, 1908
1913
Aug.
29, 191 1
1913
May
28, 1916
1915
Dec.
29, 1918
191 7
Aug.
13, 1906
1913
Aug.
4, 1920
1918
OBITUARY.
2 17
Name.
McNeely, Robert X
Magelssen, William C
Magil!, Samuel E
Magoon, Charles E
Malmros, Oscar
Manton, Benjamin D
Mason, Dean B
Mason, Frank H
Masterson, William W
Merrill. Selah
Merry, William L
Michael, William H
Michelson, Albert H
Miller, Henry B
Mills, William Wallace
Monaghan, James C
Murphy, George H
Nash, Paul
Neill, Richard R
O'Rear, John D
Ozmun, Edward H
Page, Thomas Nelson
Page, Walter Hines
Pearson, Richmond
Peirce, Herbert H. D
Penfield, Frederic Courtland.,
Pike, William J
Pitcairn, Hugh
Plumacher, Eugene H
Pontius, Albert W
Price, Milton M
Quay, Jerome A
Reid, Whitelaw
Reinsch, Paul S
Ridgely, Benjamin H
Robinson, Fred R
Roche, James Jeffrey
Rockhill, William Woodville.
Roosevelt, George W
Rublee, William A
Schoyer, Balkam
Date of Death. Edition
Dec. 30, 191S
Oct. 17, 1919
Jan. 29, 1913
Jan. 14, 1920
Aug. 18, 1909
July 30. 191 1
Jan. 16, 191 7
June 21, 1916
May 10, 1922
Jan. — , 1909
Dec. 14, 1911
May 17, 1916
June 9, 1915
Nov. 28, 192 1
Feb. 10, 1913
Nov. 19, 191 7
Oct. 16, 1924
Jan. 6, 1913
Oct. — , 1912
July 14, 1918
Dec. 9, 1910
Nov. I, 1922
Dec. 21, 1918
Sept. 12, 1923
Dec. 5, 1916
June 19, 1922
Apr. 23, 1923
July 19, 1911
Sept. 25, 1910
Feb. 23, 1923
Oct. 25, 1906
Sept. 24, 1910
Dec. 15, 1912
Jan. 26, 1923
Oct. 10, 1908
Jidy 22, 1923
Apr. 3, 1908
Dec. 8, 1914
Apr. 14, 1907
Apr. 15, 1910
Apr. 2, 1910
191S
1918
1913
1913
1913
1913
1916
1913
1922
1913
1913
1913
1914
1913
1913
1916
1924
1913
1913
1917
1913
1918
191 7
1913
1915
1918
1924
1913
1913
1924
1913
1913
1913
1918
1913
1924
1913
1913
1913
1913
1913
Name.
Date of Death. Edition.
Scidmore. George H
Sewell, William L
Sharj), Hunter
Sharp. William G
Silliman, John R
Slocum, Clarence Rice. . . .
Smith. Abraham E
Smith, Feli.x Willoughby.
Smith, James A
Sorsby, William B
Squiers, Herbert G
Stephens. Joseph G
Storer, Bellamy
Straight, Willard D
Stutesman, James F
Sullivan, James M
Summers, Maddin
Sv.-alm, Albert W
Taylor, P. Emerson
Taylor, Samuel M
Terres, John B
Touhay, St. Leger A
Tower, Charlemagne
Vail, Delmar J
Van Buren, Harold S
Van Dyne, Frederick
Vignaud, Henry
Warner, Southard P
Watts, Ethelbert
Webster, William H. H...
West, George N
Westacott, Richard
White, Jay
Willard, Joseph Edward. .
Wilson, Ripley
Wood, Charles M
Wright, LukeE
Wynne, Robert J
Voung, Wallace J
Zabriskie, Luther K
Nov.
Mar.
Dec.
Nov.
Jan.
Feb.
Jan.
Jan.
Sept.
Mar.
Oct.
Dec.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.
Aug.
May
Aug.
Apr.
Dec.
Nov.
May
Feb.
Oct.
Feb.
Apr.
Sept.
May
July
Apr.
Mar.
Jan.
May
Apr.
Oct.
May
Nov.
Mar.
Dec.
Jan.
27, 1922
25, 1906
17. 1923
17, 1922
17,1919
25, 1912
18, 1915
11, 1920
29, 1920
26, 1912
19, 1911
22, 1920
12, 1922
1, 1918
15. 1917
— , 1920
4. 1918
24, 1922
8, 1913
7, 1916
1, 1920
IS. 1907
24. 1923
30, 1906
12, 1907
21, 191S
16, 1922
9.1914
13. 1919
15,1911
26, 1920
28, 1922
23. 1918
4, 1924
2, 1917
22, 1908
17, 1922
II, 1922
4. 1923
17. 1921
1923
1913
1924
191J
1918
1913
1914
1918
1918
1913
1913
1918
1913
1913
1913
1914
1917
1922
1913
1915
1918
1913
1913
1913
1913
1914
1913
1913
1918
1913
1918
1918
191 7
1924
1916
1913
1913
1913
1924
1918
2l8
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
XIX. LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS OF THE UNITED STATES, MARCH 4, 1789-JANUARY I, 1925.
ABYSSINIA.
Minister Resident and Consul General.
Ho£Fman Philip, New York, July 20, 1908.
ALBANIA.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Ulysses Grant-Smith, Pennsylvania, September 22, 1922.
ALGIERS
Commissioner Plenipotentiary.
David Humphreys, Connecticut, March 21, 1793.
ARGENTINA.
Minister Plenipotentiary.
Caesar A. Rodney, Delaware, January 27, 1823.
Charges d' Affaires.
John M. Forbes, Florida, March 9, 1825.
Francis Baylies, Massachusetts, January 3, 1832.
William Brent, jr., Virginia, June 14, 1844.
William A. Harris, Virginia, February 19, 1846.
Johns S. Pendleton, Virginia, February 27, 1851.
James A. Peden, Florida, May 22, 1854.
Ministers Resident.
James A. Peden, Florida, Jime 29, 1854.
Benjamin C. Yancey, Georgia, June 14, 1858.
John F. Cushman, Mississippi, July 18, 1859.
Robert M. Palmer, Pennsylvania, March 28, 1861.
Robert C. Kirk, Ohio, March 4, 1862.
Alexander Asboth,' Missouri, March 12, 1866.
H. G. Worthington,' Nevada, June s, 1868.
Robert C. Kirk,' Ohio, April 16, 1869.
Julius White, Illinois, December 12, 1872.
Thomas O. Osborn, Illinois, February 10, 1874.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Thomas O. Osborn, Illinois, July 7, 1884.
Bayless W. Hanna, Indiana, June 17, 1885.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Bayless W. Hanna, Indiana, July i, 1887.
John R. G. Pitkin, Louisiana, July 26, 1889.
William I. Buchanan, Iowa, January 26, 1894.
William P. Lord, Oregon, October 16, 1899.
John Barrett, Oregon, July 2, 1903.
Arthur M. Beaupre, Illinois, March 17, 1904.
Spencer F. Eddy, Illiaois, April 2, 1908.
Charles H. Sherrill, New York, April i, 1909.
John W. Garrett, Maryland, December 14, 1911.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Frederic Jesup Stimson, Massachusetts, October i, 1914.
John W. Riddle, Connecticut, November 18, 1921.
AUSTRIA.
(See Austria-Hungary, December 22, 1867-April 9, 1917.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Henry A. Muhlenberg, Pennsylvania, February 8, 1838.
Daniel Jenifer, Maryland, August 27, 1841.
' Accredited also to Uruguay.
Charges d'.\ffaires.
William H. Stiles, Georgia, April 19, 1845.
James Watson Webb, New York, November i, 1849.
Charles J. McCurdy, Connecticut, September 27, 1850.
Thomas M. Foote, New York, September 16, 1852.
Henry R. Jackson, Georgia, May 24, 1833.
Minister Resident.
J. Glancy Jones, Pennsylvania, November i, 1858.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
J. Glancy Jones, Pennsylvania, December 15, 1858.
Anson Burlingame, Massachusetts, March 22, 1861.
J. Lothrop Motley, Massachusetts, August 10, i86i.
Charge d' Affaires pro tempore.
Arthur Hugh Frazier, Pennsylvania, November 25, 1921.
Envoy Extraordinary and ^Minister Plenipotentiary.
Albert Henry Washburn, Massachusetts, February 10, 1922.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
(See also Austria and Hungary.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Henry M. Watts, Pennsylvania, July 25, 1868.
John Jay, New York, April 13, 1869.
Godlove S. Orth, Indiana, March 9, 1875.
Edward F. Beale, District of Columbia, June i, 1876.
John A. Kasson, Iowa, June 11, 1877.
William Walter Phelps, New Jersey, May 5, 1881.
Alphonso Taft, Ohio, April 26, 1882.
John M. Francis, New York, July 4, 1884.
Alexander R. Lawton, Georgia, April 15, 1887.
Frederick D. Grant, New York, March 23, 1889.
Bartlett Tripp, South Dakota, April 6, 1893.
Charlemagne Tower, Pennsylvania, April i, 1897.
Addison C. Harris, Indiana, January 12, 1899.
Robert S. McCormick, Illinois, March 7, 1901.
A mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Robert S. McCormick, Illinois, May 27, 1902.
Bellamy Storer, Ohio, September 26, 1902.
Charles S. Francis, New York, March 22, 1906.
Richard C. Kerens, Missouri, December 21, 1909.
Frederic Courtland Penfield, Peimsylvania, July 28, 1913.
BELGIUM.
Charges d' Affaires.
Hugh S. Legare, South Carolina, April 14, 1832.
Virgil Maxcy. Maryland, June 16, 1837.
Henry W. Hilliard, Alabama, May 12, 1842.
Thomas G. Clemson, Pennsylvania, June 17, 1844.
Richard H. Bayard, Delaware, December 10, 1850.
J. J. Seibels, Alabama, May 24, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
J. J. Seibels, Alabama, June 29, 1854.
Elisha Y. Fair, Alabama, June 14, 1858.
Henry S. Sanford, Connecticut, March 20, iS6r.
Joseph Russell Jones, Illinois, March 15, 1870.
Ayres Phillips Merrill, Mississippi, January 7, 1S76.
William C. Goodloe, Kentucky, March 4, 1878.
James O. Putnam, New York, June 4, 1880.
Nicholas Fish, New York, April 28, 1882.
Lambert Tree, Illinois, July 3, 18S5.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
219
Envoys Extraordinary and Xlinisters Plenipotentiary.
I^mbert Tree, Illinois, August 10, 1888.
John G. Parkhurst, Michigan, October i, 1888.
Edwin H. Terrell, Texas, April i, 1889.
James S. Ewing, Illinois, April 8, 1893.
Bellamy Storer, Ohio, May 4, 1S97.
Lawrence Townsend, Pennsylvania, April 12, 1899.
Henry Lane Wilson, Washington, March 8, 1905.
Charles Page Bryan, Illinois, December 21, 1909.
Larz Anderson. District of Columbia, August 12, 1911.
Theodore Marburg, Maryland, November 22, 1912.
Brand Whitlock, Ohio, December 22, 1913.
.4 mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Brand Whitlock, Ohio, September 30, 1919.
Henry P. Fletcher,^ Pennsylvania, March 6, 1922.
William Phillips,^ Massachusetts. February 29, 1924.
BOLIVIA.
Charges d'. Affaires.
John Appleton, Maine, March 30, 1848.
Alexander K. McClung, Mississippi, May 29, 1849.
Horace H. Miller, Mississippi, Februarj' 10, 1852.
John W. Dana, Maine, August 26, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
John W. Dana, Maine, June 29, 1854.
John Cotton Smith, Connecticut, June 14, 1858.
David K. Cartter, Ohio. March 27, i86i.
Allen A. Hall, Tennessee. April 21, 1863.
John W. Caldwell, Ohio, June 18, 1868.
Leopold Markbreit, Ohio, April 16, 1869.
John T. Croxton, Kentucky, December 20, 1872.
Robert M. Reynolds, Alabama, June 17, 1874.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
S. Newton Pettis, Pennsylvania, September 4, 1878.
Charles Adams, Colorado, April 6, 1880.
Special Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Henry Trescot, South Carolina, November 28, 1881.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
George Maney, Tennessee, April 17. 1882.
Richard Gibbs, New York, Jime i8. 1883.
William D. Bloxham, Florida, April 18, 1885.
William A. Seay, Louisiana, May 9, 1885.
S. S. Carlisle, Louisiana. August 31, 1887.
Thomas H. Anderson, Ohio, September 3, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Thomas H. Anderson, Ohio, July 30, 1890. ,
Frederick J. Grant, Washington, December 22, 1892.
Thomas Moonlight, Kansas, February 2, 1894.
George H. Bridgman. New Jersey, October 7, 1897.
William B. Sorsby, Mississippi, July 11, 1902.
James F. Stutesman. Indiana, June s, 1908.
Horace G. Knowles, Delaware, June 24, 1910.
John D. O'Rear, Missouri, June 26, 1913.
S. Abbot Maginnis, Utah, September 23, 1919.
Jesse S. Cottrell, Tennessee, October 19, 1921.
BRAZIL.
Charges dWffaires.
Condy Raguet, Pennsylvania, March 9, 1825.
William Tudor, Massachusetts. June 26, 1827.
' Accredited also to Luxemburg.
32952—2.^ -15
Ethan A. Brown, Ohio, May 26, 1830.
William Hunter, Rhode Island, June 28, 1834.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Hunter, Rhode Island, September 13, 1841.
George H. Proffit, Indiana, June 7, 1843.
Henry A. Wise, Virginia, February 8, 1844.
David Tod, Ohio, March 3, 1847.
Robert C. Schenck, Ohio, March 12, 1851.
William Trousdale, Tennessee. May 24, 1853.
Richard K. Meade, Virginia, July 27, 1857.
James Watson Webb, New York, May 31, 1861.
Henry T. Blow, Missouri, May i, 1869.
James R. Partridge, Maryland, May 23, 1871.
Henry W. Hilliard, Georgia, July 31, 1877.
Thomas A. Osbom, Kansas, May 19, 1881.
Thomas J. Jarvis, North Carolina, April 2, 1885.
Robert Adams, jr., Pennsylvania, March 30, 1889.
Edwin H. Conger, Iowa, September 27, 1890.
Thomas L. Thompson, California, April 24, 1893.
Edwin H. Conger, Iowa, May 27, 1897.
Charles Page Bryan, Illinois, January 19, 1898.
David E. Thompson, Nebraska, September 26, 1902.
A mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
David E. Thompson, Nebraska, January 13, 1905.
Lloyd C. Griscom, Permsylvania, January 29, 1906.
Irving B. Dudley, California, December ig, 1906.
Edwin V. Morgan, New York, January 18, 191 2.
BULGARIA.
Agent.
Charles M. Dickinson, New York, April 24, 1901.
Diplomatic Agents.
John B. Jackson,' New Jersey, June 5, 1903.
John B. Jackson,^ New Jersey, March 8, 1903.
Horace G. Knowles, ' Delaware, July i, 1907.
Spencer F. Eddy,* Illinois, January 11, 1909.
John R. Carter,* Maryland, September 25, 1909.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John R. Carter,* Maryland, June 24, 1910.
John B. Jackson,* New Jersey, August 12, 1911.
Charles J. Vopicka,* Illinois, September 11, 1913.
Charles S. Wilson, Maine, October 8, 1921.
CENTRAL AMERICA.
(See the individual Central American States, February, 1839-
May, 1873.)
Charges d' Affaires.
William Miller, March 7, 1825.
John Williams, Tennessee, December 29, 1825.
William B. Rochester, New York, March 3, 1827.
William N. Jeffers, June 14, 1831.
James Shannon, February 9, 1832.
Charles G. De Witt, New York, January 29, 1833.
CENTRAL AMERICAN STATES.
(See the individual Central American States, June 12, 1893.)
Ministers Resident.
George Williamson, Louisiana, May 17, 1873.
Cornelius A. Los^"- Illinois, April 2, 1879.
Henry C. Hall, April 17, 1882.
' Accredited also to Rumania. Serbia, and Greece.
< Accredited also to Greece and Montenegro.
'■• Accredited also to Rumania and Serbia.
220
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
Enroys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenif^otcntiary.
Henry C. Hall, July 13, 1882.
Lansing B. Mizner, California, March 30, 1889.
Romualdo Pacheco, California, December 11, 1890.
CHILE.
Minister Plenipotentiary.
Heman Allen, Vermont, January 27, 1S23.
Charges d' Affaires,
Samuel Lamed, Rhode Island, February 29, 1828.
John Hamm, Ohio, May 26, 1830.
Richard Pollard, \'irginia, June 28, 1834.
John S. Pendleton, Virginia, August 16, 1841.
William Crump, Virginia, April 10, 1844.
Seth Barton, Louisiana, May 27, 1847.
Enioys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Balie Pej'ton, Tennessee, August 9, 1849.
David A. Starkweather, Ohio, June 29, 1854.
John Bigler, California, April 2, 1857.
Thomas H. Xelson, Indiana, Jime i, 1861.
Judson Kilpatrick, New Jersey, November ir, 1865.
Joseph P. Root, Kansas, September 15, 1870.
Cornelius A. Logan, Kansas, March 17, 1873.
Thomas A. Osbom, Kansas, May 31, 1877.
Judson Kilpatrick, New Jersey, May 19, 1881.
Special Emoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Henry Trescot, South Carolina, November 28, 1881.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Cornelius A. Logan, Illinois, March 15, 1882.
William R. Roberts, New York, April 2, 1885.
Patrick Egan, Nebraska, March 30, 1889.
James D. Porter, Tennessee, April 4, 1893.
Edward H. Strobel, New York, December 13, 1894.
Henry L. Wilson, Washington, June 9, 1897.
John Hicks. Wisconsin, July 14, 1905.
Thomas C. Dawson, Iowa, April 21, 1909.
Henry P. Fletcher, Pennsylvania, December 21, 1909.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Henry P. Fletcher, Pennsylvania, October i, 1914.
Joseph H. Shea, Indiana, March 6, 1916.
William Miller Collier, New York, June 29, 1921.
CHINA.
Emoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Caleb Cushing, Massachusetts, May 8, 1843.
Co m m issioners.
Caleb Cushing, Massachusetts, May 8, 1843.
Alexander H. Everett, Massachusetts, March 13, 1845.
John W Davis, Indiana, January 3, 1848.
Thomas A. R. Nelson, Tennessee, March 6, 1851.
Humphrey Marshall, Kentucky, August 4, 1852.
Robert M. McLane, Maryland, October 18, 1853.
Peter Parker, Massachusetts, August 16, 1853.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
WilUam B. Reed, Pennsylvania, April 18, 1837.
John E. Ward, Georgia, December 15, 1858.
Anson Burlingame, Massachusetts, June 14, 1861.
J. Ross Browne, California, March 11, 1868.
Frederick F. Low, California, September 28, 1869.
Benjamin P. Avery, California, April 10, 1874.
George F. Seward. California, January 7, 1876.
Jaaies B. Angell, Michigan, April 9, 1880.
John Russell Young, New York, March 15, 18S2
Charles Denby, Indiana, May 29, 1885.
Charles Page Bryan, Illinois, November 10, 1897.
Edwin H. Conger, Iowa, January 19, 1898.
Commissioner.
William Woodville Rockhill, District of Columbia,* July
19, 1900.
Eiivoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Woodville Rockhill, District of Columbia, March
8, 1905.
Charles R. Crane, Illinois, July 23, 1909.
William James Calhoun, Illinois, December 21, 1909.
Paul S. Reinsch, Wisconsin, August 15, 1913.
Charles R. Crane, Massachusetts, March 22, 1920.
Jacob Gould Schurman, New York, June 2, 1921.
COLOMBIA— NEW GRENADA.
(New Grenada, 1831-1862.)
Minister Plenipotentiary.
Richard C. Anderson, Kentucky, January'27, 1823.
Charge d'Affaires.
Beaufort T. Watts, South Carolina, March 3, 1827.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William H. Harrison, Ohio, May 24, 1828.
Thomas P. Moore, Kentucky, March 13, 1829.
Charges d'Affaires.
Robert B. McAfee, Kentucky, February 9, 1833.
James Semple, Illinois, October 14, 1S37.
William M. Blackford, Virginia, February 10, 1842.
Benjamin A. Bidlack, Pennsylvania, May 14, 1845.
Thomas M. Foote, New York, May 29, 1849.
Yelverton P. King, Georgia, March 12, 1851.
James S. Green, Missouri, May 24, 1853.
Ministers Resident,
James S. Green, Missouri, June 29, 1854.
James B. Bowlin, Missouri, December 13, 1854.
George W. Jones, Iowa, March 8, 1859,
Allan A. Burton, Kentucky, May 29, i85i.
Peter I. Sullivan, Ohio, March 19, 1867.
Stephen A. Hurlbut, Illinois, April 22, 1869.
William L. Scruggs, Georgia, April 9, 1873.
Ernest Dichraan, Wisconsin, June 15, 1878.
George Maney, Teimessee, May 19. 1881.
William L. Scruggs, Georgia, April 17, 1882.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William L. Scruggs, Georgia, July 7, 1884.
Charles D. Jacob, Kentucky, October 9, 1885.
Dabney H. Maury, Virginia, October iS, 1886.
John T. Abbott, New Hampshire, April i, iSSg.
Luther F. McKinney, New Hampshire, April 24, 1893.
Charles Burdett Hart, West Virginia, May 27, 1897.
Arthur M. Beaupre, Illinois, February 12, 1903.
William W. Russell, District of Columbia, March 17, 1904.
John Barrett, Oregon, June 21, 1905.
Thomas C. Dawson, Iowa, January 10, 1907.
Elliott Northcott, West Virginia, April 23, 1909.
James T. Du Bois, Permsylvania, August 21, 1911.
Thaddeus Austin Thomson, Texas, June 10, 1913.
Hofifman Philip, New York, August 8, 191 7.
Samuel H. Piles, Washington, March 22, 1922.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
221
i COSTA RICA.
(See Central America and Central American States.)
Emoy Extraordinary and MinisteT Plenipotentiary.
Solon Borland,' .Arkansas, April i8, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
Mirabeau B. Lamar,' Texas, January 20, i8s8.
Alexander Dimitry,' Louisiana, August 15, 1859.
Charles N. Riotte, Texas, June 8, 1861.
Albert G. Lawrence, Rhode Island, October 2, 1866.
Jacob B. Blair, West Virginia, July 25, 1868.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Richard Cutts Shannon,' New York, August 8, 1891.
Lewis Baker,' Minnesota, April 4, 1893.
William L. Merry,' California, July 17, 1897.
William L. Merry,' California, December 12, 1907.
William L. Merry, California, July i, 190S.
Lewis Einstein, New York, July 6, 1911.
Edward J. Hale, North Carolina, June 21, 1913.
Roy T. Davis, Missouri, February 10, igaa.
CUBA.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Herbert Goldsmith Squiers, New York, May 20, 1902.
Edwin V. Morgan, New York, November 29, 1905.
John B. Jackson, New Jersey, December 21, 1909.
Arthur M. Beaupr^, Illinois, August 12, 1911.
William E. Gonzales, South Carolina, June 21, 1913.
Boaz W. Long, New Mexico, June 30, 1919.
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Mai. Gen. Enoch H. Crowder, United States Army, February
10, 1923.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Richard Crane, Illinois, April 23, 1919.
Lewis Einstein, New York, October 8, 1921.
DENMARK,
Special Minister.
George W. Erving, Massachusetts, January 5, 1811.
Charges d' Affaires.
Henry Wlieaton, Nevs^ York, March 3, 1827.
Jonathan F. Woodside, Ohio, March 3, 1835.
Isaac Rand Jackson, Pennsylvania, May 20, 1R41.
William W. Irwin, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1843.
Robert P. Flenniken, Pennsylvania, January 11, 1847.
Walter Forward, Pennsylvania, November 8, 1849.
Miller Grieve, Georgia, August 30, 1852.
Henr^' Bedinger, Virginia, May 24, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
Henry Bedinger, Virginia, June 29, 1854.
James M. Buchanan, Maryland, May 11, 1858.
Bradford R. Wood, New York, March 22, 1861.
George H. Yeaman, Kentucky, August 25, 1865.
M. J. Cramer, Kentucky, September 9, 1870.
' .Accredited also to Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and
Salvador.
' Accredited also to Nicaragua.
8 Accredited also to Nicaragua and Salrador.
Cliargt's d' Affaires.
Michael J. Cramer, Kentucky, August 15, 1876.
Charles Payson, Massachusetts. Jime 30, 1881.
J. P. Wickersham, Pennsylvania, May i, 1882.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
J. P. Wickersham, Pennsylvania, July 13, 1S82.
Wickham Hoflfman, New York, February 27, 1883.
Rasmus B. Anderson, ^^■isconsin, April 2, 1883.
John A. Enander, Illinois, March 13, 1889.
Clark E. Carr, Illinois, May 16, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Clark E. Carr, Illinois, July 30, 1890.
John E. Risley, New York, March 27, 1893.
Laurits S. Swenson, Minnesota, October 4, 1897.
Thomas J. O'Brien, Michigan, March 8, 1905.
Maurice Francis Egan, District of Columbia, June 10, 1907.
Norman Hapgood, New York, April 16, 1919.
Joseph C. Grew, Massachusetts, April 7, 1920.
John Dyneley Prince, New Jersey, September 24, 1921.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Charges d'.Affaires.
John M. Langston,' District of Columbia, November"i2, 18J
John E. W. Thompson, 6 New York, May 16, 1885.
Frederick Douglass,' District of Columbia, September 20, iJ
John S. Durham,* Pennsylvania, July 23, 1892.
William F. Powell,' New Jersey, June 17, 1897.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Thomas C. Dawson, Iowa, April 29, 1904.
Fenton R. McCreery, Michigan, January 10, 1907.
Horace G. Knowles, Delaware, December 21, 1909.
William W. Russell, District of Columbia, June 24, 1910.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William W. Russell, District of Columbia, July 6, 1911.
James M. Sullivan, New York, August 12, 1913.
William W. Russell, District of Columbia, August 16, 1913.
ECUADOR.
Charges d'.Affaires.
Vanbrugh Livingston, New York, April 10, 1848.
John Trumbull Van Alen, New York, June 5, 1849.
Courtland Cushing, Indiana, September 28, 1850.
Philo White, Wisconsin, July 18, 1853.
Minister Resident.
Philo White, Wisconsin, June 29, 1854.
Charles R. Buckalew, Pennsylvania, June 14, 1858.
Frederick Hassaurek, Ohio, March 27, 1861.
William T. Coggeshall, Ohio, May 4, 1866.
E. Rumsey Wing, Kentucky, November 16, 1869.
Thomas Biddle, Pennsylvania, February 2, 1875.
Christian Wullweber, Iowa, July 12, 1873.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Rowland B. Mahany, New York, February 44, 1892.
Edward H. Strobel, New York, April 14, 1894.
James D. Tillman, Tennessee, January 24, 1895.
Archibald J. Sampson, Arizona, September 18, 1897.
9 Accredited also to Haiti.
222
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
Joseph W. J. Lee, Maryland, September i8, 1905.
William C. Fox, Ne%v Jersey, January 10, 1907.
Evan E. Young, South Dakota, July 6, 191 1.
Montgomery Schuyler, jr., New York, March i, 1913.
Charles S. Hartman, Montana, July 28, 1913.
Gerhard A. Bading, Wisconsin, March 9, 1922.
EGYPT.
Agents and Consuls General.
Elbert E. Farman, New York, March 27, 1876.
Simon Wolf, District of Columbia, June 30, 1881.
George P. Pomeroy, New Jersey, July i, 1882.
John Cardwell, Texas, October 2, 1885.
Eugene Schuyler, New York, June 26, 1889.
John A. Anderson, Kansas, February 27, 1891.
Edward C. Little, Kansas. November 15, 1892.
Frederic C. Penfield, Connecticut, May 13, 1893.
Thomas S. Harrison, Pennsylvania, April 22, 1897.
John G. Long, Florida, October 30, 1899.
John W. Riddle, Minnesota, September 8, 1903.
Lewis M. Iddings, New York, March 23, 1905
Peter Augustus Jay, Rhode Island, December 21, 1909.
Olney Arnold, Rhode Island, September 2, 1913.
Hampson Gary, Texas, October 2, 191 7.
Carroll Sprigg, Ohio, May 11, 1920.
J. Morton Howell, Ohio, October 7, 1921.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
J. Morton Howell, Ohio, June 21, 1922.
ESTHONIA.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Frederick W. B. Coleman,"* Minnesota, September 20, 1922.
FINLAND.
Charge d' Affaires pro tempore.
Alexander R. Magruder, Maryland, March 12, 1920.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Charles L. Kagey, Kansas, October 8, 192 1.
FRANCE.
Minkter Plenipotentiary.
Thomas Jefferson, Virginia, March 10, 1785.
Charge d' Affaires.
William Short, Virginia, April 20, 1790.
Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Gouvemeur Morris, New York, January 12, 1792.
James Monroe, Virginia, May 28, 1794.
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, South Carolina, September 9
1796.
Robert R. Livingston, New York, October 2, 1801.
John Armstrong, New York, June 30, 1804.
Charge d' Affaires.
Jonathan Russell, Rhode Island, November s, 1810.
Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Joel Barlow, Connecticut, February 27, 181 1.
William H. Crawford, Georgia, April 9, 1813.
'<> Accredited also to Latvia and Lithuania.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Albert Gallatin, Pennsylvania, February 28, 1815.
James Brown, Louisiana, December 9, 1823.
William C. Rives, Virginia, April 18, 1829.
Charge d' Affaires.
Leavitt Harris, Pennsylvania, March 6, 1833.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Edward Livingston, Louisiana, May 29, 1833.
Lewis Cass, Ohio, October 4, 1836.
William R. King, Alabama, April 9, 1844.
Richard Rush, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1847.
William C. Rives, Virginia, July 20, 1849.
John Y. Mason, Virginia, October 10, 1853.
Charles J. Faulkner, Virginia, January 16, i860.
William L. Dayton, New Jersey, March 18, 1861.
Charge d'. Affaires.
John Bigelow, New York, December 21, 1864.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John Bigelow, New York, March 15, 1865.
John A. Dix, New York, September 24, 1866.
Elihu B. Washburne, Illinois, March 17, 1869.
Edward F. Noyes, Ohio, July i, 1877.
Levi P. Morton, New York, March 21, 1881.
Robert M. McLane, Maryland, March 23, 1885.
Whitelaw Reid, New York, March 23, 1889.
T. Jefferson Coolidge, Massachusetts, May 12, 1892.
James B. Eustis, Louisiana, March 20, 1893.
^4 mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
James B. Eustis, Louisiana, April 8, 1893.
Horace Porter, New York, March 19, 1897.
Robert S. McCormick, Illinois, March 8, 1905.
Henry WTiite, Rhode Island, December 19, 1906.
Robert Bacon, New York, December 21, 1909.
Myron T. Herrick, Ohio, February 15, 1912.
William G. Sharp, Ohio, June 19, 1914.
Hugh Campbell Wallace, Washington, February 27, 1919.
Myron T. Herrick, Ohio, April 16, 1921.
GERMANY.
(Prussia prior to 1871.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George Bancroft, New York, May 31, 1871.
J. C Bancroft Davis, New York, June 11, 1874.
Bayard Taylor, Pennsylvania, March 4, 1878.
Andrew D. WTiite, New York, April 2, 1879.
Aaron A. Sargent, California, March 2, 1882.
John A. Kasson, Iowa, July 4, 1884.
George H. Pendleton, Ohio, March 23, 1885.
William Walter Phelps, New Jersey, June 20, 1889.
Theodore Runyon, New Jersey, March 23, 1893.
A mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Theodore Runyon, New Jersey, September 14, 1893.
Edwin F. Uhl, Michigan, February 10, 1896,
Andrew D. White, New York, April 5, 1897.
Charlemagne Tower, Pennsylvania, September 26, 1902.
David JajTie Hill, New York, April 2, 1908.
John G. A. Leishman, Pennsylvania, August 12, 1911.
James W. Gerard, New York, July 28, 1913.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
223
Charge d' Affaires.
Ellis Loring Dresel, Massachusetts, November 18, 1921.
A mbassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Alanson B. Houghton, New York, February 10, 1922.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Minister Plenipotentiary.
Thomas Pinckney, South Carolina, January 12, 1792.
Envoy Extraordinary,
John Jay, New York, April 19, 1794.
Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Rufus King, New York, May 20, 1796.
James Monroe, Virginia, April 18, 1803.
William Pinkney, Marj'land, May 12, 1806.
Charge d' Affaires.
Jonathan Russell, Rhode Island, July 27, 1811.
Envoys Extraordinary and .Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John Quincy Adams, Massachusetts, February 28, 1815.
Richard Rush, Pennsylvania, October, 1817.
Rufus King, New York, May s. 1825.
Albert Gallatin, Pennsylvania, May 10, 1826.
James Barbour, Virginia, May 23, 1828.
Louis McLane, Delaware, April 18, 1829.
Martin Van Buren, New York, August i, 1831.
Charge dWffaires. •
Aaron Vail, New York, July 13, 1832.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Andrew Stevenson, Virginia, March 16, 1836.
Edward Everett, Massachusetts, September 13, i84r.
Louis McLane, Marj'land, June 16, 1845.
George Bancroft, New York, September 9, 1846.
Abbott Lawrence, Massachusetts, August 30, 1849.
Joseph R. Ingersoll, Permsylvania, August 21, 1852.
James Buchanan, Pennsylvania, April 11, 1853.
George M. Dallas, Pennsylvania, February 4, 1856.
Charles Francis Adams, Massachusetts, March 20, 1861.
Reverdy Johnson, Maryland, June 12, 1868.
J. Lothrop Motley, Massachusetts, April 13, 1869.
Robert C. Schenck, Ohio, December 22, 1870.
Edwards Pierrepont, New York, May 22, 1876.
John Welsh, Permsylvania, November 9, 1877.
James Russell Lowell, Massachusetts, January 26, 1880.
Edward J. Phelps, Vermont, March 23, 1885.
Robert T. Lincoln, Illinois, March 30, 1889.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Thomas F. Bayard, Delaware, March 30, 1893.
John Hay, District of Columbia, March 19, 1897.
Joseph H. Choate, New York, January 19, 1899.
Whitelaw Reid, New York, March 8, 1905.
Walter Hines Page, New York, April 21, 1913.
John W. Davis, West Virginia, November 21, 1918.
George Harvey, New Jersey, April 16, 1921.
Frank B. Kellogg, Minnesota, December 11, 1923.
GREECE.
Ministers Resident.
Charles K. Tuckerman, New York, March 11, 1868.
John M. Francis, New York, May 15, 1871.
J. Meredith Read, jr.. New York, November 7, 1873.
Charge d' Affaires.
John Meredith Read, August 15, 1876.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Eugene Schuyler,' New York, July 7, 1882.
Walker Feam.s Louisiana, April 18, 1885.
\. Loudon Snowden,' Permsylvania, July i, 1889.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
A. Loudon Snowden,' Pennsylvania, July i, 1891.
Minister Resident and Consul General.
Truxtim Beale,' California, July 27, 1892.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary and Con-
suls General.
Truxtun Beale,' California, March 3, 1893.
Eben Alexander.^ North Carolina, April 7, 1893.
William Woodville Rockhill,' District of Columbia, July 8,
1897.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Woodville Rockhill,5 District of Columbia, May 25,
1898.
Arthur S. Hardy,^ New Hampshire, April 18, 1899.
Charles S. Francis,* New York, December 20, 1900.
John B. Jackson,^ New Jersey, October 13, 1902.
John B. Jackson, 'I New Jersey, June 5, 1903.
John B. Jackson, '2 New Jersey, March 8, 1905.
Richmond Pearson," North Carolina, July i, 1907.
George H. Moses,'' New Hampshire, April 5, 1909.
Jacob Gould Schurman,'' New York, August 16, 1912.
George Fred Williams,'' Massachusetts, December 22, 1913.
Garrett Droppers," Massachusetts, August 5, 1914.
Edward Capps," New Jersey, June 18, 1920.
Irwin B. Laughlin, Pennsylvania, March 24, 1924.
GUATEMALA.
(See Central America and Central American States.)
Charges d' Affaires.
Elijah Hise, Kentucky, March 31, 1848.
Ephraim George Squier, New York, .\pril 2, 1849.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Solon Borland,'* Arkansas, April 18, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
John L. Marling, Tennessee, August 2, 1854.
William E. Venable, Tennessee, March 14, 1857.
Beverly L. Clarke," Kentucky, January 7, 1858.
EHsha O. Crosby, New York, March 22, 1861.
William Kellogg, Illinois, April 21, 1864.
Fitz Henry Warren, Iowa, August 12, 1865.
Silas A. Hudson, Iowa, April 22, 1869.
'■> Accredited also to Rumania and Serbia.
" Accredited also to Rumania and Serbia and as Diplo-
matic Agent in Bulgaria.
" Accredited also to Montenegro and as Diplomatic Agent
in Bulgaria.
" Accredited also to Montenegro.
'* Accredited also to Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua,
and Salvador.
'^ Accredited also to Honduras.
224
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
Envoys Extraordinary and Xlinisters Plenifjotetifiary.
Romualdo Pacheco,'" California, July i, 1891.
Pierce M. B. Young,'^ Georgia, April 4, 189J.
Macgrane Coxc,'^ New Yori, July 27, 1896.
W. Godfrey Huntcr,i= Kentucky, November 8, 1897.
Leslie Combs, '^ Kentucky, November 12, 1902.
Joseph W. J. Lee,i=' Maryland, January 10, 1907.
Joseph W. J. Lee, Maryland, July i, 1907.
William Heimke, Kansas, March 10, tgoS.
William F. Sands, District of Columbia, August 4, 1909.
R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Illinois, September 17, 1910.
William Hayne Leavell, Mississippi, October 16, 1913.
Benton McMillin, Tennessee, September 23, 1919.
Arthur H. Geissler, Oklahoma. May 24, 1922.
HAITL
Commissioners and Consuls General.
Benjamin F. Whidden, New Hampshire, July 12, 1862.
H. E. Peck, Ohio, March 14, 1865.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
H. E. Peck, Ohio, August 6, 1866.
Gideon H. Hollister, Connecticut, February 5, 1868.
Ebenezer D. Bassett, Pennsylvania, April 16, 1869.
John M. Langston,'^ District of Columbia, September 28, 1877.
John E. W. Thompson, 's New York, May 7, 1885.
Frederick Douglass, '^ District of Columbia, June 26, 1889.
John S. Durham, Pennsylvania, Septembers, 1891.
Henry M. Smythe, Virginia, September 15, 1893.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William F. Powell, New Jersey, June 17, 1897.
Henry W. Fumiss, Indiana, November 23, 1905.
Madison R. Smith, Missouri, August 15, 1913.
Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, Louisiana, May 22, 1914.
HAWAII.
Commissioners
George Brown, Massachusetts, March 3, 1843.
Anthony Ten Eyck, Michigan, April 19, 1845.
Charles Eames, New York, January 12, 1849.
Luther Severance, Maine, June 7, 1850.
David L. Gregg, Illinois, July 6, 1853.
James W. Borden, Indiana, January 11, 1858.
Thomas J. Dryer, Oregon, March 26, 1861.
Ministers Resident
James McBride, Oregon, March 9, 1863.
Edward M. McCook, Colorado, March 21, 1S66.
Henry A. Peirce, Massachusetts, May 10, 1869.
James M. Comly, Ohio, July i, 1877.
Rollin M. Daggett, Nevada, July 1,^882.
George W. Merrill, Nevada, April 2, 1885.
John L. Stevens, Maine, June 20, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John L. Stevens, Maine, July 30, 1890.
James H. Blount, Georgia, May 9, 1893.
Albert S. Willis, Kentucky, September 13, 1893.
Special Commissioner.
James H. Blount, Georgia, March 11, 1893.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Harold M. Sewall, Maine, April 22, 1897.
•' Accredited also to Honduras.
" Accredited also to the Dominican Republic.
HONDURAS.
(See Central America and Central American States. )
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
Solon Borland,!' Arkansas, April 18, 1853.
Ministers Resident
Beverly L. Clarke,'^ Kentucky, January 14, 1858.
James R. Partridge, Maryland, February 10, 1862.
Thomas H. Clay, Kentucky, April 16, 1863.
Richard H. Rousseau, Kentucky, May 14, 1866.
Henry Baxter, Michigan, April 21, 1869.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary
Romualdo, Pacheco,'' California, July i, 1891.
Pierce M. B. Young.'s Georgia, April 4, 1893.
Macgrane, Coxe,^' New York, July 27, 1896.
W. Godfrey Hunter, '^ Kentucky, November 8, 1897.
Leslie Combs," Kentucky, November 12, 1902.
Joseph W. J. Lee," Maryland, January 10, 1907.
H. Percival Dodge,'' Massachusetts, July i, 1907.
William B. Sorsby, Mississippi, June 5, 1908.
Philip M. Brown, Massachusetts, November 11, 1908.
Fenton R. McCreery, Michigan, December 21, 1909.
Charles Dunning White, New Jersey, July 6, 1911.
John Ewing, Louisiana, September 10, 1913.
T. Sambola Jones, Louisiana, June 26, 1918.
Franklin E. Morales, New Jersey, October 24, 1921.
HUNGARY.
(See Austria-Hungary prior to 1921.)
Charge d' Affaires pro tempore.
Ulysses Grant-Smith, Pennsylvania, December 27, 1921.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Theodore Brentano, Illinois, February 10, 1922.
ITALY.
(See Two Sicilies, 1816-1860; see also Sardinia, 1840-1860.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George P. Marsh, Vermont, March 20, 1861.
William Waldorf Astor, New York, August 4, 1882.
John B. Stallo, Ohio, June 17, 1885.
Albert G. Porter, Indiana, March 13, 1889.
William Potter, Pennsylvania, November 15, 1892
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Wayne MacVeagh, Pennsylvania, December 20, 1893.
William F. Draper, Massachusetts, April 5, 1897.
George v. L. Meyer, Massachusetts, December 14, 1900.
Henry White, Rhode Island, March 8, 1905.
Lloyd C. Griscom, Pennsylvania, December 19, 1906.
John G. A. Leishman, Pennsylvania, April i, 1909.
Thomas J. O'Brien, Michigan, August 12, 1911.
Thomas Nelson Page, Virginia, June 21, 1913.
Robert Underwood Johnson, New York, February 18, 1920.
Richard Washburn Child, Massachusetts, May 26, 1921.
Henry P. Fletcher, Pennsylvania, February 19, 1924.
JAPAN.
Ministers Resident,
Townsend Harris, New York, January 19, 1859.
Robert H. Pruyn, New York, October 12, 1861.
1' Accredited also to Costa Rica, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and
Salvador,
'8 Accredited also to Guatemala.
" Accredited also to Salvador.
TLIS OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
■^D
Robert B. Van Valkenburgh, New York, January i8, 1866.
Charles E. De Long, Nevada, April 21. 1869.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Charles E. De Long, Nevada, July 14, 1870.
John A. Bingham, Ohio, May 31, 1873.
Richard B. Hubbard, Texas, April 2, 1885.
John F. Swift, California, March 12, 1889.
Frank L. Coombs, California, April 20, 1892.
Edwin Dun. Ohio, April 4, 1893.
Alfred E. Buck, Georgia, April 13, 1897.
Lloyd C. Griscom, Pennsylvania, December 16, 1902.
A mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Luke E. Wright, Tennessee, January 25, 1906.
Thomas J. O'Brien, Michigan, June 11, 1907.
Charles Page Bryan, Illinois, August 12, 1911.
Larz Anderson, District of Columbia, November 14, 1912.
George W. Guthrie, Pennsylvania, May 20, 1913.
Roland S. Morris, Pennsylvania, August i, 191 7.
Charles Beecher Warren, Michigan, June 29, 1921.
Cyrus E. Woods, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1923.
Edgar A Bancroft, Illinois, September 23, 1924.
STATES OF THE KONGO ASSOCIATION.
A gent.
Willard P. Tisdel, Ohio, August 19, 1884.
KOREA.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Lucius H. Foote, California, February 27, 1883.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Lucius H. Foote, California, July 7, 1884.
William H. Parker, District of Columbia, February 19, 1886.
Hugh A. Dinsmore, Arkansas, January 12, 1887.
Augustine Heard, Massachusetts, January 30, 1890.
John M. B. Sill, Michigan, January 12, 1894.
Horace N. Allen, Ohio, July 17, 1897.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Horace N. Allen, Ohio, June 17, 1901.
Edwin V. Morgan, New York, March 18, 1905.
LATVIA.
En-voy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Frederick W. B. Coleman, 2" Minnesota, September 20, 1922.
LIBERIA.
Commissioners and Consuls General.
John J. Henry, Delaware, March 11, 1863.
Abraham Henson, Wisconsin, June 8, 1863.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
John Seys, Ohio, October 8, 1866.
James W. Mason, Arkansas, March 29, 1870.
J. Milton Turner, Missouri, March i, 1871.
John H. Smyth, North Carolina, May 23, 1878.
Henry Highland Garnet, New York, June 30, 1881.
John H. Smyth, North Carolina, April 12, 1882.
Moses A. Hopkins, North Carolina, September 11, 1885.
Charles H. J. Taylor, Kansas, March 11, 1887.
Ezekiel E. Smith, North Carolina, April 24, 1888.
Alexander Clark, Iowa, August 16, 1S90.
William D. McCoy, Indiana, January 11, 1892.
William H. Heard, Pennsylvania. February 23, 1895.
Owen L. W. Smith, North Carolina, February 11, 1898.
John R. A. Crossland, Missouri, January 16, 1902.
Ernest Lyon, Maryland, March 16, 1903.
William D. Crum, South Carolina, June 13, 1910.
Fred R. Moore, New York, March i, 1913.
George W Buckner, Indiana, September 10, 1913.
James L. Curtis, New York, October 25, 191 3.
Joseph L. Johnson, Ohio, August 27, 1918.
Solomon Porter Hood, New Jersey, October 26, 1921.
LITHUANIA.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary .
Frederick W. B. Coleman.^' Minnesota, September 20, 19
LUXEMBURG.
Emoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Stanford Newell,22 Minnesota, June 5, 1903.
David J. Hill,22 New York, March 13, 1905.
Arthur M. Beaupre,-^ Illinois, April 2, 1908.
Lloyd Bryce,22 New York, August 12, 1911.
Henry Van Dyke,^^ New Jersey, June 27, 1913.
John W. Garrett,22 Maryland, August 23, 1917.
William Phillips, 22 Massachusetts, March 3, 1920.
Henry P. Fletcher,^' Pennsylvania, March 5, 1923.
William Phillips,'' Massachusetts, February 29, 1924.
MEXICO.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary,
Joel R. Poinsett, South Carolina, March 8, 1825.
Charges d' Affaires.
Anthony Butler, Mississippi, October 12, 1829.
Powhatan EUis, Mississippi, January 5, 1836.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Pleni potent iar;.
Powhatan Ellis, Mississippi, February 15, 1839.
Waddy Thompson, South Carolina, February 10, 1S42.
Wilson Shannon, Ohio, April 9, 1844.
John Slidell, Louisiana, November 10, 1845.
Nathan Clifford, Maine, July 28, 1848.
Robert P. Letcher, Kentucky, August 9, 1849.
Alfred Conkling, New York, August 6, 1852.
James Gadsden, South Carolina, May 24, 1833.
John Forsyth, Alabama, July 21, 1856.
Robert M. McLane, Maryland, March 7, 1859.
John B. Weller, California, November 17, 1S60.
Thomas Corwin, Ohio, March 22, i86i.
Lewis D. Campbell, Ohio, May 4, 1866.
Marcus Otterbourg, Wisconsin, July i, 1867.
William S. Rosecrans, Ohio, July 27, 1868.
Thomas H. Nelson, Indiana, April 16, 1869.
John W. Foster, Indiana, March 17, 1873.
Philip H. Morgan, Louisiana, January 26, i38o.
Henry R. Jackson, Georgia, March 23, 1885.
Thomas C. Manning, Louisiana, August 30, 1886.
Edward S. Bragg, Wisconsin, January 16, 1888.
Thomas Ryan, Kansas, March 30, 1889.
Isaac P. Gray, Indiana, March 20, 1893.
Matt W. Ransom, North Carolina, February 23, 1895.
Matt W. Ransom, North Carolina, August 24, 1895.
Powell Clayton. Arkansas, March 22, 1897.
"> Accredited also to Esthonia and Lithuania.
** Accredited also to Esthonia and Latvia.
*• Accredited also to the Netherlands.
" Accredited also to Belgium.
226
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Powell Clayton, Arkansas, December 8, 1898.
Edwin H. Conger, Iowa, March 8, 1905
David E. Thompson, Nebraska, January 24, 1906.
Hanry Lane Wilson, Washington, December 21, 1909.
Henry P. Fletcher, Pennsylvania, February 25, 1916.
Charles Beecher Warren, Michigan, February 29, 1924.
James Rockwell Sheffield, New York, September 9, 1924.
MONTENEGRO.
Enioys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John B. Jackson, 21 New Jersey, March 8, 1905.
Richmond Pearson," North Carolina, July i, 1907.
George H. Moses,25 New Hampshire, April 5, 1909.
Jacob Gould Schurman," New York, August 16, 1912.
George Fred Williams," Massachusetts, December 22, igij.
Garrett Droppers," Massachusetts, August 5, 1914.
Edward Capps," New Jersey, June 18, 1920.
MOROCCO.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Samuel R. Gummere, New Jersey, March 8, 1905.
H. Percival Dodge, Massachusetts, May 12, 1909.
Fred W. Carpenter, California, June 2, 1910.
Agents and Consuls General.
Maxwell Blake, Missouri, July 20, 1917.
Joseph M. Denning, Ohio, February 10, 1922.
NETHERLANDS.
(Batavia Republic, 1795-1806.)
Ministers Resident.
William Short, Virginia, January 16, 1792.
John Quincy Adams, Massachusetts, May 30, 1794.
William Vans Murray, Maryland, March 2, 1797.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Eustis, Massachusetts, December 19, 1814.
Charges d'. Affaires.
Alexander H. Everett, Massachusetts, June 27, 1818.
Christopher Hughes, jr., Maryland, March 9, 1825.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Pitt Preble, Maine, June i, 1829.
Charges d' Affaires.
Auguste Davezac, Louisiana, October 15, 1831.
Hermanns Bleecker, New York, May 15, 1839.
Christopher Hughes, Maryland, May 12, 1842.
Auguste Davezac, Louisiana, April 19, 1845.
George Folsoin, New York, May 4, 1850.
August Belmont, New York, May 24, 1853.
Ministers Resident.
August Belmont, New York, June 29, 1854.
Henrj' C. Murphy, New York, June i, 1857.
James S. Pike, Maine, March 28, 1861.
Hugh Ewing, Kansas, September 24, 1866.
Charles T. Gorham, Michigan, July 12, 1870.
Francis B. Stockbridge, Michigan, July 12, 1875.
James Bimey, Michigan, January 10, 1876.
" Accredited also to Greece and as Diplomatic Agent in Bul-
garia.
'• Accredited also to Greece.
William L. Dayton, New Jersey, April 26, 1882
Isaac Bell, jr., Rhode Island, April 2, 1885.
Robert B. Roosevelt, New York, May 16, 1888.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Robert B. Roosevelt, New York, August 10, 1888.
Samuel R. Thayer, Minnesota, March 19, 1889.
William E. Quinby, Michigan, May 24, 1893.
Stanford Newel, Minnesota, May 11, 1897.
Stanford Newel," Minnesota, June 5, 1903.
David J. Hill, 26 New York, March 15, 1905.
Arthur M. Beaupre," Illinois, April 2, 1908.
Lloyd Bryce," New York, August 12, 1911.
Henry Van Dyke," New Jersey, June 27, 1913.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John W. Garrett,26 Maryland, August 23, 1917.
William Phillips,^* Massachusetts, March 3, 1920.
Richard M. Tobin, California, March s, 1923.
NEW GRENADA.
(See Colombia.)
NICARAGUA.
(See Central America and Central American States.)
Charge d'. Affaires.
John B. Kerr, Maryland, March 12, 1851.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Solon Borland,^' Arkansas, April 18, 1853.
Ministers Resident,
John H. Wheeler, North Carolina, August 2, 1854.
Mirabeau B. Lamar,^* Texas, January 20, 1858.
Alexander Dimitry,28 Louisiana, August 15, 1859.
Andrew B. Dickinson, New York, March 28, 1861.
Thomas H. Clay, Kentucky, October 21, 1862.
Minister Resident and Extraordinary,
Andrew B. Dickinson, New York, April 18, 1863.
Minister Resident.
C. N. Riotte, Texas, April 21, 1869.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Richard Cutts Shannon, 2» New York, August 8, 1891.
Lewis Baker,29 Minnesota, April 4, 1893.
William L. Merry,29 California, July 17, i89'7.
William L. Merry ,2* California, December 12, 1907.
John Gardner Coolidge, Massachusetts, June 5, 1908.
Elliott Northcott, West Virginia, January 9, 1911.
George T. Weitzel, Missouri, December 21, 1911.
Benjamin L. Jefferson, Colorado, June 21, 1913.
John E. Ramer, Colorado, October 8, 1921.
NORWAY.
(See Sweden and Norway prior to 1906.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Herbert H. D. Peirce, Massachusetts, June 22, 1906.
Laurits S. Swenson, Minnesota, April 27, 191 1.
Albert G. Schmedeman, Wisconsin, July 21, 1913
Laurits S. Swenson, Minnesota, October 8, 1921.
" Accredited also to Luxemburg.
2' Accredited also to Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, and
Salvador.
2* Accredited also to Costa Rica.
^ Accredited also to Costa Rica and Salvador.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
J27
PANAMA.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William I. Buchanan, New York, December 17, 1903.
John Barrett, Oregon, March 17, 1904.
Charles E. Magoon, Nebraska, July 3, 1905.
Herbert G. Squiers, New York, October 20, 1906.
R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Illinois, December 21, 1909.
Thomas C. Dawson, Iowa, June 24, 1910.
H. Percival Dodge, Massachusetts, July 6, 1911
William Jennings Price, Kentucky, August 20, 1913.
John Glover South, Kentucky, October 8, 1921.
PAPAL STATES.
(Kno\vn also as the Pontifical States, States of the Church,
Holy See, and Rome.)
Charge d' Affaires.
Jacob L. Martin, North Carolina, April 7, 1848.
Lewis Cass, jr., Michigan, January s, 1849.
Ministers Resident.
Lewis Cass, jr., Michigan, June 29, 1854.
John P. Stockton, New Jersey, June 15, 1858.
Alexander W. Randall, Wisconsin, August 6, 1861.
Richard Milford Blatchford, New York, August 9, 1862.
Rulus King, Wisconsin, October 7, 1863.
PARAGUAY.
Co mmissioners.
James B. Bowlin, Missouri, September 9, 185S.
Cave, Johnson, Tennessee, June 8, i860.
Charles A. Washburn, California, June 8, 1861.
Ministers Resident.
Charles A. Washburn, California, January 19, 1863.
Martin T. McMahon, New York, June 27, 1868.
John L. Stevens. 30 Maine, April 28, 1870.
John C. Caldwell,'" Maine, January 8, 1874.
Charges d' Affaires.
John C. Caldwell, 30 Maine, August 15, 1876.
William Williams,'" Indiana, April 12, 1882.
John E. Bacon,'" South Carolina, April 28, 1885.
Ministers Resident.
John E. Bacon,'" South Carolina, August 10, 1888.
George Maney,'" Tennessee, June 20, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George Maney,*" Tennessee, September 23, 1890.
Granville Stuart,'" Montana, March i, 1894.
William R. Finch,'" Wisconsin, October 2, 1897.
Edward C. O'Brien,'" New York, March 8, 1903.
Edwin V. Morgan,'" New York, December 21, 1909.
Nicolay A. Grevstad,'" Illinois, June 30, 1911.
Daniel F. Mooncy, Ohio, January 30, 1914.
William J. O'Toole, West Virginia, January 18, 1922.
PERSIA.
Charge dWffaires and Consul General.
S. G. W. Benjamin, New York, January 29, 1883.
" Accredited also to Uruguay.
32052—25 16
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
S. G. W. Benjamin, New York, Februarj' 27, 1883.
Frederick H. Winston, Illinois, October 28, 18S5.
E. Spencer Pratt, Alabama, August 3, 1886.
Truxton Beale, California, February 27, 1891.
Watson R. Sperry, Delaware, July 27, 1892
Alexander McDonald, Virginia, Septembei 8, 1893.
Arthur S. Hardy, New Hampshire, July 12, 1897.
Herbert W. Bowen, New York, May 3, 1899.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Herbert W. Bowen, New York, May i, 1901.
Lloyd C. Griscom, Pennsylvania, June 17, 1901.
Richmond Pearson, North Carolina, December 17, 1902.
John B. Jackson, New Jersey, July i, 1907.
Charles W. Russell, District of Columbia, December 21, 1009.
John L. Caldwell, Kansas, June 6, 1914.
Joseph Saul Komfeld, Ohio, November 9, 1921.
PERU.
(See Peru-Bolivian Confederation, 1 838-1843.)
Charges d' Affaires.
James Cooley, Pennsylvania, May 2, 1826.
Samuel Lamed, Rhode Island, December 29, 182S.
Emanuel I. West, Illinois, October 22, 1829.
Samuel Lamed, Rhode Island, May 15, 1830.
James B. Thornton, New Hampshire, June 13, 1836.
John A. Bryan, Ohio, August 15, 1844.
Albert G. Jewett, Maine, March 13, 184s.
John Randolph Clay, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1847.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John Randolph Clay, Pennsylvania, March 16, 1853.
Christopher Robinson, Rhode Island, June 8 1861.
Alvin P. Hovey, Indiana, August 12, 1865.
Thomas Settle, North Carolina, Febmary 18, 1871.
Francis Thomas, Maryland, March 25, 1872.
Richard Gibbs, New York, April 9, 1875.
Isaac P. Christiancy, Michigan, February 11, 1879.
Stephen A. Hurlbut, Illinois, May 19, 1881.
Special Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Henry Trescot, South Carolina, November 28, 1881.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
James R. Partridge, Maryland, April 12, 1882.
Seth Ledyard Phelps, District of Columbia, June 18, 1883.
Charles W. Buck, Kentucky, April 2, 1885.
John Hicks, Wisconsin, March 30, 1889.
James A. McKenzie, Kentucky, April 4, 1893.
Irving B. Dudley, California, June 28, 1897.
Leslie Combs, Kentucky, December 19, 1906.
H Clay Howard, Kentucky, January 18, 191 1.
Benton McMillin, Tennessee, July 2, 1913.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
William E. Gonzales. South Carolina, September 10, 1919.
Miles Poindextcr, Washington, February 19, 1923.
PERU-BOLIVIAN CONFEDERATION.
Charge d'A ffaires.
J. C. Pickett, Kentucky, June 9. 1838.
228
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS,
POLAND.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Hugh S. Gibson, California, June 26, 1919.
Alfred J. Pearson, Iowa, April 2, 1924.
PORTUGAL.
Minister Resident.
David Humphreys, Connecticut, February 21, 1791.
Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John Quincy Adams, May 30, 1796.
William Smith, South Carolina, July 10, 1797.
Thomas Sumter, jr.. South Carolina, March 7, 1809.
John Graham, Virginia, January 6, 1819.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Henry Dearborn, sr.. New Hampshire, May 7, 1822.
Charges d' Affaires.
Thomas L. L. Brent, Virginia, March 9, 1825.
Edward Kavanagh, Maine, March 3, 1835.
Washington Barrow, Tennessee, August 16, 1841.
Abraham Rencher, North Carolina, September 22, 1843.
George A\'. Hopkins, Virginia, March 3, 1847.
James Brown Clay, Kentucky, August i, 1849.
Charles B. Haddock, New Hampshire, December 10, 1850.
John L. O'Sullivan, New York, February 16, 1854.
Ministers Resident.
John L. O'Sullivan, New York, June 29, 1854.
George W. Morgan, Ohio. May 11, 1858.
James E. Harvey, Pennsylvania, March 28, 1861.
Samuel Shellabarger, Ohio, April 21, 1869.
Charles H. Lewis, Virginia, March 15, 1870.
Benjamin Moran, December 15, 1874.
Charges d' Affaires.
Benjamin Moran, August 15, 1876.
John M. Francis, New York, April 28, 1882.
yiinisters Resident and Consuls General.
John M. Francis, New York, July 7, 1882.
Lewis Richmond, Rhode Island, July 4, 1884.
Edward Parke Custis Lewis, New Jersey, April 2, 1885.
George B. Loring, Massachusetts, March 30, 1889.
George S. Batcheller, New York, October i, 1890.
Gilbert A. Pierce, Minnesota, January 6, 1893.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George William Caruth, Arkansas, April 25, 1893.
Lawrence Townsend, Pennsylvania, June 9, 1897.
John N. Irwin, Iowa, April 12, 1899.
Francis B. Loomis, Ohio, June 17, 1901.
Charles Page Bryan, Illinois, January 7, 1903.
Henry T. Gage, California, December 21, 1909.
Edwin V. Morgan, New York, May 24, 1911.
Cyrus E. Woods, Pennsylvania, January 25, 1912.
Thomas H. Birch, New Jersey, September 10, 1913.
Fred Morris Dearing, Missouri, February 10, 1922.
PRUSSLA.
(See Germany after 1S71.)
Minister Plenipotentiary.
John Quincy Adams, Massachusetts, June i, 1797.
Charge d'. Affaires.
Henry Wheatoa, New York, March 3, 1835.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Henry Wheaton, New York, March 7, 1837.
Andrew J. Donelson,'' Tennessee, March 18, 1846.
Edward A. Hannegan, Indiana, March 22, 1849.
Daniel D. Barnard, New York, September 3, 1850.
Peter D. Vroora, New Jersey, May 24, 1853.
Joseph A. Wright, Indiana, Jime i, 1857.
Norman B. Judd, Illinois, March 8, 1861.
Joseph A. Wright, Indiana, Jime 30, 1865.
George Bancroft, New York, May 14, 1867.
RUMANIA.
Diplomatic .Agent and Consul General.
Eugene Schuyler, New York, June 11, 1880.
Charge d'.Affaires and Consul General.
Eugene Schuyler, New York. December 21, 1880.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Eugene Schuyler,'^ New York, July 7, 1882.
Walker Feam,'^ Louisiana, April 18, 1885.
A. Loudon Snowden,52 Pennsylvania, July i, 1889.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
A. Louden Snowden,'^ Pennsylvania, July i, 1891.
Minister Resident and Consul General.
Truxton Beale,'^ California, July 27, 1892.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary and Constils
General.
Truxton Beale,'^ California, March 3, 1893.
Eben Alexander,^^ North Carolina, April 7, 1893.
William Woodville Rockhill,'^ District of Columbia, July 8,
1897.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Woodville Rockhill,'^ District of Columbia, May 25,
1898.
Arthur S. Hardy ,^2 New Hampshire, April iS, 1899.
Charles S. Francis, '2 New York, December 20, 1900.
John B. Jackson,22 New Jersey, October 13, 1902.
John B. Jackson,^ New Jersey, June 5, 1903.
John W. Riddle,'^ Minnesota, March 8, 1905.
Horace G. Knowles,'* Delaware, January 16, 1907.
Horace G. Knowles,'^ Delaware, July i, 1907.
Spencer F. Eddy,'" Illinois, January 11, 1909.
John R. Carter,'^ Maryland, September 25, 1909.
John R. Carter,^^ Maryland, June 24, 1910.
John B. Jackson,'^ New Jersey, August 12, 1911.
Charles J. Vopicka,'^ Illinois, September 11, 1913.
Peter Augustus Jay, Rhode Island, April 18, 1921.
3' Accredited also to the Federal Government of Germany.
1848.
32 Accredited also to Greece and Serbia.
" Accredited also to Greece and Serbia and as Diplomatic
Agent in Bulgaria.
*< Accredited also to Serbia.
^ Accredited also to Serbia and as Diplomatic Agent in
Bulgaria.
^ Accredited also to Serbia and Bulgaria
LIST FO PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
2^29
RUSSIA.
^linister Plenipotentiary.
John Qumcy Adams, Massachusetts, June 27, 1809.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Pinkney, Maryland, March 7, 1816.
George Washington Campbell, Tennessee, April 16, 1818.
Henry Middleton, South Carolina, April 6, 1820.
John Randolph, Virginia, May 26, 1830.
James Buchanan, Pennsylvania, January 4, 1832.
William Wilkins, Pennsylvania, June 30, 1834.
Charge d' Affaires.
John Randolph Clay, Pennsylvania, June 29, 1836.
Envoys Extraerdinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George M. Dallas, Pennsylvania, March 7, 1837.
Churchill C. Cambreleng, New York, May 20, 1840.
Charles S. Todd, Kentucky, August 27, 1841.
Ralph I. Ingersoll, Connecticut, August 8, 1846.
Arthur P. Bagby, Alabama, June 15, 1848.
Neil S. Brown, Tennessee, May 2, 1850.
Thomas H. Seymour, Connecticut, May 24, 1853.
Francis W. Pickens, South Carolina, January ir, 1858.
John Appleton, Maine, June 8, i860.
Cassios M. Clay, Kentucky, March 28, 1861.
Simon Cameron, Pennsylvania, January 17, 1862.
Cassius M. Clay, Kentucky, March 11, 1863.
Andrew G. Curtin, Pennsylvania, April 16, 1869.
James L. Orr, South Carolina, December 12, 1872.
Marshall Jewell, Connecticut, May 29, 1873.
George H. Boker, Pennsylvania, January 13, 1875.
Edwin W. Stoughton, New York, October 30, 1877.
John W. Foster, Indiana, January 26, 1880.
William H. Hunt, Louisiana, April 12, 1882.
Alphonso Taft, Ohio, July 4, 1884.
George V. N. Lothrop, Michigan, May 7, 1885.
Lambert Tree, Illinois, September 25, 1888.
Allen Thorndike Rice, New York, March 30, 18S9.
Charles Emory Smith, Pennsylvania, February 14, 1890.
Andrew D. White, New York, July 22, 1892.
Clifton R. Breckinridge, Arkansas, July 20, 1894.
Ethan A. Hitchcock, Missouri, August 16, 1897.
A mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Ethan A, Hitchcock, Missouri, February 11, 1898.
Charlemagne Tower, Pennsylvania, January 12, 1899.
Robert S McCormick, Illinois, September 26, 1902.
George v. L. Meyer, Massachusetts, March 8, 1905.
John W. Riddle, Minnesota, December 19, 1906.
William Woodville Rockhill, District of Columbia, May 17,
1909.
Curtis Guild, Massachusetts, April 24, 1911.
George T. Marye, California, July 9, 1914.
David R. Francis, Missouri, March 6, 1916,
SALVADOR.
(See Central America and Central American States.)
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Solon Borland,^' Arkansas, April 18, 1833.
Ministers Resident.
James R. Partridge, Maryland, April 16, 1863.
A. S. Williams, Michigan, August 16, 1866.
Alfred T. A. Torbert, Delaware, April 21, 1869.
Thomas Biddle, Pennsylvania, July 10, 1871.
" Accredited also to Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, and
Nicaragua.
Envoys Extraordinary and Xlinisters Plenipotentiary.
Richard Cutts Shannon, 3' New York, August 8, 1891.
Lewis Baker,39 Minnesota, April 4, 1893.
William L. Merry," California, July 17, 1897.
H. Percival Dodge,^' Massachusetts, July i, 1907.
H. Percival Dodge, Massachusetts, July i, 1908.
William Heimke, Kansas, August 5, 1909.
Boaz W. Long, New Mexico, July 29, 1914.
Peter Augustus Jay, Rhode Island, May 4, 1920.
Montgomery Schuyler, New York, May 4, 1921.
SARDINIA.
(See Two Sicilies, 1816-1860; see Italy after i860.)
Chargts d' Affaires.
H. Gold Rogers, Pennsylvania, June 30, 1840.
Ambrose Baber, Georgia, August 16, 1841.
Robert Wickliffe, jr., Kentucky, September 22, 1843.
Nathaniel Niles, Vermont, January 4, 1848.
William B. Kinney, New Jersey, April 22, 1830.
John M. Daniel, Virginia, July 23, 1853.
Minister Resident.
John M. Daniel, Virginia, June 29, 1854.
KINGDOM OF THE SERBS, CROATS, AND
SLOVENES.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
H. Percival Dodge, Massachusetts, July 17, igig.
SERBIA.
(See Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes after 1919.)
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Eugene Schuyler,** New York, July 7, 1882.
Walker Feam,* Louisiana, April 18, 1885.
A. Loudon Snowden,*" Pennsylvania, July i, 1889.
Envay Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
A. Loudon Snowden,^'' Pennsylvania, July i, 1891.
Minister Resident and Consul General.
Truxtun Beale,*" California, July 27, 1S92.
Envoys Extraordittary and Ministers Plenipotentiary and Consuls
General.
Truxtun Beale,<<' California, March 3, 1893.
Eben Alexander,^" North Carolina, April 7, 1893.
William Woodville Rockhill, « District of Columbia, July ,^,
1897.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
William Woodville Rockhill, <" District of Columbia, May 25,
1898.
Arthur S. Hardy, ■"' New Hampshire, April 18, 1899.
Charles S. Francis.^" New York, December 20 ,1900.
Henry L. Wilson,*" Washington, October 13, 1902.
John B. Jackson, <" New Jersey, October 13, 1902.
John B. Jackson, *' New Jersey, June 5, 1903.
John W. Riddle," Minnesota, March 8, 1905.
Horace G. Knowles,*' Delaware, January 16, 1907.
" Accredited also to Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
2' Accredited also to Honduras.
* Accredited al.so to Greece and Rumania.
*' Accredited also to Greece and Rumania and as Diplomatic
Agent in Bulgaria.
'' Accredited also to Rumania.
230
UST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
Horace G. Knowles,^' Delaware, July i, 1907.
Spencer F. Eddy,<' Illinois, January n. 1909.
John R. Carter,^' Maryland, September 25, 1909.
John R. Carter,*' Maryland, June 24, 1910.
John B. Jackson, << New Jersey, August 12, 1911.
Charles J. Vopicka,** Illinois, September 11, 1913.
SIAM.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
John A. Halderman, Missouri, July 13, 1882.
Jacob T. Child, Missouri, March 9, 1886.
Sempronius H. Boyd, Missouri, October i, 1890.
John Barrett, Oregon, February 14, 1894.
Hamilton King, Michigan, January 14, 1898.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Hamilton King, Michigan, April 27, 1903.
Fred W. Carpenter, California, September 12, 1912.
William H. Homibrook, Oregon, February 12, 1915.
George Pratt Ingersoll, Connecticut, August 8, 1917.
George W. P. Hunt, Arizona, May 18, 1920.
Edward E. Brodie, Oregon, October 8, 1921.
SPAIN.
Charge d' Affaires.
William Carmichael, Maryland, April 20, 1790.
Minister Resident.
William Short, Virginia, May 28, 1794.
Envoy Extraordinary.
Thomas Pinckney, South Carolina, November 24, 1794
Ministers Plenipotentiary.
David Humphreys, Connecticut, May 20, 1796.
Charles Pinckney, South Carolina, June 6, 1801.
James Bowdoin, Massachusetts, November 22, 1804.
George W. Erving, Massachusetts, August 10, 1814.
John Forsyth, Georgia, February 16, 1819.
Hugh Nelson, Virginia, January 15, 1823.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Alexander Hill Everett, Massachusetts, March 9, 1825.
Cornelius P. Van Ness, Vermont, June i, 1829.
William T. Barry, Kentucky, April 10, 1835.
John H. Eaton, Tennessee, March 16, 1836.
Charge d' Affaires.
Aaron Vail, New York, May 20, 1840.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Washington Irving, New York, February 10, 1842.
Romulus M. Saunders, North Carolina, February 25, 1846.
Daniel M. Barringer, North Carolina, June 18, 1849.
Pierre Soule, Louisiana, April 7, 1853.
Augustus C. Dodge, Iowa, February 9, 1855.
William Preston, Kentucky, December 15, 1858.
Carl Schurz, Wisconsin, March 28, i86i.
Gustavus Koemer, Illinois, June 14, 1862.
John P. Hale, New Hampshire, March 10, 1865.
Daniel E. Sickles, New York, May 15, 1869.
Caleb Cushing, Virginia, January 6, 1874.
James Russell Lowell, Massachusetts, June 11, 1877.
■" Accredited also to Rtmiania and as Diplomatic Agent in
Bulgaria.
** Accredited also to Rumania and Bulgaria.
Lucius Fairchild, Wisconsin, January 26, 1880.
Hannibal Hamlin, Maine, June 30, 1881.
John W. Foster, Indiana, February 27, 1883.
Jabez L. M. Curry, Virginia, October 7, 1885.
Perr>' Belmont, New York, November 17, 1888.
Thomas \\\ Palmer, Michigan, March 12, 1889.
E. Burd Grubb, New Jersey, September 27, 1890.
Special Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
John W. Foster, Indiana, March 6, 1891.
Envoys Extraordinary and Alinisters Plenipotentiary.
A. Loudon Snowden, Pennsylvania, July 22, 1892.
Hannis Taylor, Alabama, April 8, 1893.
Stewart L. Woodford, New York, June 19, 1897.
Bellamy Storer, Ohio, April 12, 1899.
Arthur S. Hardy, New Hampshire, September 26, 1902.
William Miller Collier, New York, March 8, 1905.
Henry Clay Ide, Vermont, April i, 1909.
Joseph E. Willard, Virginia, July 28, 1913.
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Joseph E. Willard, Virginia, September 10, 1913.
Cyrus E. Woods, Pennsylvania, June 24, 1921.
Alexander P. Moore, Pennsylvania, March 3, 1923.
SWEDEN AND NORWAY.
(Separate Missions after 1906.)
Minister Plenipotentiary.
Jonathan Russell, Rhode Island, January 18, 1814.
Charges d' Affaires.
Christopher Hughes, jr., Maryland, January 21, 1819.
John James Appleton, Massachusetts, May 2, 1826.
Christopher Hughes, Maryland, March 3, 1830.
George W. Lay, New York, May 12, 1842.
Henry W. Ellsworth, Indiana, April 19, 1845.
Francis Schroeder, Rhode Island, November 7, 1849.
Ministers Resident.
Francis Schroeder, Rhode Island, June 29, 1854.
Benjamin F. Angel, New York, July 17, 1857.
Jacob S. Haldeman, Pennsylvania, March 16, 1861.
James H. Campbell, Pennsylvania, May 18, 1864.
John McGinnis, jr., Illinois, November 16, 1866.
Joseph J. Bartlett, New York, March 19, 1867.
C. C. Andrews, Minnesota, June 3, 1869.
John L. Stevens, Maine, August 28, 1877.
William W. Thomas, jr., Maine, June 6, 1883.
Rufus Magee, Indiana, April 2, 1885.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Rufus Magee, Indiana, August 10, 1888.
William W. Thomas, jr., Maine, Marchi9, 1889. •
Thomas B. Ferguson, Maryland, February 14, 1894.
William W. Thomas, jr., Maine, December 18, 1897.
Charles H. Graves, Minnesota, March 8, 1905.
SWEDEN.
(See Sweden and Norway prior to 1906.)
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Charles H. Graves, Minnesota, March 8, 1905.
Ira Nelson Morris, Illinois, July 13, 1914.
Robert Woods Bliss, New York, January 30, 1923.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
231
SWITZERLAND.
Ministers Resident.
Theodore S. Fay, Massachusetts, March 16, 1853.
George G. Fogg, New Hampshire, March 28, 1861.
George Harrington, Georgia, July 7, 1865.
Horace Rublee, Wisconsin, April 20, 1869.
Charges d' Affaires.
Horace Rublee, Wisconsin, August 15, 1876.
George Schneider, Illinois, May i, 1877.
Nicholas Fish, New York, June 20, 1877.
Michael J. Cramer, Kentucky, May 11, 1881.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Michael J. Cramer, Kentucky, July 13, 1882.
Boyd Winchester, Kentucky, May 7, 1883.
John D. Washburn, Massachusetts, March 12, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary aiid Ministers Plenipotentiary.
John D. Washburn, Massachusetts, July 30, 1890.
Person C. Cheney, New Hampshire, December 13, 1892.
James O. Broadhead, Missouri, April 7, 1893.
John L. Peak, Missouri, November 18, 1895.
John G. A. Leishman, Pennsylvania, June 9, 1897.
Arthur S. Hardy, New Hampshire, December 20, 1900.
David J. Hill, New York, January 7, 1903.
Brutus J. Clay, Kentucky, March 8, 1905.
Laurits S. Swenson, Minnesota, December 21, 1909.
Henry S. Boutell. Illinois, April 24, 1911.
Pleasant A. Stovall, Georgia, June 21, 1913.
Hampson Gary, Texas, April 7, 1920.
Joseph C. Grew, Massachusetts, .September 24, 1921.
Hugh S. Gibson, California, March 18, 1924.
TEXAS.
(Annexed to the United States, 1845.)
Chargfs d' Affaires.
Alcee La Branche, Louisiana, March 7, 1837.
George H. Flood, Ohio, March 16, 1840.
Joseph Eve, Kentucky, April 15, 1841.
William S. Murphy, Ohio, April 10, 1843.
Tilghman A. Howard, Indiana, June 11, 1844.
Andrew J. Donelson, Tennessee, September 16, 1844.
TURKEY.
Chargf' d' Affaires.
David Porter, Maryland, April 15, 1831.
Ministers Resident.
David Porter, Maryland, March 3, 1839.
Dabney S. Carr, Maryland, October 6, 1843.
George P. Marsh, Vermont, May 29, 1849.
Carroll Spence, Maryland, August 23, 1853.
James Williams, Tennessee, January 14, 1858.
Edward Joy Morris, Pennsylvania, June 8, i86r.
Wayne !MacVeagh, Pennsylvania, June 4, 1870.
George H. Boker, Pennsylvania, November 3, 1871.
Horace Maynard, Tennessee, March 9, 1875.
James Longstreet, Georgia, June 14, 1880.
Lewis Wallace, Indiana, May 19, 1881.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Lewis Wallace, Indiana, July 13, 1882.
Samuel S. Cox, New York, March 25, 1885.
Oscar S. Straus, New York, March 24, 1887.
Solomon Hirsch, Oregon, May 16, 1889.
David P. Thompson, Oregon, November 13, 1892.
Alexander W. Terrell, Texas, April is, 1893.
James B. Angell, Michigan, April 15, 1897.
Oscar S. Straus, New York, June 3, 1898.
John G. A. Leishman, Pennsylvania, December 20, 1900.
.4 mbassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
John G. A. Leishman, Pennsylvania, June 18, 1906
Oscar S. Straus, New York, May 17, 1909.
William Wood\'ille Rockhill, District of Columbia, April 24, 1911 .
Henry Morgenthau, New York, September 4, 1913.
Abram I. Elkus, New York, July 21, 1916.
TWO SICILIES.
(See Sardinia, 1840-1860; see Italy after i860.)
Minister Plenipotentiary.
William Pinkney, Maryland, April 23, 1816.
Charges d'.Affaires.
John Nelson, Mari'land, October 24, 1831.
Enos T. Throop, New York, February 6, 1838.
William Boulware, Virginia, September 13, 1841.
William H. Polk, Tennessee, March 13, 1843.
John Rowan, Kentucky, January 3, 1848.
Thomas W. Chinn, Louisiana, June 5, 1849.
Edward Joy Morris, Pennsylvania, January 10, 1830.
Robert Dale Owen, Indiana, May 24, 1833.
Ministers Resident.
Robert Dale Owen, Indiana, June 29, 1834.
Joseph R. Chandler, Pennsylvania, June 13, 1838.
URUGUAY.
Ministers Resident.
Alexander Asboth," Missouri, April 3, 1867.
H. G. Worthington," Nevada, July 23, 1868.
Robert C. Kirk," Ohio, May 3, 1869.
John L. Stevens, <5 Maine, March 23, 1870.
John C. Caldwell,''^ Maine, January 8, 1874.
Charges d' Affaires.
John C. Caldwell, ^^ Maine, August 15, 1876.
William Williams, ^^ Indiana, April 12, 1882.
John E. Bacon," South Carolina, April 28, 1885.
Ministers Resident.
John E. Bacon, <5 South Carolina, August 10, 1888.
George Maney,^' Tennessee, June 20, 1889.
Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
George Maney,*^ Tennessee, September 23, 1890.
Granville Stuart,''^ Montana, March i, 1894.
William R. Finch, <^ Wisconsin, October 2, 1897.
Edward C. O'Brien, <^ New York, March 8, 1903.
Edwin V. Morgan," New York, December 21, 1909.
Nicolay A. Grevstad,*"^ Illinois, June 30, 1911.
John L. de Saulles, Pennsylvania, March 27, 1914.
Robert Emmett JefTery, Arkansas, February 3, 1913.
Hoffman Philip, New York, March 23, 1922.
VENEZUELA.
(See Colombia prior to 1831.)
Charges d' Affaires.
John G. A. Williamson, Pcnnsulvania, March 3, 1835.
Allen A. Hall, Tennessee. March 13, 1841.
*^ Accredited also to Argentina.
<* Accredited also to Paraguay.
232
LIST OF PRINCIPAL DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
X'espasian Ellis, Missouri, September 30, 1844.
Benjamin G. Shields, Alabama, March 14, 1845.
Isaac Nevitt Steele, Maryland, December 6, 1849.
Charles Eames, District of Columbia, February 9, 1854.
Alinislers Resident.
Charles Eames, District of Columbia, June 29, 1854.
Edward A. Turpin, New York, June 15, 1858.
Henry T. Blow, Missouri, June S, 1861.
Erastus D. Culver, New York, July 12, 1S62.
James Wilson, Indiana, May 31, 1866.
Thomas N. Stillwell, Indiana, August 30, 1867.
James R. Partridge, Maryland, April 21, 1869.
William A. Pile, Missouri, May 23, 1871.
Thomas Russell, Massachusetts, April 20, 1874.
Jehu Baker, Illinois, March 4, 187S.
George W. Carter, Louisiana, June 30, 1881.
Ministers Resident and Consuls General.
Jehu Baker, Illinois, July 7, 1884.
Charles L. Scott, Alabama, April 28, 1883.
Emoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary.
Charles L. Scott, Alabama, August 10, i868.
William L. Scruggs, Georgia, March 30, 1889.
Frank C. Partridge, Vermont, January 25, 1893.
Seneca Haselton, Vermont, May 11, 1894.
Allen Thomas, Florida, June 13, 1895.
Francis B. Loomis, Ohio, July 8, 1897.
Herbert W. Bowen, New York, June 17, 1901.
William W. Russell, District of Columbia, June 21, 1905.
R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Illinois, June 24, 1910.
John W. Garrett, Maryland, December 15, 1910.
Elliott Northcott, West Virginia, December 21, 1911.
Preston McGoodwin, Oklahoma, September 18, 1913.
Willis C. Cook, South Dakota, October 8, 1921.
XX.— REGULATIONS CONCERNING PRECEDENCE OF DIPLOMATIC AGENTS.
The rules on this subject which have been prescribed by the Department are the same as those
contained in the seven rules of the Congress of Vienna, found in the protocol of the session of March
9, 1815, and in the supplementary or eighth rule of the Congress of Aix la Chapelle of November 21,
1818. They are as follows:
Article I. Diplomatic agents are divided into three classes: That of ambassadors, legates, or
nuncios; that of envoys, ministers, or other persons accredited to sovereigns; that of charges d'affaires
accredited to ministers for foreign affairs.
Art. XL Ambassadors, legates, or nuncios only have the representative character.
Art. III. Diplomatic agents on an extraordinary mission have not, on that account, any superiority
of rank.
Art. IV. Diplomatic agents shall take precedence in their respective classes according to the
date of the official notification of their arrival. The present regulation shall not cause any innovation
with regard to the representative of the Pope.
Art. V. A uniform mode shall be determined in each state for the reception of diplomatic agents
of each class.
Art. VI. Relations of consanguinity or of family alliance between courts confer no precedence
on their diplomatic agents. The same rule also applies to political alliances.
Art. VII. In acts or treaties between several powers which grant alternate precedence, the order
which is to be observed in the signatures shall be decided by lot between the ministers.
Art. VIII. * * * It is agreed that ministers resident accredited to them shall form, with
respect to their precedence, an intermediate class between ministers of the second class and charges
d'affaires.
These rules have been formerly or tacitly accepted by all governments except the Ottoman Porte,
which divides diplomatic representatives into three classes only — ambassadors, ministers, and charges
d'affaires.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 233
XXI. THE FOREIGN SERVICE.
The Diplomatic and Consular branches of the Foreign Service, constitute the field force for the
conduct of the foreign relations of the United States. The work of the two branches is in many respects
closely allied. The Diplomatic branch is charged with the conduct of official intercourse between
the Government of the United States and the other governments of the world. It is composed of 51
diplomatic missions, known as embassies or legations, according to their importance, situated at the
capitals of as many foreign countries. Each mission consists of an ambassador, minister, or charge
d'affaires, and one or more secretaries with such clerks, translators, and other employees as may be
provided. It is the duty of a mission, in addition to serving as the official channel of communication
between our Government and the government to which it is accredited, to protect the lives and prop-
erty of American citizens, to observe and report to the Secretary of State upon political and other con-
ditions in the country of its residence, and, in conjunction with the Consular branch, to safeguard and
promote the general and commercial interests of the United States and of individual citizens.
The Con5idar branch shares with the Diplomatic branch the duty of protecting the lives and prop-
erty of American citizens abroad; both are actively concerned with safeguarding and promoting the
general and commercial interests of the Nation and of individual Americans, and they collaborate in
observing and reporting upon conditions in the countries of their residence. In these fields of common
endeavor the work of the two branches is coordinated in each country. Consuls deal with matters
involving relations with local authorities, while the diplomatic mission deals with those requiring
contact with the central authorities. The diplomatic mission is concerned primarily, but by no means
exclusively, with political affairs. Consuls perform important administrative functions in enforcing
and assisting in the enforcement of American laws affecting American citizens residing or traveling
abroad, or aliens abroad in their relations to the United States, its citizens and laws. It is also an
important and vital function of consular officers to make economic investigations and reports. They
protect American citizens and their interests in foreign lands and assist individual American exporters
in the extension of their foreign trade.
The duties of officers in both the Diplomatic and Consular branches of the Foreign Service place
special requirements upon them in the way of character and ability. To the individuals who can
meet these requirements the career offers, on the other hand, unusual advantages.
The officers of the Foreign Service occupy abroad positions of dignity and consequence. Diplo-
matic officers are accorded by international law, in the countries of their residence, full immunity from
local jurisdiction and enjoy important special privileges. Consular officers have, by treaty and usage
and under the law of nations, the privileges and immunities necessary to the accomplishment of their
functions.
Diplomatic officers are frequently the guardians of the most vital interests of the United vStates.
Grave fiscal and administrative responsibilities rest upon consular officers.
The work of both brings them into direct contact with leaders of thought and action in the field of
government, the professions, and business. In foreign eyes, they represent the United States and
its institutions.
Diplomatic officers must establisli and maintain in the capitals in which they reside a position
befitting the commanding prestige of the United States among nations. A similar, though possibh' less
exigent, duty devolves upon consular officers in the communities to which tliey are assigned.
Adaptability, balance, tact, sound judgment, rigid impartiality, and integrity, as well as thorough
general education and technical proficiency, aie essential factors making for success.
The Foreign Service imposes a strict discipline upon its metjibers. They must perform witliout
question the duties assigned to them by the Secretary of State and proceed without demur to whatever
parts of the world they may be ordered. Long hours and hard work are frequently the rule. 01fi.cers
are also expected to perform, and do perform, tlieir duty without regard for discomfort or personal danger.
The rewiird of the Foreign Service is not a money reward. The salaries paid to officers are not
comparable with the salaries attained by the conspicuously successful in business. The appeal, how-
ever, is not to those who seek only material gain. The Foreign Service offers instead tlie cultural
advantages of foreign travel, active contact with leaders in other lands, and the opportunity of distin-
guished patriotic achievement. It offers the spiritual gratification to be found in the patli of public
service and responsibility.
234 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
REORGANIZATION OF THE FOREIGN SERVICE.
The Act of May 24, 1924, provides for the reorganization and improvement of the Foreign Service ,
for the purpose of securing benefits of economy and efficiency through a system of combined adminis-
tration, and a more effective coordination of the political and economic branches of the service.
The principal advantages in the reorganization are (i) the amalgamation of the Diplomatic and
Consular branches into a single Foreign Service on an interchangeable basis, (2) the adoption of a new
and uniform salary scale applicable equally to officers in the Diplomatic and Consular branches, thus
making unification and interchangeability possible, (3) the authorization of representation allowances,
when necessary, (4) the establishment of a retirement act.
Act of May 24, 1924.
[Public — No. 135 — 68th Congress.]
An Act For the reorganization and improvement of the Foreign Service of the United States, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress
assembled, That hereafter the Diplomatic and Consular Service of the United States shall be known as
the Foreign Service of the United States.
Sec. 2. That the official designation "Foreign Service officer" as employed throughout this Act
shall be deemed to denote permanent officers in the Foreign Service below the grade of minister, all of
whom are subject to promotion on merit, and who may be assigned to duty in either the diplomatic or
the consular branch of the Foreign Service at the discretion of the President.
Sec. 3. That the officers in the Foreign Service shall hereafter be graded and classified as follows, with
the salaries of each class herein affixed thereto, but not exceeding in number for each class a proportion
to the total number of officers in the service represented in the following percentage limitations: Ambas-
sadors and ministers as now or hereafter provided; Foreign Service officers as follows: Class i, 6 per
centum, $9,000; class 2, 7 per centum, $8,000; class 3, 8 per centum, $7,000; class 4, 9 per centum, $6,000;
class 5, 10 per centum, $5,000; class 6, 14 per centum, $4,500; class 7, $4,000; class 8, $3,500; class 9,
$3,000; unclassified, $3,000 to $1,500: Provided, That as many Foreign Service officers above class 6 as
may be required for the purpose of inspection may be detailed by the Secretary of State for that purpose.
Sec. 4. That Foreign Service officers may be appointed as secretaries in the Diplomatic Service or
as consular officers or both : Provided, That all such appointments shall be made by and with the advice
and consent of the Senate: Provided further, That all official acts of stich officers while on duty in either
the diplomatic or the consular branch of the Foreign Service shall be performed under their respective
commissions as secretaries or as consular officers.
Sec. 5. That hereafter appointments to the position of Foreign Service officer shall be made after
examination and a suitable period of probation in an unclassified grade or, after five years of continuous
service in the Department of State, by transfer therefrom under such rules and regulations as the Presi-
dent may prescribe : Provided, That no candidate shall be eligible for examination for Foreign Service
officer who is not an American citizen: Provided further. That reinstatement of Foreign Service officers
separated from the classified service by reason of appointment to some other position in the Government
service may be made by Executive order of the President under such rules and regulations as he *nay
prescribe.
All appointments of Foreign Service officers shall be by commission to a class and not by commis-
sion to any particular post, and such officers shall be assigned to posts and may be transferred from one
post to another by order of the President as the interests of the service may require: Provided, That the
classification of secretaries in the Diplomatic Service and of consular officers is hereby abolished, with-
out, however, in any wise impairing the validity of the present commissions of secretaries and consular
officers.
Sec. 6. That section 5 of the Act of February 5, 1915 (Public, 242), is hereby amended to read as
follows:
"Sec. 5. That the Secretary of State is directed to report from time to time to the President, along
with his recommendations, the names of those Foreign Service officers who by reason of efficient service
have demonstrated special capacity for promotion to the grade of minister, and the names of those
Foreign Service officers and employees and officers and employees in the Department of State who by
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 235
reason of efficient serv'ice, an accurate record of which shall be kept in the Department of State, have
demonstrated special efficiency, and also the names of persons found upon taking the prescribed exami-
nation to have fitness for appointment to the lower grades of the service."
Sec. 7. That on the date on which this Act becomes effective the Secretan,^ of State shall certify-
to the President, with his recommendation in each case, the record of efficiency of the several secre-
taries in the Diplomatic Ser\-ice, consuls general, consuls, vice consuls of career, consular assistants,
interpreters, and student interpreters then in office and shall, except in cases of persons found to merit
reduction in rank or dismissal from the service, recommend to the President the recorrunissioning,
without further examination, of those then in office as follows:
Secretaries of class one designated as counselors of embassy, and consuls general of classes one and
two as Foreign Service officers of class one.
Secretaries of class one designated as counselors of legation and consuls general of class three as
Foreign Service officers of class two.
Secretaries of class one not designated as counselors, consuls general of class four, and consuls general
at large as Foreign Service officers of class three.
Secretaries of class two, consuls general of class five, consuls of classes one, two, and three, and
Chinese, Japanese, and Turkish secretaries as Foreign Service officers of class four.
Consuls of class four as Foreign Service officers of class five.
Secretaries of class three, consuls of class five, and Chinese, Japanese, and Turkish assistant
secretaries as Foreign Service officers of class six.
Consuls of class six as Foreign Service officers of class seven.
Secretaries of class four and consuls of class seven as Foreign Service officers of class eight.
Consuls of classes eight and nine as Foreign Service officers of class nine.
Vice consuls of career, consular assistants, interpreters, and student interpreters as Foreign Service
officers, unclassified.
Sec. 8. That consuls general of class one and consuls of class one holding office at the time this Act
takes effect shall not, as a result of their recommissioning or reclassification, suffer a reduction in salary
below that which they are then receiving: Provided, however, That this provision shall apply only to
the incumbents of the offices mentioned at the time this Act becomes eft'ective.
That the grade of consular assistant is hereby abolished, and that all consular assistants now in the
service shall be recommissioned as Foreign Service officers, unclassified.
Sec. 9. That sections 1697 and 1698 of the Revised Statutes are hereby amended to read as follows:
"Every secretary, consul general, consul, vice consul of career, or Foreign Service officer, before
he receives his conunission or enters upon the duties of his office, shall give to the United States a bond,
in such form as the President shall prescribe, with such svu-eties, who shall be permanent residents
of the United States, as the Secretary of State shall approve, in a penal sum not less than the annual
compensation allowed to such officer, conditioned for the true and faitliful accounting for, paying over,
and delivering up of all fees, moneys, goods, effects, books, records, papers, and other property which
shall come to his hands or to the hands of any other person to his use as such officer imder any law now or
hearafter enacted, and for the true and faithful performance of all other duties now or hereafter lawfully
imposed upon him as such officer: Provided, That tlie operation of no existing bond shall in any wise be
impaired by the provisions of this Act: Provided further, That such bond shall cover by its stipulations all
official acts of such officer, whether as Foreign Service officer or as secretary in the Diplomatic Service,
consul general, consul, or vice consul of career. The bonds herein mentioned shall be deposited with
the Secretary of the Treasury."
Sec. 10. That the provisions of section 4 of the Act of April 5, 1906, relative to the powers, duties,
and prerogatives of consuls general at large are hereby made applicable to Foreign Service officers
detailed for the purpose of inspection, who shall, imder the direction of the Secretary of State, inspect
the work of offices in the Foreign Service, both in the diplomatic and the consular branches.
Sec. II. That the provisions of sections 8 and 10 of the Act of April 5, 1906, relative to official
fees and the method of accounting therefor sliall include both branches of tlie Foreign Service.
Sec. 12. That the President is hereby autliorized to grant to diplomatic missions and to consular
offices at capitals of countries where there is no diplomatic mission of the United States representation
236 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
allowances out of any money which may be appropriated for such purpose from time to time by Congress,
tlie expenditure of such representation allowance to be accounted for in detail to the Department of
State quarterly imder such rules and regulations as the President may prescribe.
Sec. 13. Appropriations are authorized for tlie salary of a private secretary to each ambassador
who shall be appointed by tlae ambassador and hold office at his pleasure.
Sec. 14. That any Foreign Service officer may be assigned for duty in the Department of State
without loss of class or salary, such assignment to be for a period of not more than three years, unless
the public interests demand further service, when such assignment may be extended for a period not to
exceed one year. Any Foreign Service officer of whatever class detailed for special duty not at his
post or in the Department of State shall be paid his actual and necessary expenses for travel and not
exceeding an average of $8 per day for subsistence during such special detail: Provided, That such
special duty shall not continue for more than sixty days, unless in the case of trade conferences or inter-
national gatherings, congresses, or conferences, when such subsistence expenses shall run only during the
period thereof and the necessary period of transit to and from the place of gathering: Provided further ,
That the Secretary of State is authorized to prescribe a per diem allowance not exceeding $6, in lieu of
subsistence for Foreign Service officers on special duty or Foreign Service inspectors.
Sec. 15. That the Secretarj- of State is authorized, whenever he deems it to be in the public interest,
to order to the United States on his statutory leave of absence any Foreign Service officer who has per-
formed three years or more of continuous service abroad: Provided, That the expense of transportation
and subsistence of such officers and their immediate families, in traveling from their posts to their homes
in the United States and return, shall be paid imder the same rules and regulations applicable in the
case of officers going to and returning from their posts under orders of the Secretary of State when not
on leave: Provided further , That while in the United States the services of such officers shall be available
for trade conference work or for such duties in the Department of State as the Secretary of State may
prescribe .
Sec. 16. That the part of the Act of July i, 1916 (Public, Numbered 131), which authorizes the
President to designate and assign any secretary of class one as counselor of embassy or legation, is hereby
amended to read as follows:
"Provided, That the President may, whenever he considers it advisable so to do, designate and
assign any Foreign Service officer as counselor of embassy or legation. "
Sec. 17. That within the discretion of the President, any Foreign Service officer may be appointed
to act as commissioner, charge d'affaires, minister resident, or diplomatic agent for such period as the
public interests may require without loss of grade, class, or salary: Provided however, That no such
officer shall receive more than one salary.
That section 1685 of the Revised Statutes as amended by the Act entitled " An Act for the improve-
ment of the Foreign Service, approved Februarys 5, 1915," is hereby amended to read as follows:
"Sec. 1685. That for such time as any Foreign Service officer shall be lawfully authorized to act
as charge d'affaires ad interim or to assiime charge of a consulate general or consulate during the absence
of the principal officer at the post to which he shall have been assigned, he shall, if his salary is less than
one-half that of such principal officer, receive in addition to his salary as Foreign Service officer com-
pensation equal to the difference between such salary and one-half of the salary provided by law for the
ambassador, minister, or principal consular officer, as the case may be."
Sec. 18. The President is authorized to prescribe rules and regulations for the establishment of a
Foreign Service retirement and disability system to be administered under the direction of the Secretary
of State and in accordance with the following principles to wit:
(a) The Secretary of State shall submit annually a comparative report showing all receipts and
disbursements on account of refunds, allowances, and annuities, together with the total number of
persons receiving annuities and the amounts paid them, and shall submit annually estimates of appro-
priations necessary to continue tliis section in full force and such appropriations are hereby authorized :
Provided, That in no event shall the aggregate total appropriations exceed the aggregate total of tlie
contributions of the Foreign Service officers theretofore made, and accumulated interest thereon.
(b) There is hereby created a special fund to be known as the Foreign Service retirement and
disability fund.
(c) Five per centum of the basic salary of all Foreign Service officers eligible to retirement shall
be contributed to the Foreign Service retirement and disability fund and the Secretary of the Treasury
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 237
is directed on the date on which this Act takes effect to cause such deductions to be made and the sums
transferred on the books of the Treasury Department to the credit of the Foreign Service retirement
and disability fund for the payment of annuities, refunds, and allowances: Provided, That all basic
salaries in excess of $9,000 per annum shall be treated as $9,000.
(d) When any Foreign Service officer has reached the age of sixty-five years and rendered at least
fifteen years of service he shall be retired: Provided, That the President may in his discretion retain
any such officer on active duty for such period not exceeding five years as he may deem for the interest
of the United States.
(e) Annuities shall be paid to retired Foreign Service officers under the following classification,
based upon length of service and at the following percentages of the average annual basic salarv^ for
the ten years next preceding the date of retirement: Class A, thirty years or more, 60 per centum; class
B, from twenty-seven to thirty years, 54 per centum; class C, from twenty-four to twenty-seven years,
48 per centum; class D, from twenty-one to twenty-four years, 42 per centum; class E, from eighteen
to twenty-one years, 36 per centum; class F, from fifteen to eighteen years, 30 per centum.
(f) Those officers who retire before having contributed for each year of service shall have withheld
from their annuities to the credit of the Foreign Service retirement and disability fund such proportion
of 5 per centum as the number of years in which they did not contribute bears to the total length of
service.
(g) The Secretary of the Treasiu-y is directed to invest from time to time in interest-bearing sectxri-
ties of the United States such portions of the Foreign Service retirement and disability fund as in his
judgment may not be immediately required for the payment of annuities, refunds, and allowances,
and the income derived from such investments shall constitute a part of said fund.
(h) None of the moneys mentioned in this section shall be assignable, either in law or equity,
or be subject to execution, levy, or attachment, garnishment, or other legal process.
(i) In case an annuitant dies without having received in annuities an amount equal to the total
amount of his contributions from salary with interest thereon at 4 per centum per annum compounded
annually up to the time of his death, the excess of the said accumulated contributions over the said
annuity payments shall be paid to his or her legal representatives; and in case a Foreign Service officer
shall die without having reached the retirement age the total amount of his contributions with accrued
interest shall be paid to his legal representatives.
(j) That any Foreign Service officer who before reaching the age of retirement becomes totally
disabled for useful and efficient service by reason of disease or injury not due to vicious habits, intem-
perance, or willful misconduct on his part, shall, upon his own application or upon order of the Presi-
dent, be retired on an annuity under paragraph (e) of this section: Provided, however. That in each case
such disability shall be determined by the report of a duly qualified physician or surgeon designated
by the Secretary of State to conduct the examination: Provided further, That unless the disability be
permanent, a like examination shall be made annually in order to determine the degree of disability,
and the payment of annuity shall cease from the date of the medical examination showing recover}^
Fees for examinations under this provision, together with reasonable traveling and other expenses
incurred in order to submit to examination, shall be paid out of the Foreign Service retirement and
disability fund.
When the annuity is discontinued under this provision, before the annuitant has received a sura
equal to the total amount of his contributions with accrued interest, the difference shall be paid to him
or to his legal representatives.
(k) The President is authorized from time to time to establish, by Executive order, a list of places in
tropical countries which by reason of climatic or other extreme conditions are to be classed as unhealtli-
ful posts, and each year of duty at such posts, while so classed, inclusive of regular leaves of absence,
shall be counted as one year and a half, and so on in like proportion in reckoning the length of service
for the purposes of retirement.
(1) Whenever a Foreign Service officer becomes separated from the service except for disability
before reaching tlie age of retirement, 75 per centum of the total amount of contribution from his salary
without interest shall be returned to him.
(m) Whenever any Foreign Service officer, after the date of his retirement, accepts a position of
employment the emoluments of which are greater than the annuity received by him from the United
States Government by virtue of his retirement under this Act, the amount of the said annuity during
238 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
the continuance of such employment shall be reduced by an equal amount: Provided, That all retired
Foreign Service officers shall notify the Secretary- of State once a year of any positions of employment
accepted by them stating the amount of compensation received therefrom and whenever any such officer
fails to so report it shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to order the payment of the annuity to be
suspended imtil such report is received.
(n) The Secretary of State is authorized to expend from surplus money to the credit of the Foreign
Service retirement and disability fund an amount not exceeding $5,000 for the expenses necessary in
carrj'ing out the provisions of this section, including actuarial advice.
(o) Any diplomatic secretary or consular officer who has been or any Foreign Service officer who
may hereafter be promoted from the classified service to the grade of ambassador or minister, or appointed
to a position in the Department of State shall be entitled to all the benefits of this section in the same
manner and under the same conditions as Foreign Service officers.
(p) For the purposes of this Act the period of service shall be computed from the date of original
oath of office as secretary in the Diplomatic Service, consul general, consul, vice consul, deputy consul,
consular assistant, consular agent, commercial agent, interpreter, or student interpreter, and shall
include periods of service at different times in either tlie Diplomatic or Consular Service, or while on
assignment to the Department of State, or on special duty, but all periods of separation from the service
and so much of any period of leave of absence as may exceed six months shall be excluded: Provided,
That service in the Department of State prior to appointment as a Foreign Service officer may be
included in the period of service, in which case the officer shall pay into the Foreign Service retirement
and disability fund a special contribution equal to 5 per centum of his annual salary for each year of
such employment, with interest thereon to date of paj^ment compounded annually at 4 per centum.
Sec. 19. In the event of public emergency any retired Foreign Service officer may be recalled tem-
porarily to active service by the President and while so serving he shall be entitled in lieu of his retire-
ment allowance to the full pay of the class in which he is temporarily serving.
Sec. 20. That all provisions of law heretofore enacted relating to secretaries in the Diplomatic
Service and to consular officers, which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, are hereby
made applicable to Foreign Service officers when they are designated for service as diplomatic or as
consular officers, and that all Acts or parts of Acts inconsistent with this Act are hereby repealed.
Sec. 21. That the appropriations contained in Title I of the Act entitled "An Act making appro-
priations for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary and for the Departments of
Commerce and Labor for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1925, and for other purposes," for such com-
pensation and expenses as are affected by the provisions of this Act are made available and may be
applied toward the payment of the compensation and expenses herein provided for, except that no
part of such appropriations shall be available for the payment of annuities to retired Foreign Service
officers.
Sec. 22. The titles "Second Assistant vSecretary of State" and " Third Assistant Secretary of State"
shall hereafter be known as "Assistant Secretary of State" without numerical distinction of rank; but
the change of title shall in no way impair the commissions, salaries, and duties of the present incumbents.
There is hereby established in the Department of State an additional "Assistant Secretary of State, ' '
who shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall
be entitled to compensation at tlie rate of $7,500 per annum.
The position of Director of tlie Consular Service is abolished and the salary provided for that office
is hereby made available for the salary^ of the additional Assistant Secretary of State herein authorized.
Sec. 23. That this Act shall take effect on July i, 1924.
Approved, May 24, 1924.
EXECUTIVE ORDER OF JUNE 7, 1924.
Whereas, The Congress, by the Act of May 24, 1924, has confirmed and given statutory recognition
to the civil service status of the Foreign Service established by the Presidential Executive Orders of
June 27, igo6, for the Consular Service, and November 26, 1909, for the Diplomatic Service.
And, whereas, under the provisions of the said Act of May 24, 1924, the President is authorized to
prescribe certain rules and regulations for administering the Foreign Service on an interchangeable basis.
Now, therefore, the President, in the exercise of the powers conferred upon him by the Constitution
and laws of the United States, makes the following regulations:
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 239
1. Vacancies in all classes from i to 9 shall be filled by promotion from lower classes, based upon
ability and efficiency as sh3\vn in the service.
2. All admissions to the service shall be to tlie grade of Foreign Service Officer, unclassified.
• 3. Officers and employees, after five years of continuous service in the Department of State are
eligible for appointment by transfer to any class in the Foreign Service upon the recommendation of
the Foreign Service Personnel Board and with the approval of the Secretary' of State as hereinafter
provided.
The Foreign Service Personnel Board.
4. There is hereby constituted a Foreign Service Personnel Board composed as follows:
The Under Secretary of State, who shall be the Chairman, an Assistant Secretary of State to
be designated by the Secretarj'of State, the Director of the Consular Service, (on and after July i,
1924, this title becomes Assistant Secretary of State) and the members of the Executive Com-
mittee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board.
5. It shall be the duty of the Board:
(a) To examine into the character, ability, efficiency, experience, and general availability of all
secretaries in the diplomatic service, consuls general, consuls, vice consuls of career, consular assistants,
interpreters and student interpreters, and before July r, 1924, to submit to the Secretar}- of State such
information as he may require regarding the efficiency records of such officers.
(b) From time to time after the Act of May 24, 1924, becomes effective and as vacancies arise, to
submit to the Secretary of State lists of those Foreign Service Officers whose records of efficiency entitle
them to advancement in the service, and who are therefore recommended for promotion, and the
names of those officers and employees in the Department of State who, after five years of continuous
service, and because of special ability and merit are recommended for appointment by transfer to the
position of Foreign Service Officer. All such lists to be signed by the Chairman and at least three
members of the Board, except in the case of a tie vote when the Secretary of State shall decide.
(c) To submit to the Secretary of State the names of those Foreign Service Officers who, in the
opinion of the Board, have demonstrated special capacity for promotion to the grade of Minister. Each
list thus submitted shall enumerate the names of the officers in the order of merit and shall be complete
in itself, superseding all previous lists. A list shall be submitted to the Secretary of State whenever
there is a vacancy in the grade of Minister or when requested by the President or the Secretary of State
and in no case shall it contain more names than there are vacancies to fill. Each such list shall be
signed by the Chairman and at least three members of the Board, and if approved by the Secretary of
State, shall be submitted to the President.
(d) To submit to the Secretary of State the names of those Foreign Service officers who are recom-
mended for designation as counselors of embassy or legation.
(e) To recommend to the Secretary of State the assignment of Foreign Service Officers to posts
and the transfer of such officers from one branch of the service to the other according to the needs of
the service.
(/) To consider controversies and delinquencies among the service personnel and recommend to
the Secretary appropriate disciplinary measures where required.
For the purposes stated in paragraphs (e) and (/), the Under Secretary of State, the Assistant
Secretary of State and the Director of the Consular Service (on and after July i, 1924, this title becomes
Assistant Secretary of State) shall be deemed to constitute the full Board, but the Executive Committee
shall have power of recommendation.
6. Whenever it is determined tliat the efficiency rating of an officer is poor and below tlie required
standard for the Service, the Personnel Board shall so notify the officer, and if after due notification the
rating of such officer continues nevertheless to be unsatisfactory, his name shall be reported to the
Secretary of State with a full recital of the circumstances and a recommendation of the Board for
separation from the service.
Wlienever such recommendation for separation from die service is made, the Board shall at tlic
same time notify the officer of the action taken.
7. The members of tlie Board, individually and collectively, shall have authority to examine all
records and data relating to the personnel of the service.
240 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
8. All action taken by the Board shall be strictly nonpartisan, and based exclusively upon the
record of efficiency of the officers concerned.
9. The proceedings of the Board shall be strictly confidential, but the Chairman may, and it is
hereby made a part of his duty, within a reasonable time prior to each meeting of the Board for recom-
mending promotions, demotions or removals, to invite the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations and the Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs or some Committee member
designated by the Chairman, to sit with the Board through its deliberations without, however, par-
ticipating in its decisions.
10. The Board shall elect its vSecretary from among its members.
The Executive Committee.
11. There is hereby constituted an Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board
to be composed of a Chairman, and two other members who shall be Foreign Service officers of high
rank representing both the diplomatic and the consular branches of the Foreign Service, to be selected
by the other members of the Personnel Board with the approval of the Secretary of State.
The Secretary of State is authorized to prescribe the duties of the Executive Committee.
The Board op Examiners.
12. There is hereby constituted a Board of Examiners composed of the following members; to wit:
The Under Secretary of State, an Assistant Secretary of State to be designated by the Secretary of
State, the Director of the Consular Service (on and after July i, 1924, this title becomes Assistant
Secretary of State), the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board,
and the Chief Examiner of the Civil Service Commission or such person as may be designated by him
to serve in his stead.
13. It shall be the duty of the Board of Examiners to formulate rules for and hold examinations of
applicants for commission to the Foreign Service and to determine from among the persons designated
by the President for examination those who are fitted for appointment.
14. The scope and method of the examinations shall be determined by the Board of Examiners,
but among the subjects shall be included the following: at least one modem language other than
English (French, Spanish, or German by preference), elements of international law, geography, the
natural, industrial, and commercial resources and the commerce of the United States; American history,
government and institutions; the history since 1850 of Europe, Latin America and the Far East;
elements of political economy, commercial and maritime law.
15. The examinations shall be both written and oral.
16. Examinations shall be rated on a scale of 100, and no person rated at less than 80 shall be
eligible for certification.
17. No one shall be certified as eligible who is under 21 or over 35 years of age, or who is not a
citizen of the United States, or who is not of good character and habits and physically, mentally, and
temperamentally qualified for the proper performance of the duties of the Foreign Service, or who has
not been specially designated by the President for appointment subject to examination and to the
occurrence of an appropriate vacancy.
18. Upon the conclusion of the examinations, the names of the candidates who shall have attained
upon the whole examination the required rating will be certified by the Board to the Secretary of State
as eligible for appointment.
19. The names of candidates will remain on the eUgible list for two years, except in the case of such
candidates as shall within that period be appointed or shall withdraw their names. Names which
have been on the eligible list for Uvo years will be dropped therefrom and the candidates concerned
will not again be eligible for appointment unless upon fresh application, designation anew for examina-
tion, and the successful passing of such examination.
20. Applicants for appointment who are designated to take an examination and who fail to report
therefor, shall not be entitled to take a subsequent examination unless they shall have been specifically
designated to take such subsequent examination.
21. In designations for appointment subject to examination and in appointments after examination,
due regard will be had to the principle that as between candidates of equal merit, appointments should
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 24 1
be made so as to tend to secure proportional representation of all the States and Territories in tlie foreign
service; and neither in the designation for examination nor certification nor appointment after examina-
tion will the political affiliations of the candidates be considered.
22. The Board of Examiners is autliorized to issue such notices and to make all such rules as it may
deem necessary to accomplish the object of this regulation.
23. New appointments to the service shall be to tlie grade of Foreign Service Officer, unclassified,
and no promotions to a higher grade shall be made except on the recommendation of the Foreign Service
Personnel Board, with the approval of the Secretar)' of State, after the completion of one full term of
instruction, or tlie equivalent thereof in the Foreign vService School hereinafter established.
24. Those candidates for appointment as diplomatic or consular officers whose names are on the
eligible list at the time the Act of May 24, 1924, becomes effective shall be eligible for appointment as
Foreign Service Officers.
The Foreign Service School.
25. There is hereby established in the Department of State a Foreign Service School for tlie in-
struction of new appointees.
26. The Foreign Service School shall be under the direction of a Foreign Service School Board,
composed of the following members; to wit: the Under Secretary of State, and Assistant Secretary of
State to be designated by the Secretary of State, the Director of the Consular Service (on and after July
I, 1924, this title becomes Assistant Secretary of State), the Chairman of the Executive Committee of
the Foreign Service Personnel Board, and the Chief Instructor of the Foreign Service School. The
School Board will act in all matters with the approval of the Secretary- of State.
27. The Chief Instructor shall be selected by the other members of the School Board from among
the officers of the Foreign Service, with the approval of the Secretary of State.
28. Other instructors shall be selected from among the qualified officers of the Department of State,
the Foreign Service, the otlier executive departments of the Government, and other available sources
in the descretion of tlie School Board.
29. The term of instruction in the Foreign Service School is one year which shall be considered a
period of probation during which the new appointees are to be judged as to their qualifications for
advancement and assignment to duty. At the end of the term, recommendations shall be made to
the Secretary' of State by the Personnel Board for the dismissal of any who may have failed to meet
the required standard of the Service.
30. The Secretary of vState is authorized to prescribe rules and regulations for the governance of the
Foreign Service School.
Calvin Coolidge.
The White House, June 7, 1024.
DEPARTMENTAL ORDER NO. 295.
Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board.
With a view to strengthening and improving tlie personnel of the Foreign Service and securing
uniform and impartial ratings for all officers and employees, tlie following duties are hereby prescribed
for the Executive Committee of the Foreign Service Personnel Board under the autliority contained
in the Executive Order of the President, dated June 7, 1924:
1. To take into its possession and consolidate immediately all records and material relating to the
personnel of the foreign service, botli diplomatic and consular. The Diplomatic Bureau, the Consular
Bureau and the Office of Consular Personnel will promptly surrender all such files and records as may be
in their possession.
2. To keep the efficiency records of all Foreign Service Officers and employees.
3. To collect, collate, and record pertinent data relating to Foreign Service personnel.
4. To submit to the Foreign Service Personnel Board recommendations for the assignment of officers
to posts and the transfer of such officers from one branch of the service to the other.
5. To recommend the granting of leaves of absence.
6. To interview applicants and prospective applicants for the Foreign Service.
242 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
7. To examine and recommend for appointment applicants for positions as subordinate employees
in the Foreign Service.
8. To maintain contact with Foreign Service Officers and employees while on visits to the United
States. For this purpose a register of visiting officers and employees shall be kept.
All personnel records shall be held strictly confidential, and no papers, documents, data, or reports
relating thereto shall be revealed except to the Secretary of State, the members of the Foreign Service
Personnel Board, and the Board of Review.
At least once a year, or whenever the Secretary of State shall so order, all personnel records, ratings,
and accumulated material shall be examined impartially by a Board of Review and a report rendered
to the Foreign Service Personnel Board as to the relative standing of officers and employees. The
Board of Review shall be composed of five members, of whom the Chairman of the Executive Committee
shall be the Chairman, and the remaining four drawn from Foreign Service Officers of high rank by the
Secretary of State.
Charles E. Hughes.
Department of State, June g, 1924.
DEPARTxMENTAL ORDER No. 296.
The Foreign Service School.
The President by Executive Order of June 7, 1924, having provided for the establishment of a
Foreign Service School in the Department of State, the following rules and regulations are hereby made
for the governance of the School:
1. The Chief Instructor shall be selected from among Foreign Service Officers of class 5 or over.
2. He shall have the following duties:
(a) To prepare and submit to the School Board for approval a complete schedule of work to be cov-
ered during the term of instruction.
{b) To select instructors in the various subjects from among the qualified officers of the Department
of State, the Foreign Service, the other Executive Departments of the Government, and other available
sources.
(c) To instruct the School in subjects selected and approved by the Board.
{d) To maintain the discipline of the School and bear responsibility therefor.
(g) To keep a record of attendance and an impartial, confidential rating of each pupil with respect
to his qualifications for the Foreign Service.
(/) To act as a member of the School Board.
{g) To make reports on the work of the School and the individual pupils at the end of the term of
instruction or whenever required by the School Board or the Secretary of State.
3. Each term of instruction shall begin and end on dates to be fixed by the School Board.
4. Each Foreign Service pupil shall be assigned to one of the divisions or bureaus of the Department
of State, where he will report for duty when not attending classes.
5. The Chiefs of the divisions or bureaus shall report to the Chief Instructor the character of the
work done by the pupils assigned to them, together with any delinquencies.
Charles E. Hughes.
Department of State, June g, 1924.
REGULATIONS GOVERNING EXAMINATIONS FOR THE FOREIGN SERVICE, PRO-
MULGATED BY THE BOARD OF EXAMINERS DECEMBER 15, 1924.
The Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service, in the discharge of the duty intrusted to it by the
order of the President dated June 7, 1924, of formulating rules for and determining the scope and method
of examinations of applicants for admission to the Foreign Service, prescribes the following regulations:
I. Examinations for unclassified grade only. — Examinations will be for the grade of Foreign Service
officer unclassified, with the understanding that successful candidates will be assigned to the diplomatic
or consular branch of the Foreign Service according to the needs of the service and the special qualifica-
tions of the candidates.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 243
2. Time of examinations. — Examinations will usually be held twice yearly in the months of January
and July, upon dates to be publicly announced through the press. All persons designated for examina-
tion will be notified in writing in advance of the examination. Examinations for particular candidates
on dates other than those on which the regular examinations occur will not be held except as provided
in section 3.
3. Place of examination. — All examinations will be held in Washington at a place specified in the letter
of notification. Candidates for examination who are employed in the Foreign Service in unclassified
positions, and have been so employed for not less than six months, may be permitted to take the written
examination at their posts of duty upon a regular examination date specified by the board, and the oral
examination ' upon the occasion of their presence in Washington before or after the date of taking the
written examination.
4. Scope of examination. — The examination will be in two parts, one written and the other oral, each
part counting equally. The written examination will include the subjects prescribed by the President,
to wit: Modern languages (French, Spanisli, or German is required, and a candidate may offer, in the total
test, in'addition to one of these any languages with which he may be familiar); elements of international,
commercial, and maritime law; political and commercial geography; the natural, industrial, and com-
mercial resouces and commerce of the United States witli especial relation to the possibilities of trade
expansion and protection; American history, government, and institutions; the history since 1850 of
Europe, Latin America, and the Far East, with particular attention to political and economic tendencies;
and the elements of political economy. Candidates will be examined in arithmetic as used in commercial
statistics, tariff calculations, exchange and simple accounting, and they will be rated in English, composi-
tion, grammar, punctuation, spelling, and penmanship ts shown by their replies to questions in the
written examination.
The oral examination will be designed to ascertain the physical, mental, and temperamental qualifi-
cations of candidates for the proper performance of the duties of the Foreign Service; their character,
ability, address, judgment, and fitness, general education and culture, and contemporary' information,
experience and business ability. In this part of the examination the applications previously filed,
together with all other available information concerning the candidates, will be utilized in ascertaining
the pertinent facts.
5. Method of examination. — The written examination will be conducted for the Board by the Civil
Service Commission and will usually occupy two days. The oral examination will be conducted by the
Board after the candidates shall have completed the written examination. The physical fitness of the
candidates will be determined by Government surgeons in Washington acting in an advisory capacity
to the Board of Examiners.
6. Ratings. — Examinations will be rated on a scale of 100 and no person rated at less than 80 shall be
eligible for certification.
7. Certification. — The names of candidates who shall have attained upon the whole examination
the required rating of 80 will be certified by the Board to the Secretary of State in the order of their
standing in the examination as eligible for appointment. No one will be certified as eligible who is
not a citizen of the United States specially designated by the President for appointment subject to
examination and who has not reached the age of 21 or who has already reached the age of 35.-
8. Results of examinatioiu. — The results of the examinations will be made known to candidates as
soon as the report of the Board shall have been submitted to tlie Secretary of State, and they will be
informed of the rating in each subject and the average in the written examination, tlie total rating in
the oral examination, which includes the physical examination, and the rating on the whole examina-
tion. No information in regard to the details of the oral examination will be made public.
9. Duration of eligibility. — The names of eligible candidates who have not been appointed or whose
names have not been withdrawn by the candidates will remain upon the eligible list for two years from
the date of certification, when they will be dropped therefrom and the candidates will not again be
eligible for appointment except upon a new application, designation, and examination.
10. Failure to report. — Candidates who fail to report for the examination for which they have been
duly designated may not be admitted to a subsequent examination imlcss specifically designated to
take the subsequent examination.
' This examination is held on the second Tuesday ol February, April, June, August, October, and December of each year.
2 The age specified is regarded as having been attained on the day preceding the 21st or 35th anniversary of the person's birth-
day (22 Cyc. S12; Opinion of the Solicitor for the Interior Department, Aug. 24, 1920).
244 AMERICAX FOREIGN SERVICE.
11. Political affiliations not considered. — The political and religious affiliations of candidates will
not be considered either in examinations or certifications.
12. Expenses of candidates . — Tlie traveling and other personal expenses of candidates in connection
with the taking of examinations are not borne by the Government.
Additional Information Regarding the Foreign Service Examinations.
Candidates seeking designation for examination may obtain from the Department of State upon
request forms of application for appointment.* Applications and all correspondence relating thereto
should be addressed to the Secretary- of State, who will in due course notify by letter such applicants as
may be designated for examination. The letter of designation furnishes all information necessary as to
date and place of the examination, and it is the practice to send out such letters two months prior to
the date set for the examination.
All applications, whether for designation for examination or for appointment to a clerkship, must
be accompanied by five indorsements in the form of letters from competent and responsible persons,
attesting the moral character, integrity, good deportment, and ability of the applicant, his business
experience, and his qualifications as set forth in the application. The originals of all indorsements
listed in the application must be filed therewith; copies are not acceptable. Indorsements remain a
part of the Government records and may not be withdrawn while a person remains an applicant or while
he is an officer or employee of the Department of State.
Applications should also be accompanied by a birth certificate and an unmounted photograph of
the applicant, plainly marked with his name and the approximate date when the photograph was taken.
Applicants for appointment in tlieir correspondence with the department should always sign their
names as given in their applications, without enlargement or contraction, one given name at least being
used.
An applicant should be particularly careful to give his legal residence correctly. The Department
of State does not tmdertake to determine an applicant's legal residence.
Applicants are required to state if they have had, or still have, outstanding financial obligations, and
if so the nature and extent thereof.
An application is considered as pending for a period of two years. After such period has elapsed
without action having been taken thereon, another application with new indorsements will be necessary
to obtain further consideration.
American citizens only may be designated for Foreign Service examinations. As a rule, only per-
sons bom in the United States are appointed to the Foreign Service, and the assignment of naturalized
citizens to duty in tlie country of their birtli or contiguous countries is avoided.
Under the law and regulations, Foreign Service examinations are open to any American citizen
who from the application presented would appear to possess sufficient education for the service, and who
may be designated therefor.
There are about 450 posts in the two branches of the Foreign Service, presenting many peculiar
climatic, social and racial conditions. Candidates can not be certified as eligible to serve at a few posts
only, but must be chosen from the standpoint of their availability for at least a majority of the posts.
Officers must expect assignment to tropical and unhealtliful posts as well as to posts where healthful
climatic conditions prevail.
Many colleges and universities furnish courses covering the subjects of Foreign Service examinations.
The Government does not recommend any particular institutions; does not furnish a course of study
in any educational institution; nor suggest a list of books to be studied in preparation for examination.
It is suggested that prospective candidates correspond with respect to courses with any institution
they might wish to attend; and that persons teaching the subjects embraced in the examination are
prepared to suggest the best textbooks.
The Foreign Service school, established by the Executive order of June 7, 1924, is for the instruction
of persons who have successfully passed the prescribed examinations and have been appointed Foreign
Service officers, unclassified grade. Candidates preparing for examination are not admitted to the Foreign
Service school.
These must be filled out completely and in the handwriting of the applicant.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
245
The Department does not furnish information regarding vacancies or possible vacancies in the
Foreign Service.
The only set of examination papers which is furnished to applicants is that printed in this pamphlet.
SAMPLE WRITTEN EXAMINATION FOR THE FOREIGN SERVICE.
Two days are allowed for the written examination. The following is a list of the subjects with the
relative weights based on a scale of 20:
Subjects.
Relative
weights.
FIRST DAY.
1. International, maritime, and commercial law.
2. Political and commercial geography
Intbrmission, I Hour.
3. Arithmetic
4. Modem lang^uages — French, German, or Spanish —
Written
Oral
SECOND DAY.
5. Natural, industrial, and commercial resources and commerce of the United States
6. Political economy
Intermission, i Hour.
7. American history, government, and institutions
8. Modem history (since 1850) of Europe, Latin- America, and the Far East.
FIRST SUBJECT.
INTERNATIONAL, MARITIME, AND COMMERCIAL LAW.
(First day.)
GROUP I (International Law.)
Question i. (a) In countries where consuls exercise extraterritorial functions, how has the right to exer-
cise these functions been conferred and how is their exercise regulated?
(b) Distinguish between "domicile" and "citizenship."
U)
Question 2. (a) An American citizen ships as a sailor on board a foreign vessel.
(a) In case of controversy over wages between this sailor and his master in a port of the United
States, what tribunal or official has jurisdiction?
(b) For the purpose of jurisdiction, what is the nationality of the ship?
Question j. (a) State two advantages secured by a neutral government through the proclamation or
declaration of neutrality after the notification of the commencement of war.
(b) When territory is occupied by foreign hostile forces, what provision does The Hague
Convention make regarding the power of tlie occupants (i) to confiscate private
property and (2) the collection of taxes in tlie occupied territory?
Question 4. (a) State the modem rule and practice with regard to the treatment of individuals residing
and doing business in an enemy's country during war.
(6) In the absence of treaty stipulations, what are the rights and duties of American natural-
ized citizens in regard to military and naval service to the countr}' of origin when
they return to such country?
GROUP II {Maritime Law.)
Question 5. (a) State briefly the functions of a prize court.
(6) Define "marine insurance."
Question 6. (a) What courts in the United vStates have jurisdiction over suits against pilots?
(b) What is meant by the terms (i) maritime contracts, (2) consular invoice?
246 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
GROUP III {Comviercial Law.)
Question/, (a) Explain each of the following terms as applied to negotiable instruments: (i) Bona fide
holder; (2) protest; (3) accommodation party.
Question 8. (a) State three ways by which agency may be terminated.
(b) Write a negotiable promissory note using John Doe as the maker and Richard Roe as the
payee.
SECOND SUBJECT.
POLITICAL AND COMMERCIAL GEOGRAPHY.
(First day.)
V
Questions i to j. Insert on the line at the right the number found at the left of the name of the body
of water which forms the direct outlet required to complete correctly each statement.
(Write
answers
here.)
(a) Outlet of Lake Ontario is (i) Niagara River, (2) Lake Erie, (3) St. Lawrence
River (a)
(b) Outlet of Black Sea is (i) Rhine River, (2) Bosporus, (3) Volga River (6)
(c) Outlet of San Francisco Bay is (i) Golden Gate, (2) San Joaquin River, (3)
Pacific Ocean (c)
(d) Outlet of Lake Erie is (i) St. Clair River, (2) Mohawk River, (3) Niagara River, (d)
(e) Outlet of Lake Michigan is (i) Detroit River, (2) Lake Huron, (3) Strait of
Mackinac (e)
Questions 6 to 10. Write on the line at the right the number of one of the four numbered cities which
will show a similar connection with the second country named as the first named city shows to the first
country named.
(Write
answers
here.)
(a) France: Paris : : Poland: (i) Lemberg, (2) Warsaw, (3) Cracow, (4) Lodz (a)
(6) China: Peking : : British India: (i) Calcutta, (2) Madras (3) Bombay, (4) Delhi. (6)
(c) Florida: Tallahassee : : Louisiana: (i) Shreveport, (2) New Orleans, (3) Baton
Rouge, (4) Crowley (c)
{d) Illinois: Springfield : : Michigan: (i) Detroit, (2) Ann Arbor, (3) Lansing, (4)
Grand Rapids {d)
(e) Chile: Santiago : : Venezuela: (i) Maracaibo, (2) La Guaira, (3) Valencia, (4)
Caracas (e)
Questions 11 to 75. Connect correctly the ports with the State or country named below by writing
the number found at the left of the port on the line at the right of the State or country in which it is
situated.
(Write
answers
• here.)
1 1 . Seattle. Uruguay
12. Portland. Straits Settlements
13. Antwerp. Maine
14. Singapore. Belgium
15. Montevideo. Washington
Questions 16 to 20. (Connect each island, group of islands, or possession named with the coimtry
which exercises control over it by writing on the line at the right of the country the number given the
island, group of islands, or possession with which it should be connected.
(Write
answers
here.)
16. Guam. France
17. C>yprus. Portugal
18. Madeira. Italy
19. Algeria. Great Britain
20. Libya (Tripoli). United States
Questions 21 to 25. Name the five largest natiural bodies of water on the most direct water route
from Calcutta, India, to Marseille, France.
(i) (2) (3)
• (4) (5)
Questions 26 to 2j. State in two sentences two reasons for the shifting of the sources of supply of
crude rubber.
Answers: (i)
(2)
p^
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
247
Questions 28 to 31. State in three sentences three factors which determine where manufacturing
shall be active.
Answers: (i)
(2)
(3)
THIRD SUBJECT.
ARITHMETIC.
(First day.)
Question I. The following table shows the value of several domestic manufactures exported from
the XJnited States during the years 1910 and 1915. Comparing the year 1915 with the year 1910, find
and enter in the proper column for each article named in the table the increase or decrease, tlae total
increase and total decrease, and the net increase or decrease for all of the articles. The work should be
done on scratch paper and the results only entered in the form with ink.
Articles
1910
1915
Increase
Decrease
Art works
Dollars
965,691
293,616
598, 743
604, 467
294, 579
157,041
518,607
80,874
353,574
63, 765
232,578
818,442
256, 086
870. 048
286,821
Dollars
298,323
535,023
503,622
712,242
417,348
211,797
539, 721
474, 453
273,519
51,084
189,414
624, 492
155,088
929, 862
251,568
Blacking
Brooms and brushes
Candles
Cork, manufactures of
1
Ink
Matches
1
Motor boats
1
Plaster
Toys
Trunks, valises, traveling bags
Total
Net
Write in ink the answers only to the five lettered problems under Question 2 on this sheet in the
blank spaces provided at the right.
Question
(a) At 6 cents per gallon, how many dollars duty should be paid on 50 hec-
toliters of whale oil? (i hectoliter = 22 gallons) (a)
(6) If the rate of exchange between England and Sweden be 18 kroner for
£1 and between England and France be no francs for 32 shillings,
what would be the value of 144 kroner in francs? (6)
(c) An importation of 80 kilos of opium contained 8 pounds 13^^ oimces of
morphia. What per cent of this opium was morphia? (i kilo=:2.205
pounds; 16 ounces = i pound) (c)
(d) How many dollars duty should be paid on 11,520 glass bottles, holding
1,440 liters, the rate of duty being as follows: If holding not less than
one-fourth of a pint, !'< cents per pound; if holding less than one-
fourth of a pint, 50 cents per gross, (i liters 1.76 pints) (d)
(e) What would be the cost in foreign money and in United States money of
the following items:
(Write
answers
here.)
Invoice
Foreign money
U. S. money
Dollars
Cents
lire
■' I
I lire=ioo centissinii=$o.o445: i framc=ioo centimes=$o.o67s.
248
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
Qiieslion j. In the form given below the competitor is required to fill out in ink an export invoice
of the following merchandise; he should show at the bottom of the form the total net cost of the invoice
in United States goli and in English money, with exchange at $4.40.
Invoice memoranda.
The exporters, Brown, Long & Co., of New York City, shipped to Matheson & Lord, of London, via
Liverpool, per S. S. Ionia the following Invoice No. 6,224, Indent 421, dated May 20, 1924:
In cases Nos. i and 2, two i>< -horse power "Pluperfect" gasoline engines, No. 68, valued at $72
each, less 35 per cent discoimt; weight of each case is 600 pounds gross and 400 pounds net.
In cases Nos. 3, 4, and 5, three 2 ' <-horsepower "Pluperfect" gasoline engines, No. 70, valued at
S120 each, less 35 per cent discount; weight of each case is 1,050 pounds gross and 800 pounds net.
In cases Nos. 6, 7, 8, and 9, four 8-borsepower portable gasoline engines. No. 010, valued at $380
each, less 35 per cent discount; weight of each case is 3,500 pounds gross and 2,600 pounds net.
In case No. 10, one 12-horsepower portable gasoline engine. No. 012, valued at $510, less 35 per cent
discount; weight of case is 4,700 pounds gross and 3,400 pounds net.
In case No. 11, one case of repair parts, valued at $110.25, ^o^ which there is no charge; weight of
case is 220 pounds gross and 150 pounds net.
In case No. 12, one case of printed matter and electrotypes, for which there is no charge; weight of
case is 87 pounds gross and 66 pounds net.
Invoice
No. ..
Invoice
per ....
and risk c
and cons
Your 1
' of ....
Shibbed bv
■ Marks and jn umbers.
«X\ ^
\,4o/
via , by 0
yf
rder of and for accouJit
gned to .
'ndent. .
M \y^& L.
dated
LIVERPOOL
In
Each case.
Quan-
tity.
Fig.
No.
Size
H. p.
Description.
At—
Case
No.
•
Gross
weight.
Net
weight.
Gross value.
Net value.
$
5
$
'
U. S. gold, $ at Exch.
New York, , 192 . .
(Signed)
FOURTH SUBJECT.
Exporters.
modern languages.
(First day.)
Applicants are required to take one of tlie following-named languages: French, Spanish, or German.
Make a close translation of one (and only one) of the following into idiomatic English:
French.
Munich, le 2 decembre, 192J.
Messieurs C, M. et Cie. d Rome.
Usant des offres aimables que vous avez bien voulu nous faire a plusieurs reprises, nous vous recom-
mandons tout particuli^rement le porteur de la pr6sente, Monsieur L., que son goijt prononc6 potir les
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 249
arts decide a passer cjiiclques annees dans votre ville pour y etudier les ceuvres des grands maitres.
Les heureuses dispositions que ce jeune homme montre pour la peinture nous font bien augurer de son
projet, et ses qualites personnelles nous font tin devoir de le reconimander a nos amis et a nos connais-
sances. Nous esperons que votre sieur M., qui est lui-meme artiste — et un artiste distingua — voudra
bien prendre interet a notre protege et, si ce n'est I'eclairer de ses conseils, du moins lui faciliter I'acces
dans les diverses galeries. Nous nous regarderons comme personnellement obliges de tout ce que votre
amite pour nous vous dictera en faveur de notre protdge et nous vous en adressons d'avance tons nos
remerciments.
Recevez, Messieurs, 1 'expression sincere de notre affectueux devouement.
H. ET P.
Spanish.
Zaragoza, 2 de julio de ig2j.
Sres. C. y Cia., Barcelona. —
Muv Sexores ^Iios: Habiendo merecido de Yds. muchos y grandes favores, me atrevo aiin a
molestarles de nuevo, en la confianza de que, por su reconocida bondad y la amistad que Yds. me pro-
fesan, perdonaran la molestia, y que de estar en su mano me serv'iran con tanto gusto como lo haria yo.
La considerable extension que han toniado los negocios desde hace poco tiempo me ha procurado
un gran mimero de comisiones y desde hace algunas semanas mi fabrica trabaja sin cesar. Sin embargo
este aumento de negocios me ha cogido tan de improviso que me veo obligado para seguir empleando mis
obreros a proporcionarme un emprestito de 3,500 a 4,000 pesetas. No pudiendo contar con entradas
inmediatas me veo en la necesidad de obtener un credito en descubierto por valor de dicha suma. Si
creen Yds. que el negocio se puede emprender y no tienen inconveniente en hacerlo, les suplico me lo
comuniquen cuanto antes para saber a que atenerme.
Al mismo tiempo me suscribo de Yds. s. s.
q. e. s. m.
German.
London, ij. Dez. 1922.
Herren Wm. C. & Son, Xcuxastle.
Ich habe in jiingster Zeit keine Yeranlassung gehabt, an vSie zu schreiben, ersuche Sie aber heute,
einem mir von Lissabon zugegangenen Auftrage auf eine aus Ihren Hafen zu verschiffende Ladimg
Steinkohlen Ihre Aufmerksamkeit zu widmen. Wenn derselbe zur Zufriedenheit meines dortigen
Freundes ausgefiihrt wird, so diirfte sich dieser wahrscheinlich zu allraonatlicher Emeuerung seiner
Ordre vcranlasst linden. Die Ladung soil aous 10-15 Keels fiir Schmiede passender Steinkohlen bester
Qualitat bestehen. Bemiihen Sie sich gefalligst um die Yerladung in moglichst billiger Fracht. Da
jetzt bestandig Schiffe zur Einnahme von Fruchtladungen auslaufen, so wird es Ihnen, denke ich, nicht
schwer werden, zu einem sehr niedrigen Satze anzukonunen, zumal die Kohlen als Ballast dienen und
somit die Kosten fiir Ein- imd Ausladen desselben erspart werden. Sie woUen femer die Gate haben,
mir zeitig Bericht iiber die \'erladung nebst Angabe des ungefahren Betrages zukommen zu lassen,
damit ich mich bei Eesorgung der Assekuranz danach richten kann. Sobald ich Faktura und Verla-
dungsschein erhalte, soil Ihre Tratte fiir den Eelauf der ersten schuldigst honoriert werden.
Ich empfehle mich Ihmen.
hochachtungsvoil ergebenst,
Wm. M.
Make an idiomatic translation of the following into the language chosen by you in the foregoing
exercise :
NEWf,YoRK,''Mav i, 1924.
Messrs. A. and G., Naples, Italy.
Gentlemen: We take the liberty of recommending to your kind attention the bearer of this letter,
Mr. ]. R., a traveling salesman of the firm of M. and Company of this city. Our friend is about to pay
a visit to your coimtr>^ for the -purpose of extending the commercial relations of his employers, and
therefore we beg you to be so good as to serve him in every case in which he may require your assistance,
furnishing him with any information that will contribute to the realization of his wishes. Should Mr.
R. want some funds to meet his expenses for trips into the interior, have tlie kindness to give him the
sums he needs up to the amoimt of one thousand five hundred dollars, taking his draft on us, to your
order, at sight. When he has completed his journey, we shall reimburse you.
Yery respectfully,
W. AND B.
250 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
FIFTH SUBJECT.
NATURAL, INDUSTRIAL, AND COMMERCIAL RESOURCES AND COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES.
(Second day.)
Answer any five (and only five) of the following six numbered questions:
Question i. Write at least 150 words on either (a) or (6) of this question:
(o) Australia as a market for manufactures of the United States.
{b) Essential points to be considered by American exporters in the endeavor to secure and hold
foreign markets.
Question 2. Name the State which leads in the production of each of the following: (a) Raw wool;
(6) dried prunes; (c) Irish potatoes; {d) butter; (e) hogs.
Question 5. Name the body of water which connects each of the following pairs:
(a) Lakes Ontario and Erie.
\b) Lakes Michigan and Huron.
(c) Puget Sound and the Pacific Ocean.
{d) Susquehanna River and the Atlantic Ocean.
(e) Connecticut River and the Atlantic Ocean.
Questio n 4. (o) Name the capital of each of the following-named States: (i ) New Jersey; (2) Washing-
ton; (3) Minnesota; (4) Missouri; (5) New Mexico.
{b) Identify each of the following-named geographical terms as to whether mountain,
lake, etc.: (i) Placid; (2) Rainier; (3) Welland; (4) Everglades; (5) Albemarle.
Question 5. Name the country which leads in exports to the United States of each of the following-
named products: (a) Tin; {b) nitrates; (c) raw cane sugar; {d) camphor; (e) olive oil.
Question 6. Give three reasons for the great development of the shoemaking industry in the United
States. Name two important shoemaking centers in the United States.
SIXTH SUBJECT.
POLITICAL ECONOMY.
(Second day.)
Question i. Explain or illustrate the economic terms: (a) Unearned increment; {b) clearing house;
(c) bank reserves; {d) seigniorage.
Question 2. (a) State the essential characteristics that good money must possess.
(6) What is meant by "fiat money"?
Question 5. (a) What is meant by the "law of diminishing returns"? illustrate, by diagram, the
application of this law to agriculture.
{b) Under what conditions, if any, does it apply to manufacture?
Question 4. (a) Give three important reasons for the periodicity of commercial crises. Give two
noted examples of economic crises.
(b) What is the distinction between /ree competition and monopoly?
Question 5. (a) State briefly the fundamental causes why prices are substantially higher since the
close of the World War than before it began.
(b) Are the causes substantially the same in the United States as in European countries?
State the fundamental dififerences, if any.
SEVENTH SUBJECT.
AMERICAN HISTORY, GOVERNMENT, AND INSTITUTIONS.
(Second day.)
Questions i to 5. Connect each of the following -named persons with the discovery with which he is
identified by writing on the line at the right of the discoverer the number found before the discovery.
(Write
answers
here.)
1. Mouth of the Mississippi River . . Balboa
2 . Pacific Ocean La Salle
3. St. Lawrence River Ponce de Leon
4. Manhattan Island Henry Hudson
5. Florida Jacques Cartier
I
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 25 1
Qtiestions 6 to 10. Insert on the line at the right the number of each colony which correctly identifies
it with the historic statement given below.
(Write
answers
here.)
(a) House of Burgesses is identified with (i) Georgia, (2) Massachusetts, (3) Virginia, (a)
(6) Patroon system of settlement is identified with (i) New Jersey, (2) New York,
(3 ) Pennsylvania (6)
(c) Faneuil Hall is identified with (i) Connecticut, (2) Massachusetts, (3) North
Carolina (c)
(d) First \\Titten constitution (purely republican) is identified with (i) Massa-
chusetts, (2) Rhode Island, (3) Connecticut (d)
(e) First to grant religious toleration is identified with (i) Maryland, (2) New Jersey,
(3) Rhode Island (e)
Questions II to 75. Write in the line at the right the nuinber of the country which is the correct one
to make each of the lettered statements given below a true one.
(Write
answers
here.)
(o) Louisiana Territory was purchased from (i ) Spain, (2) France, (3) Mexico (a)
(b) Florida was purchased from ( I j Mexico, (2) England, (3) Spain (6)
(c) Gadsden Purchase was obtained from (i) Spain, (2 ) Mexico, (3) France (c)
(d) Alaska was purchased from (i ) Russia, (2) Germany, (3) England (d)
(e) Virgin Islands were purchased from (i) Portugal, (2) Netherlands, (3) Denmark, (e)
Questions 16 to 20. Connect the name of each of the persons listed below with the proper event or
invention in the accompanying list. Then insert the number of each event or invention on the line at
tlie right of the man's name with which it should be connected.
(Write
16. Veto of bill for rechartering
the United States Bank . . Alexander Hamilton .
17. Establishment of financial sys-
tem of the United States . . Cyrus W. Field ....
18. Obtaining French aid for the
American Revolution. . . Orville Wright
19. Trans-Atlantic Cable . . . Andrew Jackson
20. Practical Aeroplane .... Benjamin Franklin. .
here.)
Questions 21 to 25. Write the number found at the left of the name of a battle or siege giving below
in the space at the right of tlie war listed below with which it should be connected.
(Write
answers
here.)
2 1 . Lake Erie Mexican War
22. Chateau- Thierry War of the Revolution
23. Resaca de la Palma .... Spanish-American War
24. Monmouth War of 1812
2 5 . Santiago World War
Questions 26 to 30. From each of the following lettered statements given below select the numbered
word which completes correctly each statement. Then write the number of the correct word on the
line at the right.
(Write
answers
here.)
(a) The power to declare war is vested in (i) President of the United States, (2) Con-
gress, (3) Senate of the United States, (4) the House of Representatives (a)
(6) The power to ratify treaties is vested in (i) Congress, (2) President of the United
States, (3) Senate of United States, (4) Supreme Court of United States (6)
(c) The power to try Federal impeachment cases is vested in (i) Congress, (2) House
of Representatives, (3) Senate of United States, (4) Supreme Court of United
States (c)
{d) The title of the official who presides when the President of the United States is
tried on impeachment is (i) President of the Senate, (2) Speaker of the House
of Representatives, (3) Chief Justice, (4) Attorney General (d)
(e) The power to regulate the commerce of the United vStatcs with foreign nations
is vested in (i) Secretary of State. (2) Congress, (3) Secretary of Commerce,
(4) Interstate Commerce Commission (e)
32952—25 17
252 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
EIGHTH SUBJECT
MODERN HISTORY (SINCE 1850) OF EUROPE, LATIN AMERICA, AND THE FAR EAST.
(Second day.)
Question, i. Give the title of the treaty which provided for the —
(Write answers here.)
(a) German acquisition of Alsace-
Lorraine, 187 1 (a)
(6) Nationalist Turkish boixndaries
and settlement of rights (1923) (6)
(c) Independence of Servia (1878) . (c)
{d) Settlement of Russo-Japanese .
War {d)
(e) Acquisition of oil concessions by
England (1919) . . . . (e) .■
Question. 2. Give the name of the victorious nation in each of the following-named historic sieges
and battles, and state the war in which each occurred.
(Write answers here.)
(a) Caporetto (a)
{b) Jutland {b)
(c) Mukden (c)
{d) Gallipoli {d)
{e) Sedan {e)
Question j. Give the name of the —
~' (a) Most noted Italian representa-
tive at the Peace Conference
(1919) (o)
(6) Provisional head of the Russian
Republic, after the overthrow
of Czar Nicholas II, 1917 . . {b)
(c) First provisional president of
the Chinese Republic, 191 1 . (c)
(d) General noted for his defense of
\'erdun, 1917 {d)
(e) Greek minister who aided the
Anglo-French expedition at
Salonica, 1917 (e)
Question 4. Name the —
(a) European general selected in
1923 to head the~niilitaiy op-
erations of Poland . . . . (a)
(6) Last king of Portugal . . . . (b)
(c) Inventor of wireless system of
telegraph)'^ (c)
{d) Person financing the expedition
leading to the discovery of the
tomb of Tvit-Ankli-Amen . . {d)
(e) Statesman obtaining for Eng-
land control of the Suez Canal {e)
Question 5. Write at least 150 words on either (a) or (b) of this question:
(a) The present problems of Great Britain in India.
(6) The Dawes plan for the payment of reparations by Germany.
EXECUTIVE ORDER OF OCTOBER 13, 1905.
The Executive order of October 13, 1905, as amended on May 17, 19 19, is hereby amended to read
as follows:
No officer or employee 0/ the Government shall, directly or indirectly, instruct or be concerned
in any manner in the instruction of any person or classes of persons, with a view to their special prepa-
ration for the examinations of the United States Civil Service Commission. The fact that any officer
or employee is found so engaged shall be considered sufficient cause for his removal from the service :
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 253
Provided, That this order shall not be so construed as to prevent the Federal Board for Vocational Edu-
cation, the Medical Departments of the Army and Navy, and any other branches of the Government
from utilizing the Government facilities and the services of Federal officers and employees where such
facilities or services may be necessar}^ or useful in carrying out the duties imposed upon such depart-
ments or branches by law, in the training and testing of disabled soldiers, sailors, and marines.
WOODROW WlIvSON.
The White House, 13 January, ig20.
This order has since been amended to extend to Government establishments generally Hie exemp-
tion heretofore made in the case of the Federal Board of Vocational Education.
INFORMATION CONCERNING FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS AND SUBORDINATES.
SECRETARIES.
It is the duty of diplomatic secretaries to assist the Chief of Mission in all matters in which their
assistance may be required; to supervise the administrative work of the Mission; and to cultivate and
maintain friendl}^ relations with the officials of the Government in whose capital they reside and with the
members of the Diplomatic Corps.
Diplomatic secretaries are charged with the preparation of such correspondence with the Depart
ment of State, the Foreign Office of the Government to which they are accredited, and with private
organizations and persons as may be entrusted to them by the Chief of Mission. They are called upon
to obtain exact information bearing upon the political, economic and other questions of interest arising
in the country of their assignment, and to prepare for the assistanceof the Chief of Mission and for the
information of the Department of State authoritative reports upon such subjects. Secretaries exercise
supers'ision over tlae administrative functions of the Mission which include the custody of the archives,
the classification, indexing and filing of correspondence, and the coding and decoding of messages in
confidential cipher.
In the absence from his post of tlie Chief of Mission the ranking counselor or diplomatic secretary
assumes the office of Charg6 d' Affaires ad interim, and in that capacit)^ becomes responsible for the proper
conduct of the Mission and for the representation of the interests of this Government.
Secretaries are expected to study and become reasonably proficient in the language of the country of
their assignment. The importance of Spanish may be realized from the fact that it is the language at
19 posts in the Diplomatic Service. Secretaries must study earnestly the political, economic, financial,
and other conditions existing in the countries where they are stationed, and be alert at all times to obtain
and communicate to their Chief information of interest and value.
Unswerving loyalty, faithfulness, discipline, tact, perserverance, and the ability to keep one's own
counsel, are of vital importance in the Diplomatic Service. A diplomatic secretary is not merely an
individual residing abroad but a representative of his Goverrrment and country, and judgment may
frequently be passed upon his country largely in accordance with his conduct. The realization of this
fact should be enough to inspire such an officer with a proper sense of responsibility and with the firm
determination so to conduct himself that the prestige and good name of his country' may if possible be
enhanced.
Secretaries are expected to take their turn in whatever part of the world their services may be
required, and every secretary, whether married or unmarried, must be prepared to go to the post to which
he may be assigned.
CONSULAR OFFICERS.
Consuls general and consuls are what are technically designated principal consular officers, as dis-
tinguished from subordinate officers. They are usually assigned to take responsible charge of consulates
general and consulates, while subordinate consular officers are assigned to duty in Uiose offices under the
direction of the principal officers.
Practically all of the functions of a consular officer may be classified under three heads — (a)
administrative duties, {h) protection of the interests of his countr>'men, and (c) facilitation of trade.
In fulfilling these functions he serves, either directly or indirectly, every department of tli^e Government
and virtually ever}' citizen of the United States.
A consular officer's duty under the first heading is to enforce and assist in the enforcement of Ameri-
can laws, in so far as they affect American citizens residing or traveling abroad, or aliens abroad in their
254 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
relations to the United vStates, its citizens, and laws. More specifically these duties include: aiding in
the collection of customs revenue by certifying to the correctness of the valuation of merchandise exported
to the United States; the visaing, and, when so authorized, the issuing of passports; the settlement in,
certain cases, of the personal estates of Americans who may die abroad; services to American vessels and
seamen; reporting the sanitary and health conditions of foreign ports; assisting in the enforcement of the
immigration and quarantine laws; performing of notarial services; acting as witness to marriages of Ameri-
can citirzens abroad, etc., etc.
Under the second heading, consular officers are expected to endeavor to maintain and promote all the
rightful interests of American citizens and to protect them in all privileges provided for by treaty or con-
ceded by usage. When disasters occur in his consular district, an officer is required to report to the
Department of State whether Americans or American interests have been affected in any way, and to
point out any steps which should be taken by those interested. Consular officers in China, Egypt, Siam,
Morocco, and a few other so-called non-Christian countries are invested with judicial powers over
American citizens in those countries. These powers are usually defined by treaty, but generally
include the trial of civil cases to which Americans are parties, and in some instances extend to the trial
of criminal cases.
The third heading, "Facilitation of trade," includes duties offering unlimited opportunities to a
capable, industrious, and interested man. A consular officer is expected to reply fully and in a practical
manner to the numerous inquiries which he receives from American business houses in regard to com-
mercial questions and the possibility of marketing their products in his consular district. Another duty
of prime importance is the promotion of American commerce by reporting available opportunities for the
introduction of our products and aiding in the establishment of relations between American and foreign
commercial houses. Consuls are constantly occupied with the preparation of economic and commercial
reports and, whenever the opportunity arises, they render assistance to the traveling representatives of
American business. In their trade extension work, consular officers cooperate with the Department of
Commerce.
Consular officers also cooperate with tlie Department of Agriculture in the introduction of new and
valuable plants; with the Department of Labor in reporting on matters connected with immigration and
on labor conditions in their district; with the Department of the Interior by reporting on mining, educa-
tion, conservation, and reclamation; and in fact with all other Departments of the Government along
many important lines.
VICE CONSULS.
Vice consuls are consular officers subordinate to consuls general or consuls, and perform consular
duties within the limits of their consulates at the same or at different points and places from those at
which their principals are located, except that when they take charge of a consulate general or a con-
sulate during tlie absence of tlie principal officer they are regarded as substitute officers. They per-
form such duties of the consular offices to which they may be assigned as are described in the Consular
Regulations and Laws of the United States, and which they may be directed to perform by the principal
officer under whom they serve.
There are two categories of vice consuls — ^those of career who have passed the prescribed exami-
nations and are Foreign Service officers; and vice consuls not of career who are appointed from the
clerical personnel without examination, by the Secretary of State, when a need for an additional officer
exists at a post and a career officer is not available. Such vice consuls, however, are not eligible for
appointment as Foreign Service Officers until they have passed the usual examination.
During the absence of the principal officer from his post either a career or a noncareer vice consul
may be placed in charge and his compensation, if not already equal to one-half the salary of the prin-
cipal officer, will be increased to that figure while he remains in charge.
CONSULAR AGENTS.
A consular agent is an officer subordinate to a consul general or a consul, exercising similar, but
limited, powers at a place different from that at which the consulate general or consulate is situated.
He acts entirely under the direction of his principal, and is usually a local business man. His com-
pensation is derived from fees collected for official services, one-half of whicli he may retain, not to
exceed in any case $i,ooo a year. He pays the rent of his office and may engage in private business.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE. 255
The Government furnishes him with such forms, record books, stationer^-, and similar articles required
for his official use.
LANGUAGE STUDENTS.
Selection will be made annually of a few officers, from among new appointees in the Foreign Service
who have shown especial aptitude for acquiring languages and who possess the other necessar>^ quali-
fications, for assignment to China, Japan, and Turkey, where in addition to learning and performing
the usual diplomatic and consular duties, they will be expected to acquire familiarity with the native
language and the laws, customs, history, and race psychology of the people with a view to serving for
the most part in the country of their assignment. Officers selected for these assignments may receive
in addition to their salaries an allowance for language tuition and may be provided with quarters.
This is one of the most attractive fields of activity in the entire Foreign Service and offers unusual
opportunities for rendering distinguished service to the Government and for advancement in the
service.
CLERKS.
Clerks are employed in the Foreign Service, and receive initial compensation from $1,500 to $2,000
a year. Compensation begins upon the date of departure for the post to which they are assigned. Trans-
portation expenses are paid by the Government, under certain regulations.
Appointees are expected to remain in the service for at least two years, and their transportation
expenses in returning to the United States in case of resignation are not payable unless they have served
for that period. They are, furtliermore, expected to accept such assignments or transfers as the Depart-
ment may deem desirable in the best interests of the service. No appointments can be considered for
special countries, although a statement as to preferences of assignment is welcomed by the Department.
In the case of men such appointments are restricted to those who are unmarried and without
dependents, as it is now seldom found practicable to pay compensation in an amount sufficiently large
to justify the appointment of married men, nor is tlie appropriation for transportation sufficient to permit
the payment of transportation of wives and families of clerks in the Foreign Service.
The employment? of citizens or subjects of foreign powers as clerks in the diplomatic branch of the
Foreign Service and in the consular branch where the salary is more than $1,000 per annum is prohibited
by law. Therefore, only American citizens are employed as clerks in the diplomatic branch and in
positions in the consular branch the salaries of which are more than $1,000. Preference is given to
honorably discharged soldiers and sailors who possess the requisite qualifications.
Women are equally eligible with men for clerkships in the Foreign Service. However, the climatic
and social conditions at many posts render it impossible for women to serve at them with satisfaction to
themselves and advantage to the Government.
The duties of clerks consists of such routine work as may be assigned to them by the officers in charge.
An idea of the scope of these duties may be gained from a perusal of the functions of secretaries and
consular officers which are enumerated elsewhere in this publication. It is desirable that clerks should
be stenographers and possess a knowledge of the language of the country in which .they are to be em-
ployed.
It is tlie practice of the Department to commission clerks as vice consuls only when a need exists
at the office to which they are assigned, and not until they have served for a sufficient period to judge
of their abilities and conduct and tliat they merit such recognition. Whenever clerks are commissioned
as vice consuls not of career their duties do not change, and they are not eligible to promotion to the
grade of Foreign Service Officer without undergoing the usual examinations. A commission as vice consul
not of career does not carry with it an increase in compensation.
No formal examination is required for appointment to a clerkship; the Department, however, reserves
the right to examine an applicant in any particular it may deem advisable.
No one who is under 21 or over 35 years of age or who is not in excellent physical condition will be
considered for these positions. The Department may require the applicant to undergo a physical
examination.
Application blanks for clerical appointments may be obtained from the Office of Foreign Service
Personnel, Department of State. For further information regarding applications for such appointments,
see page 244.
256 AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE.
Additional Information. ■
FEES.
Foreign Service Officers are required to account for all fees which they collect, and the salary fixed
by law or regulation constitutes their sole and only compensation, except as specially provided in the
case of consular agents who are compensated by one-half of the fees collected by them not exceeding,
in any case, $1,000 a j^ear.
LEAVES OF ABSENCE.
Within his discretion, the Secretary of State may grant Foreign Service Officers leave of absence,
for reasonable periods, in no case to exceed 60 days in one year, except that, when leave is granted with
permission to visit the United States, the time actually and necessarily occupied in transit by the most
direct route will be approved in addition to the 60 days. Leave with permission to visit the United
States may not be granted oftener than once in two years, except in cases where the health of the officer
requires that he should be absent from his post of duty. No leave is granted any officer within six
months of his arrival at his post of duty.
TRAVELING EXPENSES.
Under regulations prescribed by the Secretary' of State, the Government defrays the actual and
necessary expenses of transportation and subsistence up to $5 per day, of Foreign Service Officers and
clerks in missions and consulates and their families and effects in going to and returning from their posts
or when traveling under orders, but makes no allowance for any expense incurred in connection with
leaves of absence.
EFFICIENCY RECORDS.
Though the scene of his activities may be far removed from the United States, a Foreign Service
officer's work is nevertheless closely watched by the Department of State, and he is given every oppor-
tunity to prove his worth to the service and credit for all that he accomplishes? A detailed efficiency
record is kept in the Department of State, based upon personal and official conduct, the manner in which
he handles business intrusted to him, and his knowledge of the technique of Foreign Service administra-
tion. Furthermore, all missions and consulates are visited at intervals by an inspector who examines
their condition and the administration thereof, reports fully thereon to the Department, and gives
officers counsel and advice.
BOARDS, COMMISSIONS, ETC. 257
XXII. BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR THE FOREIGN SERVICE.
(Under the Executive Order of June 7, 1924.)
Joseph C. Grew, of New Hampshire. Wilbur J. Carr, of New York.
J. Butler Wright, of Wyoming. Charles C. Eberhardt, of Kansas.
Plerbert A. Filer, of Illinois.
XXIII. UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA.
(Act of June 30, 1906.)
Judge. — Milton Dwight Purdy, of Minnesota.
District Attorney. — Leonard G. Husar, of California.
Marshal. — Thurston R. Porter, of New York.
Clerk. — William A. Chapman, of Ohio.
XXIV. DESPATCH AGENTS.
I. P. Roosa, Room 622, No. 2 Rector Street, New York.
Joseph F. Roberts, Room 5, Ferry Post Office, San Francisco.
R. Newton Crane, 6 Grosvenor Gardens, S. W. i, London, England.
Joseph J. Love, Post Office Building, New Orleans, Louisiana.
XXV. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO.
(Treaty of March i, 1889.)
(Offices at El Paso, Tex.)
Commissioner oyi the part of the United States. — George Curry, of New Mexico.
Consulting Engineer on the part of the United S^aier.— Randolph E. Fishbiun, of Arizona.
Assistant to Consulting Engineer on the part of the United States. — Paul E. Fernald, of^Arizona.
Comtnissioner on the part of Mexico. — Gustavo P. Serrano.
Consulting Engineer on the part of Mexico. — Armando Santacruz, jr.
Topographer on the part of Mexico. — Salvador Cuellar Munoz.
Secretary and Disbursing Officer of the United States Commission. — J. Harrie Cloonan, of Texas.
Secretary of the Mexican Commission. — Jose Hernandez Ojeda.
XXVI. ALASICAN BOUNDARY DELIMITATION COMMISSION AND CANADIAN BOUNDARY DELIMITATION
COMMISSION.
(Conventions of April 21, 1906, and April 11, 1908.)
Commissioner for the United States. — E. Lester Jones, of Virginia.
Acting Commissioner for Great Britain. — J. D. Craig.
XXVII. INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND CANADA.
(Treaty of January 11, 1909.)
Commissioners for the United States. — Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming; Fred Thomas Dubois, of Idaho.
Secretary. — William H. Smith, of the District of Columbia.
Commissioners for Great Britain. — Charles A. Magrath, Henry A. Powell, K. C. M. G., Sir William Hearst.
Secretary. — Lawrence Johnston Burpee.
258 BOARDS, COMMISSIONS, ETC.
XXVIII. AMERICAN AND BRITISH CLAIMS ARBITRATION.
(Agreement of August 18, 1910.)
Agent. — Fred K. Nielsen, of Nebraska.
Associate Counsel. — Stanley H. Udy, of Missouri.
Associate Counsel and Secretary of the Agency. — Frederick S. Dunn, of New York.
Associate Counsel. — John J. McDonald, of New Hampshire.
Clerk and Disbursing Officer. — Maurice P. Shaner, of Pennsylvania.
XXIX. MIXED CLAIMS COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND GERMANY.
(Agreement of August 10, 1922.)
Umpire. — Edwin B. Parker, of Texas.
American Commissioner. — Chandler P. Anderson, of New York.
German Commissioner. — -Wilhelm Kiesselbach.
American Agent. — Robert W. Bonynge, of New York.
German Agent. — Karl von Lewinski.
XXX. GENERAL CLAIMS COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO.
(Convention signed September 8, 1923.)
Chairman of Commission. — C. vanVoUenhoven.
American Commissioner. — Nathan I. Miller, of New York.
Mexican Commissioner. — G. Fernandez MacGregor.
American Agent. — Henry W. Anderson, of Virginia.
Mexican Agent. — Benito Flores.
XXXI. SPECIAL CLAIMS COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO.
(Convention signed September 10, 1923.)
Chairman of Commission. — Rodrigo Octavio.
American Commissioner. — Ernest B. Perry, of Nebraska.
Mexican Commissioner. — F. Gonzalez Roa.
American Agent. — Henry W. Anderson, of Virginia.
Mexican Agent. — Lie. Aquiles Elorduy.
XXXII. INTER-AMERICAN HIGH COMMISSION, UNITED STATES SECTION.
(Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.)
Honorary Chairman. — ^Andrew W Mellon, of Pennsylvania, Secretary of the Treasury.
Chairman. — Herbert Hoover, of California, Secretary of Commerce.
Vice Chairman. — Wesley L. Jones, of Washington, Chairman of the Committee on Commerce of the
United States Senate.
O. K. Davis, of New York, Secretary of the National Foreign Trade Council,
ohn H. Fahey, of Massachusetts, Member of the Senior Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the
United States.
William O. Hart, of Louisiana, Treasurer of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State
Laws.
A. C. Miller, of California, Member of the Federal Reserve Board.
W. W. Nichols, of New York, President of the American Manufacturers' Export Association.
Honorary Member. — L. S. Rowe, Director General of the Pan American Union.
Secretary. — Guillermo A. Sherwell, Cosmos Club.
BOARDS, COMMISSIONS, ETC. 259
XXXIII. INTERNATIONAL PRISON COMMISSION.
Commissioner on the part of the United States. — B. Ogden Chisolm, of New York.
XXXIV. INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE AT ROME, ITALY.
(Convention of June 7, 1905.)
Member of the Permanent Committee. — Asher Hobson, of Washington.
XXXV. INTERNATIONAL OFFICE OF PUBLIC HEALTH AT PARIS.
(Convention of December 9, 1907.)
Representative of the United States. — Surgeon General Hugh S. Cumming, of the Public Health Service.
XXXVI. PAN-AMERICAN COMMITTEE OF THE UNITED STATES.
Members. — Medill McCormick, George H. Moses, Atlee Pomerene, Stephen G. Porter, John Jacob
Rogers, J. Charles Linthicum, Harry A. Garfield, David D. Barrows, Henry White, Robert S.
Brookings, Willard Saulsbury, George E. A'incent, Frank C. Partridge, William Eric Fowler, Leo
S. Rowe.
Chairman. — Medill McCormick.
XXXVII. INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS OF EGYPT.
In 1876, as the result of negotiations between the Ottoman and Egyptian Governments and the
various Christian powers having representatives at Cairo, certain courts were created in Egypt for the
trial of civil and commercial causes arising between natives and foreigners of different nationality,
as well as all questions of real estate between any person and suits of foreigners against the Egyptian
Government and members of the Khedival family. These mixed tribunals, in civil matters within
their exclusive jurisdiction, superseded the consular courts. A mixed tribunal consists of five judges,
three of whom are foreigners and two natives. The foreign judges are appointed by the Khedive on
the recommendation of the great powers, each of which is represented by from one to three judges.
There are three tribunals of original jurisdiction (first instance), one each at Cairo, Alexandria, and
Mansura, and a court of appeals at Alexandria. The United States is represented in these courts by the
following judges:
Court of appeals. — Jasper Yeates Brinton, of Pennsylvania (appointed 1921).
Court of first instance. — William G. Van Home, of Utah (appointed 1902); Pierre Crabit^s, of Louisi-
ana (appointed 191 1)'
XXXVIIl, PERMANENT COURT OF ARBITRATION PROVIDED FOR BY THE CONVENTION SIGNED AT THE
HAGUE, JULY 29, 1899.
ARGENTINA.
His Excellency Mr. Carlos Rodriguez Larreta, LL. D., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-
tentiary at Paris; formerly Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Buenos Aires,
Minister for Foreign Affairs and Worship, and Delegate Plenipotentiary at the Second Peace
Conference.
His Excellency Mr. Manuel-Augusto Montes de Oca, LL. D., formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and
President of the Argentine Delegation to the Fifth Pan American Congress.
His Excellency Mr. Leopoldo Melo, LL. D., Senator; formerly Deputy.
His Excellency Mr. Antonio Bermcjo, LL. D., President of the Supreme Court of Justice.
32952—25 18
26o HAGUB COURT.
AUSTRIA.
The Hague Court list of Members published at The Hague March 9, 192 1, omits all appointees from
Austria.
BELGIUM.
Baron Descamps, Senator, Professor of the University of Louvain; formerly Minister of Sciences and
Arts, and Secretary-General of the Institute of International Law.
Mr. Leon Arendt, Honorary Director-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
His Excellency Jules van den Heuvel, Minister of State; formerly Minister of Justice.
Mr. Charles de Visscher, Professor at Ghent University, Legal Adviser at the Ministry' for Foreign Affairs.
His Excellency Mr. Severo Fernandez Alonso, LL. D., Minister at Buenos Aires; formerly Preadent
of Bolivia and Professor of International Law at the University of Chuquisaca.
His Excellency Mr. Eliodoro Villazon, formerly President of Bolivia.
Mr. Macario Pinilla.
Mr. Daniel Sanchez Bustamente.
BRAZIL.
His Excellency Mr. Clovis Bevilaqua, LL. D., Law Officer of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Member
of the Faculty of Law at the University of Recife, Member of the Brazilian Academy.
His Excellency Mr. Afranio de Mello-Franco, Deputy from Minas Geraes, formerly Minister of State, and
Ambassador on extraordinary mission.
Mr. Alfredo Bernardes da Silva, Professor of Law at the University' of Rio de Janeiro.
Mr. Manoel Villaboim, Federal Deputy and Member of the Faculty of Law at Sao Paulo.
BULGARIA.
His Excellency Mr. P. Hadji-Mischef, LL. D., Minister at Rome.
Mr. St. Kiroff, LL. D., Professor at the University of Sofia.
CHILE.
His Excellency Mr. Ventura Blanco Viel, LL. D., formerly Minister of State, Minister for Foreign
Affairs, and Ambassador to Argentina.
His Excellency Mr. Federico Puga Borne, Senator; formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs, and Minister
at Paris.
His Excellency Mr. Joaquin Walker Martinez, formerly Minister of State, Senator, and Ambassador at
Washington, and Delegate to the first Pan American Conference.
His Excellency Mr. Armando Quezada Acharan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
at Paris; formerly Senator, President of the Council and Minister of Finance.
His Excellency Mr. Hoo-Wei-Teh, formerly Secretary of State of the Board of Foreign Affairs and
Minister at Paris.
His Excellency Mr. Liou She-Shun, formerly Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs, Minister at Paris, Madrid,
Lisbon, and Rio de Janeiro.
His Excellency Mr. J. van den Heuvel, Belgian Minister of State; formerly Minister of Justice, Pro-
fessor of Law at the University of Louvain, and Minister Plenipotentiary.
His Excellency Mr. Chengting Thomas Wang, LL. D., formerly Minister of Agriculture and Commerce.
COLOMBIA.
His Excellency Mr. Ignacio Gutierrez-Ponce, LL. D., Minister at London.
His Excellency Mr. Jos6 Vicente Concha, LL. D., formerly President.
His Excellency Mr. Carlos Adolfo Urueta, LL. D., formerly Deputy, and Minister at Washington.
Mr. Eduardo Rodriguez Piiieres, LL. D., attorney at law. Professor of Law and Political Science at
Bogota.
HAGUE) COURT. 26 1
Mr. Antonio Sanchez de Bustamante, LL. D., Professor of International Public and Private Law at
the University of Habana; formerly Senator and Delegate to the Second Peace Conference.
His Excellency Mr. Manuel Sanguily, Barrister; formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and Senator.
His Excellency Mr. Cosme de la Torriente, LL. D., Senator; formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and
Minister at Madrid.
His Excellency Mr. Juan de Dios Garcia Kohly, LL. D., formerly Judge of the Court of Appeal, Assistant
Secretary of Justice and President of the Civil Service Commission.
His Excellency Mr. Carlos Manuel de Cespedes, LL. D., formerly Deputy', Minister Plenipotentiary^ and
Secretary of State.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA.
Mr. Emil Hacha, LL. D., Vice President of the Supreme Administrative Court.
Mr. Antonin Hobza, LL. D., Professor of International Law at the University of Prague.
Mr. Jan Krcmaf , LL. D., Professor of Civil Law at the University of Prague.
Mr. Emil Vazny, LL. D., Vice President of the Supreme Court at Brno.
Mr. Axel Vedel, Chamberlain, Prefect of the Department of Praesto; formerly Director at the Min-
istry for Foreign Affairs and Delegate to the Second International Peace Conference.
Mr. D. Nyholm, Honorary Councilor of State and Member of the Mixed Tribunals of Egypt; formerly
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court at Copenhagen.
Mr. Herluf Zahle, Chamberlain, Minister at Stockholm.
Mr. F. G. C. Schroder, Director of the Ministry of Justice.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Mr. Cabral y Baez, Barrister; formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs.
Mr. Emilio C. Joubert, formerly Secretary of State and Minister at Washington.
Mr. Manuel de J. Troncoso de la Concha, Barrister, Justice of the Supreme Coiu-t.
ECUADOR.
Mr. Honorato Vasquez, LL. D., formerly Cabinet Minister, Minister at Lima and Madrid, Deputy and
Senator.
Mr. Francisco Aviles Zerda, LL. D., Professor of International Law at the University of Guayaquil.
His Excellency Mr. C. M. Tobar y Borgono, LL. D., Rector of the Central University and Deputy;
formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister at Brussels.
Mr. Antonio Saenz, LL. D., Secretary of the Senate; formerly Deputj'^ and Professor of International
Law at the Central University.
FINLAND.
Mr. Rafael Waldemar Erich, LL. D., Professor of International Law at the University of Helsin;fjrs,
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary; formerly President of the Council.
Mr. Jakob Wilhelm Chydenius, LL. D., Professor of Civil Law at the University of Helsingfors, De;m of
tlie Faculty of Law.
Mr. Alexandre Wilhelm Gadolin, LL. D., Professor of Law at the Academy of Abo. '
His Excellency Mr. Karl Gustaf Idman, LL. D., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
FRANCE.
Mr. Leon Bourgeois, LL. D., President of the Senate, Minister of Labor; formerly Minister for Foreign
Affairs, President of the Chamber of Deputies, President of the Cabinet Council, and Minister of
Labor and Social Providence.
Mr. Henri Fromageot, LL. D., Law Officer to the Minister for Foreign Affairs; formerly Technical Dele-
gate to the Second International Peace Conference.
Mr. Andr6 Weiss, Professor of International Law at Paris, Law Officer of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs
and Member of the Institute of France.
Mr. Gabriel Hanotaux, formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs, French Representative in the League of
Nations.
262 HAGUE COURT.
GERMANY.
His Excellency Mr. Kriege, LL. D., Privy Counselor; formerly Director of the Department for Foreign
Affairs.
Mr. de Staff, LL. D., President of the Superior Court of Dtisseldorf.
His Excellency Mr. Heinze, LL. D., formerly Saxon Minister of Justice.
Mr. Schiicking, LL. D., University Professor.
GREAT BRITAIN.
The Viscount Finlay, G. C. M. G.
The Very Honorable Lord Stemdale.
GREECE.
His Excellency Mr. Georges Streit, Member of the Institute of International Law; formerly Minister
for Foreign Affairs, Minister at Vienna, and Professor of International Law at the University of
Athens.
Mr. S. Seferiades, Professor of International Law at the University of Athens.
His Excellency Mr. Nicolas Politis, LL. D., Associate Member of the Institute of International Law;
formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs.
Mr. Georges Roussos, formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs.
GUATEMALA.
Mr. Antonio Batres Jauregui, Councilor of State; formerly President of the Judicial Power and of the
Supreme Court of Justice, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Public Instruction, Minister at Wash-
ington and Rio de Janeiro, and Delegate to the Third International American Conference.
Mr. Mariano Crus, Licentiate of Law, Counsellor of State; formerly President of the Supreme Court of
Justice.
Mr. Victor M. Estdvez, Licentiate of Law, Counsellor of State; formerly President of the Court of Appeals,
and Member of the Supreme Court of Justice.
Mr. Jos6 Matos, LL. D., President of the National University; formerly Charge d 'Affaires to Mexico
and Undersecretary of State for Foreign Relations.
Mr. Louis Bomo, formerly Minister Plenipotentiary and Secretary of State for Foreign Relations,
Finance, and Commerce.
Mr. Auguste Bonamy, President of the Court of Cassation.
Mr. Emmanuel Etheart, Judge of the Court of Cassation.
Mr. Dantes Bellegarde, Secretary of State, Public Instruction and Religion.
HUNGARY.
His Excellency Mr. Albert de Berzeviczy, Privy Coimselor; formerly Hungarian Minister of Public
Worship and Education.
His Excellency Mr. Francors de Nagy, Privy Counselor; formerly Secretary of State.
His Excellency Mr. Gustave de Tory, Privy Counselor, President of the Supreme Court; formerly Hun-
garian Minister of Justice.
His Excellency Baron Jules Wlassics, Priv)' Counselor, President of the High Royal Administrative
Court of Hungary; formerly Hungarian Minister of Public Worship and Education.
ITALY.
Mr. Victor Emmanuel Orlando, Lawyer, University Professor; formerly President of the Chamber of
Deputies and of the Ministerial Council.
His Excellency Mr. Tommaso Tittoni, LL. D., Cabinet Minister, President of the Senate; formerly
Minister for Foreign Affairs and Ambassador at London and Paris.
Dr. Carlo Schanzer, LL. D., Senator, President of a Section of the Council; formerly Minister of the
Treasury.
Mr. Dionisio Anzilotti, Professor of International Law at the University of Rome, and Undersecretary
General of the League of Nations.
i
HAGUE COURT. 263
JAPAN.
Baron Nobushige Hozumi, LL. D., Privy Counselor, honorary Professor of the Imperial University of
Tokyo.
Mr. Masaakira Tomii, LL. D., Privy Counselor, honorary Professsor of the Imperial University of Tokyo.
Mr. Man Oda, LL. D., Professor at the Imperial University at Kyoto.
His Excellency Mr. Mineitciro Adatci, Ambassador at Brussels.
LUXEMBURG.
Mr. Victor Thorn, President of the Council of State.
MEXICO.
His Excellency Mr. Arturo H. Orci, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at The Hague.
Mr. Gilberto Valenzuela, Licentiate of Law, Undersecretary of the Department of the Interior, appointed
Minister to The Hague.
Mr. Fernando Gonzalez Roa, Licentiate of Law; formerly Undersecretar}' of the Interior.
Mr. Genaro Fernandez MacGregor, Licentiate of Law, Solicitor of the Department of Foreign Affairs.
MONTENEGRO.
His Ex-cellency Mr. Eugene Popovitch, President of the Council, Minister for Foreign Affairs.
His Excellency Mr. Pierre Chotch, Minister of Public Instruction, Acting Minister of Justice.
NETHERLANDS.
Jonkheer G. L. M. H. Ruys de Beerenbrouck, LL. D., Member of the Council of State on Extraordinary
Mission, Commissioner of the Queen in the Province of Limbotug; formerly ^fmister of Justice.
His Excellency Mr. P. W. A. Cort van der Linden, LL. D., Member of the Council of State; formerly
Minister of Justice.
Mr. C. Van Vollenhoven, LL. D., Professor of Law at the University of Leiden.
NICARAGUA.
Mr. Leon Vallez, Consul General in Belgium.
Mr. G. Gram, fonnerly Minister of State and Governor.
Mr. Sigurd Ibsen, LL. D., formerly Minister of State.
Mr. H. J. Horst, Member of the Norwegian Group of the Interparliamentary Union for Arbitration and
Peace, Member of the Noble Committee of the vStorthing, Member of the Interparliamentary Council,
Member of the Commission of the International Peace Bureau; formerly President of the Lagthing.
Mr. Frederik Valdemar Nikolai Beichmann, President of the Court of Appeals at Trondhjem.
His Excellency Dr. Belisario Porras, LL. D., President of Panama- formerly Minister at Washington
and at San Jose, Costa Rica.
Mr. Harmodio Arias, LL. D., formerly Assistant Secretary of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
PERSIA.
His Excellency Samad-Khan Momtazos-Saltaneh , Minister at Paris.
His Excellency Eshagh Khan Mofakhamed-Dovleh, Minister at Rome.
264 HAGUE COURT.
PERU.
Mr. Manuel Alvarez Calderon, LL. D., Minister at Berne; formerly Minister at Brussels, at Washing-
ton, and at Santiago, Chile; delegate to the Second Pan American ConfereHce at Mexico City.
Mr. Lizardo Almazora, LL. D., Judge of the Supreme Court, Law Professor and formerly Dean of the
Faculty; formerly Minister of Justice.
Dr. Mariano H. Comejo, Senator, Professor of literature.
Mr. Foderico Elguera, formerly Minister Plenipotentiary and Mayor of Lima.
Count Michel Rostworowski, LL. D., Member of the Institute of International Law, Professor at the
University of Cracow.
Mr. Sigismujid Cybichewski, LL. D., Professor at the University of \'arsevie.
Mr. Ignace Szebeko, Deputv" formerly Envoy Extraordinary^ and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. Jean Kucharzewski ; formerly President of the Council.
PORTUGAL.
His Excellency Mr. Jose Capello Franco Frazao (Comte de Penha Garcia), LL. D.; formerly President
of the Chamber of Deputies.
His Excellency Mr. Bernardino Machado, LL. D., Senator; formerly President.
Mr. Arthur Rodrigues de Almeida Ribeire, LL. D., Judge of the Lisbon Court of Cassation.
RUMANIA.
Mr. Constantin G. Dissescu, Senator, Minister of Worship and Public Instruction.
Mr. Thomas Stelian, Professor at the University of Bucharest; formerly Minister.
Mr. Alexander Hurmuzache, formerly Deputy.
Mr. Corneliu Manolescu Ramniceanu, formerly President of the Court of Cassation.
RUSSIA.
Mr. Tagantzeff, formerly Member of the Council of the Empire, Senator, and Privy Cotmcilor.
Baron Michel de Taube, LL. D., Privy Councilor, Senator.
Baron Nolde, Councilor of State, Law Officer of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs.
SALVADOR.
Mr. Alonso Reyes Guerra, LL. D., Consul-General at Hamburg, Germany.
Mr. Juan Francisco Paredes, LL. D., Minister for Foreign Affairs, of Justice and Public Instruction.
Mr. Manuel Castro Ramirez, LL. D., formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and President of the Court
of justice of Central America.
Mr. Francisco Martinez Suarez, LL. D., President of the Supreme Court of Justice; formerly Minister
for Foreign Affairs.
SERBS, CROATS, AND SLOVENES, KINGDOM OF THE.
Mr. Michailo Yovanovitch, formerly President of the Court of Cassation of Belgrade.
Dr. Ivan Jolgher, Professor of the Ljoubliana University.
Mr. Ladislav Politch, Professor of the Zagreb University.
Mr. Eldon Revare James, LL. D., Councilor for Foreign Affairs at Bangkok.
Mr. Francis Bowes Sayre, LL. D., Member of the New York Bar, Professor of International and Mari-
time Law at Harvard University.
SPAIN.
His Excellency Mr. Manuel Garcia Prieto, Marquis de Alhucemas, LL. D., Senator; formerly President
of the Council, Minister of State and Minister of Justice.
His Excellency Mr. Juan Alvarado y del Saz, Deputy; formerly Minister of Finance and Marine.
HAGUE COURT, 265
SWEDEN.
Mr. Kniit Hjalmar Leonard de Hammarskjold, LL. D., Member of the Swedish Academy, Governor
of the Province of Upsal; formerly Minister of Justice, Minister of Worship and of Public Instruc-
tion, Minister at Copenhagen, President of the Court of Appeals of Jonkoping, and Professor of Law
of the University of Upsal.
Baron Marks von Wiirtemberg, LL. D., President of the Court of Appeal at Stockholm.
Mr. Johannes Hellner, LL. D., formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs, Member of the Supreme Court
and Member of the Diet.
His Excellency Baron Carl Nils Daniel Bildt, D. Lit., Minister to Italy and Member of the Swedish
Academy at Stockholm.
SWITZERLAND.
Mr. Max Huber, LL. D., Judge in the Permanent Court of International Justice; fornjerly Professor of
Public International Law at the University of Zurich.
Mr. Agostino Soldati, LL. D.; formerly Counselor of State of the Canton of Tessin and Member of the
Federal Court.
TURKEY.
His Excellency Osman Bey, First President of the Court of Cassation.
His Excellency Ahmed Rechid Bey, Minister Plenipotentiar}-; formerly legal adviser of the Sublime
Porte and Assistant Secretary' of Foreign Affairs.
Mouammer Bey, Assistant Minister of Justice.
Saadeddin Bey, Vice President of the Legislative Section of the Council of State.
UNITED STATES.
Mr. George Gray, LL. D., United States Circuit Judge; formerly United States Senator.
Mr. Oscar S. Straus, formerly Secretary of Commerce and Labor and Ambassador at Constantinople.
Mr. Elihu Root, formerly United States Senator, Secretary of War, and Secretary of State.
Mr. John Bassett Moore, Professor of International law and diplomacy at the Columbia University,
formerly Coimselor for the Department of State.
URUGUAY.
Mr. Juan Zorilla de San Martin, LL. D., President of the Society of International Law of Uruguay;
formerly Mi'nister Plenipotentiary at Madrid, Lisbon, and Paris.
Mr. Manuel B. Otero, Barrister, Senator; formerly Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister Plenipoten-
tiary.
Mr. Benito M. Cunarro, LL. D., President of the High Court of Justice.
Mr. Julio Bastes, LL. D., Member of the High Court of Justice.
Mr. Carlos F. Grissanti.
Mr. Santiago Key Ayala.
Mr. Jose Santiago Rodriguez.
Mr. Pedro Itreago Chacin.
VENEZUELA,
SECRETARY-GENERAL,
Baron Michiels van Verduynen.
FIRST SECRETARY OF THE COURT.
C. Crommelin,
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL.
The Administrative Council consists of the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands and the
diplomatic representatives at The Hague of the ratifying powers.
266 FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
XXXIX. FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
(Corrected to May i, 1925.)
Country and date of
presentation.
Name.
Rank.
Residence.
Amb. E. and P
March 10, 1924.
Mr. Felipe A. Espil
Counselor of Embassy
First Secretary of Embassy . . .
Naval Attache
Ave.
1806 Corcoran St.
Wardman Park Hotel.
Commander Ricardo A. Vago
Mr. Conrado Traverse
Wardman Park Hotel.
Secretary of Embassy
1806 Corcoran St.
Attache
1806 Corcoran St.
Mr. Edgar L,. G. Prochnik
Counselor of Legation and
Chargd d'Affaires ad in-
terim.
185 1 Wyoming Ave.
Office of Legation
1 85 1 Wyoming Ave.
Amb. E. and P
May 12, 1920.
Mr. Raoul Tilmont
Secretary of Embassy
Commercial Secretary
2008 i6th St.
Mr. M. E. M. Ulser
Baron Joseph van der Elst
Office of Embassy
1780 Massachusetts Ave.
Bolivia
Senor Dr. Don Ricardo JaLmes Freyre
E. E. andM. P
Wardman Park Hotel.
October 8, 1923.
Wardman Park Hotel.
Senor Don Jorge Blacud Jofre
Attache
1909 19th St.
Office of Legation
Wardman Park Hotel.
Brazil
Mr. Augusto Cochrane de Alencar
Amb. E. and P
1603 H St.
May 26, 1920.
Counselor of Embassy and
Charge d'Affaires ad in-
terim.
Naval Attache
1603 H St.
Commander Radler de Aguino
1745 K St.
Office of Embassy
1603 H St.
Mr. Stephan Panaretoff
E. E. and M. P
1910 Kalorama Road.
August 24, 1921.
Mr. Stephen P. Bisseroff
2221 R St.
Office of Legation
2221 R St.
Chile
Senor Don Beltran Mathieu
Amb. E. and P
2305 Massachusetts Ave.
Counselor of Embassy
The Argonne.
Lieutenant Commander Luis Munoz Valdes.
Naval Attache
14 Evergreen St., New
Military Attach^
London, Conn.
Attache
2154 Florida Ave.
Office of Embassy
2154 Florida Ave
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
267
Country and date of
presentation.
Name.
Rank.
Residence.
China
March 10, 1931.
Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze.
Mr. Yung Kwai ,
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation.
Mr. PihMin-Yu
Mr. Hua Huang
Mr. Yu Kwei Yang
Mr. Clarence Kuangson Young.
Office of Legation
Second Secretary.
Third Secretary. .
Attache
Attache
Colombia
May 23, 1922.
Dr. Enrique Olaya
Senor Don Jose Maria Coronado.
Seiior Don Abraham Martinez. . .
E. E. and M. P
Secretary of Legation.
Commercial Attach^. .
Senor Don Alfredo Lozano .
Office of Legation
Attache.
Costa Rica Senor Don J. Rafael Oreamuno.
December 27, 1922. Senor Guillermo E. Gonzales
Office of Legation ,
Cuba
December 13, 1923.
Czechoslovakia .
Jtme IS, 1923.
Denmark
November 8, 1912.
Dominican Republic
September 2, 1924.
Ecuador
October 28, 1924.
I
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation.
Senor Don Cosme de la Torriente.
Senor Don Arturo Padro
Senor Don Jose T. Baron
Senor Don Luis Marino Perez
Captain Virgilio G. Villalta
Senor Don Carlos de la Torre
Senor Don Vicente Valdfe Rodriguez
Senor Don Cayetano de Quesada
Office of Commercial and Military Attachfe.
Office of Embassy
Amb. E. and P
Counselor of Embassy and
Chargd d'Affaires ad in-
terim.
Secretary of Enibassy
Commercial Attache ,
Military Attache
Second Secretary
Third Secretary
Attach^
Dr. Frantiiek Chvalkovsky.
Mr. Jaroslav Lipa
Dr. Rudolf Kuraz..
Dr. Pavel Stransky.
Dr. Milos Handk . . .
Office of Legation. . .
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation and
Charged 'Affaires ad interim.
First Secretary of Legation. . . .
Second Secretary of Legation..
Second Secretary of Legation. .
Mr. Constantin Bnm
Mr. Kaj Helmer-Petersen
Mr. A. Konow Bojsen
Mr. Soren Sorensen, Agricultural Adviser
to the Danish Government.
Office of Legation
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation .
Secretary of Legation.
Attache
Sefior Jose del Carmen Ariza
Licenciado Federico C. Alvarez .
Office of Legation
Seiior Dr. Don Francisco Ochoa Ortiz.
Senor Don Juan Barberis
Seiior Don Emilio M. Terdn
Seiior Don Carlos Mantilla O
Office of Legation
E. E. and M. P.
First Secretary. .
E. E. andM. P..
First Secretary...
Second Secretary.
Attach^
19th and Vernon Sts.
3312 Highland Ave.,
Cleveland Park.
2001 19th St.
2000 Massachusetts Ave.
The Sherman.
Office, 130 West 42d St.,
New York City.
1800 Connecticut Ave.
1800 Connecticut Ave.
2201 Massachusetts Ave.
160 1 Nineteenth St.
2201 Massachusetts Ave.
2630 i6th St.
2400 i6th St.
The Argonne.
2716 Woodley Place.
1659 Fuller St.
1900 Lamont St.
2400 1 6th St.
3630 i6th St.
2630 1 6th St.
1730 i6th St.
1716 N St.
1854 Ontario Place.
1724 17th St.
211S O St.
1730 i6th St.
1605 22d St.
2000 Massachusetts Ave.
1720 Lanier Place.
402 Southern Building
435 Southern Building
Wardman Park Hotel.
Hotel Roosevelt.
Woodward Building.
1409 i6th St.
The Argonne.
The Jefferson.
1318 Rhode Island Ave.
Rooms 940-944 Invest-
ment Bldg.
268
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND IvEGATlONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Country and date of
presentation.
Egypt.
Esthonia
December 31, 1923.
Finland
February 17, 1922.
France
January 30, 1925.
Germany
March 12, 1935.
Great Britain. . ,
March 5, 1924.
Name.
Mr. Ismail Kamel Bey .
Dr. Farag Mikhail Moussa.
Abu-el-Enein Salem Eff
Office of Legation
Mr. Antonius Piip . .
Colonel Victor Mutt.
Office of Legation .
Mr. Axel Leonard Astrom.
Mr. Bruno Kivikoski
Office of Legation
Mr. Emile Daeschner
Brigadier General George A. L. Dumont.
Count de Sartiges
Captain Edmond D. Willm
Mr. Jules Henry
Mr. Charles Auguste Louis Le Neveu
Count Jacques de Sieyes de Veynes
Captain Georges Thenault
First Secretary and Charge
d'Affaires ad interim.
Third Secretary
Second Attache
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation and
Acting Military Attache.
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation.
Residence.
Captain E. Lombard
Chief Engineer Paul Edouard Henri Gripon
Mr. Robert Lacour-Gayet
Office of Military Attachd
Office of Naval Attache
Office of Commercial Attache
Amb. E. and P
Military Attache !
Counselor of Embassy
Naval Attache
First Secretary of Embassy. . .
Commercial Attache
Second Secretary
Assistant Military Attache for
aeronautics.
Assistant Military Attache . . . .
Assistant Naval Attache
Financial Attache
Office of Financial Attache.
Office of Embassy
Baron Ago von ilaltzan
Dr. Hans Heinrich DieckhofT.
Dr. Karl von Lewinski
Herr Emil Wiehl
Dr. Emil L. Baer
Baron Leopold Plessen
Dr. Edwart von Selzam
Office of Embassy
The Right Honorable Sir Esme Howard.
Mr. Henry Getty Chilton
Colonel C. E. C. G. Charlton'
Captain F. L. Tottenham, R. N
Group Captain M. G. Christie
Mr. John Joyce Broderick
The Honourable H. W. Brooks.
Mr. J. Balfour
iSis Q St.
1779 Massachusetts Ave.
1815 Q St.
2200 Q St.
2200 Q St.
1629 i6th St.
1629 i6th St.
1629 i6th St.
Hamilton Hotel.
1 124 Connecticut Ave.
The Argonne.
i860 California St.
iSs5 Mintwood Place.
The Argonne.
The Portland.
1501 iSth St.
1 501 i8th St.
1501 i8th St.
46 East 25th St. New
York City.
35 Nassau St., New York
City.
2460 1 6th St.
Amb. E. and P
Counselor of Embassy ! 1702 i6th vSt.
Counselor of Embassy ■■ 3145 i6th St.
First Secretary [ Wardman Park Hotel.
Secretary of Embassy ' Wardman Park Hotel.
Secretary of Embassy 182 1 Q St.
Attache The Racket Club.
] 1435 Massachusetts- Ave.
Amb. E. and P
Acting Counselor of Embassy.
Military Attache
Naval Attache
Air Attache
Commercial Counselor of Em-
bassy.
First Secretary
Second Secretary
Mr. G. H. Thompson i Second Secretary.
Sir Adrian William Maxwell Bailly, Bart .
Engineer Commander H. A. Brown, R. N.
Second Secretary.-.
Assistant Naval Attache .
1300 Connecticut Ave.
1812 R St.
1922 Sunderland Place.
1215 i6th St.
2400 i6th St.
2326 California St.
2132 Bancroft Place.
The Anchorage.
2400 i6th St.
1900 Q. St.
10 East Bradley Lane,
Md.
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES,
269
Country and date of
presentation.
Name.
Rank.
Residence.
Great Britain (con.)..
Greece
December 12, 1924.
Guatemala
May 23, 1922.
Haiti
February 10, 1925
Honduras
March 9, 1925 . . . .
Hungary
January 11, 1922.
Irish Free State. .
October 7, 1924.
Italy ,
March 2, 1925.
Japan
March 16, 1925.
Mr. A. J. Pack
Mr. Henry L. d'A. Hopkinson
Mr. Leander McCormick-Goodhart.
Commercial Secretary.
Third Secretary
Commercial Secretary.
Mr. H. H. Sims Attache.
Mr. John Robert Lawson-Johnston Attache.
Office erf Embassy
E. E. and M. P
Counselor of Legation .
Mr. Charalambos Simopoulos
Mr. Constantin D. Xanthopoulos
Mr. C. Diamantopoulos ' First Secretary of Legation.
Office of Legation
Senor Don Francisco Sdnchez Latour.
Office of Legation
Mr. Hannibal Price.
Mr. Raoul Lizaire. . .
Office of Legation. . .
Seiior Luis Bogran
Senor Carlos Izaguirre V.
Office of Legation
Count Laszlo Szechenyi..
Mr. John Polenyi
Mr. Andor do Hertelendy.
Office of Legation
Mr. Timothy A. Smiddy.
Mr. Hugh Slattery
Office of Legation
Nobile Giacomo de Martina
Signer Augusto Rosso
Signer Giuseppe Catalani
Colonel Marquis Vittorio Asinari di Ber-
nezzo, Honorary Aide de Camp to His
Majesty the King of Italy.
Commander CountEttore Sommati di Mom-
bello.
Wing Commanders Signer Mario Calderara. ,
Count Delfino Rogeri di Villanova
Signer Luigi Mariani
Sig:nor Luciano Mascia
Count Gian Franco della Parta
Mr. Romolo Angelone
Office of Embassy
E. E. and M. P.
E. E. and M. P
Secretary of Legation.
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation.
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation.
Attache
Min. P
Secretary of Legation.
Amb. E. and P
Counselor of Embassy
Second Counselor of Embassy
Military Attache
Naval Attache .
Air Attache
First Secretary of Embassy
Secretary of Embassy
Attache
Attache
Commercial Attache
Mr. Tsuneo Matsudaira Amb. E. and P
Mr. Setsuzo Sawada Counselor of Embassy .
Mr. Kengo Mori Financial Attachd
Mr. Yasukichi Yatabe \ First Secretary.
Captain Kiyoshi Hasegawa, I.J.N Naval Attache .
The Mayflower Hotel.
The Anchorage.
Langley Park, Hyatts-
ville, Md.
1819 19th St.
1824 R St.
130! 19th St.
1838 Connecticut Ave.
Wardman Park Hotel.
1838 Connecticut Ave.
1521 New Hampshire
Ave.
1521 New Hampshire
Ave.
1730 Connecticut Ave.
Wardman Park Hotel.
Hotel Roosevelt.
Wardman Park Hotel.
2929 Massachusetts Ave.
1424 i6th St.
1954 Columbia Road.
1424 i6th St.
Wardman Park Hotel.
University Club,
loio Investment Bldg.
17S5 Massachusetts Ave.
1853 Vernon St.
1301 i6th St.
Stoneleigh Court.
The Argonne.
2010 Hillyer Place.
1618 iSth St.
Hotel Martinique.
2101 i6thSt.
1601 i6th Si.
i6th and Fuller Sis.
1321 K St.
1805 Irving St.
The Equitable Building,
New York City, N. Y.
1538 17th St.
1422 Massachusetts Ave.
2 70
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Country and date of
presentation.
Japan (con.).
Latvia.
Lithuania
August 6, 1924.
Luxemburg
Mexico
February 24, 1925
Netherlands
January 10, 1923.
Nicaragua
July 6, 1921.
Norway
November i, 1910.
Panama
August 28, 1922.
Name.
Rank.
Residence.
Mr. Kazue Kuwashima First Secretary of Embassy .
Colonel Noburu Morita, I. J. A Military Attache
Commander Katsumi Yukishita, I. J. >
Mr. Teijiro Tlimura
Mr. Atsushi Kimura
Mr. Hiroshi Kawamura
Mr. Yasuto Shudo
1404 2ISt St.
The Portland.
Mr. Yoshiaki Miura
Captain Yoshio Inouye, I. J. A
Captain Kikuichi Abe, I. J. A
Lieutenant Chikao Yamamoto, I. J. N .
Mr. Kozo Motono
Mr. Chiuichiro Harada
Mr. Akira Tsutsumi
Mr. Keizo Fujii
Mr. Yutaka Ishizawa
Mr. Tomakazu Hori
Office of Embassy
Mr. Arthur B. Lule.
Office of Legation, . .
Mr. Kazys Bizauskas
Mr. Henrikas RabinaviSius.
Office of Legation
Baron Raymond de Waha .
Sefior Don Manuel C. Tellez
Senor Dr. Don Josd Benitez
Seiior Don Manuel Y. De Negri
Seiior Don Carlos, Baumbachy Griethe.
Sefior Don Luis Padilla Nervo
Sefior Don Francisco Suastegui
Senor Don Canuto A. Vargas
Office of Embassy
Jonkheer Dr. A. C. D. de Graeff
Jonkheer, Dr. H. van Aschuan Wyck.
Mr. A. Loudon
Office of Legation
Dr. Jose Antonio Tigerino.
Office of Legation
Mr. Helmer H. Bryn
Mr. Daniel Steen
Mr. Alexis H. G. O. Lundh.
Office of Legation
Sefior Dr. Don Ricardo J. Alfaro.
Seiior Don Juan B. Chevalier
Sefior Don Eduardo M. Sosa
Office of Legation
Assistant Naval Attache 1422 Massachusetts Ave.
Second Secretary
Third Secretary
Third Secretary
Commercial Secretary .
Third Secretary
Assistant Military Attache. . .
Assistant Military Attache. . .
Assistant Naval Attache
Attachd
Attach^
Attach^
Attach^
Attach^
Attachd
Consul of Latvia in New York
City, in charge of Legation.
E. E. and M. P
Secretary of Legion.
Charge d'Affaires.
Amb. E. and P
First Secretary
First Secretary
Second Secretary
Attache
Commercial Attache.
Attache
E. E. and M. P
Counselor of Legation ,
Secretary of Legation. .
Charg^ d'Affaires.
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation .
Commercial Coimselor.
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation .
Attach^
1877 Monroe St.
144s Spring Road.
1844 Kalorama Road.
165 Broadway, New York
City.
The Shoreham.
1445 Spring Road.
The Portland.
1622 Massachusetts Ave.
1310 N St.
Suite iios, 115 Broad St.,
New York City.
2622 i6th St.
2622 i6th St.
2622 i6th St.
2829 i6th St.
2047 Rosemont Ave.
Hotel Roosevelt.
2047 Rosemont Ave.
The Argonne.
Fontanet Courts.
1429 Rhode Island Ave.
2829 i6th St.
2435 15th St.
Wardman Park Hotel.
1470 Euclid St.
Wardman Park Hotel.
Wardman Park Hotel.
2137 R St.
Wardman Park Hotel.
2019 Columbia Road.
The Wyoming.
IS35 N. H. Ave.
The Portner.
1528 O St.
1535 N. H. Ave.
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
271
Country and date of
presentation.
Paraguay
January 29, 1923-
Persia
November 15, 1931.
Peru
March 24, 1924.
Poland
December 7, 1922.
Portugal
May I, 1902.
■Rumania
February 25, 1921.
Russia.
Salvador.
Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes.
October 10, 1922.
Name.
Dr. Don Eusebio Ayala.
Office of Legation
Mr. Hussein Alai
Mr. B. Mohazzeb-ed-Dowleh Kazemi.
Mr. Abdullah Entez4m.
Mr. S. M. Ameri
Office of Legation
Dr. Heman Valarde
Senor Alfredo Gonzalez Prada. . . .
Dr. Santiago F. Bedoya
Colonel Jose Urdanivia Vines
Seiior Carlos de Pierola y Souza .
Sefior Julio Malaga Grenet
Seiior Don Hector Velarde
Senor Alberto Ayulo Laos
OfSce of Embassy
Dr. Wladyslaw Wroblewski
Mr. Hipolit Gli wic
Lieutenant Colonel, General Staff, Bohdan
Holewicz.
Mr. Leon Orlawski
Office of Legation
Viscount d'Alte. . .
Office of Legation.
Prince A. Bibesco
Mr. F. Nano
Mr. Andrei Popovici.
Mr. D. Dimancesco..
Office of Legation . . . .
Mr. Serge Ughet.
Office
Dr. Don Hector David Castro.
Seiior Don Roberto Melendez
Seiior Don Rodolfo Wayorga Rivas.
Office of Legation
Dr. Ante Tresich Pavichich .
Dr. Douchan Marinovitch. . .
Mr. Branko Adjcmovitch
Mr. Vladimir (kiutesha
Office of Legation
Rank.
E. E. and M. P.
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation and
Charg^ d'Affaires ad in-
terim.
Third Secretary
Attache
Residence.
Wardman Park Hotel.
W'ardman Park Hotel.
1720 i6th St.
1720 i6th St.
Amb. E. and P 2306 Massachusetts Ave.
First Secretary of Embassy . . . Wardman Park Hotel.
Second Secretary \ Wardman Park Hotel.
Military Attache
Attach^
Attachd
Attachd
Commercial Attache
Wardman Park Hotel.
E. E. and M. P
Counselor of Legation.
Military Attache
Second Secretary.
2010 Wyoming Ave.
2640 i6th St.
Metropolitan Club
The Sommerset Apart-
ments.
The Roosevelt.
2640 i6th St.
E. E. andM. P Wardman Park Hotel.
Wardman Park Hotel.
E. E. andM. P
Secretary of Legation.
Attache
Attache
1607 23d St.
1607 23d St.
Financial Attache.
1607 23d St.
120 East 75th St., New
York City.
247 Park Ave., New
York City.
Secretary of Legation and 2800 Ontario Road.
Charge d'Affaires ad interim.
Attachd I 1320 Monroe St.
Attachd i
2800 Ontario Road.
E. E. andM. P ; 1520 i6th St.
Secretary of Legation Wardman Park Hotel.
Second Secretary The Jefferson.
Second Secretary
i 1520 i6th St.
272
FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND IvEGATlONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Country and date of
presentation.
Name.
Rank.
Residence.
Siam
April 27, 1923.
Spain
December i, 1913.
Sweden
April 6, 1921.
Switzerland
May 25, 1920.
Uruguay
May 12, 1920.
Venezuela
September 22, 193a.
Phya Buri Navarasth ! E. E. and M. P.
Mr. Edward H. Loftus
Pra Sundara Vachana
Luang Debavadi
Mr. Swai Sankantakul
OfEce of Legation
2300 Kalorama Road.
First Secretary of Legation The Dresden.
First Secretary of Legation [ 1300 Kalorama Road.
Third Secretary ' 2300 Kalorama Road.
Attach^ 2300 Kalorama Road.
2300 Kalorama Road.
Senor Don Juan Riano y Gayangos.
SeiiorOon Vicente G.-Amao
Senor Don IMariano de Amoedo y Galar-
mendi.
Major Victoriano Casajus, Royal Spanish Military Attach^.
Army.
Lieutenant Commander Adolfo H. de Sol ds. . Naval Attach<5
Royal Spanish Navy.
Chamberlain to His Majesty
the King of Spain, Amb. E.
and P.
First Secretary of Embassy
Second Secretary
Senor Don Beltran Mathieu.
OfSce of Embassy
Attach^.
Captain Axel F. Wallenberg E. E. and M. P
Mr. P. V. G. Assarsson Counselor of Legation
Mr. Gustaf Weidel ; Commercial Counselor of Le-
gation.
Ofifice of Legation
Mr. Marc Peter i E. E. and M. P
Mr. Leon-Alexandre Girardet
Dr. Ernest Brenner
Office of Legation
Dr. J. Varela
Mr. Hugo V. de Pena .
OfiBce of Legation
Senor Dr. Don Pedro Manuel Arcaya.
Dr. Francisco Gerardo Yanez
Lieutenant Diogenes Morales.
Senor Dr. C. A. Davila
Dr. Ovidio Perez
Office of Legation
First Secretary of Legation. .
Secretary of Legation
E. E. andM. P
First Secretary of Legation.
E. E. andM. P
Counselor of Legation, and
Charge d' Affaires ad in-
terim.
Naval Attach^
Commercial Attache
Attach^
2620 i6th St.
Silver Spring, Md.
Wardman Park Hotel.
The Argonne.
The Calverton, 1673 Co-
lumbia Road.
2249 R St.
1909 19th St.
1723 2ISt St.
2249 R St.
1525 i6th St.
1954 Columbia Road.
191S N St.
2013 Hillyer Place.
1777 Massachusetts Ave.
1801 i6th St.
Rooms 607-608, Federal
American National
Bank Building, 1317
FSt.
2344 Massachusetts Ave.
2344 Massachusetts Ave.
3344 Massachusetts Ave.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
273
XL. FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
(Corrected to June 10, 1925.)
ALBANIA— ARGENTINA
State.
Residence.
ALBANIA.
Massachusetts Boston
New York New York City . .
ARGENTINA.
Alabama Mobile
California j Los Angeles. . .
San Francisco.
Florida.
Georgia. .
Illinois . . .
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi.. . .
Missouri
New York . . . .
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
Apalachicola.
Jacksonville..
Pensacola . . . .
Brunswick . . .
Savannah . . . .
Chicago
New Orleans.
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Gulf port
St. Louis
New York City
Portland....
Philadelphia
Manila
San Juan ...
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Kristo Kirka, Consular Agent.
Constantin Tashko, Consul
Date of rec-
ognition.
G. Russell Ladd, Vice-Consul
H. C. Niese, Vice-Consul
Santos Gofii, Consul-General
For the States of Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Montana; Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Wash-
ington and Wyoming, and the Philippine Islands.
Boutwell Dunlap, Vice-Consul
For California.
William W. Pooser, Vice-Consul
Jurisdiction also in St. Joseph.
George 'W'. Hardee, Vice-Consul
J. Harris Pierpont, Vice-Consul
Rosendo Torras, Vice-Consul
W. H. Morrell, Vice-Consul
Agustin Mariano Ojeda, Consul ,
For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
Mariano Moreno, Vice Consul
Antenor Gercz, Consul-General
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee,
and Texas.
Alfred LeBlanc, Vice-Consul ,
Richard J. Leupold, Vice-Consul ,
For Maryland.
Manuel Gonzalez Durand, Consul
Amancio J. Rivera, Vice Consul ,
Samuel Fitzpatrick, Vice Consul
Guillcnno, Ross, Vice-Consul
For Mississippi.
Gustavo von Brecht, Vice-Consul
Enrique Hayton , Consul-General
For the States of Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Marj'land, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Minnesota, ^lissouri, Nebraska, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Vermont,
West Virginia, Wisconsin, Porto Rico, and the Virgin
Islands,
John A. Lothrop, Vice Consul
Marcial R. Candioti, jr.. Consul
For Pennsylvania.
Guillermo P. Wilson, Vice-Consul
Josd Florentine Fernandez, Vice-Consul
For the Philippine Islands.
Sergio Ramirez, Vice-Consul
For Porto Rico.
July 37,1931
Apr. 30,1933
Mar. 30,1931
Mar. 30, 1909
Jan. 6, 1910
Jan. 30, 1933
Apr. 19, 1906
Feb. 1, 1933
Feb. 10, 1933
Nov. 4, 1933
May 14, 1924
Oct. 30, 1933
Apr. 30, 1906
Apr. 27, 1916
Jan. 13, 1933
Feb. 20, 1933
Feb. 17, 1933
May 37, 192S
Apr. 31,1906
Apr. 39, 1924
Apr. 13, 1933
Oct. 25, 1924
Apr. 19, 1906
May 35,1917
Sept. II, 1911
274
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ARGENTINA— BELGroM.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
ARGENTINA— Continued .
Charleston
A. Beauregard Betancourt, Vice Consul
May
Texas
Port Arthur
Newport News. . . .
Christopher Stephen Flanagan, Vice-Consul
Mar.
May
H. C. Leslie, Vice-Consul
Norfolk
H. C. Leslie,"' in charge of Vice Consulate ■
May
19. 1925
With jurisdiction also in Newport News.
Washington
Seattle
Miguel Alfredo Molina, Consul
Jan.
July
JnViTi P Hfliisman Vinp-PnTKiitl
AUSTRIA.
For the State of Washington.
Nov.
May
3. 1924
Illinois
4. I9»S
For the States of Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Okla-
homa, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wash-
ington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, the territories of Alaska
and Hawaii, the Philippine Islands, the Virgin Islands,
and Porto Rico.
New York
New York City . . .
Friedrich Fischerauer, Consul-General
Feb.
For the States of Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia,
BELGIUM.
and West Virginia.
Birmingham
V. G. Nesbit, Consul
Dec.
For the counties of Bibb, Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee,
Clay, Cleburne, Colbert, Cullman, Dekalb. Etowah,
Fayette, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Lamar, Lau-
derdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, Marion,
Marshall, Morgan, Pickens, Randolph, St. Clair,
Shelby, Talladega, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston.
MoWle
Consul . .
For the counties of Autauga, Baldwin, Barbour, Bul-
lock, Butler, Chambers, Chilton, Choctaw, Clarke,
Coffee, Conecuh, Coosa, Covington, Crenshaw, Dale,
Dallas, Elmore, Escambia, Geneva, Greene, Hale,
Henry, Houston, Lee, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo,
Mobile, Monroe, Montgomery, Perry, Pike, Russell,
Sumter, Tallapoosa, Washington, and Wilcox.
California
Los Angeles
Ch. Winsel, Vice-Consul
Sept.
For Arizona and southern California.
San Francisco
May
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Mon-
tana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
Colorado
Denver
J. Mignolet, Consul
Jan.
3, 1895
For Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming.
Hartford
Nov.
July
Florida
Jacksonville
J. H. Bland, Vice-Consul
12, 1923
For Florida,
Pensacola
H. Hilton Greene, Vice Consul
Nov.
23, 1922
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
BELGIUM.
275
State.
BELGIUM— Continued.
Georgia
Hawaii.
Illinois. .
Iowa
Kentucky . . . .
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota . . . .
Missouri
Nebraska
New York . . . .
Residence
Atlanta .
Savannah .
Honolulu
Chicago . .
Moline.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
H. L. De Give, Consul
For Georgia, except southeastern Georgia.
E. W. Rosenthal, Consul
For the counties of Appling, Berrien, Brooks, Bryan,
Bullock, Burke, Camden, Clinch, Coffee, Colquitt,
Charlton, Chatham, Columbia, Decatur, Dodge,
Dooly, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, Glascock,
Glynn, Hancock, Houston, Irwin, Jefferson, Johnson,
Laurens, Liberty, Lowndes, McDuffie, Mcintosh,
Mitchell, Montgomery, Pierce, Pulaski, Richmond,
Screven, Tattnall, Telfair, Thomas, Twiggs, Ware,
Warren, Washington, Wayne, Wilcox, Wilkinson,
and Worth.
V. Lappe, Vice-Consul
C. Vermeren, Consul
For Illinois, except the Moline consular district, and
Indiana.
C. De Voghelaere, Vice-Consul
For the counties of Adams, Brown, Bureau, Calhoun,
Fulton, Hancock, Henderson, Henry, Knox, McDon-
ough, Mercer, Peoria, Pike, Rock Island, Schuyler,
Stark, and Warren in Illinois; and in Iowa the coun-
ties of Adair, Adams, Appanoose, Cass, Clarke, Davis,
Decatur, Des Moines, Fremont, Henry, Jefferson,
Johnson, Keokuk, Lee, Louisa, Lucas, Madison, Ma-
haska, Jlarion, Mills, Monroe, Montgomery, Musca-
tine, Page, Pottawattamie, Ringgold, Scott, Taylor,
Union, Van Buren, Wapello, Warren, Washington,
and Wayne.
Dubuque N. C. Gindorff, Consul
For Iowa, except the Moline (Illinois) consular district.
Louis Hermann," Acting Vice-Consul
For Kentucky, except the counties of Boone. Kenton,
and Campbell.
H. Dabezies, Consul
For Louisiana and Mississippi.
J. G. Whiteley, Consul
For Delaware and Maryland.
Thomas H. Robbins, Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
P. Boeye, Consul
For Michigan.
O. E. Safford. Consul
For Minnesota.
G. Mignolet, Consul
For Kansas and Kansas City, Mo.
M. Seguin, Consul
For Missouri, except Kansas City.
Omaha ! D. A. Fitch, Consul
For Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
J. Mali, Consul
For the United States, except the districts of the consuls
in New Orleans and San Francisco.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Oct. 8. 1910
Apr. 2, 1914
Louisville.
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston.
Detroit.
Minneapolis.
Kansas City .
St. Louis
June 12, 1920
Mar. 23, 19 IS
Jan. 19, 1923
New York City . . .
May 6, 1924
Mar. 24, 1920
Sept. 17,1923
Feb. 5, 1917
Sept. 13, 1923
July 28, 1919
Jan. 18,1922
Nov. 26,1912
Aug. 12,1913
Sept. 23, 1924
Jan. 5.i9'4
276
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
BELGIUM.
State.
BELGIUM— Continued.
Ohio.
Oklahoma. . .
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands.
Porto Rico.
South Carolina
South Dakota .
Tennessee
Texas
Vireinia
Virgin Islands.
Residence.
Cincinnati.
Cleveland
Oklahoma City
Portland
Philadelphia. .
Pittsburgh.
Manila .
Habana, Cuba.
Mayaguez
San Juan
Charleston .
Sioux Falls.
Memphis...
Galveston . .
Norfolk and New-
port News.
Richmond
St Thomas.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
F. H. Chatfield, Consul
For the counties of Adams, Athens, BroT\'n, Butler, Clark,
Clermont, Clinton, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Gallia,
Greene, Hamilton, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Law-
rence, Meigs, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, Musking-
gum. Noble, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Preble, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton, Warren, and Washington in Ohio.
In Kentucky, the counties of Boone, Campbell and
Kenton.
E. E. Steams, Consul
For the northern counties of Ohio.
Mont F. Highley, Vice-Consul
For Arkansas and Oklahoma.
S. Hill, Honorary Consul-Gemeral
For Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.
C. H. Labbe, \^ice-Consul
Snowden Henry, Consul
For the counties of Adams, Bedford, Berks, Blair,
Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Center, Chester, Clinton,
Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Frank-
lin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Jimiata, Lackawanna,
Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming,
Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Northamp-
ton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike,
Potter, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna,
Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York.
P. Didier, Consul
For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver,
Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw-
ford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana,
Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset,
Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland.
J. Clement, Consul -General
Michael Verlinden," Acting Consul
For the Philippine Islands.
Consul-General . .
For Porto Rico, St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas.
A. Bravo, Vice-Consul
For the Departments of Aguadilla and Mayaguez.
J. Saldana, Consul
For the Departments of Arecibo. Bayamon. Guayama,
Humacao and Ponce, and the island of Vieques.
B. Rutledge, Consul
For North Carolina and South Carolina.
X. Priim, Consul
P. S. McDonald, Consul
M. H. Royston, Consul
For Texas.
P. J. Andre Mottu, Consul
Date of rec-
ognition.
Mar. Si 1924
Feb. 28, 1933
Dec. 8,1919
Apr. 24.1916
Sept. 1,1909
Feb- 20.1924
Fred E. Nolting. Consul
For Virginia and West Virginia.
E. Van Beverhoudt, Consul
For St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas.
Jan. 14, 1932
Dec. 19, 1924
Jan. 8, 1925
Dec. 10, 1908
Nov. 1,1923
Feb. 12,1907
Apr. 16, 1924
Aug. 14,1919
Jan. a, 1910
Feb. 1,191s
Sept. 15, 1909
Oct. 14, 19>t
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES,
BELGIUM-BRAZIL.
277
State.
BELGIUM— Continued
Wasbioston
Wisconsin
BOLIVIA.
Alabama
California
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Missouri
New York
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Porto Rico
Viceinia
Washington
BRAZIL.
Alabama
California
Canal Zone
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mississippi
Missouri
Residence.
Seattle.
Green Bay.
Mobile
Los Angeles . . .
San Diego
San Francisco.
Chicago
New Orleans
Baltimore
Boston
Kansas City
St. Louis
New York City .
Cincinnati
Philadelphia. . .
San Juan
Norfolk
Seattle
Mobile
Los Angeles. . .
San Francisco.
Panama
Femandina. . .
Jacksonville.. .
Pensacola
Brunswick
Savarmah
Honolulu
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
R. Auzias de Turenne, Consul.
J. Hertogs, \'ice-Consul
For Washington.
M. J. Heynen, Consul
For Wisconsin.
T. G. McGonigal, Honorary Vice-Consul
Jorge D. Alberta. Honorary Consul
Philip Morse, Consul
Alberto Palacios, Consul
Manuel Soria Galvarro, Honorary Consul
William Henry Rose, Honorary Vice-Consul.
Gregorio Garret, Consul
Henry B. Wilcox, Honorary Consul
Arthur P. Gushing, Consul
Edwin R. Heath, Honorary Consul
Arnold George Stifel, Honorary Consul
Ramon Paudo, Consul-General
Rodolfo Wurlitzer, Honorary Vice-Consul. . .
Wilfred H. Schoff, Honorary Consul
William A. Waymouth, Honorary Consul
John D. Leitch, Vice-Consul
Antonio Quiroga V., Consul
Chicago .
Louisville. . . .
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston
Gulfport...
Pascagoula.
St. Louis. . .
Truman Gile McGonigal, Vice-Consul
Arthur F. Machado Guimaraes," Consul
Ludwig Mathias Hoefler," Consul
Jorge Domingo Arias Feraud," Consul
John Brown Gordon Hall, Vice-Consul ,
Joel H. Tucker, Vice-Consul
Vicente J. Vidal," Vice-Consul
Commercial Agent .
Lovet R. Potter." Vice-Consul
Antonio Daniel Castro, Consul
For Hawaii.
Alvaro de Magalhaes, Consul
Affonso De Luca. Vice-Consul
Thomas S. Tuley," Vice-Consul
Carlos Ferreira de Araujo, Consul-General
For Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and
Texas.
Carlos Escobciro Femandes," Vice-Consul
George William Chester, Consul
Leon du Bois, Vice-Consul
David William Bicn, Consular Agent
Jayme Mackay de Almeida, Consul
Pedro Mackay d'Almeida, Commercial Ag^ent
Gabriel Bruner Dantzler, Vice-Consul
William Ross, Commercial Agent
Manuel Ros, Vice-Consul
Andrew Gray, Commercial Agent
Fred Wehmiller, Vice-Consul
Jerome Joseph Schotten, Commercial Agent
Date of rec-
ognition.
Feb.
1 3,
I9»0
June
13.
1914
June
39>
1914
June
18,
1914
Nov.
I,
1923
Apr.
I,
1907
Nov.
6,
1911
Oct.
3.
igii
May
27.
1925
Oct.
j8,
1921
Feb.
3.
1933
Nov.
A,
1907
Oct.
16,
1895
Sept.
7r
1913
Nov.
I,
1933
June
14.
1934
June
IS.
189S
Mar.
20,
1924
Jan.
6,
1910
Oct.
7.
1933
Mar.
4>
191a
June
1925
Mar.
3-
1934
Dec.
I,
193]
Oct.
37>
1914
Feb.
18,
1920
Nov.
3.
1919
Mar.
3
1934
May
15-
19IS
Sept.
7
1923
Feb.
aS
1934
June
33
1933
Apr.
9.
1934
Mar.
3
1924
Apr.
9,
1924
Sept.
I,
1931
Apr.
18,
1933
Sept.
12
1924
Oct.
34
1901
May
'1.
1909
Feb.
IS.
1910
Dec.
16,
1 90s
Dec.
'3.
1901
Dec.
39
1934
Nov.
13.
ipii
278
FOREIGN CONSUI.AR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
BRAZIL— CHILE.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
BRAZIL— Continued.
New York
New York .
CHILE.
Calilomia. . .
Canal Zone.
Hawaii
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts .
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
South Carolina . . .
Texas
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
BULGARIA
Illinois
New York City. . Helio Lobo, Consul-Gcneral
For Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Districtof
Columbia, I-Jawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro-
lina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Ten-
nessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Gabriel de Andrade, Vice-Consul
Joao Carlos Muniz, Deputy Consul
Cleveland Carlos W. Brand," Honorary Vice-Consul
Portland John H. Lothrop," Vice-Consul
Philadelphia ] Eduardo de Aguiar Vallim, Consul
Henry C. Sheppard," Vice-Consul
Manila J. M. Poizat, Consul
San Juan Waldemar E. Lee, Vice-Consul
Albert Edward Lee, Commercial Agent
Charleston Robert G. Rhett, jr.,« Vice-Consul
Galveston Fred M. Burton, Vice-Consul
Port Arthur Christopher Stephen Flanagan, Vice-Consul. . .
Richard Patrick Flanagan, Commercial Agent
Alfredo Polzin, Consul
E. T. Robinson, Vice-Consul
Harry Arthur Keitz, Vice-Consul
Oscar Correia, Consul
John D. Gordon, Vice-Consul
Richmond Fitzhugh Carter Lafferty," Consul
St. Thomas George Levi.", Consul
Seattle W^. L. Nossman," Vice-Consul
Newport News .
Norfolk.
Chicago.
New York City .
vSan Francisco.
Cristobal
Honolulu ....
Chicago
New Orleans.
Baltimore
Boston
Marquis Eaton, Honorary Consul-General
For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illi-
nois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota,
Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Neal Dow Becker, Honorary Consul-General
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Colum-
bia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
Mar>'land, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennes-
see, Vermont, and West Virginia.
Marcos Garcia Huidobro, Consul
Carlos Edwards Vives, Consul-General
Jorge Peiia Castro, Consul
J. W. Waldron, Consul
M. H. Ehlert, Consul
Domingo Peiia Toro, Consul
Heman Besa Montt, Consul
Hemdn Besa Montt, Consul
May 33, 192c
Aug.
14.
1922
Sept.
7.
1920
May
13.
1922
June
20,
1923
Jan.
3.
1923
Mar.
3
1924
June
7.
1913
June
27.
19OS
May
3,
1914
Aug.
3>
1931
Feb.
18,
1920
Nov.
31,
1911
Nov.
13.
191 5
Apr.
8,
1924
Mar.
32,
1923
Dec.
29.
1924
Apr.
8.
1924
May
16,
192 1
May
28,
1921
Apr.
9.
1919
June
— .
1925
May
15
1924
Apr. 16, 1923
May 24, 1920
Aug. 21, 1924
May 18, 1925
May 27, 1912
Jan. II, 1912
Mar. 20, 1922
Nov. n, 1922
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
CHILE— COLOMBIA.
State
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
CHILE— Continued.
Michigan Detroit Consul
Missouri St. Louis [ F. Ernesto Cramer, Consul May lo, 1923
New Jersey Newark 1 Federico Tonkin, Consul Nov. 20, 1919
New York Buffalo Consul. .
New York City ... Gustavo Munizaga Varela, Consul-General Aug,
j For the United States.
Ohio Cincinnati | Francisco Pefia," in charge of Consulate JIar. 4.1924
For the State of Ohio.
Enrique Busies, Consul .
A. Malvehy, Consul
Pennsylvania Philadelphia.
Philippine Islands Manila
Porto Rico ' San Juan | Waldemar E. Lee, Consul
Carlos Lavandero, Consul
Jurisdiction also in Newport News.
Virginia Norfolk
Washington Seattle
CHINA.
California San Francisco. .
Canal Zone Panama
Hawaii Honolulu
New York New York City
Oregon Portland .
Philippine Islands Manila . . .
Washington Seattle
COLOMBIA.
Alabama Mobile
California Berkeley
Los Angeles. . .
i San Francisco.
Illinois ; Chicago
Indiana Indianapolis .
South Bend..
Louisiana | New Orleans.
Maryland
Massachusetts.
Michigan.. .
Missouri. . . .
New Jersey.
New York . .
Baltimore.
Boston
Detroit
St. Louis
Englewood
New York City.
June II, 1924
Jan. 4, 1906
Aug. 21, 1924
Oct. 24, 1922
Arturo Rios, Consul
For Washington and Oregon.
Koliang Yih, Consul General ■ Mar. 23, 1923
Consul-General . .
Tan Shueh Hsu, Consul Apr. 16, 1919
Ziangling Chang, Consul General Apr. 13, 1923
Vice-Consul . .
Moy Back Hin, Honorary Consul Nov. 16, 1906
Lingoh Wang," Consul-General ' May 18, 1925
For the Philippine Islands.
Joe Tang Li," Vice-Consul Mar. 3, 1317
Goon Dip, Honorary Consul Mar. i, 1 509
Juan Llorca Marti, Consul
Consul. .
Roberto R. Rudas, Consul
Alvaro Rebolledo, Consul-General
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Mon-
tana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washing-
ton, and Wyoming.
Alberto Benavides Guerrero, Consul
Manuel V. Gallego y Gutierrez, Consul
Fernando L. Mcndcz, Consul
Diego Jose Fallon, Consul-General
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Teimes-
see, and Texas.
Roberto Forero V^lez, Consul
Enrique Naranjo M., Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode
Island.
Arthur P. Cashing, Vice-Consul
William J. GrifKths.u Consul
R. P. Serrano," in charge of Consulate
Joseph J. Day, Consul
Gabriel Valencia, Consul-General
For the United States except the New Orleans and San
Francisco jurisdictions.
Carlos Casablanca, Vicc-Consul
Nov. 17, i;oj
Jan. 21.1924
Feb. 16,1924
June 19, 1923
Jan. 3, 1925
Apr. 30, 1924
Feb. 16, 1924
Feb. 17, 1931
July 28, 1919
Apr. 19, 1918
May 3, 1919
May 2, 1919
May II, 1923
Dec. 3, 1924
May 14, 1934
28o
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
COLOMBIA— CUBA.
State.
COLOMBIA— Continued
Pennsylvania ,
Porto Rico
Texas
Wisconsin
COSTA RICA.
•Alabama
California
Canal Zone ,
Connecticut
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Missouri
Xew York
Ohio ,
Pennsylvania ,
Porto Rico ,
Texas
Virginia
Wisconsin
CUBA.
Alabama ,
California
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia. . .
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisiana.
Maryland.
Residence.
Phiadelphia.
Sa-n Juan
Houston ....
Milwaukee. .
Mobile.
Los Angeles. .
San Diego
San Francisco
Cristobal
Meriden
Chicago
New Orleans.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Octavio Diaz Valenzuela.u Consul. . .
Miguel Guerra Mondragon, Consvd. .
T. L. Evans, Honorary Vice-Consul.
Palmer D. Brong, Consul
Truman G. McGonigal, Consul
Thomas D. Nettles, Vice-Consul
Carlos Enrique Bobertz, Consul
Vice Consul. .
Ruben Gonzalez Flores, Consul- General
Enrique Pucci Paoli, Honorar/ Consul
Francisco Villafranca Carazo, Consul
Berthold Singer, Consul
Ramon Bedoya Monge, Honorary Consul-General
Julio Aguilar Soto, Consul
John Marshall Quintero, Vice-Consul
For Louisiana.
Baltimore i William A. Riordan, Consul
Boston
Kansas City
St. Louis
New York City.
Toledo .
Mario Sancho Jimenez, Consul
Ezequias Madrigal Mora, Honorary Consul.
Salvador Cerda Mufloz, Honorary Consul. . .
ilanuel Antonio BoniUa, Consul-General . . .
Vice-Consul. .
Felipe Molina Larios, Honorary Consul
Philadelphia | Timoteo Vaca Seydel, Honorary Consul
San Juan Francisco Ramirez de Arellano, Honorary Consul
Fort Worth Vice-ConsuL
Galveston Consul.
Houston Ricardo de Villafranca, Honorary Consul
Norfolk I Harry Reyner, Honorary Consul
With jurisdiction also in Newport News.
Milwaukee Eduardo Azuola Aubert, Consul-General
Edward J. Menge, Vice-Consul
Racine Wilfred Seng, Honorary Vice Consul
Mobile Andres Jimenez y Ruz, Consul
Los Angeles Jos^ S. Saenz y Macho, Honorary Consul. . . .
San Francisco Gabriel Angel Amenabar y Cabello, Consul.
Washington i Cayetano de Quesada y Socarris, Consul. . . .
Fernandina Augustus Oswald Bailey, Honorary Consul .
Jacksonville Julio Rodriguez Embil, Consul
Key West. . . .
Miami
Pensacola ....
Tampa
Domingo J. Milord y Vazquez, Consul
Miguel Caballero y Valdds, Honorary Consul .
Manuel Arias y Perez de Alejo, Consul
Angel A. Solano y Garcia, Consul
i For Port Tampa also.
Atlanta Guy King, Honorary Consul
Brunswick i Rosendo Torres, Honorary Consul
Savannah ....
Chicago
Louisville. . . .
William McLane Coolidge, Honorary Consul.
Jose A. Mufioz y Riera," Acting Consul
Richard P. Cane, Honorary Consul
New Orleans Eduardo Patterson y Jduregui, Consul
Baltimore Eduardo L. Desvernine, Consul
Date of rec-
ognition.
May 25, 192s
Oct. 6, 1924
Mar. 31, 1925
Nov. 29, ig2a
Sept.
Sept.
Dec.
July
Feb.
Feb.
Aug.
Sept.
Feb.
Nov.
June
Feb.
Mar.
Sept.
Jan.
Sept.
May
Mar.
Aug.
July
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Mar.
May
May
Dec.
Sept.
Jan.
June
Feb.
May
June
Sept.
Jan.
May
Nov.
Jan.
Mar.
July
8, 1911
8, 191 1
a6, 19 II
31. 1924
25. 1925
2, 1921
2, 1899
15, 1924
7, 1921
IS. 1897
36, 1896
4. I921
21, 1925
15. 1924
15.1924
aS, 193a
9, 1923
13, 192*
1924
1909
1923
1923
1924
1921
1917
1923
1923
1921
1930
1919
1930
1923
1919
1931
1904
1917
1924
igo6
1923
1914
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
CUBA— DENMARK.
281
State.
Residence.
CUBA— Continued.
Massachusetts Boston.
Michigan Detroit.
Mississippi Gulf port
Pascagoula
Missouri Kansas City
St. Louis
New York New York City . .
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Pennsylvania Philadelphia
Porto Rico.
Arecibo . . . .
Mayaguez..
Ponce
San Juan.. .
Charleston.
South Carolina
Tennessee ] Chattanooga . . . .
Texas Galveston
Virginia Newport News. .
I Norfolk
Virgin Islands , St. Thomas
Federico Sanchez y Guerra, Consul Apr.
Consul. .
Archibald Ogilvie Thompson, Honorary Consul May
Jose R. Cabrera y Bcquer, Consular Agent I Sept.
Clarence S. Palmer, Honorary Consul June
Alberto G. .Vbreu y Sanchez, Consul [ Nov.
Felipe Taboada y Ponce de Leon, Consul-General Mar.
For the United States.
Mario del Pino y Sandrino, Consul June
Higinio J. Medrano y Polanco, Vice-Consul Apr.
Pedro P. Perez y Blanco, Vice-Consul Oct.
Jose A. Ramos y Aguirre, Consul Feb.
With jurisdiction over Wilmington, Del.
Fernando Aleman y Vailed, Honorary Consul I Jan.
June
Mar.
Feb.
Mar.
Aug.
Jaime Annexi Iglesias, Consular Agent
Eugenio Dominguez y Torres, Consul
Jose M. Gonzalez y Rodriguez del Rey, Consul
Leopoldo Dolz y de Veze, Consul
Bernard Eugene Jennings, Consular Agent
Francisco Rayneri y Perez, Consul , Mar.
Pedro Firmat y Cabrero, Consul | Nov.
Jose A. Munoz y Riera, Consul Dec.
Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miller, Honorary Consul I July
8, 193 1
18, 1930
14. 1923
1, 1916
10,1923
30, 1930
7. 1923
4. 1931
6, 1931
38, 1933
39, 1904
18,1933
13, 1923
10, 1933
3. 1923
14, 1931
10, 1923
36. 1917
18,1919
10. 1918
CZECHOSLOVAKIA I
Illinois Chicago
Nebraska
Omaha.
New York \ New York City .
Ohio.
Pennsylvania.
DANZIG, FREE CITY OF.
The diplomatic and consular
representatives of Poland have
charge of the interests of the
Free City of Danzig in the
United States.
DENMARK.
Alabama Mobile.
Cleveland .
Pittsburgh .
Jaroslav Snietanka, Consul Oct. 30, 1930
For Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Missouri
Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin.
Stanley Serpan," Consul Feb. 3, 1931
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho,
Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota. Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Philippine
Islands, South Dakota, Utah, Washington and
Wyoming.
Karel Neubert," Acting Consul Jan. 31, 1925
For Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and Virgin Islands.
Bohuslav BartoSovsk^'. Consul Nov. 13, 1930
For .\labama, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio,
and Tennessee.
Milan Getting (Attache at Washington), in charge of
Consulate.
For Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Thomas Cunningham Thomsen, Vice-Consul.
For Alabama.
June 26, 1920
282
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
DENMARK.
State.
DENM ARK— Com inued .
California.
Canal Zone .
Colorado
Florida. ...
Georgia.
Hawaii .
Illinois.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota. . . .
Missouri
Nebraska
New York
North Dakota . . . .
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
South Carolina.
Boston.
Detroit.
Los Angeles Ryan Asger Grut," in charge of Vice Consulate
San Francisco Fin Lund, Consul
For Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, and Oregon,
Colon J. V. Beverhoudt," Acting Vice Consul
Panama Samuel Levy Maduro,« in charge of Consulate
Denver Julius Frederik Rasmussen, Vice-Consul
For Colorado.
Pensacola Carl McKenzie Oerting, Vice-Consul
For Florida.
I Savannah Aage Georg Schroder, Vice Consul
Honolulu Christian Hedemann, Consul
For Hawaii.
Chicago ." Reimiuid Batunann, Consul
For Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne-
braska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wiscon-
sin, and Wyoming.
New Orleans Ingemann Olsen, Consid
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas.
Baltimore Holger A. Koppcl, Vice-Constil
For Maryland.
Andreas J. Blom," Acting Vice Consul
For Massachusetts.
Victor Olsen, Vice-Consul
For Michigan.
Minneapolis Thomas Jensen Skellet, Vice-Consul
For Minnesota.
St. Louis P. Ibsen, Vice-Consul ,
For Missouri.
Omaha Frank W. Lawson, Vice-Consul
For Nebraska.
New York City . . . Georg Bech, Consul- General
Johan Oluf, Vice-Consul
Mads Henningsen, Vice-Consul.
For Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, JIaine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
Grand Forks Marinus Rasmussen, Vice-Consul
For North Dakota and South Dakota.
Portland Henry Harkson, Vice-Consul
For Oregon.
Mathias Moe, Vice-Consul
For Pennsylvania.
Rudolph Riis,n Acting Consul
Antonio Roig, Vice-Consul
Albert Bravo, Vice-Consul
Albert Armstrong, Vice-Consul
Thomas G. I. Waymouth, Consul
For Porto Rico.
Cha,rleston William Counsil BuUard, Vice Consul
For South Carolina.
Philadelphia.
Manila. . .
Humacao ,
Mayaguez
Ponce. . ..
San Juan.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
DENMARK— ECUADOR.
283
State.
DENMARK— Continued.
Texas . . .
Utah ...
Virginia .
Virgin Islands
Washington
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Alabama
California.. .
Canal Zone .
Illinois.
Louisiana..
Maryland. .
New York.
Texas.
Virginia
Virgin Islands.
ECUADOR.
California .
Canal Zone.
Residence.
Pennsylvania Philadelphia .
Porto Rico Aguadilla. ...
Arecibo
Galveston
Port Arthur
Salt Lake City...
Newport News.. .
Norfolk
St. Thomas .
Seattle
Mobile
San Francisco.
Colon
Panama
Chicago
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Hans Kofoed Guldmann, Vice-Consul
N. M. Nielsen, Vice-Consul
Thorvald Orlob. Vice-Consul
For Utah.
Thomas S. Braband," Acting Vice-Consul
Walter Knox, Vice Consul
For Virginia.
F. V. H. Laub.t in charge of Consulate-General .
For the Virgin Islands.
Henning Plaun, Consul
For Alaska and Washington.
New Orleans . . . .
Baltimore
New York City .
Guanica...
Humacao .
Mayagiiez .
Ponce
San Juan.
Beaumont
Galveston
Houston
Norfolk and New-
port News.
St. Croix
St. Thomas
Los Angeles. . .
San Francisco.
Colon
Panama
Chicago
New Orleans . .
Illinois
Louisiana
New York 1 New York Cit y .
Pennsylvania j Philadelphia . . .
Virginia i Norfolk
T. G. McGonigal, Vice-Consvl
John Barneson, Honorary Consul
Joshua Jesurum Henriquez, Honorary Vice-Consul.
Mauricio Benjamin Fidanque, Honorary Consul
Frederick W. Job, Vice-Consul
Rene Rodriguez, Honorary Vice-Consul
Manuel de Jesus Fiallo, Cousiil
William A. Riordan, Vice-Consul
Rafael Diaz, Consul-General
Carlos Virgilio Pou, Vice-Consul
For the United States.
Rodman Wanamaker, Consul
Eduardo Fronteras, Vice-Consul
Fernando Aleman, Honorary Vice-Consul
Enloe L. Lowry, Honorary Vice-Consul
Jos^ Mendez, Honorary Vice-Consul
E. P. Rousset, Honorary Consul
O. Alvarez Mainardi, Consul
Bias C. Silva, Vice-Consul
Rafael Ortiz Arzeno, Consul-General
For Porto Rico.
Leopoldo Castellanos, Honorary Vice-Consul
A. Sevilla, Honorary Vice-Consul
T. L. Evans, Honorary Consul
Harry Reynor, Vice-Consul
H. A. Delemos, Vice-Consul
Emile A. Berne, Honorary Consul
J. Percy Souffront, Honorary Vice-Consul.
Victor M. Egas, Honorary Consul . .
Jose I. Seminario, Consul-General..
Ricaurte Zaval.w Honorary Consul.
Colon VAoy Alfara, Consul-General. .
.Consul.
Ismael Aviles, Consul-General
Luis Arteta G., Consul-Gcncral
Luis A. Mata.w Consul • •
William H. Schmitt, Honorray Vice-Consul.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Nov.
30,1911
Mar.
31. 1933
Feb.
31I909
June
S. i9as
Apr.
18,1918
Apr.
36, 1930
Oct.
7. J9»4
Sept.
>3»I9II
Sept.
a. 1913
June
17,1931
Mar.
7. 192a
Sept.
8,1900
Sept.
33, 1924
Dec.
39, 1934
July
9,1900
Oct.
4. 1924
Oct.
4.I9J4
July
10, 1908
July
10, I9I3
Mar.
1,1913
Aug.
30, 1930
May
>3. 1933
Dec.
18,1919
Dec.
19. 1924
Oct.
3.1913
Aug.
30, 1924
Jime
10, 1933
Apr.
7. 1924
June
11,1934
Dec.
5,1908
Sept,
14, 1923
Apr.
33,1918
June
14, 1924
May
24. 1924
Apr.
3.192s
Mar.
21,192s
Feb.
14. 192S
Aug.
31,1924
Feb.
14. 192.';
Jan.
13, 1918
Apr.
8, 1934
32952—25-
-19
I
284
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
EGYPT— FRANCE.
State.
EGYPT.
New York.
ESTHONIA.
New York .
FINLAND.
California .
Canal Zone .
TUinois
Massachusetts .
Michigan.
Montana
New York
Ohio
Oregon ,
Washington ,
FRANCE.
Alabama
California ,
Canal Zone
Colorado. . .
Florida
Georgia....
Hawaii . . . .
lUinoia...
Residence.
New York City . . .
New York City,
San Francisco.
Chicago.
Boston.
Calumet .
Detroit. .
Duluth . .
Roberts
New York City . . .
Ashtabula Harbor
Astoria
Portland .
Seattle...
Birmingham . .
Mobile
Los Angeles. . .
San Diego
San Francisco.
Panama. .
Denver
Pensacola .
Tampa....
Savannah.
Honolulu .
Chicago . . .
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Ramses Chafey, Consul.
Victor Mutt (Secretary of Legation), in charge oi Consulate.
Jarl Arthur Lindfors, Vice Consul
For Arizona, California, and Nevada, Hawaii, Philip-
pine Islands, and other insular possessions of the
United States in the Pacific Ocean.
Ramon Arias-Feraud, jr.. Consul
Elmer A. Forsberg, Consul
Oscar Hayskar. Vice-Consul
For Illinois and Indiana.
John Alfred Anderson, Vice-Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Charles Oscar Jackola, Consul
For the upper peninsula of Michigan.
Charles A. Bartanen, Vice-Consul
For the lower peninsula of Michigan.
Aaro Johannes Jalkanen, Consul
For Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Teimessee,
Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Albert Budas, Vice-Consul
For Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming.
Kaarlo Fredrik Aaltio, Consul-General
For the United States and its dependencies.
Edvin Lundstrom, Vice-Consul
Charles Johan Potti, Vice-Consul
For Kentucky and Ohio.*
Werner Fellman, Consul
For Oregon.
Vice-Consul . .
Alarik Wilhelm Quist, Vice-Consul
For Washington and Alaska.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Apr. 9, 1924
Feb. 15,1931
Aug.
Mar.
Mar.
5,1921
31. 1924
31. 1924
May 24,1921
Simon Klotz, Consular Agent
C. J. Wheeler, Consular Agent
Louis Sentous, jr.. Consular Agent
Jean Baptist Talabct, Consul Agent
Maurice Heilmann, Consul-General
For Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada,
New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.
Emmanuel Leonce Neuville, Consul
A. Bourquin, Consular Agent
George Westerby Howe, Consular Agent ,
Ernest W. Monrose, Consular Agent ,
Alexis Nicolas, Consular Agent
Auguste Marques," Honorary Consul
Antonin Barthelemy, Consul
For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mich-
igan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota.
Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Jan.
»7. 192s
Feb.
14. 192 s
Jan.
31. 1925
May
Apr.
June
May
3. 192a
20, 1923
12,1923
23,1921
Nov. 14, 1923
June 12,1930
Aug. 17, 1894
May 6, 1913
Aug. 27, 1910
July 18, 1924
Mar. ti, 1925
Apr. 1, 1925
Mar. 24, 19c J
Oct. 3, 190s
June 5, 190S
Apr. 13, 1906
Sept, 6,1912
Sept. 26, 19 1 6
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
FRANCE— GERMANY.
285
State.
Residence,
FRANCE— Continued.
Kentucky : Lotiisville
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Louisiana.
Baton Rouge.
New Orleans.
Maine Portland
Maryland ! Baltimore. . ,
Massachusetts j Boston ,
Michigan Detroit
Minnesota [ St. Paul
Mississippi I Gulfport . . . .
Missouri i Kansas City
New York .
Ohio.
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent. .
Ernest Maurice de Simonin, Consul
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas.
Ernest de Beaufort le Prohon, Consular Agent
Leonce Rabillon, Consular Agent
Joseph J. Flamand, Consular Agent
Joseph Belanger, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. .
John Emmanuel Paoli, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. .
St. Louis Marc Francois E"g(?ne Seguin, Consular Agent
Buffalo Charles P. Franchot, Consular Agent
New York City . .
Maxime Anatole Aristide Mongendre, Consul-General
For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
Vice-Consul . .
Jean ten Have, Consular Agent
Cincinnati....
Cleveland Edouard Jacquet, Consular Agent
Oregon Portland Charles Henri Labb^, Consular Agent
Pennsylvania I Philadelphia Maiu'ice Emile Auguste Paillard.u Consul
For Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,
South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Aimd Jules Jean-Baptiste Leteve, Consular Agent
Manila Antoine Valentini, Consul
Arecibo Eugdne EHe Lefranc, Consular Agent
Mayagiiez Eugene Orsini, Consular Agent
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
Texas.
Pittsburgh.
Vieques
Brownsville.
Virginia.
Virgin Islands .
Washington. . .
GERMANY.
Alabama..
California.
Ponce Antoine Quilichine, Consular Agent
San Juan Dominique Francois Auguste Forcioli, Consul
For Porto Rico.
Ch. Petit Le Brun, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. .
Dallas Jean Baptiste Adoue, Consular Agent
El Paso Jean Marie Romagny, Consular Agent
Galveston P. A. Drouilhet, Consular Agent
Houston Georges Pierre Ferdinand Jouine, Consular Agent
San Antonio Alfred Sanner, Consular Agent
Norfolk : Rend Raoul Denizet, Consular Agent
Jurisdiction includes Newport News and Portsmouth.
St. Thomas Emile Arthur Beme," Consular Agent
Seattle Marcel R. Daly," in charge oi Consulate
For Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska.
Tacoma Consular Agent.
Mobile Robert t)u Mont, Consul
For Alabama.
Los Angeles Siegfried C. Hagen, Consul
For the counties of Imperial, Kern, Los Angeles, Orange,
Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis
Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura,
Kurt Ziegler, Consul-General
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Mon-
tana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washing-
ton, and Wyoming.
San Francisco.
Date of rec-
ognition.
May 19,1923
Feb. 9, 1887
Apr. 14, 1896
Oct. 10, 1906
Apr. 15, 1889
July 27, 1907
Oct. I, I9i»
Sept. 33, 1931
Feb. 14, 1925
May 14, 1924
May 31. i9»3
Jime 1, 1899
Apr. 7, 1935
Aug, 19, 1931
July 1, 1924
Dec. II, 191 1
Sept. 3, 1934
Aug. 25, 1923
Oct. 19, 1931
Dec. 30, 1906
May 24, 1897
Dec. 9, 1909
Apr. 22, 1920
Nov. 14, 1934
Feb. 16,1911
Feb. 14,192*
Apr. IS, 1924
May — , 192s
Aug. 16,1933
Feb. 28, 1923
Apr. 34, 1922
286
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
GERMANY— GREAT BRITAIN.
State.
GERMANY— Continued
Canal Zone
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland
New York
Ohio
Oregon
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
South Carolina
Texas
Virginia
GREAT BRITAIN
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Residence.
Bilbao.
Pensacola .
Savannah.
Chicago .
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
New York City .
Cleveland .
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Ernst Neumann, Consul
For the Port of Bilbao, including the Pacific part of
the Canal Zone.
Gerhard RoUs, Consul
For Florida.
Julius Carl Schwarz, Consul
For Georgia.
Rudolph Steinbach, Consul General
For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minne-
sota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Consul . .
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida. Georgia, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.
Consul. .
For Delaware, Maryland, and the District of Colimibia.
Karl Lang, Consul-General
Erich Kraske.u Consul
For Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jer-
sey, New York, Ohio, Pennyslvania, Rhode Island,
Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Louis J. Litzler, Vice Consul
For Cleveland.
Clemens Julius Pape, Consul
Edgar Viegelmann.u, Consul
Friedrich Schomburg, Consul
Charleston 1 Ernst Steinke, Consul
For North Carolina and South Carolina.
Julius W. Jockusch, Consul
For that part of the State of Texas situated east or south
of the counties of Brazoria, Collin, Freestone, Grayson,
Grimes, Harris, Henderson, Jackson, Kaufman, Leon,
Madison, Matagorda, Montgomery, Nueces, Refugio,
Rockwall, San Patricio, and Victoria and including
these counties.
Carl Luetcke, Consul
For that part of the State of Texas situated west, north,
or south of the counties of Brazoria, Collin, Freestone,
Grayson, Grimes, Harris, Henderson, Jackson, Kauf-
man, Leon, Madison, Matagorda, Montgomery,
Nueces, Refugio, Rockwall, San Patricio, and Vic-
toria, and excluding these counties.
Leopold Marshall von Schilling, Vice-Consul
For Newport News, Norfolk, and Portsmouth.
Date of rec-
ognition.
June 2, 1925
Aug 16,1923
Sept. 14, 1923
Apr. 24, 1922
Portland.
Manila . . ,
San Juan
Galveston.
San Antonio .
Newport News.
Birmingh .m.
Mobile
Skagway.
Douglas..
Cyrus Pittman Orr, Vice-Consul
Thomas Mclntyre Ross, Vice-Consul .
C. H. B. Chandler, Pro-Consul
George Hermann Jliller, Vice-Consui.
For Alaska.
Alexander Baird. jr.. Vice-Consul. . . .
July
Feb.
29, 1921
21, 192J
Jan. 8,1924
Apr.
1. 1925
Nov.
SjI923
Feb.
17. I9«
Sept.
5.1933
Oct. 23, 1923
Aug. 16, 1923
Oct.
30,
1917
Jan.
13.
1933
Feb.
14.
192s
Apr.
2,
1921
Mar. 1, 1923
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN.
287
State.
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued.
California
Canal Zone .
Colorado
Connecticut
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia.
Hawaii.
Illinois.
Louisiana.
Maine. .. .
Maryland.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Los Angeles Godfrey Arthur Fisher, Consul •
For the counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange,
Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Bar-
bara, and Ventura, and the State of Arizona.
Eivion Hugh Davies, Vice-Consul
Harold Edings Beard, Vice-Consul
Charles Thompson, Pro-Consul
San Diego John Ashton Heap, Vice-Consul
San Francisco Gerald Campbell. Ccnsul-Geiieral
For California (except the counties included in the juris-
diction of the Consulate at Los Angeles), Nevada, and
Utah.
Cyril Hubert Cane, Vice-Consul
Colon Hugh Alexander Ford, Consul
Ernest Alexander de Comeau, Vice-Consul
Panama Charles Braithwaite Wallis, Consul- General
Reginald Keith Jopson, Vice-Consul
Egerton Shaw Humber, Vice-Consul
Archibald Wallace Robertson, Acting Vice-Consul
Denver Harry Crebbin, Vice-Consul
Hartford \'ice-Consul . .
Washington John Campbell Thomson, Acting Vice-Consul
Jacksonville Walter Mucklow, Consul
J. H. H. Bland, Pro-Consul
Key West W. J. H. Taylor, Vice-Consul
Miami Lewis Arthur Gates, Vice-Consul
Pensacola William Dodson Howe, Vice-Consul
Tampa Peter Taylor, Vice-Consul
Atlanta Sydney Entwistle Kay, Consul
For Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and in Florida the counties of Brevard,
Broward, Dade, Duval, Flagler, Nassau, Palm Beach,
St. Johns, St. Lucie, and Volusia.
Brunswick Andrew Miller Ross, Vice-Consul
Darien Robert Manson, Vice-Consul
Savannah Wentworth Martin Gumey, Consul
Richard William Holt, Vice-Ccnsul
Honolulu William Massy Royds, Consul
For Hawaii.
Chicago Herbert Arthur Richards, Consul-General
For Illinois, Indiana. Iowa, Minnesota. Nebraska, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
John Gamett Lomax, Vice-Consul
Douglas Gerald Rydings, Vice-Consul
New Orleans Victor Henry St. John Huckin, Consul- General
For Florida (except the counties of Brevard, Brow-
ard, Dade, Duval, Flagler, Nassau, Palm Beach, St.
Johns, St. Lucie, and Volusia), Louisiana, and Mis-
sissippi.
William Edward Belton, Vice-Consul
Harold Couch Swan, Vice-Consul
William Percy Taylor Nurse, Pro-Consul
Portland John Bernard Keating, Consul
For all the ports of entry in Maine.
Baltimore Guy Basil Gilliat-Smith, Consul
For Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Date of recog-
nition.
Feb. 12.1924
Apr. 17.1925
Sept. 33, 1924
Jan. 6, 193J
Oct. 10, 1913
Dec.
28,
1922
May
22,
1925
May
22,
1925
May
22,
192s
May
22,
1925
May
22,
1925
Feb.
5.
1925
Nov.
S.
1919
Apr.
10,
1924
Feb.
18,
1931
Mar.
9.
1925
Apr.
5-
1887
July
3.
1924
June
25,
1913
Oct.
15.
1920
Mar.
17.
1925
Aug. 23,1920
Jan. 4,1898
Mar. 17. 1925
Dec. 14,1923
Feb. 20, 1920
May 22, 1924
Sept. II, 1923
May 22, 1924
Mar. 17, 1925
Oct. 10, 1916
Nov. 28, 1924
July 19,1921
Feb. 18, 1920
Apr. 5, 1924
288
FOREIGN CONSUI/AR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued.
Massachusetts
Michigan .
Minnesota
Missouri. .
Nebraska. .
NeT7 York.
North Carolina
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania..
Philippine Islands.
Detroit
Duluth
Kansas City . . .
St. Louis
Omaha
Buffalo
New York City
Wilmington.
Cleveland. . .
Astoria
Portland
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Cebu
Iloilo
Manila ....
Zamboanga, Min-
danao.
Edward Francis Gray, Consul-General
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
James Arthur Brannen, Vice-Consul
Cecil Charles Arthur Lee, Acting Vice-Consul
John Alexander Cameron, Consul
Arthur Impey, Vice-Consul
For Michigan and Ohio.
Colin Thomson, Vice-Consul
Reginald Thomas Davidson," Vice-Consul
Godfrey Edward Proctor Hertslet, Consul
For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri,
and Oklahoma, and the city of East St, Louis, 111.
William Keene Small, Vice-Consul
Mathew Alexander Hall, Vice-Consul
William Henry James Cole, Vice-Consul
Henry Gloster Armstrong, Consul-General
For Connecticut, New Jersey (with the exception of the
counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem), and New
York.
Lewis Edward Bemays, Consul
James Douglas Scott, Consul
Cyril Herbert Alfred Marriott, Vice-Consul
Francis E. Evans, Acting Vice-Consul
John Penmordam Maine, Acting Vice-Consul
John Cockbum Curtis, Acting Vice-Consul
J. Deans, Acting Vice-Consul
Walter Payne Sprunt, Vice-Consul
Horatio Fitzroy Chisholm, Vice-Consul
Edward Mackay Cherry, Vice-Consul
John Elliot Bell, Consul
James Cormack, Pro-Consul
For Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington.
Frederick Watson, Consul-General
For Delaware, Pennsylvania, and in New Jersey, the
counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem.
Edward Waring Wilson, Vice-Consul
Theodore Harold Fox, Vice-Consul
Arthur Cyril Hemsley, Vice-Consul
Samuel Robert Manley, Acting Vice-Consul
Charles Hyde, Consul
Alexander McCuUoch Stewart, Acting Vice-Consul
Harold Walford, Acting Vice-Consul
Thomas Joseph Harrington, Consul-General
For the Philippine Islands.
Paul Dalrymple Butler, Vice-Consul
Reginald McPherson Austin, Vice-Consul
Cyril Quartus Darragh, Acting Vice-Consul
Maberly Esler Dening, Acting Vice-Consul
Clive Kingcome, Proconsul
John Nowell Sidebottom," Pro-Consul
William James Adam, Acting Vice-Consul
Jan. 11,1923
Jan. s, igao
Nov. 28, 1924
May 22, 1924
Mar. 26, 1925
Jan. 5, 1921
May 13, 1922
Mar. 17, 1915
Jan. S3, 1914
Feb. 17. 1898
Oct. II, 1909
May 22, 1914
Mar.
19, 1921
Feb.
2,1924
Dec.
13. 1924
Sept.
3. i9»o
Oct.
11, 192 1
Oct
16, 1912
Dec.
19, 1924
Nov.
II, 1922
June
26, 1922
Jan.
s. 1909
Oct.
13.1923
Apr.
18, 192s
May
22, 1924
Sept. 9, 1909
Apr. 18, 1916
Apr. 23, 192s
Feb. 18, 1920
Feb. 21, 1925
Dec 8, 1924
May 29, 1923
May 16,1921
Apr. 4, 1921
July 7, 1924
Mar. 15, 1923
June 2, 1924
Sept. 14, 1918
Oct. 18,1915
July 13, 1931
FOREIGN CONSUI^AR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN— GREECE.
289
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
P
GREAT BRITAIN— Continued
Porto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Texas
Ponce
San Juan.
Providence.
Charleston. ,
Dallas
El Paso
Galveston..
Laredo
Port Arthur.
Utah
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
GREECE,
California
Colorado
District of Columbia
Georgia
Illinois
Massachusetts
Missouri
New York
Ohio
Salt Lake City.
Newport News.
Norfolk
Richmond
Frederiksted . . .
St. Thomas
Grays Harbor .
Seattle
Tacoma .
San Francisco.
Denver
Washington.
Atlanta
Chicago.
Boston.
St. Louis
New York City.
Cleveland.
Fernando Miguel Toro, Vice-Consul
Arthur Henry Noble, Consul
For Porto Rico.
Henry Joseph Church Dubois, Vice-Consul
James Cuthbert Roach, Vice-Consul
Matthew Gill, Vice-Consul
Fenwick Clementison Hunnam, Vice-Consul
Julius Basil Browiie, Consul
For New Mexico and Texas.
Samuel Wythe Barnes, Vice-Consul
Thomas O'Conner, Vice-Consul
William Edward Courtenay Crossland, Vice-Consul
With jurisdiction also in Beaumont, Sabine, and Orange
John James, Vice-Consul
George Payne, Acting Vice-Consul
James Guthrie, Consul
Arthur Ponsonby Wilraer, Vice-Consul
Robert Lorin Merwin, Vice-Consul
Edward Goler Larkin, Consul
For the islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas.
Vice-Consul.
Bernard Pelly, Consul ,
George Henry Lygon Murray, Vice-Consul
John Frederick Lyon, Vice-Consul
Constantin Panagopoulos,«in charge of Consulate-General.
For Arizona, California, Nevada, and the Hawaiian
Islands. Supervisory jurisdiction over Alaska, Idaho,
Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
and Wyoming.
Nikias Calogeras, Vice-Consul
For Colorado and New Mexico.
The Legation of Greece at Washington has consular ju-
risdiction over the District of Columbia, the adjoining
section of Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware.
Leonidas Cri'santhopoulos," Consul
For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina.
Supervisory jurisdiction over Arkansas, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas.
George Depasta," Consul-General
For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Super-
visory jurisdiction over Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Min-
nesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
and South Dakota.
George Dracopoulos," Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Hector M. Pesmazoglou,< in charge of Consulate
For Missouri.
B. Mammonas," in charge ol Consulate General
For Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and the ad-
joining section of Pennsylvania, including Philadelphia.
Supervisory jurisdiction over Virginia.
P. Tringhettas.u Vice-Consul
July 6,1900
Nov. 34, 1911
Nov. 9,1911
Nov. 10, 1919
Jan. 23, 1925
Oct. 22, 1924
May 22. 1924
Mar. 27,1905
Aug. 6,1917
July s,i9«i
Nov. 26, 1923
Mar. -27, 1925
May IS. 1924
Apr. 15,1907
Aug. 16,1917
June 2, 1924
June 7,1913
Sept. 14,1918
Mar. 27,1918
Apr. 9, 19J9
May 4, 1910
Apr. 10,1924
Aug. II, 1924
Dec 30, 1924
Apr. 30, 1908
Oct, 25, 1924
May, 1935
290
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
GREECE— HAITI.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of reo-
ogaition.
GREECE— Continued
Pennsylvania
Virginia
Washington
GUATEMALA.
Alabama
California
Florida
Illinois
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi
Missouri
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Porto Rico
Rhode Island ,
Texas
Virginia
Virgin Islands ,
Washington
HAITI.
Alabama
California
Hawaii
Louisiana
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Pittsburgh.
Norfolk .
Seattle.
Mobile
Los Angeles . . .
San Diego
San Francisco.
San Pedro...
Jacksonville.
Pensacola. . .
Chicago
Kansas City.
Louisville
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston.. . .
Detroit. ..
Gulfport.
St. Louis.
Jersey City
New York City .
Philadelphia .
San Juan
Providence...
Galveston
Houston
Norfolk
St. Thomas. .
Seattle
Mobile
San Francisco.
Honolulu
New Orleans. .
May.
May,
1925
192s
L. Sakarrophos," in charge of Consulate
For Pennsylvania (less part adjoining New York)
and West Virginia.
D. Macropoulos," Vice-Consul
For Virginia (except the section adjoining the District of
Columbia).
Christo LilUopoulos, Consul ; May 27, 1915
For Alaska, Oregon, and Washington.
Guillermo Valenzuela. Consul ,
Arturo Ramirez, Consul
Onnond W. Follin. Honorary Vice-Consid
Alfredo Skinner Klee, Consul-General
Jose F. Linares. Honorary Consul
Julio C. Toriello, Honorary Consular Agent
J. J. Raleigh, Honorary Consul
Vicente J. Vidal, Honorary Vice-Consul
Julio J. Brower, Consul-General
For Illinois.
Harry R. Hurlbut, Vice-Consul
Edwin R. Heath, Honorary Consul
For Kansas.
Shirley M. Crawford, Honorary Consul
J. Dolores Mayorga, Consul-General
Carlos Waldheim, jr. , Vice-Consul
C. Morton Stewart, jr.. Honorary Consul-General
For Maryland.
William A. Mosman, Honorary Consul-General
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Ver-
mont.
Maynard D. Follin, Honorary Consul
B. Richards, Vice-Consul
James A. Troy, Honorary Consul-General
For Missouri.
Virgilio Rodriguez Bcteta, Consul-General
Eduardo Aguirre Velasquez, Consul-General
Delfino Sanchez, Vice-Consul
T. W. Pumer, Honorary' Consul
Carlos Vere, Consul
Eduardo G. Kelton, Consul
J. Merrow, Honorary Ccnsul
T. L. Evans, Honorary Consul
Harry Reyner, Honorary Consul
David M. de Castro, Consul
Adolfo Bracons, Honorary Vice-Consul
Sept
Jan.
June
Jan.
Jan.
Sept.
Aug.
June
Feb.
Feb.
July
Aug.
Aug.
Oct.
Feb.
IS-I9I4
8, 192s
II, 1900
21.1924
21,1924
II. 1924
15. 1924
II, 1900
28, 1919
38, 1915
18,1896
J3, 1901
31, 192a
13, 1896
May 21,1923
Aug.
Feb.
Mar.
Sept.
Aug.
Aug.
Jan.
June
Aug.
Jan.
Jan.
Aug.
July
Aug.
12. 1924
6,1913
14. 1925
15,1914
19, 1922
19, 1922
21. 1924
30, 1908
29, 1911
26, 1903
30. 1925
12, 1924
12, 1917
2, 1922
Apr. 16, 1924
Boston
Manchester.
Richard Murray, Honorary Consul
Honorary Consul . .
Robert W. Shingle, Consul Sept. 14, 1923
May IS, 192s
May 12, 1923
Thomas A. Vilmenay, Consul-General
N. U. Carrie, Vice-Consul
Jurisdiction includes Galveston (Texas) and Mobile
(Alabama).
A. Preston Clark, Consul Oct. 16, 1909
Eugene Le Boss^, Honorary Consul Aug. 11, 1921
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
HAITI— HUNGARY.
291
HAITI— Continued .
New York .
Pennsylvania.
Porto Rico....
Texas .
Residence.
New York City.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Chester
Mayagiiez.
Ponce
San Juan.
Beaumont .
Virgin Islands.
Galveston
Houston
Port Arthur.
St. Thomas..
HONDURAS.
Alabama Mobile.
California Los Angeles.
San Francisco.
District of Columbia Washington .
Florida Jacksonville. .
I Tampa
Illinois Chicago
Louisiana j New Orleans.
Massachusetts Boston
Lck)nce Bomot, Consul General
Henri Gardere, Vice-Consul
William Ward. Jr., Honorary Vice-Consul
Honorary Consul.
Bias C. Silva, Vice-Consul
Charles Vere, Consul
R. M. Bazzanella, Vice Consul
For Orange Coimty.
Vice-Consul.
T. L. Evans, Honorary Consul
Arthur S. Khan, Vice Consul
Cyril Daniel, Consul-General
For the Virgin Islands.
Philip Gomez, Honorary Vice-Consul
Michigan .
Missouri . .
Detroit
Kansas City.
St. Louis
New York ! New York City . .
Porto Rico San Juan
Texas Galveston
San Antonio .
HUNGARY.
Illinois Chicago
New York .
New York City .
Ohio I Cleveland.
Pennsylvania Pittsburgh .
Romulo Carbajal, Honorary Consul
Urbano Quesada, Honorary Consul
Armando Lopez UUoa, Consul-General
Consul.
James Samuel Easterby, Vice-Consul
R. Calvin McNab, Honorary Consul
Enrique Trinidad Raudales, Honorary Consul-General. . .
Eusebio Toledo Lopez, Consul-General
Honorary Consul .
Guillermo J. Griffiths, Vice Consul
Gabriel Madrid Hernandez, Honorary Consul
Rafael Martinez," iu charge of Consulate-General
For Missouri.
Antonio Lardizabal, Consul General
Emilio V. Soto, Honorary Vice-Consul ,
Waldemar E. Lee, Honorary Consul ,
H. H. Haines, Honorary Consul
Ricardo de Villafranca, Honorary Consul General
For Texas.
J. Stephen Shefbeck, Consul
For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illi-
nois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, the counties
embraced in the northern peninsula of Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington,
Wisconsin, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and the Phil-
ippine Islands.
Charles Winter, Consul-General
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Vermont, and Porto Rico.
Alexander Reutter de Kaltenbrunn, Consul
For Kentucky, the counties embraced in the southern
peninsula of Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
Louis Alexy . u Consul
For Pennsylvania.
Julius Hanschild," in charge of Consulate
July 28, 1924
Sept. 20, 1922
Jan. 8, 1916
Nov. 16, 1912
Oct. 12, 1906
Jan. 10, 1925
Nov. 3, 1924
Nov. 14, 1924
Dec. 16, 1918
Mar. 2, 191S
Apr. 17, 1925
June 5, 1922
Jan. 31, 1911
Oct. 25, 1932
Apr. 28, 1920
Apr. 1,1901
July 18, 1912
Nov. s. 1930
Apr. 18, 1925
Jan. s. 1915
May 23, 1930
Feb. IS, 1913
Sept. 14,1923
Dec. 18, 1932
Dec. 18, 1923
Dec. 18, 1923
Oct. 31,1922
Jan. 28.1925
32952—25 20
292
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ITALY.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
ITALY
Alabama
Arizona
California
Canal Zone.
Colorado.
Connecticut
Delaware. ..
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii. . . .
Illinois
Indiana...
Iowa
Kansas. . .
Kentucky
Louisiana.
Maine
Maryland
Masiacbusetts
Birmingham .
Mobile
Phoenix
Eureka
Los Angeles. .
Sacramento. .
San Diego
San Francisco
Stockton
Colon...
Panama.
Denver . .
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent. .
Chevalier Enrico Plana, Acting Vice-Consul
Gioacchino Vittorio Panattoni, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. .
Vittore Siciliani, Consul-General
For Arizona, California, and Nevada.
Enrico Alberto Mazzera, Consular Agent
Giuseppe Peff er,« Consular Agent
Ludovico Del Piano, Consul
Gualtiero Chilesotti, Consul
For Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyo-
ming.
Giuseppe Battaglia," Acting Consular Agent
Giuseppe Maio, Consular Agent
Giuseppe Brancucci, Consular Agent
Ismaele Notartrancesco, Consular Agent
New Haven \ Pasquale de Cicco, Acting Vice-Consul
Wilmington Giuseppe de Stefano, Consular Agent
For Delaware, and in Pennsylvania the counties of
Berks, Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Lancaster, Lebanon,
Montgomery, and York.
Consixlar Agent . .
Chevalier Viti Mariani, Consular Agent
Pueblo. . . .
Trinidad..
Bridgeport
Hartford. .
Pensacola
Tampa...
Savannah Mose Cafiero, Consular Agent.
Honolulu. . . .
Chicago
Springfield...
Indianapolis.
Des Moines. .
Frontenac. . . .
Louisville
New Orleans.
Shreveport.
Portland...
Baltimore. .
Lawrence. .
Lynn
Springfield.
Worcester. .
Gerald Hastings Phipps," in charge of Consulate
Leopoldo Zunini, Consul General
For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, >Iichigan, Minnesota, North
Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Giuseppe Dall'Agnol, Vice-Consul
Giovanni Maria Picco, Consular Agent
Chevalier Vincenzo Lapenta, Consular Agent
Pietro Dapolonia, Consular Agent
Raffaele Purgatorio, Consular Agent
Sebastiano Lucchesi, Consular Agent
Consul. ,
For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Texas.
Chevalier Carlo Papiui, Vice-Consul
Antoniuo Vinti, Vice-Consul ,
Alberto Saracco, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. ,
Carlo Cesare Tomielli di Crestvolant, Consul
For Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Virginia.
Marquis Agostino Ferrante di Ruffano, Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Giuseppe Caterini, Consular Agent
Consular Agent.
Tommaso de Marco, Consular Agent
Michelangelo De Felice, Consular Agent
Mar. 4, 1924
May 14, 1924
Apr. 6, 1923
Jtme 7. 1924
Feb. 2, 1925
May 9, 1925
Feb. 27,1924
Apr. 2, 192s
Jan. 3 1, 1906
Oct. 16, 1924
July 28, 1924
Mar. 4, 1924
Nov. 16, 1912
Sept. 29, 192J
Jan. 21, 1908
June, 1925
Feb. 27,1924
Mar. 8,1915
Sept. 14,1911
Aug. 20, 1923
May 12, 1925
Sept. 14, 1911
Sept. 17,1923
Dec. 4, 1906
July 14,1910
Nov. St i9»o
Apr. 16, 1924
Nov. 13, 1920
Mar. 14, 1914
Oct. 18, 1910
Aug. 5, i9»»
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ITALY.
293
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
ITALY— Continued
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
Calumet ....
Detroit
Rockford . . . ,
Duluth
St. Paul
Gulf port
Vicksburg. . .
Kansas City.
St. Louis
Butte
Omaha
Reno
Newark
Paterson
Trenton
Albuquerque.
Albany
Buffalo
New York City .
Rochester.
Syracuse .
Utica...,
Yonkers.
Ohio
Oklahoma. . .
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Cincinnati.
Cleveland.
Youngstown .
McAlester . . .
Wilburton. . .
Portland .
Altoona. .
Erie.
Consular Agent. ,
Chevalier Pietro Cardiello, Acting Vice-Consul
Consular Agent . .
Attilio Castigliano, Consular Agent
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent . .
Andrea Bucci, Consular Agent
Arrigo Gasperini Casari, Consular Agent
Paolo Emilio Giusti, Consul
For Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Ten-
nessee.
Pietro Maria Amabile Notti, Consular Agent
Sebastiano Salerno," in charge of Consular Agency
Antonio Miniggio, Consular Agent
Francesco SantomassLmo, Acting Vice-Consul
Ricco Matteo, Consular Agent
Felice Ronca, Consular Agent
Francesco Fraccaroli," Acting Consular Agent
Germano Placido Baccelli, Consular Agent
Michele Caboni, Consular Agent
For the comities of Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua,
Erie, Genesee, Niagara, Orleans, Steuben, and Wyo-
ming.
Emilio Axerio, Consul General
For Connecticut. New Jersey, and New York.
Chevalier Ubaldo Rochira, Vice-Consul
Paolo Alberto Rossi, Vice-Consul
Cesare Sconfietti, Consular Agent
For the counties of Cayuga, Chemung, Livingston, Mon-
roe, Ontario, Schuyler, Seneca, Tioga, Tompkins,
Wayne, and Yates.
Giovanni Gangemi, Consular Agent
For the counties of Broome, Chenango, Cortland, Lewis,
Madison, Oneida, Onondaga, and Oswego.
Consular Agent. .
Giuseppe Brancucci," Acting Consular Agent
With jurisdiction in Westchester County.
Carlo Ginocchio. Consular Agent
Chevalier Nicola Cerri, Acting Consul
For Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia.
Consular Agent. .
Consular Agent. .
Giovanni Tua«, Acting Consular Agent
For Oklahoma.
Alberto B. Ferrera, Consular Agent
Paolo Sterbini, Consular Agent
For the coimties of Adams, Bedford, Blair, Cambria,
Center, Clearfield, CUnton. Cumberland, Franklin,
Fulton, Himtingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder.
Somerset, and Union.
Orazio Rico, Consular Agent
For the counties of Cameron, Clarion, Crawford, Elk,
Erie. Forest, McKean, Potter, Venango, and Warren.
Chevalier Giuseppe Natali," in charge of Consular Agency.
Mar.
4.1934
Sept.
8,1911
Mar.
".1913
Mar.
7>I934
July
7. 1924
Jan.
1; 1934
Sept.
18, igaa
Mar.
13. 1924
Mar.
A, I9t4
Jan.
33, 1934
July
1,1907
Aug.
7,i9JO
July
13,1898
Oct.
3)1910
May 31, 1924
Nov. ao, 1919
Feb. 7, igai
Mar. 8,1911
Nov. 33,1933
May 19, 1935
Feb. 18, 1901
Mar. 4, 1914
May 3,1933
Jan. 33,1931
May t),i9ij
July f9, I9*>
Jan. j,i9«T
294
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFlCliKS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ITALY.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
ITALY-Continued.
Pennsylvania (continued)
Philadelphia
20, I92I
For Delaware and Pennsylvania.
Chevalier Armando Salati, Honorary Vice-Consul
Oct.
29, I9»3
Pittsburgh
Chevalier Telesio Lucci, Acting Vice-Consul
Mar.
4, 1924
For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver,
Butler, Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Law-
rence. Mercer, Washington, and Westmoreland.
Scranton
For the counties of Bradford, Carbon, Columbia, Dau-
phin, Lackawanna, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming,
Monroe, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland,
Pike. Schuylkill. Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga,
Wayne, and Wyoming.
'^ .
29, 1908
G. P. de Rinaldis.u Consular Agent
San Juan
Ciro Malatrasi. Consul
June
9i 1917
For Porto Rico.
Rhode Island
July
May
Texas
Fort Worth
Feb.
Sept.
Port Arthur
Consular Agent . .
Utah '.
Salt Lake City
Fortunato Ansehno, Consular Agent
Apr.
20, 1915
Virginia
Norfolk
Arturo Parati, Consular Agent
July
II, 1901
For the counties of Accomac, Alexandria, Alleghany,
Amelia, Amherst, Appomattox, Bedford, Bland,
Botetourt, Brunswick, Buchanan, Campbell, Caroline,
Carroll, Charles City, Charlotte, Craig, Culpeper, Dick-
enson, Dinwiddle, Elizabeth City, Essex, Fairfax,
Franklin, Fauquier, Floyd, Giles, Gloucester, Gray-
son, Greensville, Halifax, Henry, Isle of Wight,
James City, King George, King and Queen, King
William, Lancaster, Loudoun, Lunenburg, Madison,
Mathews, Mecklenburg, Middlesex, Montgomery,
Nansemond, New Kent, Norfolk, Northumberland,
Nottoway. Patrick, Pittsylvania, Princess Anne,
Prince Edward, Prince George, Prince William,
Rappahannock, Richmond, Roanoke, Rockbridge,
Southampton, Spotsylvania, Stafford, Surry, Sussex,
Warwick, Westmoreland, and York.
In West Virginia, the counties of McDowell and Wyo-
mmg.
Jan.
For the counties of Albemarle, Augusta, Bath, Buck-
ingham, Chesterfield, Clarke, Cumberland. Fluvanna,
Frederick, Goochland, Greene, Hanover, Henrico,
Highland, Louisa, Nelson, Orange, Page, Powhatan,
Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren.
Sept.
For the Virgin Islands
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ITALY— JAPAN,
295
State.
ITALY— Continued.
Washington.
West Virginia
Wisconsin
JAPAN.
Alabama ,
Alaska
Calilornia
Residence.
Seattle..,
Spokane.
Charleston.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Alberto Aliani," Acting Consul
For Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington.
Giuseppe Plastino, Consular Agent
For the Counties of Benton, Douglas, Grant, Okanogan,
and Yakima.
Enrico lannarelli, Consular Agent
For the State of West Virginia, except the counties of
McDowell and Wyoming.
Milwaukee Angelo Cerminara, Consular Agent.
Canal Zone. . .
Hawaii
Illinois
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Missouri
Xew York . . . .
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
Texas
Washington
San Francisco.
Panama.
Chicago .
New Orleans.
Boston
St. Louis
New York City
Portland.
Mobile Henry H. Clark, Honorary Consul
Jimeau Emery \^alentine, Honorary Consul
Los Angeles | Kaname Wakasugi, Consul
For the counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange,
Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis
Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura in California,
I and the States of Arizona and New Mexico.
Toshihiko Taketomi, Consul General
For Calilornia (except the Los Angeles consular district) ,
Colorado, Nevada, and Utah.
, Consul
Mikaeru Shibasaki, Vice Consul
Honolulu I Consul General
For the Hawaiian Islands.
Nobuo Shigematsu," Acting Consul
For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michi-
gan, Minnesota, Jlissouri, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Motohachi Yagi, Consul
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Texas.
Edwin Sibley Webster, Honorarj- Consul
J. E. Smith, Honorary Consul
Hirosi Saito. Consul General
For Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia. Maine,
Mar>-land, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jer-
sey, New York, Pennsylvania. Porto Rico, Rhode
Island, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Hisakichi Okamoto,« in charge of Consulate
For Idaho (except that part included in the consular
district of Seattle), Oregon, and Wyoming.
Philadelphia J. Franklin McFadden, Honorary Consul
ManDa ' Eishiro Nuida, Consul General
For the Philippine Islands and the Island of Guam.
Kuragoro Aibara, Vice Consul
San Juan Miguel Such, Honorary Consul
Galveston J. H. Langben, Honorary Consul
Seattle Chuichi Ghashi, Consul
For Alaska, Montana, and Washington, and in Idaho,
the counties of Boise, Bonner, Custer, Idaho, Koote-
nai, Latah, Lemhi, Nez Perce, and Shoshone.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Apr. 3, 192J
Sept. ao, 192a
June as, 1923
Sept. 4. 1910
June 35, 1920
Aug. 27,1923
Mar. 7,1924
Feb. 21, 1925
Mar. 11,1925
May 18,1925
May 4, 1925
Dec. 31,1923
June 19, 190s
Jan. 21,1924
May 18, 1925
June 38, 1904
Mar. 27, 1925
June 31, 1918
Dec. 8, 1923
June 8, 1904
July 17,1933
296
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
LATVIA— LUXEMBURG.
State.
LATVIA.
California
Illinois
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Missouri
New York
Pennsylvania
LIBERIA.
Alabama
California
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland ,
Missouri ,
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Texas
LITHUANIA
Illinois
New York.
LUXEMBURG.
California.
Residence.
San Francisco. .
Chicago
New Orleans...
Boston
St. Louis
New York City
Philadelphia. . .
Mobile
San Francisco..
Chicago
New Orleans...
Baltimore
St. Louis
Jersey City
New York City
Philadelphia. ..
Manila
Galveston
Chicago
New York City .
Los Angeles.
San Francisco.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Harry Willard Glensor, Consul
For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico,
Utah, and Hawaii.
J. M. Ullman, Consul
For Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota,
South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
August Edward Pradillo, Consul
For Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas.
Jacob Sieberg, Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Ver-
mont.
Fred A. Gissler, Consul
For Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.
Arthur Lule, Consul
Philip Godley, Consul
For Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Teimessee, and West Virginia.
George W. Lovejoy , Consul
Oscar Hudson, Consul
Richard E. Westbrooks, Consul
L. H. Reynolds, Vice-Consul
Ernest Lyon, Consul-General
Hutchins Inge, Consul
Albert W. Minick, Vice-Consul
Edward G.Merrill, Consul
E. B. Merrill, Vice-Consul
Thomas J. Hunt, Consul
Robert C. Moon, Vice-Consul
R. Summers, Consul
J. R. Gibson, Consul
Povilas Zadeikis, Consul
For Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Klansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Minnesota,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming.
Julius J. Bielskis, Consul
For Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and
West Virginia.
Augustus Koppes, Consul ,
For Arizona and New Mexico, and California south of
and including the coimties of San Luis Obispo, Kern,
and San Bernardino.
Prosper Reiter, Consul
For Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington, and Cali-
fornia north of and including the counties of Monterey,
Kings, Tulare, and Inyo,
FOREIGN CONSUl^AR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
LUXEMBURG— MEXICO.
297
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
L UXEMBURG— Continued
District of Columbia
Illinois
Minnesota
New York
South Dakota
MEXICO,
Alabama
Arizona
Washington.
Chicago .
Minneapolis.
California .
New York City .
Redfield
Mobile. .,
Douglas.
Naco
Nogales .
Phoenix
Rowood-Ajo
Tucson
Yuma
Calexico
Los Angeles.
San Diego .
Cornelius Jacoby, Consul ,
For Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
Peter P. Kransz, Consul General
For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
Eugene Huss, Vice-Consul
Emile Ferrant, Consul
For Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, North Da-
kota, South Dakota, and Wyoming.
Michel Heilinckx, Consul
For Coimecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York. Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
Harry Krombach, Vice Consul
Peary Daubenfeld, Consul
For Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota.
Jan. 31, 192s
Jan. 31, 1925
Apr.
Apr.
Oct.
to, 19*1
ao, I93t
Jose Cabrera, Honorary Consul
Juan A. Marshall, Consul
For Cochise County, except the city of Naco.
Francisco Perez, Consul
Carlos Palacios Roji, Consul
For the cotmties of Santa Cruz and Pima, except the
city of Tucson.
Aurelio Gallardo, A'ice-Consul
Guillermo L. Robinson," Vice-ConsuI
Ladislao Lopez Montero, Consul
For the counties of Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mohave,
Pinal and Yavapai.
Ignacio Gonzalez, Honorary Vice Consul
For Rowood-Ajo.
Juan E. Anchondo, Consul
Aurelio S. Gallardo, Consul
Carlos M. Gaxiola, Consul
For Imperial County in California and Yuma County
in Arizona.
Lauro Izaguirre, Vice Consul
Rafael Aveleyra, Consul
Jose Maria Miranda, Vice Consul
Lamberto I. Obregon, Vice Consul
For the counties of Inyo, San Luis Obispo, Kern, San
Bernardino, Los Angeles. Santa Barbara, Ventura.
and Orange.
Enrique Ferreira, Consul
-\rturo Gomez Martinez, Vice-Consul
Hermolao E. Torres, Vice Consul
For Riverside and San Diego Counties.
Nov.
38, 1933
Jan.
31. 192s
Mar.
19. 1924
May
38, 192s
May
28, 1925
Feb.
14. 192s
Mar. 31, 1934
May 1, 1925
Mar 19, 1924
June 9, 1924
Feb. 19, 1925
Apr. 3, 192s
Feb. 19, 1925
Dec. 16, 1924
May 28, 1924
Aug. 9, 1924
May 36, 1924
Mar. 31,1924
Dec. 33, 1934
298
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
MEXICO.
State.
MEXICO— Continued.
California (Continued)
Colorado.,
Florida..,
Hawaii. . .
Illinois. ..
Indiana..,
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Missouri
New Mexico .
Residence.
San Francisco.
Denver
Tampa
Honolulu ....
Chicago
Indianapolis..
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston
Kansas City..,
St. Louis
Albuquerque.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Alejandro Lubbert , Consul General
Consular jurisdiction includes the State of Nevada, and
i n California the counties ol Alameda, Alpine, Amador,
Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte,
Eldoradfl, Fresno, Glenn, Humboldt, Kings, Lake,
Lassen, Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Mendocino, Merced,
Modoc, Mono, Monterey, Napa, Nevada, Placer,
Plumas, Sacramento, San Benito, San Francisco, San
Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta,
Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Sutter,
Tehama, Trinity, Tulare, Tuolumne, Yolo, Yuba.
Indirect jurisdiction over the Consulates at Calexico,
Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, San Diego, and Seattle;
the Honorary Consulates at Honolulu and Manila,
and the Vice-Consulate at Yuma.
Jose Antonio V'alenzuela, Consul
Baldomero A. Almada," Consul
Carlos M. Gaxiola," Consul
Gonzalo Obregon," Vice Consul
Manuel Esparza, Consul
For Colorado and Wyoming
Rafael Ruesga, Honorary Consul
Consul. .
Luis Lupian G., Consul
For Illinois and Indiana
Russell B. Harrison, Honorary Consul
For Marion County.
Jose Garza Zertuche, Consul General
Edmimdo L. Aragon, Consul
For Alabama, except Mobile County, Arkansas, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee.
Indirect jurisdiction over the Consulates at
Kansas City (Missouri), Port Arthur, St. Louis,
and Tampa.
Raoul G. Dominguez, Consul
Francisco B. Sal azar,« Consul
Roberto Garcia, Consul
For Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia
Rafael de la Colina, Consul
For Maine. Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Alejandro V. Martinez, Consul
Carlos Grimm, Vice Consul
For Michigan, except the high peninsula, and Ohio, ex-
cept the counties of Hamilton and Cuyahoga.
Benigno Cantu V., Consul
For Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
Alfredo Serratos, Consul
Romulo Vargas Machuca, Vice Consul
For Iowa and Missouri.
Renato Cantii Lara, Consul
For the counties of Apache and Navajo in Arizona, and
in New Mexico the counties of Bernalillo, Colfax, Mc-
Kinley, Mora, Rio Arriba, Sandoval, San Juan, San
Miguel, Santa Fe, Socorro, Taos, Torrance, and Va-
lencia.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Feb. 19. 1925
June 13,1924
Feb. 5, 1925
Feb. 12, 1925
Nov. 28, 1924
June 2, 1924
Feb. 28,1924
June 9, 1924
Mar. 7, 1924
Feb. 21, 192s
May 9, 1925
Mar. 13, 1924
Jan. IS, 1925
June II, 1924
May 29, 1924
Apr. 8, 1924
Dec. 10, 1924
May 28, 1924
May 27, 1924
Apr. 13, 1925
May 1, 1925
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
MEXICO.
299
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
MEXICO-Continued.
New York
Buffalo
Leon L. Lancaster, Honorary Consul
Feb. 28,1924
Feb. 28,1924
Ernest J. Schrempp, Honorary Vice-Consul
New York City . . .
Arturo M. Elias, Consul General
Feb. 19, 1925
Manuel G. Prieto, Consul
For Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Indirect jurisdiction over the Consulates at Baltimore,
Bcston, Chicago, Cleveland, Norfolk, Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh, and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Jos^ Riestra, Vice-Consul
Ohio
Enrique Omelos, Honorary Consul
J. F. Ortiz," Honorary Consul '.
For Cuyahoga County.
Oklahoma City . . .
Jose F. Montemayor, Consul
For Oklahoma.
Portland
Rafael Vejar Honorary Crnsul.
Apr. 28, 1924
Philadelphia
For Pennsylvania, except Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh
Luis Pei cz Abreu, Vice-Consul
May 28, 1924
Jose S. Corriols, Honorary Vice-Consul
Mar. 19, 1924
For Allegheny County.
Philippine Islands
Manila
Feb. 28,1924
For the Philippine Islands.
Rhode Island
Providence
For Rhode Island.
Texas
Luis Perez Abreu, Vice-Consul
Apr. 13, 192 i;
For Beaumont.
Brownsville
Alfredo C. Vazquez, Consul
For the counties oi Cameron, Kenedy, and Willacy.
Corpus Christi
Joaquin C. Loredo, Vice-Consul
Daniel Garza, Consid
May 31, 1924
For the counties of Aransas, Bee, Brooks, Calhoun,
Goliad, Jim Wells, Kleberg, Live Oak, Nueces,
Refugio, San Patricio, and Victoria
Dallas
Vicente Rendon Quijano, Consul
Dec. 10, 1924
For the counties of Anderson, Archer, Armstrong, Bay-
lor, Bosque, Bowie, Briscoe, Callahan, Camp, Cass,
Childress, Clay, Collin, Collingsworth, Comanche,
Cooke, Coryell, Cottle, Cherokee, Dallas, Delta, Den-
ton, Dickens, Donley, Eastland, Ellis, Erath, Falls,
Fannin. Foard. Franklin, Freestone, Grayson, Gregg,
Hall, Hamilton, Hardeman, Harrison, Haskell, Hen-
derson, Hill, Hood, Hopkins. Himt, Jack, Johnson,
Jones, Kaufman, Kent, King, Knox, Lamar, Lime-
stone, Marion, McLennan, Montague, Morris, Motley,
Navarro, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker, Rains, Red
River, Rockwall, Rusk, Shackelford, Somervell,
Smith, Stephens, Stonewall, Tarrant, Throckmorton,
Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise.
Wood, and Young
300
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
MEXICO.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
MEXICO— Continued .
Texas (cent inued )
Del Rio.
Eagle Pass.
El Paso.
Galveston.
Houston. .
Laredo
McAllen
Marfa
Port Arthur.
Rioerande...
Lisandro Pena, Consul
For the counties of Crockett, Sutton, Terrell and Val-
verde.
Emiliano Tamez, Consul
For the counties of Dimmit, Edwards, Kinney, Mave-
rick, Uvalde, and Zavalla.
Francisco Obregon, Vice-Consul
Enrique D. Ruiz, Consul Genera. 1 ,
Francisco Alfonso Pesqueira, Consul ,
Enrique Fierro, Vice Consul
Alberto Ruiz Sandoval," Vice-Consul
Consular jurisdiction includes in Arizona the counties
of Graham and Greenlee; in New Mexico, the cotmties
of Chaves, Curry, Dona Ana, De Baca, Eddy, Grant,
Guadalupe, Hidalgo, Lea, Lincoln, Luna, Otero,
Quay, Roosevelt, Sierra, and Um'on; in Texas the
counties of Andrews, Bailey, Borden, Carson, Castro,
Cochran, Crosby, Culbertson, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf
Smith. Ector, El Paso, Fisher, Floyd, Gaines, Garza,
Gray, Hale, Hansford, Hartley, Hemphill, Hockley,
Howard, Hudspeth, Hutchinson, Lamb, Lipscomb,
Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Midland, Mitchell,
Moore, Nolan, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, Potter,
Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Sherman, Swisher,
Taylor, Terry, Ward, Wheeler,Winkler, and Yoakum;
indirect jurisdiction over the Consulates at Albu-
querque, Denver, Douglas, Marfa, Nagales, Phoenix,
Rowood-Ajo, and Tucson, and the Consular Agency
at Naco.
Ismael Magana, Consul
Salvador Banos Contreras, Vice-Consul
Jose Damaso Fernandez, Consul
For the Counties of Austin, Brazoria, Brazos, Burleson,
Colorado, Fort Bend, Galveston, Grimes, Harris,
Houston, Jackson, Lavaca, Lee, Leon, Liberty, Madi-
son, Matagorda, Montgomery, Polk, Robertson, San
Jacinto, Trinity, Walker, Waller, Washington, and
Wharton.
Ismael M. Vazquez, Consul ,
For the Counties of Duval, Jim Hogg, La Salle, Mc-
Mullen, Webb, and Zapata.
Manuel Tello Baitfraud, Vice Consul
Samuel J. Trevino, Consul
For Hidalgo County.
Juan E. Richer, Vice-Consul
For the Counties of Brewster, Coke, Crane, Glasscock,
Irion, Jefif Davis, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Rimnels,
Sterling, Tom Green, and Upton.
Alfredo Banos, Consul
For the Counties of Jasper, Jefferson (except Beaumont),
Newton, Orange, Sabine, San Augustine, and Shelby.
Hermenegildo Valdes, Consul
For Starr County.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
MEXICO— NETHERLANDS.
301
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
MEXICO— Continued .
Texas — Continued
San Antonio.
UUh
Vireiuia
Virgin Islands
Washington
Wisconsin
MONACO.
Massachusetts ,
New York ,
NETHERUNDS,
Alabama ,
California
Canal Zone
Colorado. . .
Florida ....
Georgia.
Hawaii.
Salt Lake City..
Norfolk
St. Thomas
Seattle
Milwaukee
Boston
New York City .
Mobile
Los Angeles.
San Diego
San Francisco.
Pamama.
Colon....
Denver. .
Jacksonville.
Pensacola...
Tampa. . . .
Savannah.
Honolulu.
Alejandro P. Carrillo, Consul- General Mar. 7, 1925
Servando Barrera Guerra, Consul [ Feb. 21, 1923
Consular jurisdiction includes in Texas the Counties of
Atascosa, Bandera, Bastrop, Bell, Bexar, Blanco,
Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Coleman, Comal, Concho,
DeWitt, Fayette, Frio, Gillepsie, Gonzales,
Guadalupe, Hays, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kim-
ble, Lampasas, Llano, McColloch, Mason, Medina,
Menard, Milam, Mills, Real, San Saba Schleicher,
Travis, Williamson, and Wilson; indirect jurisdiction
over the Consulates at Brownsville, Corpus Christi,
Dallas, Del Rio. Eagle Pass, Houston, Laredo,
Oklahoma City, Rio Grande, JIarfa, and the Consular
Agencies at Galveston and Mc Allen.
Carlos V. Ariza, Consul Jime 9, 1924
For Idaho, Montana, and Utah.
Angel Casarin, jr.. Consul May 23, 1924
For Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
George Levy. Honorary Consul ^lar. 5,1934
For the Virgin Islands.
Francisco Millet, Consul Dec. 10, 1924
For Oregon and Washington.
E. P. Kirby Hade, Honorary Consul Mar. 13, 1924
For Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the high peninsula of
the State of Michigan.
Charles F. Flamand, Consul.
Paul Fuller, Consul -General.
J. B. Oliver, Vice-Consul
For Alabama.
A. Hartog, Vice-Consul
For Arizona and that part of California south of San
Luis Obispo, Kern, and Inyo Coiuities, except the
Counties of San Diego and Imperial.
J. H. Delvalle, Vice-Consul
For San Diego and Imperial Counties.
H. A. van Coenen Torchiana, Consul-General
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New
Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
David M. Sasso, u Consul-General
Johannes J. Ecker, « Consul
Consul .
For Colorado. New Mexico, and Utah.
G. W. Parkhill, Vice-Consul
For Florida east of the Apalachicola River.
A. Zelius, Vice-Consul
For Florida west of the Apalachicola River.
J. R. van Julsingha Blinck, Vice-Consul
R. Perrin, Vice-Consul
For Georgia.
H. M. von Holt, Consul
For Hawaiian Islands.
Feb. j8, igaj
Sept. 17, 191a
Nov. 12, 1920
Apr. 28, 1925
July J7, 1917
Oct. 13, 1921
Mar. 26, 1923
Mar. 26, 1923
July 9, 1923
Dec. 14, 1921
Feb. 14, igi6
Apr. 6. 1923
Jan. 30, 1901
302
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
NETHERLANDS
State.
NETHERLANDS— Continued .
Illinois ; ...
Iowa
Louisiana
Maryland ,
Massachusetts ,
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
New York.
Porto Rico.
Residence.
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
South Carolina.
Grand Rapids.
Minneapolis. . .
Gulf port
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Chicago J. Vennema, Consul-General
For Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyo-
ming.
Orange City G. Klay, Vice-Consul
For Iowa.
New Orleans W. J. Hammond, Consul
For Alabama, Florida west of the Apalachicola River,
Louisiana, and Mississippi.
Baltimore R. H. Mottu, Consul
For Delaware and Maryland.
Boston J. H. Reurs, Consul
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Jacob Steketee, Consul
John Steketee. Vice-Consul
For Michigan and Minnesota.
Vice-Consul
For Minnesota.
A. O. Thompson, Vice-Consul
For Mississippi.
Kansas City. ...... J. C. Koster, Consul
For Iowa, Kansas, Missouri (west of the 93d° of longi-
tude), Nebraska, and Oklahoma.
St. Louis H. ter Braak, Consul
For Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri (east of the gjd" of
longitude), and Tennessee.
W. P. Montyn, Consul-General
For Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Ver-
mont, Virginia, and West Virginia.
G. P. Luden.u Vice-Consul
Anthony H. Metzelaar, Vice-Consul
For Oregon.
Philadelphia N. G. M. van Velzen, Consul
For Pennsylvania.
Cebu G. Walford, Vice-Consul
For the Island of Cebu.
Iloilo H. Walford, Vice-Consul
For the Island of Panay.
Manila P. K. A. Meerkamp van Embden, Consul-General
For the Philippine Islands.
T. Bremer, Vice-Consul
Mayagiiez O. F. Bravo, Vice-Consul
For west coast of Porto Rico.
Ponce E. M. Moringlane, Vice-Consul
For south coast of Porto Rico.
San Juan Albert E. Lee, Consul
For Porto Rico.
W. E. Lee, Vice-Consul
Charleston D. Ravenel, Consul
For Georgia and South Carolina, and Florida east of the
Apalachicola River.
New York City.
Portland .
Date of rec-
ognition.
Oct. 21, 1914
Aug. 13,1919
Sept. 30, 1901
Mar. 7, 1904
Apr. 18,1913
Oct. 4, 1920
Sept. 12, 1924
Dec. 7,1911
July », 1933
May a6, 1933
Apr. 13, 1923
Feb. 2, 1923
Feb. 14, 1916
July 30, 1924
May 36,1931
May 36, 1931
July 3,1917
May 36, 1910
Mar. 6, 1919
Apr. 24, 1924
May 19, 1900
Apr. 31,1933
Oct. 22, 1924
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
NETHERLANDS— NICARAGUA.
30.^
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
NETHERLANDS— Continued .
Texas
Utah
Virginia.
Virgin Islands.
Washington . . .
NICARAGUA.
California .
Canal Zone .
Illinois
Kansas. . .
Louisiana.
Maryland
Massachusetts .
Minnesota
Missouri.
Galveston
Port Arthur
Ogden
Newport News.
Norfolk
St. Thomas
Seattle
Calexico
Long Beach.. .
Los Angeles...
San Francisco.
Wilmington.
Panama ....
Chicago .
Kansas City .
New Orleans.
Baltimore.. .
Boston
Minneapolis.
Kansas City . . . .
St. Louis
New Vork New York City .
Troy.
Ohio Cincinnati.
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands.
Philadelphia.
Manila
Sept.
May
Nov.
R. J. McDonough, Consul Feb. 28,
For Galveston and suburbs.
L. F. J. Wilkiug, Consul
For Texas, except Galveston and suburbs.
E. Neuteboom, Vice-Consul
For Utah.
E. D. J. Luening, Vice-Consul
For city of Newport News.
J. P. A. Mottu, Consul ! Oct.
For North Carolina and Virginia, except city of Newport
News.
W. P. M. van Eps, Consul
For St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas.
A. van der Spek, Vice Consul
E. Schuyten, Acting 4 months from July i, 1923
For Washington and Alaska.
Consul. .
Berta Selva de Balyeat, Consul
Francisco Espinosa, Consul
Juan Jose, Ruiz, Consul General
Enrique Castillo, Vice Consul
For California, Oregon, and Washington.
Aristides Mayorga, Consul
Marco E. Velasquez, Consul-General
For the Canal Zone.
Berthold Singer, Consul-General ,
Herman Argiiello, jr. , Honorary Consul
Alexander Singer," Vice-Consul
Edwin R. Heath, Consul-General
Ernesto Argiiello, Consul General
Renato Lacayo, Vice-Consul
For the States of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, and Texas.
Francisco Tijerino, Vice Consul
David Sequeira, Consul
F. Stewart, Consul
For Minnesota and the adjacent territory.
Willis Wood, Consul
Rodolfo Jose Gutierrez, Consul-General ,
Toribio Tijerino, jr. , Consul-General ,
For Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsyl-
vania, Rliode Island, and Vermont.
William C. Godfrey, Honorary Consul
Virgilio Lacayo, Vice-Consul
Julio Navas, V'icc-Cousul
Gerardo Otilio Salinas, Honorary Consul
Consul . .
Jorge F. Salinas, Vice-Consul
Lorenzo Guerrero Potter, Consul-General
Desiderio Romin Kleim, Vice-Consul
Consul-General . .
Ignacio Garcia Rojas, Vice-Consul
10, igat
19, 1916
16, 1911
711919
June 30,1917
Feb. t7, 1933
Mar.
5.
1925
Mar.
13.
192s
Apr.
9.
1924
Oct.
22,
1924
Apr.
29.
1924
June
3I>
1931
Apr.
4.
1916
Apr.
18,
1925
Feb.
IS.
1918
June
17,
1901
Mar.
13.
1925
Nov.
ii>
1918
Apr.
9.
1924
Feb.
Ill
1919
Apr.
4.
1916
June
19.
1903
Apr.
IS.
1918
July
a,
1923
July
Dec.
Dec.
Oct.
14)1923
IS.1917
28, 1933
3. 1924
Aug.
Jan.
Nov.
13,1918
34,1911
27.1917
Dec. 4, 1908
304
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
NICARAGUA— NORWAY.
State.
N I C ARAGUA— C ontinued
Texas
Virginia
Virein Islands
Washington
NORWAV.
Alabama
Alaska
California
Canal Zone
Anc6n
Cristobal
Colorado
Denver
Washington
Pernandina
Jacksonville
Key West
Florida
Pensacola
Tampa
Hawaii
Honolulu
Illinois
Chicago
Iowa
Louisiana.
Residence.
Fort Worth.
Houston.. ..
Norfolk
St. Thomas.
Seattle
Mobile
Juneau
Nome
Los Angeles.. .
San Diego
San Francisco.
Decorah
New Orleans.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
.Consul.
Sidney J. Browning, Consul
Thomas E. Buchanan, Vice-Consul.
Charles M. Bamett, Consul
David M. de Castro, Consul
W. L. Kennedy, Consul ,
John Bunyan Oliver, Vice-Consul
For Alabama.
William Britt, Vice-Consul.
For the southern part of Alaska.
Carl Joys Lomen, Vice Consul
For the northern part of Alaska.
Abraham Falck Kittle, Vice Consul
For Los Angeles.
John Engebretsen, Vice-Consul
For San Diego.
Nils Voll, Consul
For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada,
New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and
Wyoming, and the Territory of Alaska.
Henry Lund, jr., Vice-Consul
Thomas Jacome, Vice-Consul
For Ancon
David Smith Webster, Consul
\'iggo Egede Baerresen, Vice-Consul
For Colorado.
The Legation of Norway has general supervision over
consular matters throughout the United States.
Nathaniel Bamett Borden, Vice-Consul
For Femandina.
James !MacCallum Baker, Vice-Consul
For Jacksonville.
William John Hamilton Taylor, Vice-Consul
For Key West and Miami.
Eric Alexander Zelius, Vice-Consul
For Florida, except the ports of Key West, Feman-
dina, Jacksonville, Miami, and Tampa.
Barton Hewitt Smith, Vice-Consul ,
For Tampa.
Einar Storm Trosdahl, Vice-Consul ,
For Georgia.
Frederick Lincoln Waldron, Consul
For Hawaii.
Olaf Bemts, Consul
Per Rutger Sniith Wendelbo, Vice-Consul
For Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Okla-
homa, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
Trond Stabo, Vice-Consul ,
For Iowa.
Walter Frederic Jahncke, Vice-Consul
For Louisiana.
Date of rec-
ognition.
Aug. 36, 1933
Mar. 10, 1933
Apr. 19, 1899
Aug. 7,1917
Apr. 4, 1916
July 38, 1919
June 35,1919
Apr. 2S, 1933
July 7, 1924
Oct. 23, 1906
Mar. 10, 1916
July 24,1909
Dec. 37,1931
May 9, 1932
July 11,1911
Jan. 5,1933
Jan. 16, 1924
May 33, J9e(
June 6, 1906
Sept. 8, 1910
Dec. 5, 1906
June 14, 1933
Mar. 36, 1920
Apr. 8, 1924
Dec. 39, 1916
July 7, 1924
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
NORWAY.
305
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
osnition.
NORWAY— Continued.
Maine
Maryland
Massacliusetts .
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi..
Missouri. . . .
Montana
Nebraska. ..
New Jersey .
New York . .
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands .
Porto Rico
South Carolina.
South Dakota..
Portland..
Baltimore.
Boston
Detroit....
St. Paul...
Gulfport
St. Louis
Billings
Omaha
Newark
Buffalo
New York City .
Niagara Palls .
Wilmington...
Grand Forks.,
Cleveland
Portland
Philadelphia . ,
Cebu
IloUo
Manila
San Juan
Charleston. . .,
Sioux Falls...
John Bernard Keating, Vice-Consul
For Maine.
Arthur Frederick Sidebotham, Vice-Consul
For Maryland.
Georg Tausan Vedeler, Vice-Consul
For Massachusetts.
Vice-Consul. .
For Michigan.
Engebreth Hagbarth Hobe, Consul
For Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, and South
Dakota.
Olus John Bedeaux, Vice-Consul ,
For Mississippi.
Johan Guldbrand Borresen, Vice-Consul
For Missouri.
Christian Rostad Hansen, Vice-Consul ,
For Montana.
A. L. Undeland, Vice-Consul ,
For Nebraska.
Johan Randulf Bull, Vice-Consul
For New Jersey.
Soren Th. M. B. Kielland, Vice-Consul
For Buffalo.
Hans Heinrich Theodor Fay, Consul-General
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missis-
sippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, Porto Rico, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Vir-
ginia, and the Virgin Islands.
Bjame Bonnevie, Vice-Consul
Job Morten August Stillesen, Vice-Consul
For Niagara Falls.
C. P. Belles," Acting Vice-Consul
For North Carolina.
Ingvald Andreas Berg, Vice-Consul
For North Dakota.
Charles Farrand Taplin, Vice-Consul
For Ohio.
Emil P. Slovarp,u Vice-Consul
For Oregon.
Mathias Moe, Vice-Consul
For Pennsi'lvania.
Guy Walford, Vice-Consul
For Cebu.
Tomo Hugh Wolseley Price, Vice-Consul
For Iloilo.
Niels Christian Gude, Consul
For Philippine Islands.
Waldemar Edward Lee, Consul
For the island of Porto Rico.
Chr. J. Larsen, Vice-Consul
For South Carolina.
Niels Oliver Monserud, Vice-Consul
For South Dakota.
June 35,1919
May 33,1906
Apr. 36, 1933
May 3,1906
Jan. 14,1914
Apr. 3s, 1907
Nov. 3, 1924
May 7, 1906
May 9,1931
May 8, 1906
Feb. 17,1911
Sept. 17,1933
Nov. 10,1911
Apr. 2, 1925
Apr. 34, 1916
Mar. 13, 19 14
July 38,1933
Apr. 9, 193 1
Nov. 9, 19 II
Nov. 1, 1913
Mar. 1, 1923
Dec 8, 1914
May 33, 1906
Aug. II, 1917
3o6
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
NORWAY— PANAMA.
State.
NORWAY— Continued.
Texas
Utah
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington. . .
Wisconsin
PANAMA,
Alabama
California
Colorado
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi
Missouri
New Mexico..
New York. . . .
Pennsylvania.
Porto Rico....
Texas
Residence.
Port Arthur.
Salt Lake City.
Newport News.
Norfolk
St. Thomas
Port Townsend. .
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Galveston John W. Focke, Vice-Consul .
For Texas, except the harbors of Port Arthur and
Sabine Pass.
John Robert Adams, Vice-Consul
For Port Arthur and Sabine Pass.
Nels Mettome," in charge of Vice-Consulate
For Utah.
T. Parker Host, Vice-Consul
For Newport News.
Anders Williams, Vice-Consul
Carl Gustav Thiele, Consul
Oscar Klocker, Vice-Consul
For the counties of Chehalis, Clallam, Island, Jefferson,
Kitsap, Mason, Pacific, San Juan, and Wahkiakum.
Thomas Samuel Huntington Kolderup, Vice-Consul
For Washington except the Port Townsend district.
Milwaukee ] Olaf I. Rove, Vice-Consul
For Wisconsin.
Seattle.
Mobile
Los Angeles.
San Diego
San Francisco.
Denver
Pensacola
Tampa
Atlanta
Hilo
Honolulu . . . .
Chicago
Lexington
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston .
Detroit
Gulf port
Kansas City
St. Louis
Silver City
New York City.
Philadelphia .
Aguadilla . . . .
Ponce
San Juan
Fort Worth..
Galveston....
A. H. Diaz, Vice Consul
Jose S. Saenz, Consul
Pablo E. Beluche, Vice-Consul
Eric George Barham, Consul
Consul.
Jos^ E. de Ycaza, Honorary Vice-Consul
Edwin L. Apperson, Consul
Honorary Consul.
Luis de Roux, Consul
John Ashley Jones, Consul
J. B. Guard, Consul :
Honorary Consul.
Antonio Navarro E., Vice-Consul
George Hamilton, Consul
Ernesto Brin, Consul-General
Vice-Consul.
Nathan Eisenmann, Vice-Consul
Francis W. Burr, Consul
William Volmerhaus," Acting Vice-Consul
Aristides Linares, Consul
Alfred R. Shrigley.u Vice-Consul
Louis James Rosenberg, Consul
Max Rowland, Honorary Consul
Loren O. Booram, Consul
Joseph S. Ergas, Vice-Consul
Antonio Grimaldos Fernandez, Consul
Enrique Geenzier, Consul General
Carlos Carbone, jr., Vice-Consul
Antenor Quinzada, Vice-Consul
Carlos Berguido, jr.. Consul
Jorge Silva y Sapia, Consul
Aristides Vidal, Consul
Charles V^re, Consul
L. T. Rogers, Consul
A. A. Van Alstyne, Consul ,
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
PANAMA— PERU.
307
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
PANAMA— Continued
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
PARAGUAY.
Alabama
California
Hiinois
Indiana
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Xlichigan
Missouri
New Jersey
New York
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Virginia
Washington
PERSIA
California
Illinois
Missouri
New York
Pennsylvania
PERU.
Alabama
California
Canal Zone
Florida
Georgia
Newport News .
Norfolk
W. E. Barrett, Honorary Vice-Consul .
John D. Leitch, Honorary Consul
St. Thomas Isaac Paiewensky, Consul
Puget Sound .
Seattle Adolfo Bracons, Honorary Consul .
Mobile
Los Angeles
San Francisco.. .
Chicago
Indianapolis. . . .
New Orleans
Boston
Detroit
Kansas City
St. Louis
Newark
New York City .
Cincinnati
Portland
Philadelphia .
Vice-Consul . .
Newport News.
Norfolk
Richmond .
Seattle
Elliott G. Rickarby, Vice-Consul
Consul . .
Roberto H. Vorfeld, Consul
Fred W. Allen, Honorary Consul
Charles E. Cofifin, Vice-Consul
James Lloveras, Consul
Jerome A. Petitti, Consul
Vice-Consul . .
F. L. Phillips, Vice-Consul
Vice-Consui . .
James A. Coe, Vice-Consul
William Wallace White, Consul-General
For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New HampH
shire. New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Philip De Ronde, Consul
Wallace White, jr., Vice-Consul
Irwin F. Westheimer Vice-Consul
Howard L. White, Honorary- Consul
Rodman Wanamaker, Consul-General
For Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri,
New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Reese M. Flcischmaim, Vice-Consul
Vice-Consul . .
Carlos Barnett, Consul
For Norfolk and Newport News.
Vice-Consul . .
Elmer Joseph Young, Consul
San Francisco Thomas W. Firby. Honorary Consul
Chicago Albert H. Putney, Honorary Consul
Wallace Streeter, Honorary Vice-Consul ,
For the District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
and Wisconsin.
St. Louis Milton Seropyan, Vice-Consul
New York City. . . I Mirza Mahmoud Khan Saghaphi, Honorary Consul-
General.
Philadelphia Hai'g Herant Pakradooni, Vice-Consul
Mobile Vice-Consul
Los Ajigeles Manuel Ayulo, Honorary Consul
San Diego E. J. Louis, Honorary Consul
San Francisco Salvador M. Cavero, Consul-General
Carlos J. Monsalve, Honorary Vice-Consul
Colon Julio C. Mejia, Consul
Panama Guillermo Rosenthal, Consul-General
Pensacola Vice-Consul
Savannah Consul. .
For Florida and Georgia.
Aug. 7,191s
Nov. 11,1909
Aug. 28, 1920
Sept. 1S.1915
Dec. 18, 1901
Sept. 18,1923
July 31, 1924
Dec. 31,1900
Oct. 8,1919
Sept. 18,1923
Feb. 3,1914
Jan. 7,1903
Nov. 6, 1914
Aug. 9,1917
May 24, 1922
Apr. 29, 1913
Dec. 31,1923
July 31,1908
Mar. 19. 1913
Aug. 6. 1901
Mar. 2;, 1924
Oct. 29, 1923
Apr. 21, 1922
Oct. 6, 1924
June 9, 1904
May II, 1925
Dec. II, 1903
Apr.
6,
1933
July
10
193a
July
20,
1922
Dec.
10,
1931
June
2,
IQ2S
June
2,
1925
3o8
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
PERU— POLAND.
State.
PERU— Continued
Hawaii
Illinois
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts
Missouri
New York
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Porto Rico
South Carolina
Texas
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
POLAND.
Illinois
Mchiffan...
N-w York.
Residence.
Honolulu
Chicago
New Orleans.
Baltimore.
Boston
St. Louis
Buffalo
New York City .
Cleveland
Toledo
Portland
Philadelphia.
Manila
Mayagruez....
San Juan....
Charleston. . .
San Antonio.
Newport News.
Norfolk
St. Thomas
Seattle
Chicago.
Detroit.
Buffalo.
Name, rank, andjjurisdiction.
Antonio D. Castro, Honorary Consul
Mitridates Plata, Honorary Consul-
Felipe Derteano, Consul
For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and
Texas.
Carlos Alberto Oyague y Pfliicker, Consul
O. G. H. E. Kehrhahn, Honorary Consul
Alejandro Guillermo Riveros, Consul
A. Burt Champion, Honorary Consul
E. R. de Money, Honorary Consul
Eduardo Higginson, Consul-General
For the United States.
Alberto Franco Guerra, Consul
Charles Scott Rowley, Honorary Consul
Jorge Leguia Ross, Consul
Manuel Fuentes, Consul
Antonio Maria Barreto, Consul
Guillermo H. Moscoso, Honorary Vice-Consul
Benito Zalduondo y Echevarria, Consul
Consul.
For North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
Ricardo Villafranca, Honorary Consul
For Texas.
T. P. Host, Honorary Vice-Consul
Alberto Perez Saez, Consul
George Levi, Consul
Eduardo Espantoso Cossio, Consul
For the State of Washington.
George Barthel de Weydenthal, Consul General ,
For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota,
Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming,
Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands.
Wladyslaw Kozlowski," Vice-Consul
Sylvestre Gruszka, Consul
For Michigan and Ohio.
Stanislaw Manduk, Consul
Edmtmd Kalenski, u Vice-Consul
For Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
InNew York, the Counties of Allegany, Broome, Catta-
ragus, Cayuga, Chautauqua, Chemung, Chenango, Clin-
ton, Cortland, Delaware, Erie, Essex, Franklin, Ful-
ton, Genesee, Hamilton, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis,
Livingston, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Niagara,
Oneida, Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, Oswego, Otsego,
Saratoga, Schoharie, Schuyler, Seneca, St. Lawrence,
Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, Warren, Washington,
Wayne, Wyoming, and Yates.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
POLAND— PORTUGAL.
309
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of reo-
ognition.
POLAND— Continued.
New York — Continued
New York City . . .
Pennsylvania.
PORTUGAL.
Caliiomia.
Canal Zone.
Connecticut
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois...,
Louisiana.
Pittsburgh.
Tadeusz Marynowski, « Consul Nov. 3, 1924
Stefan Rosicki, « Vice-Consul Nov. 3, 1924
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, North Carolina,
New Jersey, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia,
and the District of Columbia.
In New York the counties of Albany, Columbia,
Dutchess, Greene, Kings, Nassau, New York, Orange,
Putnam, Queens, Rensselaer, Richmond, Rockland,
St. Lawrence, Schenectady, Suffolk, Sullivan, Ulster,
and Westchester.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Bradford, Berks, Bucks,
Chester, Carbon, Columbia, Dauphin, Delaware,
Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne,
Monroe, Montour, Montgomery, Northampton, North-
umberland, Pike, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, Susque-
hanna, Sullivan, Wayne, and Wyoming.
Artur Marjan Ocetkiewicz, « Consul Oct. 9, 1024
For Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Adams, Allegheny,
Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria,
Cameron, Center, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Craw-
ford, Cumberland, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Frank-
lin, Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jefferson,
Juniata, Lawrence, Lycoming, McKean, Mercer,
Mifflin, Perry, Potter, Snyder, Somerset, Tioga,
Union, Venango, Warren, Washington, Westmore-
land, and York.
Fresno Abilio Gomes da Silva Reis, Vice-Consul
Los Angeles Vice-Consul
Oakland Carlos Femandes, Consul
Sacramento Antonio de Azevedo, Vice-Consul
San Francisco Euclides Goulart da Costa, u in charge of Consulate
For San Francisco and its consular district.
Guilherme Armas do Amaral, " Vice-Consul
San Leandro Joaquim Rodrigues da Silva Leite, Vice-Consul
Panama Jos6 Agustin Arango, Consul
For the Canal Zone.
New Haven Joao Jose Dinis, Vice-Consul
Key West Jose Guilherme Piodella, Vice-Consul
Pensacola Vice-Consul..
Tampa Leo Francis Pallardy, Vice-Consul
Brunswick Rosendo Torres, Vice-Consul
Savannah Vice-Consul . .
Hilo Jos^ Augusto Monteiro Osorio, Vice-Consul
For Hilo and its district.
Consul .
Honolulu Francisco de Paula Brito, jr. .Consul-General
Luis Rodrigues Gaspar, Vice-Consul
Maui j Enos Vincent, Vice-Consul
For Maui and its district.
Chicago S. Chapman Simms, Consul
Frederic Charles Harwood, Vice-Consul
New Orleans Luiz da Costa Carvalho, Consul
Mar. 31,1921
Oct. 3, 1924
Jan. 18, 1923
June a, 1924
Mar. 37, 1934
Sept. 36,1923
June 35. 1921
Mar. IS, 1924
Oct. 30, 19Ii
Sept. I4,l9s<
Dec 37, lUo
Sept. 31, 1915
Jan. 3, 1924
Oct. 13, 1920
Sept. •!, 191S
Mar. 11,1918
July a6, 1920
July 1,1917
3IO
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
PORTUGAL— RUMANIA.
State.
PORTUGAL— Continued.
Maryland
Massachusetts .
Plymouth.
Mississippi ! GuUport. .
Residence.
Baltimore.
Boston
Fall River.
Lowell
New Bedford.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
New York New York City . .
Pennsy 1 vani» Philadelphia
Philippine Islands Manila
Porto Rico San Juan
Rhode Island Providence
Texas Galveston
Virginia Newport News
and Norfolk.
Virgin Islands St. Thomas
RUMANIA.
Illinois Chicago
Adelbert W. Mears, Vice-Consul
Jose Manoel da Silva Bettencourt Fcrreira, Consul
For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Camillo Camara, Vice-Consul
For Boston.
Carlos Alberto Sd Miranda. Consul
For Fall River and its consular district.
Jose Augixsto Mendes, Vice-Consul
Guilherme de Lima O'Connor Shirley, Vice-Consul
For Lowell and its district.
Antonio Madureira e Castro, Consul
For New Bedford and its consular district.
Joaquim de Campos Cea, Vice-Consul
John Paoli, Vice-Consul
For Gulfport and its district.
Jorge da Silveira Duarte d'Almeida, Consul-General
For all the States except California, Connecticut,
Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire,
Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.
Euclides Goulart da Costa, Vice-Consul
Camilo Camara, Vice-Consul
J. J. de Maccdo, jr., Vice-Consul
For Philadelphia and its district.
John \V. Ferrier, Consul
For the Pliilippine Islands.
Jose Maria Loniba, Consul
Esteban Garcia Cabrera, < Vice-Consul
Gilberto Vieira da Silva Marques, Vice-Consul
For Providence and its district. —
Frank Clow Johnson, Vice-Consul
Vice-Consul .
Date of rec-
ognition.
Maryland.
M. E. Trepuk. Consul.
Bethesda.
Nf w York ! New York City
Ohio Cleveland .
Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia.
Ira Nelson Morris, Consul-General
J. C. Popovici," Acting Consul ,
For Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana,
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Okla-
homa, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah,
Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
William W. Bride, Consul
For Maryland.
T. Tileston Wells, Consul-General ,
Serban Drutzu," Vice-Consul
For Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts,
Connccticui Rhode Island, New York, and New
Jersey.
George Anagnostache," in charge of Consulate
For Ohio, Michigan, and West Virginia.
Mihail Marian, Consul
For Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Geor-
gia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and
Virginia.
Jan. II, 1907
Jan 31, 1925
Sept. 26, 1913
Aug. IS. 1933
Apr. 18, 1924
Feb. 14, 1925
Aug. 15,1923
Mar. 27, 1925
Aug. 6. 1909
May 18, 1920
Feb. 17, 1922
Dec. 22, 1924
June 9, 1909
Oct. 12, 1920
July 13, 1910
Apr. 9, 1900
Mar. 30, 192 1
Sept. 14,1931
Sept. 19, 1917
Nov. 14, 1924
Nov. 5, 1923
Nov. 14, 1924
July 26, 1919
June 18, 1924
Nov. 22, 1923
Aug. 12, 1924
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
RUSSIA— KINGDOM OF THE SERBS, CROATS. AND SLOVENES.
311
State.
RUSSIA
labama
laska
linois
aryland
assachusetts
ew York
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Chicago .
^nnsylvania.
Mobile Murray Wheeler, Vice-Coiisul
Nome Nikolai Bogoyavlensky. Consul-General
I Also Consul-General at Seattle.
Antoine Volkoff, Consul-General
For Illinois, Indiana. Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minne-
sota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Baltimore Charles Fawcett," Vice-Consul
Boston Joseph A. Conry , Consul
Date of rec-
ognition.
tiilippine Islands.
ixas
'ashington
SALVADOR.
ilifornia.. .
mal Zone .
New York City. . . j Michel Oustinow, Consul-General
For Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey,
Delaware, and North Carolina.
Peter A. Routsky," Acting Consul
Philadelphia William Tucker. Consul
Pittsburgh Georges Tchirkow, Consul
For the District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maryland,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and West
Virginia.
Manila Maurice Paillard," Vice-Consul
Galveston j Vice-Consul. .
Seattle Nikolai Bogoyavlensky, Consul-General
Also Consul-General at Nome.
For Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and
Wyoming.
Oct. 4, 1892
May 36,1915
June 34,1914
Oct. 33,19:4
Sept. 30, 191 2
Mar. 19, 1913
Dec. 19, 1916
Sept. 30, 191J
Oct. 7, 1915
Dec. 19, 1916
May 36,1915
nois.
luisiana.
aryland.
assachusetts.
ew York
:nnsylvania.
NGDOM OF THE SERBS,
CROATS, AND SLOVENES.
ilifornia.
Los Angeles 1 Roberto E. Tracey, Honorary Consul Apr.
San Francisco | Salvador Rodriguez, Consul j June
! Ernesto A. Boyd, Honorary Consul Feb.
Gilberto Melendez, \'ice-Consul July
Chicago Berthold Singer, Honorary Consul ; May
j Max Henry Ehlert, Honorary V^ice-Consul Oct.
New Orleans j Abraham Ramirez Pena, Consul I May
Baltimore Porlirio Mendez, Consul July
Benjamin Arrieta Gallegos, Vice-Consul ' July
Ralph Tirreil, Honorary Consul ; Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.
Boston
New York City .
Leonilo Montalvo, Consul-General ....
; Manuel Peralta L., Vice-Consul
Philadelphia Arturo Rivas Mena, Honorary Consul.
San Francisco
inois. ' Chicago
Slobodam Jovanovitch, Consul
Dragicha Stanoyevitch, Vice-Consul
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho,
Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, the Pliilippines,
Porto Rico, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington,
and Wyoming.
Bojidar Pouritch, Consul
For the States of Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Louisiana, Jlicliigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
and Wisconsin.
Vice-Consul. .
9,1919
Ml 1923
S. 1925
7, 1924
14,191s
30, 1924
21,1923
2,1923
18, 1924
I7>I923
S.1923
8, 1923
8,1923
•Jov. 3, 1924
May 33,1933
Dec.
312
FOREIGN CONSUI^AR OFFICEKS IN THE UNITED STATES.
KINGDOM OF THE SERBS, CROATS, AND SLOVENES— SPAIN.
State.
Residence
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
KINGDOM OF THE SERBS,
CROATS, AND SLOVENES— Con.
>Jew York
New York City. . . .
Pavle Karovitch.ti Consul-General
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Co-
Nov. 1, 1911
lumbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Mary-
land, JIassachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Vir-
SIAM.
San Francisco
ginia, West Virginia, and the Virgin Islands.
Henry G. W. Dinkelspiel, Consul-General
July 20, 1923
Aug. 7,1922
Chicago
New York City
Nathan William MacChesney, Consul-General
Charles W. Atwater, Consul
May 28, 1924
William E. Goodman, Consul
Dec. 18, 1923
SPAIN.
Mobile
Juan Llorca y Marti, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Alabama.
Los Angeles
Antonio Orfila, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Ber-
nardino, and San Diego Counties.
San Francisco
Josd Jimeno Aznar, Consul
Dec. 1, 1911
For Alaska, Arizona, California (except the Counties of
Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, and
San Diego), Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming.
Arturo Brand, Honorary Vice-Consul
Colon
Francisco Andrade Polanco, Honorary Consul
Jan. 22, 1925
For the Canal Zone from Cristobal to San Pablo.
Apr. 21, 1925
Apr. 21, 192s
For the Canal Zone, except the Colon district.
Florida
Femandina
Ricardo Noallas, Honorary Vice-Consul
Dec. 4, 1916
For Nassau County.
Jacksonville
Emilio Carles, Honorary Vice-Consul
Nov. 20, 1924
For Duval County.
Key West
June 28, 1919
For Monroe County.
Pensacola
J. Garriga, Honorary Vice-Consul
Oct. J, 1911
For Escambia County.
Tampa
Andres Iglesias y Velayos, Consul
Sept. 20, 1923
May 17. 1909
Alejandrino Nistal y Casas, Honorary Vice-Consul
•
For Florida, except Monroe, Nassau, and Escambia
Counties, and South Carolina.
Georeia
Brunswick
Rosendo Torras, Honorary Vice-Consul
June 14, 1900
For Glynn County.
Savannah
Pedro Baste Junyent, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Georgia, except Glynn County.
Hawaii
Honolulu
For Hawaii.
Idaho
Boise
June 12, 1916
For Idaho.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
SPAIN.
313
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
SPAIN— Continued.
llinois
Mar. 20,1911
June 12, 1916
Apr. 9, 1924
New Orleans
For Illinois (except East St. Louis), Indiana, Iowa,
Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota,
and Wisconsin.
Juan Antonio Meana y Padilla, Honorary Vice-Consul. . . .
Juan Vdzquez y Lopez Amor, Consul
For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mex-
ico, and Oklahoma.
Cristino Masia y Rodon, Honorary Vice-Consul
Giuseppe Schiaffino, Vice-ConsuI
For Maryland.
Pedro Mackay de Almeida, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Massachusetts.
Luis James Rosenberg, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Michigan.
Sept. 12, 1924
May s. 1919
June s, 1901
Vf assachusetts
Vlichigan
Detroit
Vlississippi
Gulfport
Missouri
St. Louis
For Mississippi.
New York City....
Cincinnati
For Missouri, and in Illinois the city of East St. Louis.
Jos^ Alvarez Hernandez, Vice-Consul
Jan. 5, 19 16
Sept. 7, 1920
May 9, 192 1
July 28, 1920
Vew York
Mariano Vidal Tolosana. Vice-Consul
Manuel de Soler, Honorary Vice-Consul
3hio :..
For Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New York,
Rhode Island, and Vermont, and in New Jersey the
counties of Essex, Hudson, Middlesex, Bergen, Mon-
mouth, Passaic, Sussex, and Union.
Dregon
Portland
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Cebu
For Ohio.
June 12,1916
Dec. 37, 1921
Sept. 20, 1921
Mar. 30. 1909
June 26, 1927
Pennsylvania
For Oregon.
For Delaware, New Jersey, except the counties assigned
to the New York Consular district, and Pennsyl-
vania, except the counties assigned to the Pittsburgh
consular district.
Jose Corriols y Sala, Honorary Vice-Consul
^hilipijiiie Islands
For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver,
Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw-
ford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana,
Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset,
Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland.
Cristobal Garcia, Honorary Vice-Consul
Iloilo
For Bohol and Cebu.
For the Provinces of Antique, Capiz. Iloilo, Negros Occi-
dental, and Negros Oriental.
314
FOREIGN CONSUI^AR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
SPAIN.
SUte.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
SPAIN— Continued.
Philippine Islands — Continued.
Juan Potous y Martinez, Consul-General
Feb. 12,1914
For the Provinces of Abra, Bataan, Batangas, Bulacan,
Cavite, Ilocos Norte, Ilocas Sur, Leyte, Manila,
Marinduque, Mindoro, Nueva Ecija, Nueva Viz-
caya, Palawan, Pampanga, Pangasinan, Provincias
Montanosas, Rizal, Romblon, Samar, Tarlac, La
Union, and Zambales, and the Island of Guam.
Josd Ledesma Reina, Vice-Consul
Porto Rico
Aguadilla.
Honorary Vire-Consul . .
For the Aguadilla district.
For the Arecibo district.
Humacao
Honorary Vice-Consul . .
Jose Mendez Rodriguez, Honorary Vice-Consul
For the Humacao district.
Honorary Consul . .
Benigno Rodriguez Campoamor, Honorary Vice-Consul. . .
July 8. 1032
For the Mayaguez district.
For the Ponce district.
For the San Juan and Guayama districts.
Manuel Manzuco Garcia, Vice-Consul
Jan. 21, 1925
For the Vieques district.
Texas
Emilio C. Forto, Honorary Vice-Consul
For Cameron County.
El Paso
Ramiro Diaz Erro, Honorary Vice-Consul . •
For El Paso Coimty.
Galveston
Consul.
For Texas, except the counties assigned to the Vice-
Consulates in Texas.
Eduardo Sevilla y Montoliu, Honorary Vice-Consul
July 3>I9I9
June 7,1923
For Harris County.
Port Arthur
Alfonso A. Schreck, Honorary Vice-Consul
Sept. 8, 1923
For Hardy, Jefferson, Liberty, and Orange counties.
Virginia
Norfolk
Antonio de la Cruz Marin, Consul
For the District of Columbia, Kentucky, North Caroluia,
Teimessee, and Virginia.
Arthur C. Humphreys, Honorary Vice-Consul
Virgin Islands
St. Thomas
Isidro de Lugo, Honorary Vice-Consul
Mar. 25, 1918
For Virgin Islands.
Seattle
June 12.1916
For Washington.
For West Virginia.
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
SWEDEN.
315
State.
SWEDEN.
Alabama .
California .
Canal Zone .
Colorado
Florida .
Georgia.
Hawaii.
Illinois.
Iowa
Louisiana
Maryland....
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota. . . .
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
New York. ...
North Dakota ....
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Philippine Islands
Residence.
Mobile
San Diego
San Francisco.
Colon .
Panama.
Denver
Jacksonville.
Pensacola . . .
Savannah. . .
Honolulu . . .
Chicago .
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Robert Bennett Turner, Vice-Consul
Nils Malmberg, Vice-Consul
Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, Consul
For Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Ore-
gon, Utah, and Washington.
Fredrik Westerberg, Vice-Consul
Johannes Julius Ecker, Vice-Consul
For the Isthmian Canal Zone.
Rudolf Biennan de St. Malo, Consul
For the Isthmian Canal Zone.
Walter Anders Peterson, Vice-Consul
Vice-Consul.
Charles McKenzie-Oerting, Vice-Consul
Aage Georg Schroder, Vice-Consul
Christian J. Hedemann, Vice-Consul
For the Territory of Hawaii.
Carl Otto David von Dardel, Consul
For Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Gustaf Bernhard Anderson, Vice-Consul
Gustavus Nelson Swan, Vice-Consul ,
George Plant, Vice-Consul
Charles Morton Stewart, Vice-Consul
Carl Wilhelm Emanuel Andre Johansson, Vice-Consul
Carl Berglund, Vice-Consul
Nils Leon Jaenson, Vice-Consul
A. Hawkinson, Vice-Consul
Vice-Consul. .
Peter August Edquist, Vice-Consul
Gustave Robert Ohlin, Vice-Consul
Carl Alfred Okerlind, Vice-Consul
Olof Herman Lamm, Consul-General
Theophilus Ludvig Imanuel Wessen, Vice Consul
For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South CaroUna, Ten-
nessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.
K. V. Vendelu, Vice-Consul
K. R. Thybergu, Vice-Consul
Andrew Isidor Widlund, Vice-Consul
Herman J. Nord, Vice-Consul
Portland ! Elof Valdemar Lidell, Vice-Consul
Philadelphia Maurice Hogelaud, Vice-Consul
Manila Carl Orton, Consul
j For the PhiUppine Islands.
Porto Rico. . . Ponce Rafael Subira, Vice-Consul
San Juan Waldemar Edward Lee, Consul
For the island of Porto Rico.
Galveston Charles Fowler, Vice-Consul
Salt Lake City Frank L. Malmstedt, Vice-Consul
Norfolk Joseph John Carlson, Vice-Consul
Sioux City
New Orleans. . .
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Minneapolis. . . . ,
Kansas City
Missoula ,
Omaha
Buffalo
Jamestown
New York City .
Grand Porks.
Cleveland
Date of rec-
ognition.
Nov. 20, 1922
Oct. 20, 190S
Feb. 17,1920
July 29,1908
Sept. 5. t92^
Jan. 17. 1923
Jan. i8, 1910
July 11,1906
Sept. 13, 1922
Nov. 1,1922
Sept. 15, 1921
July 31.1914
Apr. 11,1899
May Si 1919
June 10,1933
Sept. 4, 1920
May 38, 1934
Sept. IS, 1934
July 15,1915
May 3,1913
Jan. 6, 1925
Dec. 30, 19Z0
Jan. 1,1935
Sept. IS, 1934
Texas...
Uuh...
Virginia
Jan. 15,1924
Jan. 15, 1924
Auf. 17,1906
Aug. 30, 1916
Oct. 20, 1908
Oct. 13,1933
July 7,1930
Feb. 10. 1923
Jan. 11,1921
July 3,1919
Mar. 15,1931
Nov. 16, 19J1
32952—25-
-21
3i6
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
SWEDEN— URUGUAY.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
SWEDEN— Continued
Virgin Islands
Wasliington
SWITZERLAND.
California
Colorado
District of Columbia
Illinois
Louisiana
Missouri
New York
Ohio.
Oregon .
Pennsylvania.
Philippine Islands.
Virgin Islands
Washington .
St. Thomas.. .
Seattle
Los Angeles. .
San Francisco
Denver
Washington..
Chicago
New Orleans.
St. Louis ,
New York City .
Cincinnati.
Portland.
Philadelphia .
Manila.
Seattle.
TURKEY.
The diplomatic and consular
representatives of Spain have
charge of Turkish interests in
the United States.
URUGUAY.
Alabama..
California.
Mobile
Los Angeles
San Francisco.
Axel Hoist. Consul Sept.
For the Virgin Islands. 1
Andrew Chilberg, Vice-Consul Aug.
Jurisdiction includes Alaska.
2. J879
Adrien Loeb, Honorary Consul
For Arizona, and in California, the counties of Imperial,
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San
Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura.
John Freuler, Consul
For northern California and Nevada.
Guillaume Schwyter, Honorary Vice-Consul
Paul Weiss, Consul
For Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah.
The Legation of Switzerland in Washington has charge
of consular matters in the District of Columbia, Slary-
land, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Ernest Biihler, Honorary Consul
For Iowa, northern Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Mon-
tana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming.
Carl Ferdinand Bertschinger, Honorary Vice-Consul
Paul U. Thalman, Consul
For Alabama. Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana.
Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, .South Caro-
lina, and Texas.
Gaston Dubois, Honorary Consul
For Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and southern Illinois.
Louis H. Junod, Consul
Henri Escher, Vice-Consul
For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New York, Rhode Island, V'ermont, and the
Virgin Islands.
Emile Frederic Glaser, Honorary Consul
For Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
Paul O. Brandenberg:er, Honorary Consul
For Idaho and Oregon.
Charles Vuilleumier, Consul
For Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
Albert Sidler, Honorary Consul
Swiss interests are under the jurisdiction of the Swiss
Consulate at New York.
Frederic Strasser, Honorary Consul
For Alaska and Washington.
Juan Llorca Marty, Vice-Consul.
.Vice-Consul. .
O. M. Goldaracena, Consul.
For California.
Dec. 31,1913
Oct. 37,1913
June 22, 192a
Apr. 7>i9ii
Nov. 15, 1922
Dec. 20, 1922
Sept. 14, 1917
Oct. 2,1920
Nov. 22,1912
Nov. 27, 191a
May 10, 1922
Nov. II, 1922
June i.i9i.<;
Feb. 16,1923
Dec. 22, 1924
July 9- 193.1
July is,i9ii
FOREPGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
URUGUAY— VENEZUELA.
317
State.
URUGUAY— Continued .
Florida.
Georgia .
Illinois
Louisiana.
Maryland
Massachusetts .
Mississippi.
Missouri. . .
New York .
Oregon
Pennsylvania.
Porto Rico.
Texas
Virginia.
Virgin Islands.
Washington . . .
VENEZUELA.
Alabama. .
California.
Canal Zone .
Georgia
Residence.
Jacksonville and
Femandina.
Pensacola
Brunswick
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Raymond A. MacDonell, Vice-Consul .
Savannah .
Chicago
New Orleans.
Maine 1 Portland
Baltimore. .
Attleboro. .
Boston
Pascagoula.
Kansas City
St. Louis
Albany ,
Buffalo
New York City .
Portland
Philadelphia.
Pittsburgh...
Mayagiiez. . . .
Ponce
San Juan.
Galveston
Port Arthur....
Newport News.
Norfolk
Richmond
Frederiksted . . .
Seattle.
Vicente J. Vidal, \'ice-Consul
Rosendo Terras, Vice-Consul
For Brunswick and Daden.
Ramon Esteve, Consul
Vice-Consul .
Rodolfo Carlos Lebret. Consul
Henry L. Lange, Consul
Vice-Consul. .
Consul .
Jose Payon.u in charge of Consulate
Vice-Consul.
William A. Mossman, Consul
Manuel L. Ros, Vice-Consul
For Biloxi, Gullport, and Pascagoula.
Gabriel Madrid Hernandez, Vice-Consul
F. Ernest Cramer, Consul
Guillermo A. Saxton,< Vice-Consul
Leon L. Lancaster, Vice Consul
Jose Richling, Consul-General
For the United States.
C^sar C. Gaudencio, Consul
Henry H. Jennings, Vice-Consul
John H. Lothrop, Vice Consul
Rodman Wanamaker, Consul
William Meyer, Vice-Consul
Guillermo H. Moscoso, Vice-Consul ,
Carlos Armstrong, Vice-Consul ,
For Guayama and Ponce.
Manuel Mendia Alorales, Consul
Manuel Gomez Lopez, Vice-Consul
For Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao.
Enrique Schroeder, Vice-Consul
Alfonso A. Schreck, Vice-ConSul
E. J. Rudgard Wigg, « in charge of Vice Consulate
E. J. Rudgard Wigg, Vice Consul
Augusto Dietz, Vice-Consul
Thomas Ramsay, Consul
For the island of St. Croix.
Adolfo Bracons, Vice-Consul
Date of rec-
ognition.
May
31
1923
May
26,
19 10
June
7
I90I
Mar.
34>
I603
Aug.
27l
191a
Apr.
16.
191ft
Mobile Jose R. Canelon, Consul May 23, 1924
Los Angeles James M. Sheridan," Honorary Consul Apr. 15, 1924
San Francisco Luis Alcala Sucre, Consul General May 23, 1924
For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
William Fisher, Honorary Consul I Apr. 21, 19 18
Colon Carlos Elias \'illanueva. Consul General Dec. 18, 1923
.Atlanta R. A. W. Barrett, Honorary Consul I Sept. 14,1923
May
21, 1924
Oct.
9. I9IS
May
22, I9OS
May
19. 19 13
May
22, 1920
Dec.
s. 1907
June
II, 1924
Mar.
30. 1921
Dec.
9. 19 19
July
IS. 1911
Sept.
10, 1924
Sept.
8, 1911
Apr.
10, 1919
Nov.
16, 1920
Nov.
30, 1906
Feb.
3. 1913
Feb.
3. 1913
Nov.
28, 1902
May
19, 1923
May
27, 192s
May
iS, 1925
Oct.
I. I9I4
Sept.
s. 1917
May 2, 1916
3i8
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES.
VENEZUELA.
State.
Residence.
Name, rank, and jurisdiction.
Date of rec-
ognition.
VENEZUELA-Continued.
Louisiana
New Orleans
Sept. 22,1923
May 19, 1923
.Tan. 6, 192 1
Apr. 15, 1924
Oct. 25, 1920
Nov. 10, 19 11
Maryland
For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and West Vir-
ginia.
Massachusetts
Mississippi
Gulfport
Missouri
St. Louis
New York
New York City . . .
Ohio
W. P. Whitlock, Honorary Consul
June 26, 19 16
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Porto Rico
May s. 1908
Texas
Beaumont
Fort Worth
Galveston
For Porto Rico.
Consul
Norfolk and New-
port News.
St. Thomas
Seattle
Virgin Islands
For the Virgin Islands.
For Washington.
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Aaltio, Kaarlo Fredrik 284
Abbot, Lucy E 22
Abbott, John T 220
Abbott, Wainwright 42, 80, 90
Abe, Kikuichi 270
Abegg, Charles 67, 90
Abrams, Belle J 15, 31. 9°
Abreu y Sanchez, Alberto G 281
Acharan, Armando Quezada 260
Ackerman, Ralph H 37i 9°
Ackermann, Marie iS, 34. 9°
Adam, William James 288
Adams, Charles 219
Adams, Charles Francis 223
Adams, Edward L 89, 90
Adams, John i
Adams, John Quincy. . i, 223, 226, 228, 229
Adams, John Robert 306
Adams, Newton 90
Adams, Philip 64, 82, 90
Adams, jr., Robert 219
Adams, Walter A 57, So, 90
Adatci, Mineitciro 263
Adee, Alvey A 3. 5. 6
Adjemovitch, Branco 271
Adoue, Jean B 285
Agacio, B. Federico 266
Agerton, Baylor L 9°
Agostini, Caesar Franklin 73. 9°
Agviilar Soto, Julio 280
Aguirre Velasquez, Eduardo 290
Aguirre, Stephen Earnest 69, 90
Ahmed Rechid Bey 265
Ahrens, Gladys C 20, 31, 90
Ahrens, Philip H 22, 32, 90
Aibara, Kuragoro 295
Alai, Mirza Hussein Khan 271
Albert, Talbot J 90
Alborta, Jorge D 277
Albrecht, Charles H 73, 80, 90
Alcala Sucre, Luis 317
Alden, Austin C 90
Alden, Roger 7
Alemin y Vailed, Fernando 281, 283
Alencar, Augusto Cochrane de. . . . 266
Alexander, Eben 223, 228, 229
Alexander, F. Virginia 12, 36, 90
Alexander, Hugh F 21, 31, 50
Alexander, Knox 65, 86, 91
Alexy, Louis 291
Alfani, Alberto 295
Alfaro, Colon Eloy 283
Alfaro, Ricardo J 270
Alger, William E 91, 216
Allen, Charles E 7S, 82, 91
Allen, Charles W •. 74, 91
Page.
Allen, Edgar Poe is. 34. 9i
Allen, Fred W 307
Allen, Heman 220
Allen, Horace N 225
Allen, Percy F 9, 11, 26, 91
Ailing, Paul H 74, 87, 91
Allison, Rose E. Archer 20, 35, 91
Allman, Norwood F 91
Allport, Fayette W 39. 91
Allpress, Elvia B 18, 36, 91
Ahnada, Baldomero A 298
Almazora, Lizardo 264
Altaffer, Maurice W 74, 87, 91
Alvarado y del Saz, Juan 264
Alvarez Calderon, Manuel 264
Alvarez, Federico C 267
Alvarez Hernandez, Jose 313
Alvarez Lopez, Pedro 314
Amenabar y Cabello, Gabriel A. . . 280
Ameri, S. M 271
Ames, Edward Winslow 91
Amory, jr., Copley 40, 79, 91
Amsden, Charles A 74, 86, 91
Anagnostache, George 310
Anchondo, Juan E 297
Anciaux, Gabriel Louis 72, 91
Anderson, Chandler P 3, 258
Anderson, Francis M 10, 15, 91
Anderson, George B 92,216
Anderson, George E 92
Anderson, Gustaf Bemhard 315
Anderson, Henry W 258
Anderson, John A 222
Anderson, John Alfred 284
Anderson, Larz 92, 219, 225
Anderson, Norman L 64, 82, 92
Anderson, Rasmus B 221
Anderson, Richard C 220
Anderson, Thomas H 219
Anderson, jr. , T. Hart 92
Anderson, Walter H is. 34. 92
Anderton, Judith B 14, 29. 92
Andrade Polanco, Francisco 312
Andrews. C. C 230
Andrews, G. Bruce 64, 92
Andrews, William Whiting. ... 37, 78, 92
Angel, Benjamin F 230
Angell, James B 220. 231
Angell, James K 58, 92
Angelone, Romolo 269
Anselmo, Fortunato 294
Anslinger, Harry J 74, 84, 92
Anthony, Nicholas 22, 27, 92
Anzilotti, Dionisio 262
Apperson, Edwin L 306
Appleton, John 4, 7, 219, 229
Page.
Appleton, John James 230
Appleyard, George S 63, 92
Aragon, Edmundo L 298
Arango, Josd Agustin 309
Arcaya, Pedro Manuel 272
Arendt, Leon 260
Argiiello, Ernesto 303
Argiiello, jr., Herman 303
Aria-Feraud, jr., Ramon 284
Arias, Hannodio 263
Arias y Perez de Alejo, Manuel. . . 280
Ariza, Carlos V 301
Ariza, ]osi del Carmen 267
Armour, Norman 40, 77, 92
Armstrong, Albert 282
Armstrong, Carlos 317
Armstrong, George Alexander. . 74,87,92
Armstrong, Henry Gloster 288
Armstrong, James 92
Armstrong, John 222
Armstrong, jr., John S 92
Armstrong, Lar^rence S 63, 87, 92
Armstrong, Marvil G 38. 92
Amell, Charles J 92
Arnold, Frank D 7S. 79. 92
Arnold, jr., George C 72, 93
Arnold, Julean 37. 93
Arnold, Marion 12, 23, 93
Arnold, Olney 93, 216, 222
Arregui, Bernardo. ...; 312
Arteta G., Luis 283
Arrieta Gallegos, Benjamin 311
Arthur, Chester A 2
Asboth, Alexander 218, 231
Asbury , Charles E 93
Ashenden, Vivian M 15, 27, 93
Asinari di Bemezzo, Vittorio 269
Assarsson, P. V. G 272
Astor, William Waldorf 224
Astrom, Axel Leonard 268
Atcherson, Lucile 29, 75, 84, 93
Atcheson, jr., George 28, 75. 87. 93
Atherton. Edwin N 93
Atherton, Ray 39. 77. 93
Atkisson, Earl J 39. 93
Atwater, Charles W 312
Atwcll, William P 93, 216
Atwood, Franklin B 6s. 93
Auer, Pieter F 71. 93
Austin, Reginald McPherson 288
Austin, Richard W 93
Authier, Joseph M 93
Auzias de Turenne, R 277
Avcleyra, Rafael 297
Averill, Henry 93
Avery, Benjamin P 220
320
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Avery, William L 93
Avil^s Mejia, Ismael 283
Aviles Zerda, Francisco 261
Axerico, Emilio 293
Axtell, Oliver H 71. 93
Ayala, Kusebio 271
Ayers, E.J 7, 8, 10, 26, 93
Ayers, Inez A 18, 36, 94
A>-inf , Louis H 94, 216
Ayulo Laos, Alberto 271
Ayulo, Manuel 3°"
Aznar, Jos6 Jimenc 312
Azuola Aubert, Eduardo 280
Babcock, Elisha J 22
Babcock, Lester 94
Baber, Ambrose 229
Baccclli, Germane Placido 293
Bachelder, Leonard A 61, 94
Bacon, John E 227, 231
Bacon, Robert 3. 5. 94. 216, 222
Bader, Ralph H 94
Bading, Gerhard A 38, 94. 222
Baehr, Max J 94
Baer, Beulah G 22, 32, 94
Baer, Emil L 268
Baerresen, Viggo Egede 304
Bagby, Arthur P 229
Bagby, Xettie N 14, 29, 94
Bahr, Clarence L 18, 35, 94
Bailey, Augustus Oswald 280
Bailey, Everett E 94
Bailey, James G 41, 77, 94
Bailey, John W 74. 94
Bailey, Stuart R 14. 34, 94
BaiUic, Adrian William Maxwell. . 268
Bailly-Blanchard, Arthur 39, 94, 224
Baird, jr., Alexander 286
Baker, Edward Carleton 94
Baker, Henry D 66, 84, 94
Baker, James MacCallum 304
Baker, Jehu 232
Baker, Joseph R 9, 25, 94
Baker, Lewis 221, 226. 229
Baker, Orlando H 95, 216
Baker, Roy W 73. 95
Balch, Henry H 61, 79, 95
Baldwin. Frederick W 68, 87, 95
Baldwin, George E 95
Baldwin, Norman L 95
Baldwin, William. Woodward 6
Balfour, J 268
Ballantine, Joseph W 69, 79, 95
Banash, Sydney H 54, 95
Bancroft, Edgar A 40, 95, 225
Bancroft, George 222, 223, 228
Bannerman, Robert C 10, 23
Bancs, Alfredo 300
Bancs Contreras, Salvador 300
Barberis, Juan 267
Barclay, Hugh 37. 95
Barbour, James 223
Bardel, William 95
Barham, Eric George 306
Barkalow, Rees H 37. 84. 95
Barker, Blanche A 13. 34. 95
Barker, Clifford O 18, 31, 93
Barker, W. Roswell 37. 82, 95
Page.
Barletta, V'icente 318
Barlow, Joel 222
Barnaby, Arthur C 63, 95
Barnard, Daniel D 228
Barnard, Joseph H 37. 42. 95
Barnes, Charles N 9. 25. 95
Barnes, Maynard B 74, 82, 95
Barnes, Samuel Wythe 289
Bamesou, John 283
Barnett, Carlos 307
Barnett, Charles M 304
Barnhart. Eva S 15, 27, 96
Baron, Jose T 267
Barrera Guerra, Seruando 301
Barret, John 218. 230
Barreto, Antonio Maria 308
Barrett, David D 38, 96
Barrett, John 96, 220, 227
Barrett, R. A. W 317
Barrett, W. E 307
Barringer, Daniel M 230
Barringer, George H 65, 96
Barrow, Washington 228
Barrows, David D 259
Barry, John 22
Barry, John R 64, 96
Barry, M. Esther 14, 26, 96
Barry, William T 230
Bartanen, Charles A 284
Barthc! de Weydcnthal, George . . 308
Barthelemy, Antonin 284
Bartleman, Richard M 96
Bartlett, Joseph J 230
Barton, John L 22, 32, 96
Barton, Seth 220
Bartosovsky, Bohuslav 281
Bassett, Ebenezer D 224
Bassett, Jane B 13, 30, 96
Baste, Junyent, Pedro 312
Bastes, Julio 265
Batcheller, George S 228
Bates, Marie Alice 15, 34, 96
Batres Jauregui, Antonio 262
Battaglia, Giuseppe 292
Baugh, Hubert G 96
Baukhages, Minna E 17, 31, 96
Baumann, Reimund 282
Baurraud. Manuel Telle 300
Baxter, Henry 224
Baumback y Griethe, Carlos 270
Baxter, John K 96
Baxter, Ruth H 17, 30, 96
Bay, Charles A 70, 86, 96
Bayard, Richard H 218
Bayard, Thomas F 2, 223
Baylies, Francis 218
Bazzanella, R. M 291
Beach, William H 61. 87, 96
Beale, Edward F 218
Beale, Truxton 223, 227, 228, 229
Bean, J. Hubbard 11, 34, 96
Beard, Harold E 287
Bcasley, Eugene 20, 31, 96
Beaulac, Willard L 67, 84. 96
Beaumont, Adam 68, 96
Beauprf , Arthur M 96,
218, 220, 221, 225, 226
Bech, George 282
Page.
Beck, William H 9, 11, 23, 96
Becker, Cla^'ton S 13. 34. 97
Becker, Neal Dow 278
Bedinger, Henry 221
Bedoya Monge, Ram6n 280
Bcdoya, Santiago F 271
Beebe, Hoel S 65, 97
Beeler, Azel D 97
Beer, Richard C 64, 97
Beichmann, Frederik Valdemar
Nikolai 263
Beitz, William E 61, 97
Belanger, Joseph 285
Belden Perry 97
Belin, F. Lammot 24, 75, 78, 97
Belisle, Eugene L 89, 97
Bell, Edward 97, 215, 216
Bell, Isaac, jr 226
Bell, John Elliot 288
Bell, Margaret Bradley 15. 25, 97
Bellegarde, Dantes 262
Belmont, Perry 230
Belmont, August 226
Belovsky, Sidney A 66, 97
Belt, John W 97
Belton, William Edward 287
Beluche, Pablo E 306
Benavides Guerrero. Alberto 279
Benedict, James S 89, 97
Benesh, Ella A 14, 27, 97
Benitez, Jos^ 270
Benjamin, S. G. W 227
Bennett, Margaret V 1 2, 34, 97
Benson, Alexander 97
Benton, James Webb 42, 80, 97
Berea y Rodrigo, Alejandro 313
Berg, Ingvald Andreas 305
Berg, Per Torsten 74. 97
Berger, David C 57. 86, 97
Bergh, Robert S. S 97. 216
Bergholz, Leo Allen 97
Berglund, Carl 31s
Berguido, jr. , Carlos 306
Berliner, Solomon 97, 216
Bermejo, Antonio 259
Bemardes da Silva, Alfredo 260
Bernays, Lewis Edward 288
Berne, Emile A 283, 285
Bernts, Olaf 304
Berrey, Nannie W 18, 31, 97
Bertot, Raoul A 58, 97
Bertschinger, Carl Ferdinand 316
Besa Montt, Heman 278
Betancourt, A. Beauregard 274
Betts, Thomas J 38, 98
Beutelspacher, Gustave 98, 216
Bevan, Thomas H 6r, 79, 98
Beverhoudt. J. V 282
Bevilaqua, Clovis 260
Beylard, Charles B 60, 98
Biar, Herbert C 64, 87, 98
Bibesco, A 271
Bickers, William A 58, 87, 98
Bickford, George F 98, 216
Biddle, John H 61, 98
Biddle, Thomas 221, 229
Bidlack, Benjamin A 220
Bielskis, Julius J 296
INDEX OF PERSONS.
321
Page.
Bien, David WlUiani 277
Bierman de St. Malo, Rudolf 315
Bigelow. Donald F 60, 84, 98
Bigelow, John. 222
Bigelow, R. Barry 74. 98
Bigler, John 220
Bildt, Carl Nils Daniel 265
Binda. John L 98
Bingham, John A 225
Bingham, Rutherfurd 98
Bingham, William McKee 66, 98
Birch. David R 98
Birch, Mary N 13. 29. 98
Birch, Thomas H 98, 228
Bird, Frederick O 75, 98
Bimey. James 226
Bishop. Crawford M 98
Bshop, William H 98
Bisseroff, Stephen P 266
Bizauskas. Kazys 270
Black, Jeremiah S 2
Blackard. Wade 62, 98
Blackford, William M 220
Blackwood, Elizabeth B 17, 31, 98
Blacud Joire, Jorge 266
Blaine, James G 2
Blaine. Walker 6
Blair, Jacob B 221
Blair, Percy A 39, 80, 98
Blake, jr. , Gilson G 65, 86, 98
Blake, Maxwell 64, 76, 99, 226
Blanco Viel, Ventura 260
Bland, J. H 274, 287
Blandford, Alice M 11, 26, 99
Blatchford, Richard Milford 227
Bleecker, Hernamus 226
Bliss, Burdette B 67, 99
Bliss, Robert Woods 6, 42, 99, 230
Blocker, William P 69, 80. 99
Blohm, Lee R 69, 84, 99
Blom, Andreas J 282
Blount, James H 224
Blow, Henry T 219. 232
Bloxham, William D 219
Blumenthal, William 99
Bluthardt, Theodore J 99, 216
Boal, Pierre de L 42, 79, 99
Boardman, Frederic A 99
Boasman, John N 21, 27, 99
Bobertz, Carlos Enrique 280
Bocock, Annabelle H 18, 27, 99
Boernstein, Ralph A 68, 87, 99
Boeye, P 275
Boggs, S. W 9. 33. 99
Bogoya vlensky , Nikolai 311
Bogran, Luis 269
Bohne, Frederick A 66, 99
Bohr, Frank 57, 82, 99
Boker, George H 229, 231
Bojsen, .•Vnker Konow 267
Bolds, Harry H 22, 32, 100
BoUes, C. P 305
Bonamy, Augusta 262
Bond, Wallace, C 100
Bonet, Sebastian 318
Bonilla, Manuel Antonio 280
Bonnet. Ellis A 70, 87, 100
Bonnevie, Bjame 305
Page.
Bonney, Wilbert L 62, 82, 100
Bonynge, Robert W 258
Booker, Burnett 21, 31, 100
Booram, Loren 0 306
Booth. Guy B 21, 31, 100
Bopp, Jennie Cook 13,31. 100
Boragino, Angelo 68, 100
Borden, James W 224
Borden, Nathaniel Bamett 304
Bordcwich, Henry 100, 216
Borjes, Clara L 14. 34. 100
Borland, Solon 221, 223, 224, 226, 229
Bomo, Louis 262
Bomot, Leonce 291
Brresen. Johan Guldbrand 305
Botkin, Theodosius 100, 216
Bouchal, John L 58, 82, 100
Boucher, Hiram A 62, 84, 100
Boulwaie, William 231
Bouret, Joseph James 314
Bourgeois, Leon 261
Bourinot, John J 66, 100
Bourke, C. Eloise 21, 27, 100
Bourquin, A 284
Boutell. Henry S 100, 231
Boutell, Roger S. G 100
Bowcock, James M 68, 100
Bowdoin, James 230
Bovven. Arthur L 55, loo
Bowen, Herbert W 226, 232
Bowens, G. Jar vis 100
Bower, Roy E. B 66, 100
Bowerman, Paul 60, 87, 100
Bowers, Blanche is, 33) loi
Bowlin, James B 220, 227
Bowman, Howard A 68, 87, loi
Bowman, Thomas D 70, 77, loi
Boyce, Richard F 68, 82, loi
Boyd, Ernesto A 311
Boyd, Sempronius H 230
Boyle, Lewis V 60, 84, loi
Boyle, Walter F 70, 80, loi
Braband, Thomas S 283
Brac'ns, Adolfo 290,307,317
Bradbury, Craig E 18,31, loi
Bradford, John Percy is, 26, loi
Bradford, Robert R 55,82, loi
Bradley, John R 101
Bradley, William Harrison loi
Bradshaw, Charlotte 18, 25, loi
Brady, Austin C 73, 82, loi
Bragg, Edward Stuyvesant. 101,216,225
Brancucci, Giuseppe 292, 293
Brand, Arturo 312
Brand, Carlos W 278
Brand, Norton F 63,87, loi
Brandenberger, Paul O 316
Brandt, George 1 36, 75, 82, loi
Brannen, James Arthur 288
Bratton, Rufus S 40, 102
Brauer, Robert 102
Bravo, Albert 276, 282
Bravo, Oscar F 302
Braxton, Virginia C 14,30, 102
Bray, John P 102, 216
Breckinridge, Clifton R 229
Breen, Mary Agnes 14,29,102 I
Bremer, T 302
Page.
Brennan, Earl 61, 102
Brenner, Ernest 272
Brent, Daniel i, -
Brent, Thomas L. L 22S
Brent, jr., William 218
Brentano, Theodore 39, 102. 224
Bresnahan, Nellie 20.31, 102
Bresso, Amilcare 294
Bretherton, Harold G 69, 102
Brett, Homer 53. 80, 102
Brewer, Andrew J 102
Bricetio, Iragorri, Mario 31S
Brickwood, jr., Albert W 102
Bride, William W 310
Bridge, Henry P 66, 102
Bridgman. George H 102, 219
Briggs, Lawrence P 57, 82, 102
Bright, Frederick 1 102
Brin, Ernesto 306
Brinton, Jasper Yeates 239
Brissel, Charies F 102, 216
Brist, George L 8,11.31.102
Bristol, Mark L 42, 102
Bristow, John A 102
Brito, jr., Francisco de Paula ^09
Britt, William 304
Brittain, Joseph 1 89. 102
Broadhead, James 0 231
Broderick, John Joyce 268
Brodie, Edward E 42, 102. 230
Brong, Palmer D 280
Brookings. Robert S 259
Brooks, H. W 268
Brooks, Russell M 61,87,102
Broomall, Hamian L 103
Broomfleld, Edmond L 18. 35. 103
Brower, Julio J 291
Brown, C. Inness 103
Brown, Ethan A 219
Brown, F. Harold 103
Brown, George 224
Brown, H. A 26S
Brown, Henr>' R 73.86.103
Brown, James 222
Brown, Neil S 220
Brown, Philip M 103, 224
Brown, Robert W 22, 27, 103
Brown, Sevellon A 7
Brown, W. Duval 103
Brown, William H 63. 103
Browne, Julius Basil 289
Browne, J. Ross 220
Browning, Sidney J 304
Broy, Charles C 33. 75.80, 103
Brubakcr, John T is- 34, 103
Bruflfcy, Marion L iS'34, 103
Bruins, John H 69, 87. 103
Brumer, Samuel 103
Brun, Constantin 267
Brunot, Hilary S 103
Brunswick, William W 64, 84, 103
Bryan, Charles Page 103,
216, 219, 320, 325, 238
Bryan, Henry L 9, 11,33, 103
Bryan, John A 327
Bryan, William Jennings 3
Bri'ce, Lloyd 103,316,225,336
Br^n, H. H 207
322
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Bucci, Andrea 293
Buchanan, James 2, 223, 229
Buchanan. James M 221
Buchanan, Thomas E 304
Buchanan, William 1 218, 227
Buck, Alfred E 225
Buck, Charles W 227
Buckalcw, Charles R 221
Buckler, William H 103
Bucklin, George A 66, 79, 103
Bucknell, jr., Howard 56, 84, 103
Buckner, George W 103
Budas, Albert 284
Budd, Helen L 12,36,104
Buhlcr, Ernest 316
Buhrman, Parker W 74.81, 104
Bull, Johan Randulf 305
BuUard, William Connsil 282
Bulnes, Basilio 299
Bunch, Mary W 18, 36, 104
Bundy, Richard C 104
BurchcU, Edgard L 299
Burdett, William C 73,81,104
Burden, Hugh E 66, 104
Burg, Joseph P 14, 25, 104
Burge, Roy L i5,35>io4
Burgher, Robert S 41, 84, 104
Burke, Gordon L 56, 104
Burlingame, Anson 218, 220
Burlingham, Lloyd 104
Burnell, Albro I, 104, 216
Burnell, Lucy E 15, 34, 104
Burnett, Rufus R 2i,35>i04
Burpee, Lawrence Johnston 257
Burr, Francis W 306
Burn, Alfred T 67, 82, 104
Burroughs, Anna V 18, 27, 104
Bursley . Herbert S 58, 84, 104
Burt, Joseph F 60, 87, 104
Burton, Allan A 220
Burton, Fred M 278
Buskie, Elisabeth L iS, 36, 104
Busscr, Ralph C 6s, 79, 105
Bustos, Enrique 279
Butler, Anthony 225
Butler, Dorothy K 12, 34, 105
Butler, Hamilton 135
Butler, John F 38, 105
Butler, John L 21, 27, 105
Butler, Paul Dalrymple 288
Butrick, Richard P 58, 86, 105
Butts, Halleck A 40, 105
Byars, Winfield S 13,34, 105
Byington, A. Homer 105,216
Byington, Homer M 68, 77, 105
Caballero y Valdesk Miguel 280
Cable, Philander L 37. 78, 105
Caboni, Michele 293
Cabral y Baez, Mr 261
Cabrera, Jose 297
Cabrera y Bequet, Jose R 281
Cadwalader, John L 4
Caffee, Albert V 13, 34, 105
Caffery, Edward 72, 84, 105
Caff cry, Jefferson 40, 76, los
Caficro, Mos^ 292
Caino, Giacamo Antonio 294
Calder, F. Willard 66, 105
Page.
Caldcrara, Mario 269
Caldwell, John C 105, 227, 231
Caldwell, John K 28, 75, 77, 105
Caldwell, John L 106, 216, 227
Caldwell, John W 219
Calhoun, John C 2
Callioun, William James. . . . 106, 216, 220
Callanau, Leo J 68. 87, 106
Callicott, Ellen C 15. 28, 106
Calnan, John L 58, 106
Calogeras, Nilcias 289
Calvert. John S 73. 84, 106
Camara, Camillo 310
Cambreleng, Churchill C 229
Cameron. Alfred D 59, 88, 106
Cameron, Charles R 69, 79. 106
Cameron. John Alexander 28S
Cameron. Simon 229
Campbell, jr., Charles 106
Campbell, George Washington. . . . 229
Campbell. Gerald 287
Campbell, Harry 55, 79. 106
Campbell, James H 230
Campbell, John A 6
Campbell, Lewis D 225
Canada. Wilham W 106, 216
Candioti, jr., Marcial 273
Cane, Cyril Hubert 287
Cane. Richard P 2S0
Canelon, Jose R 317
Cantu v., Benigno 29S
Cantu, Lara, Renato 298
Caplan, Sophie 15, 35. 106
Capps. Edward 106, 223. 226
Carapateas, Sotiris 67. 106
Carbajal. Rcmulo 291
Carbone, jr.. Carlos 306
Cardiello. Pietro 293
Cardwell, John 222
Carey, Elizabeth H 13. 31. 106
Carey. Elsie M 20, 31, 106
Carey, Henry R 106
Carey. Henry W 73, 106
Carey. William P 9, 11, 25. 106
Carles, Emilio 312
Carleton, Algar E 63, 81, 106
Carlson. Frances M 15, 27. 107
Carlisle, S. S 219
Carlson, Harry Edwin 69, 82. 107
Carlson. Herbert W 65. 107
Carlson. Joseph John 315
Carlson, Knute E 10, 29. 107
Carmichael. William 230
Carpenter. Fred W 107. 226, 230
Carr. Clark E 221
Carr. Dabney S 231
Carr. Wilbur J 5. 7, 8, 24. 107. 257
Carrie, N. U 290
Carrigan, Clarence ^8, 77, 107
Carrillo, Alejandro P 301
Carroll, B. Harvey 107, 216
Carroll, Joseph W 42, 81, 107
Carroll, Philip 107, 216
Carroll, Randolph F 71. 86, 107
Carroll. William N 64, 107
Cartter, David K 219
Carter, Edward H 65, 107
Carter. George W 232
Page.
Carter, Henry 10, 29. 107
Carter. James G 60, 82, 108
Carter, John Ridgely 108. 219. 228. 230
Carter. Kingsley J 62. 108
Caruth. George William 228
Casablanca. Carlos 279
Cassajus. Victoriano 272
Casari, Arrigo Gasperini 293
Casarin. Angel 301
Cass. Lewis 2. 222
Cass. Lewis, jr 227
Castellanos. Leopoldo 283. 318
Castigliano. Attilio 293
Castillo, Enrique 303
Castle, Clarence Austin 108
Castle, jr., William R 8, 9, 29, 108
Castleman. Kenneth G 40, 108
Castleman, Reginald S 72, 84, 108
Castro, Antonio Daniel 277. 308
Castro, Hector David 271
Castro. Jorge Pena 278
Castro. Ramirez, Manuel 264
Catalani. Giuseppe 269
Caterini. Giuseppe 292
Caughy, Charles M 108, 216
Cauldwell. Frederic W 108
Cavero, Salvador M 307
Cawston, Arthur H 63. 88, 108
Cea. Joaquin de Campos 310
Cecil. Henry B 40. 108
Cerda, Mufioz, Salvador 280
Cerminara. Angelo 295
Cerri, Nicola 293
Chabot, Frederick C 108
Chafey. Ramses 284
Chalfant. Gladys 15, 29, 108
Chamberlain. Culver B 56. 88, 108
Chamberlain. George A 108
Chamberlin. George E 63. 77, 108
Champion, A. Burt 308
Chandler. C. H. B 286
Chandler, Charles Lyon 108
Chandler. Joseph R 231
Chang. Ziangling 279
Chapin, Albert C 108
Chapman, Charles Henry 108
Chapman, 3d, Flavius J 56, 88. 108
Chapman, J. Holbrook 39, 88, 108
Chapman, William A 257
Chapman. William E 70. 82, 108
Charlton, C. E. C. G 268
Chase, Benjamin F 75, 81, 109
Chase, Emily T 15. 33. 109
Chatfield, F. H 276
Cheever, Elsie B 1 7. 25. 109
Cheney, Arthur S 109, 216
Cheney, Elias H 109. 215, 216
Cheney. Person C 231
Chengting, Thomas Wang 260
Cherry. Edward Mackay 288
Chesbrough. Ralph F 109
Cheshire. Fleming D 109, 216
Chester. Frank Dyer 109
Chester. George William 277
Chevalier. Juan B 270
Chew, Roberts 7
Chilberg, Andrew 316
Child. Jacob T 230
INDEX OF PERSONS.
323
Page.
Child, James D S9> 109
Child, Richard Washburn 109, 224
Childs, Archie W 72, 109
Childs, J. Rives 71, 84. 109
Childs, Prescott 56. 88, 109
Chilesotti, Gualtiero 292
Chilton, Henry Getty 268
Chilton, Robert S 7. 109
Chilton, Thomas W 6s, 84, 109
Chinn, Thomas W 231
Chisholra, Horatio Fitzroy 288
Chisolm, B. Ogden 259
Choate, Joseph H 223
Chotch, Pierre 263
Christenson, Ethel G 12, 28, 109
Christiancy, Isaac P 227
Christiani, Courtland 62, 109
Christie, Emerson B 10, 29, 109
Christie, M. G 268
Chvalkovsky, Frantisek 267
Chydenius, Jakob Wilhelm 261
Cipriani, Edward B 63, 109
Claffey , John F 64, 109
Claiborne, Hamilton C . . . . 25, 75, 78, 109
Clairmont, Grace C 13,31, no
Clare, Arthur J no, 216
Clark, Alexander 225
Clark, A. Preston 290
Clark, Clarence D 257
Clark, George O 40, no
Clark, Henry H 295
Clark, Henn' C 38, no
Clark. John H 64, no
Clark, Reed Paige 65, 82, no
Clarke, Beverly L 223, 224
Clarke, J. Brent 20, 27, no
Clarke, John D 18, 35, no
Clarkson, Anna L 14, 29, no
Clausel, Louis A 54, no
Clauser, Katharine 15, 28, no
Clay, Brutus J no, 231
Clay, Cassius M 229
Clay, Henry i
Clay, James Brown 228
Clay, John Randolph 227, 229
Clay, Thomas H 224, 226
Clayton, Florence M 17,31,110
Clayton, John M 2
Clayton, Powell 225, 226
Clayton, Robert S n, 27, no
Clear, Warren J 40, no
Clement, J 276
Clemson, Thomas G 218
Cleveland, Grover 2,3
Clifford, Nathan 225
Clinton, George W 66, 1 10
Cloonan, J. Harrie 257
Cloud, Frederick Douglas no
Cloyes, Hazel L 13, 28, no
Clum, Harold D 61, 79, no
Coakley, Henry L iS, no
Coates, Haskell E 64,88, no
Cobb, George C 58, no
Cochran, H. Merle 2s, 75,81, ni
Cochran, Leo F 60, in
Codoner, Manuel J 73, i n
Coe, James A 307
Coffin, Charles E 307
32952—25 22
Page.
Coffin, Henry P in
Coffin, William 60, 77, in
Coggeshall, William T 221
Cohen, Benjamin 266
Colby, Bainbridge 3
Cole, Felix 7s, 78, in
Cole, George C in
Cole, Samuel 22
Cole, William Henry James 288
Cole, Winthrop R in
Coleman, Chapman in
Coleman, Frederick W. B 38,
40,41, III, 222, 22s
Collier, William Miller... 37,111,220,230
Collins, Harold M 62,86, in
Collins, Herbert B 10, 25, in
CoUis, Edwin J 6s, in
Colman, George T 5S>84, in
Colson, Everett A in
Combs, Leslie 111,224,227
Comly, James M 224
Compton, Clarence L 21, 26, in
Conant, Harr>' A 112
Conger, Arthur L 38,39,41,42, 112
Conger, Edwin H 219, 220, 226
Conkling, Alfred 225
Connelly, Edith P 14, 24, 112
Conner, Jacob E 112
Conover, Margaret F 13, 27, 112
Conrad, Charles M 2
Conrad, Kathryn H 14,34, 112
Conry, Joseph A 311
Constant, Samuel Victor 38, 112
Cook, Willis C 42, 112, 232
Cooke, Arthur B 66,82, 112
Cooke, Bernard A 21, 27, 112
Cooke, Charles Lee 9, 10, 24, 112
Cookinghara, Harris N 60,81. 112
Cooley, James 227
Coolidge, Calvin 3
Coolidge, John Gardner 112, 226
Coolidge, T. Jefferson 222
Coolidge, William McLane 280
Coombs, Frank L 225
Cootes, Harry N 37,38, 112
Corata, Constantine M 67, 112
Corcoran, William W 39,87, 112
Cormack, James 288
Comejo, Mariano H 264
Cornelius, George O 112
Cornell, Harry W 21, 33, 112
Comes, Emma E 20,36, 112
Cornish, Clement H 57, 112
Coronado, Josd Maria 267
Correia, Oscar 278
Correll, Irvin C 112
Corrigan, jr., John 59,82,112
Corriols y Sala, Josd 299, 3 13
Corwin, Thomas 225
Cosh, Evelyn E 18,36,112
Costello, Walter T 66, 113
Cotic, Lawrence F 57, 113
Cottrell, Jesse S 37,113,219
Coughlin, John T 22
Coulter, Eliot B 64,82, 113
Coumoyer, Gaston A 55,113
Covcl, Alice M 13,31, 113
Covert, John C 113
Page.
Cowan, jr., John W 18,35. n3
Cox, Hyatt 62, 113
Cox, Raymond E 75, 81, 113
Cox, Samuel S 231
Cox, Walton W 40, 113
Coxe, Francis Travis 113
Coxe, Macgrane 224
Coyle, John J 73, na
Crabit^s, Pierre 239
Craig, J. D 237
Crall^, Richard K 7
Cram, Paul H 65,82, 113
Cramer, F. Ernesto 279,317
Cramer, Michael J 221, 231
Cramer, W. Ford n,35, n3
Crane, Charles R 113,220
Crane, Maud M 14,34,113
Crane, Richard 113, 221
Crane, R. Newton 113, 257
Crane, Robert T 113
Cranford, Thomas G 40, 113
Craven, Robert 15, 34, 113
Crawford, Estelle 13, 36, 114
Crawford, Shirley M 290
Crawford, William H 222
Crebbin, Harry 287
Creevey, Edward A 114
Crenshaw, David 13. 34, 114
Cresson, William Penn 114
Creswell, Harry I. T 40, 114
Cridler, Thomas W 6
Crocker, «d, Edward S 41, 84, 1 14
Crockett, Joseph P 61, 114
Crommelin, C 265
Crosby, Elisha O 223
Crosby, George J 1 14
Crosby, Sheldon L 42, 76, 114
Cross, Cecil M. P 72, 82. 114
Cross, Samuel H 37, 114
Crosse, Murray Lewis 13, 34. 114
Crossland, John R. A 225
Crossland, William Edward Cour-
tenay 289
Crowder, Enoch Herbert 38, 114, 221
Crowninshield, Caspar S 1 14, 216
Croxton, John T 219
Cruger, Alexander P 68, 88, 114
Crum, William D 114, 216, 22s
Crump, Orin J 18, 35, 114
Crump, William 220
Cms. Mariano 262
Crysanthopoulos, Lconidas 289
Cueller Munoz, Salvador 257
Culbertson, Paul Trauger n, 30, ir4
Culver, Erastus D 232
Culver, Henry S 89, 114
Cumming, Hugh S 259
Cummings, Edward A 64, 114
Cunarro. Benito M 26s
Cimdiff, William L 12, 31, 114
Cunningham, Charles H 42, ns
Cunningham, Edwin S 56, 77, 115
Curry, George 257
Curry, Jabex L. M 230
Curtice, Raymond S 115, 216
Curtin, Andrew G 229
Curtis. Charles B 39. 77, ns
Curtis, James L 115, 216, 225
324
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Curtis. John Cockbura 288
CusBck, Mary H is. 34. "S
Gushing, Arthur P 277, 279
Gushing, Caleb 220, 230
Gushing, Courtland 221
Gushing, Earl A 18, 36, 115
Gushman, John F 218
Gutting, jr., W. Bayard 115, 216
Cybichewski, Sigismund 264
Dabezies, H 27s
Dabney, Thomas Ewing iis
Da Gosta Garvalho, Luiz 309
Daeschner, Emile 268
Daggett, RoUin M 224
Dalferes. Sabin J 72, 115
DaH'Aguol, Giuseppe 292
Dallas, George M 223, 229
d'Alte, Viscount 271
Daly, Marcel R 285
Damaso Fernandez, Jose 300
Damm, Henry C. A 70, 81, 115
Dana, John W 219
Daniel, Cyril 291
Daniel, Helen L 13. 25. "5
Daniel, John M 229
Daniels, Charles N 115, 216
Daniels, Thomas L 37, 81, 115
Dantzler, Gabriel Brimer 277
Dapolonia, Pietro 292
Darley, Mary L 18, 27, 115
Darragh, Cyril Quartus 288
da Silva Bettencourt Ferreira,
Jose Manuel 310
Da Silveira Duarte d'Almeida,
Jorge 310
Daubenfeld, Peary 297
Davezac, Auguste 226
Davidson, Howard C 39, 115
Davidson, James Wheeler 115
Davidson. Reginald Thomas 288
Davies, Ei .'ion Hugh 287
D '.Vila, C. A 272
Davis, Ben G 7
Davis, Bertha S 12, 31. 115
Davis, Chester \V 60, Si, 115
Davis, De Lyle 15, 34, 116
Davis, Elsie C i8, 27, 116
Davis, George F 116, 216
Davis, Hartwell C 40, 116
Davis, James P 56. 81, 116
Davis, J. C. Bancroft 4, 222
Davis, John 4
Davis, John K 56, 79, 116
Davis, John W 116, 220, 223
Davis, Laurie A 17, 36, 116
Davis, Leslie A 73, 79, 116
Davis, Marianna 13. 30, 116
Davis, Monnett B 75, 81, 1 16
Davis, Nathaniel P 60, 84, 116
Davis, Xorman H 4
Davis, O. K 258
Davis, Raymond 60, 82, 116
Davis, Robert Beale 116
Davis, Roger N 66, 116
Davis, Roy T 38, 116, 221
Davis, Thomas D 59, 82, 1 16
Dawson, Claude 1 74, 77, 117
Page.
Dawson, Leonard G 73. 82, 117
Dawson, Thomas G . 117, 216, 220, 221, 227
Dawson, William 28, 53, 75, 77, 117
Day, Erastus Sheldon 117
Day, Joseph J 279
Day, William R 3,5
Dayton, Aaron Ogden 7
Dayton, William L 222, 226
De Aguiar Vallim, Eduardo 278
Deal, Charles 117
De Alencar, Augusto Cochrane 266
De Amoedo y Galarmendi,
Mariano 272
De Andrade, Gabriel 278
Deane, Harold "M 38, 82, 1 1 7
De Aguino, Radler 266
Deans, J 288
de Araujo, Carlos Ferreira 277
Dearborn, Henry, Sr 22S
Dearing, Fred Morris 5, 42, 117, 228
De Azevedo, Antonio 309
Debavadi, Luang 272
De Berzeviczy, Albert 262
De Billier, Frederic Ogden 89, 117
De Gartier de Marchienne, Baron . . 266
De Castro, David M 290, 304
De Castro, Hector 117, 216
De Cell, Edith 18, 31, 117
De Gespedes, Carlos Manuel 261
De Gicco, Pasquale 292
de Gomeau, Ernest Alexander 287
DeCourcy, William E 58, 87, 117
Dedeaux, OIus John 305
Deedmeyer, Frank 117
De Felice, Michelangelo 292
DeFeo, John D 15, 29, 117
De Give, H. L 275
De Graeff, A. C. D 270
De Hammarskjold, Knut Hjalmar
Leonard 265
De Hertelendy, Andor 269
Deichman, Carl F 56, 77, 117
Deike, Mildred V 14, 28, 117
de Jesus Fiallo, Manuel 283
de Kaltenbrunn, Alexander Reut-
ter 291
de la Colina, Rafael 258
De la Cruz Marin, Antonio 314
De la Guardia Ojea, Alberto 314
De Lamater, Harry Irving 63, 117
de Lambert, Richard M 38, 84, 117
Delaney, Thomas J 20, 33, 118
Delaney, William F 20, 31, 118
De Lashmutt, Rebekah L 12, 24, 118
De la Torre, Carlos 267
De la Torriente, Cosme 261, 267
De Laubespin, Antoine 266
Delemos, H. A 283
Delfino, Alberto P 318
della Parta, Gian Franco 269
DeLong, Charles E 225
De Loy, Florence M 14, 27. 118
Del Piano, Ludovico 292
Del Pino y Sandrino, Mario 281
De Luca, Affonso 277
De Lugo, Isidro 314
de Lungo, Isidro 294
Delvalle, J. H 301
Page.
De Macedo, jr., J. J 310
De Magalhftes, Alvaro 277
De Marco, Tommaso 292
de Martino, Giacomo 269
De Mello-Franco, Afranio 260
Demers, Pierre Paul 118
De Money, E. R 308
Demorest, Alfredo L 66. 118
De Motta y Ortiz, Emilio 313
De Nagy, Francors 262
Denby, Charles 7, 118, 220
Denby, James Orr 39. 82, 118
De Negri, Manuel Y 270
Dening, Maberly Esler 288
Denison, Frank C 89, 118
Denizet, Rene Raoul 285
Denmark, J. Eustace 71,118
Dennett, Tyler 8, 10, 32, 118
Dennie, Harry Wheeler 118
Denning, Joseph M 226
Dennis, Lawrence 39. 81, 118
Dennison, E. Haldeman 65, 78, 118
de Oca, Manuel-Augusto Monies. . 259
De Olivares, Jos6 63, 80, 175
Depasta, George 289
De Paula Brito, jr., Francisco 309
De Pena, Hugo V 272
De Pierola Souza, Carlos N 271
De Quesada, Cayetano 267, 280
De Rinaldis. G. P 294
De Ronde, Philip 307
De Roux, Luis 306
Derrick, William S 2, 7
Derry, Charles H 33, 75. 88, 118
Derteano, Felipe 308
Derulle, Desir6 54, 118
De Sartiges, Count 268
De SauUes, John Longer. . . . 118, 216, 231
De Savigny, William H 71, 118
Descamps, Baron 260
de Sieyes de Veiiies, Jaques 268
De Simonin, Ernest Maurice 285
de Solas, Adolfo H 272
De Soler, Manuel 313
De Soto, Hernando 61, 78, 118
De Sousa Leao Gracie, Samuel 266
De Staff, Mr 262
De Stefano, Giuseppe 292
Desvernine, Eduardo L 280
De Taube, Michel 264
De Tory, Gustave 262
De Vault, Charles L 69, 86, 118
De Verteuil, Marc 66, 119
De Villafranca, Ricardo 2S0, 291
De Visscher, Charles 260
De Voghelaere, G 275
De Waha, Raymond 270
De Witt, Charles G 219
de Wolf, Francis Colt 10, 25, 119
Dexter, Fletcher 74, 119
Dexter, Lewis 119
De Ycaza, Josfi E 306
D'Hauteville, Paul Grand 119
Diamantopoulos, C 269
Diaz, A. H 306
Diaz, Rafael 283
Diaz, Erro, Ramiro 314
Diaz, Valenzuela, Octavio 280
INDEX OF PERSONS.
325
Page.
Dichman, Ernest 220
Dick, HasellH 66, 79. "9
Dickey, Caroline 20, 35, 119
Dickins, Asbury 7
Dickins, George F 65, 119
Dickinson, Andrew B 226
Dickinson, Charles M 119. 219
Dickinson, George W 119
Dickinson, Horace J S7. 88, 119
Dickover, Erie R 68, 81, 119
Dickson, Almar F 119
Dickson, Lillie V 15. 29, 119
Dickson, Samuel S 42, 82, 119
Didier, P 276
Dieckhoff, Hans Heinrich 268
Diederich, Henry W 89, 119
Dietrich, Herman R 119
Dietz, Augusto 317
Dill, Harry P 119
Dillingham, Frank 119
Dillon, Esther M 22. 32, 119
Dimancesco, D 271
Dimitry, Alexander 221, 226
Dinan, John A 62, 119
Dinis, Joao Jos6 309
Dinkelspiel, Henry G. W 312
Dinkelspiel, Martin J 312
Dinsmore, Hugh A 225
Dismon, Frances N 20, 31, 119
Dissescu, Constantin G 264
Diven, Frederick M 10, 25, 119
Dtx, Adele E 14, 34, 119
Dix, John A 222
do Amaral, Guilherme Armas 309
Doane, Elizabeth S i8, 31, 120
Dockweiler, Henry 1 42, 81, 120
Dodge, Augustus C 230
Dodge, H. Percival 42,
120, 224, 226, 227, 229
Dodson, Frederick A 21, 26, 120
Doherty, Charles W 70, 120
Dolbeare, Frederic R 75. 77. 120
Dolby, John Wesley '314
Dolz y de Veze, Leopoldo 281
Dominguez y Torres, Eugenio 281
Dominguez, Raoul G 298, 299
Dominian, Leon 68, 78, 120
Donald, George K 63, 78, 120
Donaldson, Chester 120
Donaldson, David 63, 120
Donegan, Alfred W 67, 79, 120
Donelson, Andrew J 228, 231
Donovan, Howard 55. 84, 120
Doolittle, Hooker A 59, 82, 120
Dooman, Eugene H 40, 79, 121
Doran, Helen F 12, 25, 121
Dorgan, Stella M 15, 26, 121
Dorman, Archibald B 121
Door, Julian C 68,88, 121
Dorsey, William H 21,34,121
Dorsey, W. Roderick 68, 79, 121
Doty, William F 72,82, 121
Doughtcn, J. Preston 64,82,121
Douglass, Frederick 221, 224
Douglass, William B., jr 63, 121
Dow, Edward A 71, 79, 121
Dow, Scott H i8,3S.i2i
Dowrick, Lillie B 15,27,121
Page.
Doyle, Albert M 70,86, 121
Doyle, John F 13, 121
Dracopoulos, George 289
Draper, William F 224
Dreher, Julius D 89. 121
Dresel, Ellis Loring 121, 223
Drew, Charles W., jr 121
Dreyfus, Louis G., jr 60, 77, 122
DriscoU, Edward E 13,34, 122
Drissel, Roger S 8, 11,34, 122
Droppers, Garrett 122, 223, 226
Drouilhet, P. A 285
Drutzu, S 310
Dryer, Mildred V 15,30, 122
Dryer, Thomas J 224
DuBois, Coert 9, 36, 75, 79, 122
Dubois, Fred Thomas 257
Dubois, Gaston 316
Dubois, Henrj' Joseph Church. . . . 289
DuBois, James T 122, 216. 220
du Bois, Leon 277,318
Dudley, Irving B 122, 216, 219, 227
Dudley, L. Edwin 122
Duffee, George G 122
Duflfy, Mary A 12, 26, 122
Dugan. Henry P 12, 34, 122
Duhaime, Victor L 122
Dulles, Allen W S, 29, 75, 77, 122
Dumont, Frederick T. F 60, 77, 122
Dumont, George A. L 268
DuMont, Robert 285
Dun, Edwin 225
Dunbar, Paul 17,32,122
Duncan, James L 11,26, 122
Dunker, Will F 12, 26, 122
Dunlap, Boutwill 273
Dunlap, Hiram J 123
Dunlap, Maurice P 67, 82, 123
Dunn, Frederick S 123, 258
Dunn, James Clement 37, 78, 123
Dunning, James E 123
Durand, Mildred M 18,31, 123
Durham, Efia H 15,34, 123
Durham, John S 221, 224
Durkee, Roland A 123
Duming, Daniel J 18, 35, 123
Dusenbury, Ralph W 37,41,42, 123
Dutko, Paul M 56, 123
Du Val, Marie H 13,31,123
Duvall, Frank E i5)34i 123
Dwight, Harry G 10, 123
Dwyre, Dudley G 69, 82, 123
Dwyre. Percy G 12, 34, 123
Dyar, Charles B 123
Dye, Alexander Vincent 41, 123
Dye, John W. 69, 79, 124
Dyer, Francis J 124, 215,216
Eager, George Eugene 124
Eames, Charles 224, 232
Early, Howard H 21,35. 124
Early, William W 61,84,124
Easterby, James Samuel 291
Eastin, Fred C, jr 55.87,124
Easton, Katherine 18,30, 124
Eaton, Earl Wilbert 70, 124
Eaton, John H 230
Eaton. MarqiMs 278
Pag».
Eaton, Paul W 12.34, 124
Eberhardt, Charles C 8,
28,53,76,124,257
Eberle, William E 39, 1 24
Ebling, Samuel G 74.88, 124
Ecker, Johannes Julius 301.315
Eddy, Spencer F. . . 124,218,219.228,230
Edelman, Samuel 124
Edmonds, Walter B 21,34, 124
Edquist, Peter August 315
Edwards, Alanson W 124
Edwards, Clement S 73. 81, 124
Edwards, Isaac 20. 25, 124
Edwards, J. Stanford 70, 124
Edwards, Thomas D 125
Eells, Stillman W 72, 84, 123
Egan, Maurice F 125,221
Egan, Patrick 220
Egas, Victor M 283
Eglin, Henry W. T 40,42, 125
Ehlert, M. H 278,3"
Ehrhart. Anna C. ^I 1S.36, 125
Eidler, Charles C 18, 33, 125
Einstein, Lewis 38, 125, 221
Eisenhower, Milton S 62, 125
Eisenmann, Xathan 306
Eldridge, Francis R., jr 125
Elford, Albert H 59, 125.
Elguera, Federico 264
Elias, Arturo M 299
Elkington, David C 59, 125
Elkus, Abraham 1 125, 231
Ellis, George W 125,216
Ellis, Leon H 39.84, 125.
Ellis, Powhatan 225
Ellis, Vespasian 232
Ellsworth, Henry W 230
Ellsworth, Luther T 125
Elorduy, Lie. Aquiles 258
Elting, Stewart 0 39, 125
Embry, John A 125
Enander, John A 221
Endicott, Francis Munroe 125
Engebretsen, John 304
Engelbracht, Charles A 125
Engert, Cornelius Van H 38, 78, 125
English, Benedict M 10, 25, 125
Entezam, Abdullah 271
Ereauf, Albert E 66, 125
Ergas, Joseph S 3c6
Erhardt, John G 66. 82, 125
Erich, Rafael Waldemar 261
Erickson, Eric H 1S.35. 125
Erving, George W 221. 230
Escalantc, Wcnceslao ;66
Escher, Henri 3:6
Eshagh-Khan ;Mofakhamed-
Dovleh 263
Espantoso Cossio, Eduardo 308
Esparza, Manuel 298
Espil. Felipe A 266
Espinosa, Arturo 266
Espinosa, Francisco 303
Esteve, Ramon 3'?
Est^vez, \''ictor M 26a
Etheart, Emmanuel 262
Eustis, James B 222
Eustis, William no
326
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Evans, Arthur H 37, 126
Evans, Ernest Edwin 70, 87, 1 26
Evans, Frands E 288
Evans, Rice K 65, 126
Evans, T. L 280, 283, 290, 291
Evans, William D ao, 28, 126
Evarts, William M 2
Eve, Joseph 231
Everett, Alexander H 220, 226, 230
Everett. Curtis T 61, 87, 126
Everett, Edward 2, 223
Ewart, John J 126
Ewing, Hugh 226
Ewing, James S 219
Ewing, John 126, 216, 224
Fahey, John H 258
Fair, Elisha Y 218
Fairbanks, Frederick C S9. 126
Fairchild, Lucius 230
Falck, L. James 18, 35, 126
Fallon, Diego Jose 279
Fallon, Douglas 18, 28, 126
Farman, Elbert E 222
Farrand, E. Kitchel 54, 87, 126
Farrell, Thomas F 12, 31, 126
Fastlich, Adalbert 274
Faulkner, Charles J 222
Fauntroy, Edward 21,31, 126
Fawcett, Charles 311
Fay, Hans H. Th 305
Fay, Theodore S 231
Faymonville, Philip R 40, 126
Feam, Walker 223, 228, 229
Fechet, d'Alary 40, 126
Fee, William Thomas 126, 216
Feeley, Edward F 37, 41, 126
Fellman, Werner 284
Fennell, Charles B 126, 216
Fennell, Joseph A 11, 32, 126
Fenstermacher, Harvey E. . . . 12, 34, 126
Feraud, Jorge Domingo Arias 277
Ferber, Anna B 15, 25, 126
Ferguson, Meta E 13, 26, 126
Ferguson, OUis B 64, 126
Ferguson, Thomas B 230
Femald, Paul E 257
Fernald, Robert F 67, 84, 127
Femandes, Carlos 309
Femandes, Carlos Escobeiro 277
Fernandez MacGregor, Genaro. . 258, 263
Fernandez, Josd Florentino 273
Fernandez Alonzo, Severo 260
Ferrant, Emile 297
Ferrante di Ruffano, Agostino. ... 292
Fcrreira, Enrique 297
Ferrera, Alberto B 293
Ferrier, John W 310
Ferrin, Augustin W 73, 84, 127
Ferris, Cornelius 61, 78, 127
Fiallo, Manuel de Jesus 283
Fichardt, Arthur E 63, 127
Fidanque, Mauricio Benjamin 283
Filer, Herbert A 257
Fillmore, Millard 2
Finch, William R 227, 231
Finlay, Viscount 262
Finley. Harold D 68, 84, 127
Page.
Finley, James G 67, 88, 127
Firby, Thomas W 307
Firmat y Cabrero, Pedro 281
Fishbum, Randolph E 257
Fischerauer, Friedrich 274
Fish, Hamilton 2
Fish, Nicholas 218, 231
Fisher, Carl A 39, 84, 127
Fisher, Dwight W 54. 127
Fisher, Fred D 59, 78, 127
Fisher, Godfrey Arthur 287
Fisher, Raymond H 64, 127
Fisher, Theodore M 62, 127
Fisher, William 317
Fitch, D. A 275
Fitts, Henry 1, 62, 127
Fitzgerald, I,oretta E is, 34, 127
Fitzpatrick, Francis A 67, 127
Fitzpatrick, Hugo Washington 318
Fitzpatrick, John R 13, 34, 127
Fitzpatrick, Samuel 273
Fitzpatrick, Ulysses S 127
FitzSimmons, George D 70, 127
Flack, Joseph 38, 81, 127
Flack, Thomas R 54, 128
Flaherty, Francis E 18, 34, 128
Flamand, Charles F 301
Flamand, Joseph J 28s
Flanagan, Christopher S 274, 278
Flanagan, Richard Patrick 278
Fleischmann, Reese M 307
Fleming, Alfred J 128
Fleming, George L 61, 128
Fleming, Rufus 128, 216
Flenniken, Robert P 221
Fletcher, C. Paul 66, 88. 128
Fletcher, Henry P 4,
40, 128, 219, 220, 224, 225, 226
Fletcher, Samuel J 59, 84, 128
Flood, George H 231
Flood, Peter H. A 70, 87, 128
Flores, Benito 258
Floumoy, jr., Richard W 9, 25, 128
Flye, Orlando L 57, 128
Focke, John W 306
Fogg, George G 231
FoUin, Maynard D 290
Follin, Ormond W 290
FoUmer, Cyrus B 59. 128
Folsom, George 226
Folwell, Bainbridge D 128
Foote, E. Kilboume 68, 128
Foote, Lucius H 225
Foote, Thomas M 218, 220
Foote, Walter A 61, 84. 128
Forbes, John M , 218
Forbus, Sample B 1 29
Forcioli. Dominique Franfois Au-
guste 285
Ford, Hugh Alexander 287
Ford, Richard 65, 87, 129
Ford, Samuel S 16, 34, 129
Forero Velez, Roberto 279
Forman, Charles 57, 88, 129
Forsberg, Ehner A 284
Forster, Albert 60, 129
Forsyth, John i, 225, 230
Forto, Emilio C 314
Page.
Forward, Walter 221
Foss, Harold R 129
Foster, Albert D 129
Foster, Carol H 9, 36, 75, 80, 129
Foster, Esther R 13. 34, 129
Foster, John G 65, 76, 1 29
Foster, John W 2, 225, 229, 230
Foster, Paul H 70, 84, 129
Fowle, Charles W 129
Fowler, Charles 315
Fowler, John 129, 216
Fowler, William Eric 259
Fox, Ray 62, 84, 129
Fox, Theodore Harold 288
Fox, Williams C 129, 222
Foy, Robert C 42, 1 29
Fraccaroli, Francesco 293
Frampton, Henry A 61, 129
Franchot, Charles P 285
Francis, Charles S.. . 129, 218, 223, 228, 229
Francis, David R 129, 229
Francis, John M 218, 223, 228
Frank, Laurence C 14, 34, 129
Frankenhoff, Frances J 20, 27, 129
Franklin, Lynn W 63, 84, 129
Frazao, Jose Capello Franco 264
Frazer, Robert jr 74, 77. 130
Frazier, Arthur Hugh 130, 218
Freeman, Charles M 89, 130
Frei, Irene B 16, 32, 130
Freire y Maria, Ernesto 314
Frelinghuysen, Frederick T 2
Freuler, John 316
Freyre, Ricardo Jaimes 266
Freyre, Victor Jaimes 266
Frisby, Florence E 16, 3s, 130
Fromageot, Henri 261
Fronteras, Eduardo 283
Frost, Arthur C 57, 77, 130
Frost, Wesley 59, 77, 130
Fuentes, Manuel 308
Fuerst, Mary A 16, 34, 130
Fujii, Keizo 270
Fuller, George Gregg 72, 86, 130
Fuller, Paul 301
Fuller, Rose P 15, 34. 130
Fuller, Stuart J 130
Fullerton, Hugh S 54, 82, 130
Funk, Ilo C 68, 82, 130
Funkhouser, Charles F 16, 34, 130
Fumess, Fairman R 130
Furniss, Henry W 130, 224
Gade, Gerhard 33, 75, 82, 130
GadoUn, Alexandre Wilhehn 261
Gadsden, James 225
Gafifney, T. St. John 130
Gage, Elton N 68, 130
Gage, Henry T 131, 228
Gaines, Martin N 55. 131
Gale, Esson M 131
Gale, William H 70, 77, 131
Galella, Giovanni 294
Gallagher, Edward C 18, 35, 131
Gallant, Alyre J 18. 27. 131
Gallardo, Aurelio 297
Gallatin, Albert 222, 223
Gallego y Gutierrez, Manuel V 279
Galmish, Florine G 18, 27, 131
INDEX OF PERSONS.
327
I
Page.
Galhnan, Waldemar J 30, 75. 84, 131
Gait, Dorothy U 16, 34, 131
Gamon, John A 62, 78, 131
Gangemi, Giovanni 293
Garcia Cabrera, Esteban 310
Garcia, Cristobal 313
Garcia Huidobro, Marcos 278
Garcia Kohly, Juan de Dios 261
Garcia, Roberto 298
Garcia Rojas, Ignacio 303
Gard. Allen 131, 216
Gard&rc, Henri 291
Garfield, Harry A 259
Garfield, James A 2
G.-Amao, Vicente 272
Garnet, Henry Highland 225
Garrels, Arthur 67, 78, 131
Garret, Gregorio 277
Garrett, Alonzo B 89, 131
Garrett, John W 131, 218, 225, 226, 232
Garrety, William P 74, 84, 131
Garriga, J 312
Garvin, John T 56, 131
Gary, Hampson 131, 222, 231
Garza, Daniel 299
Garza Zcrtuche, Jose 298
Gassett, Percival 89, 131
Gassett, Walter 131, 216
Gates, Louis E 12, 34, 131
Gaudencio, C&ar C 317
Gaulin, Alphonse SSi 76, 131
Gauss, Clarence E 57. 77. 132
Gaxiola, Carlos M 297, 298
(ieenzier, Enrique 306
Geiger, Harold 39, 132
Geissler, Arthur H 39. 132, 224
Geist, Raymond H 58, 86, 132
George, William P 54. 82, 132
Gerard, James W 132, 222
Gerberich, Albert H 74, 84, 132
Gerez, Antenor 273
Gerrity, Charles M 69, 132
Getting, Milan 281
Ghezzi, Carlo Gaetano 294
Gibbs, Jeptha M 70, 132
Gibbs, Richard 219, 227
Gibson, Hugh S 42, 132, 228, 231
Gibson, J. R 296
Gibson, Lloyd L 20,31, 132
Gibson, Raleigh A 73. 83, 132
GifTord, George 132
Gilbert, Leo E 18, 35, 132
Gilbert, Manson 62, 132
Gilbert, Prentiss B 8, 9, 33, 132
Giles, Scale Robertson 14. 31, 133
Gill, J. Francis 133
Gill, Matthew 289
Gillette, Glenn M 18, 35, 133
Gilman, Joseph T 67, 88, 133
Gindorff, N. C 275
Ginocchio, Carlo 293
Girardet, Leon Alexandre 272
Girdner, Kermit 18, 25, 133
Giroux, Arthur B 64. 87, 133
Girten, Michael F 274
Gissler, Fred A 296
Gittings, jr., John Sterett.38, 40, 41, 83, 133
Page.
Giusti, Paolo Emilio 293
Givens, James R 14. 34. 133
Gjessing, Eriand s8, 133
Glaser, Emile Frederic 316
Glasgow, Joseph M 39. 133
Glass, Edward L. N 41, 133
Glassey, Frank P. S 59, 88, 133
Glazebrook, Otis A 59. 78, 133
Glennan, Marjorie D 16, 34, 133
Glensor, Harry Willard 296
Gliwic, Hipolit 271
Godard, Laura F 16, 34, 133
Godfrey, William C 303
Goding, Frederic W 89, 133
Godley, Philip 296
Godson, William F. H 39. 42, 133
Goforth, Hemdon W 55. 85, 133
Goldaracena, O. M 316
Goldsberry, Ralph C 69, 134
Goldschmidt, Louis 134
Gomes da Silva Reis, Abilio 309
Gomex Martinez, Arturo 297
Gomez Lopez, Mamuel 317
Gomez, Philip 291
Goni, Santos 273
Gonzales, William E 134, 221, 227
Gonzalez Flores, Rubin 280
Gonazlez Prada, Alfredo 271
Gonzalez, Guillermo E 267
Gonzdlez, Ignacio 297
Gonzalez y Rodriguez, Jos^ M . . . . 281
Gonzalez Durand, Mamuel 273
Goodier, Harvey T 69, 85, 134
Goodier, James H 134
Goodloe, William C 218
Goodman, William E 312
Goold, Herbert S 39. 79. 134
Goon Dip 279
Gordon, Bartley P 18, 34, 134
Gordon. George A 29, 75, 79, 134
Gordon, John Dozier 278
Gore, John A 134, 216
Gorham, Charles T 226
Goss, Mary W 22
Gotlieb, Bernard 63, 83, 134
Gottschalk, Alfred L. M 134, 216
Goulart, da Costa, Euclides 309, 310
Gould, Ozro C 134
Gourley, Louis H 72, 83. 134
Goutesha, Vladimir 270
Gowen, Franklin C 68, 134
Grace, William J 65, 83, 134
Gracey, Samuel L 134, 216
Gracey, Wilbur T 134
GraefT, A. C. D. de 270
Graham, Charles 1 56. 85. 134
Graham, John 1,7, 228
Gram, G 263
Gram, Koyne V 65, 134
Grant, Fredrick D 218
Grant, Fredrick J 219
Grant, Ulysses S 2
Grant-Smith, U 37, 134, 218, 224
Gravelle, Arthur J 88, 135
Graves, Charles H 135, 230
Graves, Florence P 16, 34, 135
Gray, Andrew 277
Page.
Gray.jEdith.M 16, 29, 135
Gray, Edward Francis 288
Gray, George 265
Gray, Isaac P 225
Gray, J. Moyle 12, 31, 135
Gray, John Harrison 40, 85, 13s
Green, George A 21, 29, 135
Green, James S 220
Green, Leonard N 69, 87, 135
Green, 3d, Samuel E 65, 88, 135
Green, Victor E 21, 31, 13s
Greene, Elbridge Gerry 37, 79
Greene, H. Hilton 274
Greene, Roger S 135
Greene, W. Maxwell 135, 216
Greene, Winthrop S 62, 88, 135
Greenup, Julian C 73. 85. 13s
Gregg, David L 224
Gregory, jr., John H 135
Gresham, Walter Q 3
Grevstad, Nicolay A 135, 227, 231
Grew, Joseph C. . 4, 8, 23, 135, 221, 231, 257
Griev-e, Miller 221
Griffin, Ruth Patee 20, 27, 136
Griffin, Thomas, jr 13. 32. 136
Griffith, Beulah M 9, 11, 24, 136
Griffith, P. Merrill 136
Griffiths, Guillermo J 291
Griffiths, John L 136, 216
Griffiths, William J 279
Grimaldo Fernindez, Antonio .... 30
Grimm, Carlos 298
Grinnell, William M 6
Gripon, Paul Edouard Henri 268
Griscom, Lloyd C. . . 136, 219, 224, 225, 227
Grissanti, Carlos F 265
Groeninger, Joseph G 60, 86, 136
Gross, Catherine E 16, 35, 136
Gross, Christian 38, 85, 135
Gross, Paul L 56, 136
Groth, Edward M 74, 84, 136
Grout, John H 89, 136
Grove, Vivian E 17, 25, 136
Groves, H. Lawrence 38, 136
Grubb. E. Burd 230
Gruber, Mabel U 16, 27, 136
Grummon, Stuart E 41, 85, 136
Gruszka, Sylvestre 308
Grut, Ryan Asger 282
Guard, J. B 306
Gude, Niels Christian 305
Guenther, Richard 136
Guerra, Alberto Franco 308
Guerra, Mondragon, Miguel 280
Guild, Curtis 136, 216, 229
Guiniiires, Arthur F. Machado. . . 277
Guimaraes, J. B 72, 136
Guldmann, Hans Kofoed 283
Gummerc, Samuel R 136, 226
Gunn, Hugh 136
Gunsaulus, Edwin N 89, 136
Gunsaulus, jr., Edwin N 62, 136
Gunther, Franklin Mott. 8, 30, 75, 76, 136
Gumey, Wentworth Martyn 287
Guthrie, George W 137, 216, 225
Guthrie, James 289
Gutierrez- Ponce, Ignacio 260
32S
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Gutierrez, Rodolfo Jose 303
Guyant, Claude E 72, 80, 137
Gwin. Martha A 22
Gwj-nn, Harry M 38,39,41,42, 137
Hacho. Emil 261
Hackctt, Earl D 62, 137
Hackworth, Green H 9. 25, 137
Haddock. Charles B 228
Hade. E. P. Kirby 301
Hadji-Mischct, P 260
Hadley, Erank W 137
Haeberlc, Arminius T 55. 78, 137
Haering, George J 69, 88, 137
Hagen, Siegfried C 285
Hagen, WiUiaiu I i6, 32, 137
Haig. Robert V 17, 31. i37
Haiier, Fred E. 20. 34, 137
Haines, H. H 291
Hair, Erwin P 19. 35- i37
Haldeman, Jacob S 230
Halderman, John A 230
Hale, Bernard F 62, 86, 137
Hale, Chandler 6
Hale, Charles 4
Hale, Edward J 137, 216, 221
Hale. Franklin D 137
Hale, John P 230
Hall, Allen A 219, 231
Hall, Barton 38, 81, 137
Hall, Bertha 17, 28, 138
Hall, Henry C 219, 220
Hall. John B. G 277
Hall Mathew Alexander 288
Halstead, Albert 64, 76, 138
Halstead, jr., Albert 138
Halstead. Marshal 138, 216
Hamilton, George 306
Hamilton, James A i
Hamilton, John E 138
Hamilton, Maxwell M 56, 85, 138
Hamlin, Hannibal 230
Hamlin. John N 37, 88, 138
Hamm, John 220
Hamm, Theodore C 138, 216
Hamm, Walter C 138
Hammond, W. J 302
Hampton, Ada J 19, 23, 138
Hanak, Milos 267
Handley, William W 138. 216
Haneke, Marie S 20, 35, 138
Hanna, Baylcss W 218
Hanna. Margaret M 9, 11, 36, 138
Hanna, Matthew E 39. 78, 138
Hanna, Philip C 138
Hanna. Rea 138
Hannah. Frank S 138
Hannegan, Edward A 228
Hanotaux, Gabriel 261
Hanschild, Julius 291
Hansen, Carl C 73. 138
Hansen, Christian Rostad 305
Hanson. GeorRe C 56. 80, 138
Hanson, Gcorye M 68. 81, 138
Hanson. James 37. 139
Hapgood, Norman 139, 221
Harada, Chiuichiro 270
Hardee, George W 273
Harding. Warren G
Page.
Hardy, Arthur S 223,
227, 228, 229, 230, 231
Hardy, James W 21, 35, 139
Hargis, jr., Harry W 57, 139
Harkson, Henry 282
Harkum, John F 21,32. 139
Harlow, William McG 63. i39
Harmony, Julio 139
Harnden, Robert 54, 81, 139
Harper, Oscar C 69, 139
Harriman, Oliver B 38, 79, 139
Harrington, George 231
Harrington, Julian F S4. '39
Harrington, Thomas Joseph 218
Harris, Addison C 218
Harris, Charles B 139
Harris, Ernest L 65, 78, 139
Harris, George F 21, 24, 139
Harris, Heaton W 139
Harris, Leavitt 222
Harris, Townsend 224
Harris, William A 21 S
Harrison, Benjamin 2, 3
Harrison, Leland 5,8, 24, 139
Harrison, Russell B 298
Harrison, Thomas S 222
Harrison, William H 2, 220
Hart, Charles Burdett 220
Hart, Hilda M 17. 27, 139
Hart, William O 258
Harter, Eugene C 139
Hartman, Charles S 139, 222
Hartman, Douglas W 17. 34. 139
Hartnett, Timothy V 65, 139
Hartog, A 301
Harvey, George 139, 223
Harvey, Horace J 139
Harvey, James E 228
Harvey, Roland B 139
Harwood, Frederic Charles 309
Hasegawa, Kiyoshi 269
Haselton, Seneca 232
Haskell, Lewis W 59. 78, 139
Haskins, Thomas W 140, 216
Hassaurek, Frederick 221
Hathaway, jr., Charles M 62, 78, 140
Haupt, Alfred B 9, 25, 140
Hausman, John P 274
Haven, Don S 61, 83, 140
Haven, Joseph E 68, 80, 140
Haven, Richard B 72, 86, 140
Havenner, Albert B 12, 31, 140
Havens, Harry A 11, 33, 140
Hawkins, Harry C 76, 88, 140
Hawkins, J. Cameron 63. 88, 140
Hawkins, Richard H 20, 34, 140
Hawkinson, A 315
Hawks, Stanley 41, 85, 140
Hawley, Harry F 66, 83, 140
Hawley, William W 21, 35, 141
Hay, John 3. 4. 223
Hayden, Oris E 19, 27, 141
Hayes, John L 15, 27, 141
Hayes Rutherford B 2
Haynes, Thorn well 74, 81. 141
Hays, Perry C 141
Hayskar, Oscar 284
Hayton, Enrique 273
Page.
Haywood, William .' 141, 216
Hazeltine, Ross 141, 216
Heald, Perley C 141
Heap, John Ashton 287
Heard, Augustine 225
Heard, William H 225
Heard, William W 33. "6, 85, 141
Hearin, Charles Turner 141
Hearst, William 257
Heath, Donald R 72, 85, 141
Heath, Edwin R 277, 290, 303
Heath, John 141
Hecht, Elizabeth 19, 36, 141
Heck, Lewis 141
Heckert, George T 12, 31, 141
Hedemann, Christian 282, 315
Hedian, f ieorge D 58, 141
Hennan, Thomas E 141, 216
Heeter, Gertrude C 16. 27, 141
Heilmann, M 284
Heimke, William 141, 224, 229
Heimrod, George 141, 216
Hein, Herbert R 40, 141
Heingartner, Alexander 141, 216
Heingartner, Robert W 54. 83, 141
Heins, Fred G 19. 34. 141
Heintzleman, P. Stewart 56, 78. 141
Heinze, Mr 262
Heisler, Charles H 73, 85, 142
Heizer, Oscar S 71, 80. 142
Hellinckx, Michel 297
Hellner, Johannes 265
Helmer-Petersen, Kaj 267
Hemry, Susanna 16, 33, 142
Hemsley, Arthur Cyril 288
Henderson, John W 68, 142
Henderson, Loy W 30, 76, 86, 142
Henderson, William Dalton 74, 142
Hendra, J. Chatten 56, 142
Hendrick, Michael J 142, 216
Hengstler, Herbert C 8, 10, 33, 142
Henningsen, Mads 282
Henriquez, Joshua Jesurum 283
Henry, Frank Anderson 73, 80. 142
Henry, Harold O 142, 216
Henry, John J 225
Henry, Jules 268
Henry, Snowdcn 276
Henry, William W 142
Hensoh, Abraham 225
Herbert, Edward Eugene 65, 142
Hermann, Louis 275
Hermida, Enrique 142
Herod 2d, William P 142
Herr, Joseph S 10, 33, 142
Herrick, Myron T 38, 142, 222
Herring, Charles E 39. '43
Hcrter, Christian A 143
Hertogs, J 277
Hertslet, Godfrey E. P 288
Hester, William H 21, 27, 143
Hewes, Clarence B 3 7. 79, 143
Heynen, M.J 277
Hibbard, Frederick P 39. 8r, 143
Hibben, Paxton 143
Hibbs, Walter P 11. 31, 143
Hickerson, Jack D 55. 85, 143
Hickey, Andrew S 37. 143
INDEX OP PERSONS.
329
Page.
Hickey. Bernard F 40, 143
Hickey, William A 62, 143
Hicks, John 143, 220, 227
Hicks, Knowlton V 61, 143
Higgins, Edward 143, 216
Higgins, John C 143, 215, 216
Higginson, Eduardo 308
Highiey, Mont F 276
Hill, David J : 5.
143, 222, 22s, 226, 231
Hill, Frank D 143, 216
Hill, Ralph W. S 9. 2s, 143
Hill, S 276
Hilliard, Henry W 218, 219
Hills, Ralph W 143
Hilts, Harold C 67, 14.3
Hinckley, Robert O'D 42, 88, 143
Hinckley, Thomas 143, 216
Hinke, Frederick W 33. 76, 88, 143
Hirsch, Solomon 231
Hise, Elijah 223
Hitch, Calvin MiltoH 74. 79, 143
Hitchcock, Ethan A 229
Hitchcock, Henry B 69, 81, 144
Hitt, Robert R 4
Hitt, R. S. Reynolds. . . 144, 224, 227, 232
Hobe, Engebreth Hagbarth 305
Hobson, Asher 259
Hobza, Antonin 261
Hodgdon, Anderson Dana. ... 61, 87, 144
Hodges, Campbell B 42
Hoefele, Philip M 144
Hoefler, Ludwig Mathias 277
Hofer, Myron A 42, 79, 144
Hoff, Harold M . ; 61, 144
Hoffay, Joseph 55, 144
Hoffman, Robert J 40, 144
Hoffman, Wickham 221
Hoffman, William F 55, 144
Hogan, Marion R 16, 30, 144
Hogeland, Maurice 315
Hogg. Theodore B 144
Hoke, Joseph T 144
Holaday , Ross E 64, 79, 144
Holden, Edward C ss- '44
Holder, Charles A 144
Holcwicz, Bohdan 271
Holinger, Gertrude W is, 33. 144
Holland, Philip 67, 78, 144
Holler. John E 68, 88, 144
Holliday , John 144
Hollis, W. Stanley 72, 78, 144
Hollister, Gideon H 224
Hollister, Joseph S 145
Holloway, William R 145, 216
Holmes, James O 21.33. 14s
Hoist, .Axel 316
Holt, Richard William 287
Honaker, Samuel W 75. 79. 145
Honey, Robertson 63, 83, 145
Hoo-\\'ei-Teh 260
Hood, Hugh S 62, 145
Hood, Solomon Porter. ... 41, 69. 145, 225
Hoover, Charles L 71. 80, 145
Hoover, Herbert 258
Hope, Leighton 69, 85. 145
Hopkins, George W 228
Hopkins, Moses A 225
Paae.
Hopkinson, Henry L. d'A 269
Hopper, George D 59. 83, 145
Hori, Tomakazu 270
Horn, Thomas S 70, 86, 145
Home, James H 21. 30, 145
Horntlirook, William H 145, 230
Horst, H.J 263
Horten, George 89, 145
Hosmer, Charles B 58, 83, 14s
Host, T. P 306, 308
Hostetter, Louis .' 145
Hotchkiss, E. Scott 145
Hotschick, George M 145, 216
Houck, Fred H SS. i4S
Hough, Frances R 12. 3S. i4S
Houghton, Alanson B 39, 145, 223
Houlahan, Peter J 55, 146
Hovey, Alvin P 227
Howard, Esme 268
Howard, Henry Clay 146, 227
Howard, R. Floumoy 64, 87, 146
Howard, Tilghman A 231
Howe, Church 146
Howe, George Westerby 284
Howe, Ralph M 14. 31. 146
Howe, William Dodson 287
Howe, William S 41. 146
Howell, J. Morton 38, 146, 222
Howell, Williamson S jr 79, 146
Howells, Joseph A 146, 216
Howze, Eoline 16, 27, 146
Hoyt, Edna K 14. 26, 146
Hoyt, Elton Maynard 66, 146
Hoyt, Henry M 3
Hoyt, Ira F 22, 31, 146
Hozumi, Nobushige 263
Hsu, Tan Shueh 279
Huang, Hua 267
Hubbard, Richard B 225
Huber, Max 265
Huckin, Victor Henry St. John. . . 287
Huddle, J. Klahr 33. 76. 79, 146
Huddleston, John F 68, 88, 146
Hudson, Joel C ■. . 66, 87, 146
Hudson, Oscar 296
Hudson, Silas A 223
Huggins, Harold C 146
Hughes, Charles Evans 3. 8, 23, 146
Hughes, Christopher 226
Hughes, Christopher, jr 226, 230
Hughes, James J 22, 31, 147
Hukill, George R 71. 87. 147
Hull, Moody 19. 26. 147
Hull, Willard B 147
Hulley, Benjamin M 74, 88, 147
Humber, P^gerton Shaw 287
Humphreys, Arthur C 314
Humphreys, David 218,228,230
Hunnam, Fenwick Clementison . . 289
Hunsakcr, J. C 39, 40, 41, 147
Hunt, George W. P 147, 230
Hunt, Louis 19. 35. 147
Hunt, Thomas J 296
Hunt, William H 60, 83, 147, 229
Hunter, B. L 40, 147
Hunter, William 219
Hunter, William, jr 2, 4, 5, 7
Hunter, William Dulany 147, 216
Page.
Hunter, W. Godfrey 224
Hurd, Alan Thomas 68, 88, 147
Hurlbut, Harry R 290
Hurlbut, Stephen A 227
Hurley, John P 69, 81, 147
Hurmuzache, Alexander 264
Humey, Leo B 17, 31, 147
Hurst, Carlton 60, 87, 147
Hurst, Carlton Bailey 57. 76. 147
Hurtado, Ernesto 318
Husar, Leonard Goodwin 147, 257
Huss, Eugene 297
Huston, Jay C 56, 8r, 147
Hutchinson, Norman 147
Hutchinson, Wallace C 67, 147
Hyde, Charles 288
Hyde, Charles Cheney 8, 25, 148
Hyde, Edward 55, 148
Hynson, Frances L eo, 35. 148
lannarelli, Enrico 293
Ibsen, P 282
Ibsen, Sigurd 263
Iddings, Lewis M 148, 216, 222
Ide, Henry Clay 148, 216, 230
Idman, Karl Gustaf 261
Ifft, George N 59, 80, 148
Iglesias y Velayos, Andrfis 312
Iglesias, Jaime Annexi 28:
Impey, Arthur 288
Inge, Hutchins 296
Ingersoll, George Pratt 148, 230
Ingersoll, Joseph R 223
Ingersoll. Ralph I jig
Ingram, Augustus E 66, 78, 148
Ingram, Donald M 148
Inouye, Yoshio 270
Irving, Washington 230
Irwin, John N 228
Irwin, William W 221
Ishizawa, Yutaka 270
Itreago Chacin, Pedro 265
Ives, Ernest L 58, 80, 148
Ives, John R 61, 88, 148
Izaguirre V. , Carlos 269
Izaguirre, Lauro 297
Jackola, Charles 284
Jackson, Alfred L 21, 26. 148
Jackson, Andrew i
Jackson, Carlton 38 148
Jackson, Dorothy 20, 35, 148
Jackson, George H 148
Jackson, Henry R 218, 225
Jackson, Irving 20, 35, 148
Jackson, Isaac Rand 221
Jackson, Jesse B 68, 80, 148
Jackson, John B 148,
216, 219, 221, 223, 226, 2>7, 228, 229, 230
Jackson, William 1 64, 85, 149
Jacob, Charles D 220
Jacobs, Joseph E 56, 81, 149
Jacobson, S. Bertrand 71. 85. 149
Jacoby, Cornelius 297
Jacome. Thomas 304
JacQuet. Edouard 285
Jaeckel, Theodore 72, 78, 149
Jaenson, >fils Leon 315
Jahneke, Walter Frederic 304
Jalkanen, Aaro Johmaez 28
330
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
James, Eldon Revare 264
James. John 289
James, Jules 39. 42. i49
James, William G 17. 31. 149
Jameson, J. Paul 9, 28, 149
Janes, Henry L 149
Jarvis, Robert Y 72. 85, 149
Jay, John 218, 223
Jay, Peter Augustus. 42, 149, 222, 228, 229
JeSers, William N 219
Jefferson, Benjamin L 149, 226
JeSerson, Thomas i, 222
Jeffrey, Robert E 149. 231
Jenifer, Daniel 218
Jenkins, Douglas s6, 78, 149
Jenkins, John 149
Jenkins, William L 62, 80, 149
Jenkins, William O 70, 150
Jennings, Bernard Eugene 281
Jennings, Henry H 317
Jensen, Julius C 58, 150
Jessup, Philip C 10, 25, 150
Jewell, John F 61, 79, 150
Jewell, Marshall 229
Jewett, Albert G 227
Jewett, ^lilo A 130, 216
Jimenez, Mario Sancho 280
Jimenez y Ruz, Andres 280
Jessup, Philip C 10, 25, 150
Job, Frederick W 283
Jockusch, Julius William 286
Johansson, Carl Wilhelm Eman-
uel Andre 315
Johnson, Albion W 62, 1.50
Johnson, Andrew 2
Johnson, Cave 227
Johnson, Charles L 21, 23, 150
Johnson, Elizabeth F 19. 36. 150
Johnson, Felix S. S 63, 85, 150
Johnson, Frank Clow 310
Johnson, Frederick C 63, 150
Johnson, Hallett 38, 78, 150
Johnson, Henry A 89, 150
Johnson, Herschel V 29, 76, 80, 150
Johnson, James W 150
Johnson, Jesse H 150
Johnson, John D 8, 33, 76, 81, 150
• Johnson, Joseph L 151. 225
Johnson, Lucius H 64, 151
Johnson, Nelson T S3. 77. isi
Johnson, Reverdy 223
Johnson, Robert Underwood 151, 224
Johnson, Stewart 38, 79, i si
Johnson, Thomas L 38, 42, 151
Johnston, Edna E 16, 25. isi
Johnston, James isi
Jolgher, Ivan 264
Jones, Arthur Mason 151, 216
Jones, Chester Lloyd 38, isi
Jones, Claud A 39, 40, 41, isi
Jones, E. Lester 237
Jones, Floyd Seymor 151
Jones, George W 220
Jones, Grace E 19, 25, 151
Jones, Harold Frederic 70, 151
Jones, John Ashley 306
Jones, John Edward 151, 216
Jones, J. Clancy 218
Page.
Jones, Joseph Russell 218
Jones, Thomas C 151
Jones, T. Sambola 151, 224
Jones, Victor E 21, 29, 151
Jones, William Oscar 73, 88, 151
Jones, Wesley L 258
Jonscher, Addie F 14, 34, 151
Jopson, R. K 287
Jordan, Curtis C 38, 81, 151
Josselyn, Paul R 37, 80, 151
Jouard, Elisee. S9. 152
Joubert, Emilio C 261
Jovine, Georges Pierre Ferdinand. 285
Jova, Eugene E S7. 1S2
Jovanovitch, Slobodam 311
Joy, Margaret J 15, 31, 152
Joyce, Kenyon A 39; 152
Judd, Norman B 228
Judelsohn, Montefiore 152
Junod, Louis H 316
Kagey, Charles L 38, 152, 222
Kaiser, Gladys F 19, 27, 1S2
Kaiser, Louis 152
Kalenski, Edmund 308
Kamel Bey, Ismail 268
Kane, Blanche M 19, 36, iS2
Karovitch, Pavle 312
Kasson, John A 218, 222
Kavanagh, Edward 228
Kavanagh, William J 13. 30, 152
Kawamura, Hirashi 270
Kay, Sydney Entwistle 287
Kazerai, Bagher M 271
Keating, John Bernard 287, 305
Keating, Joseph T :6, 34, 152
Keblinger, Wilbur 61,860,152
Keeley, jr., James Hugh 74, 86, 152
Kenna, Leo J 63, 77, 152
Keene, Francis B 89, 152
Kehl, John E 6i, 78, 152
Kehrhahn, O. G. H. E 308
Keiser, Robert L 68, 83, 152
Keith, Edwin D 10, 30, 152
Keitz, Harry Arthur 278
Kelley, Robert F 30, 76, 8s. 153
Kelley, William F is3, 216
Kellogg, Frank B 39, i53> 223
Kellogg, James C 153, 216
Kellogg, William 223
Kelly, William J 21, 27, 153
Kelton, Eduardo G 290
Kemp, Edwin Carl 58, 81, iS3
Kemp, Percy G 72, 153
Kemper, Graham H 69, 80, 153
Kendall, Frederick A 12,33,153
Kendrick, Stephen E 54, iS3
Kennedy, Maud 15.31. 153
Kennedy, W. L 304
Kent, William P 89
Kerens, Richard C 153, 216, 218
Kerr, John B 226
Kerr, Ruth D is. 34, iS3
Key Ayala, Santiago 265
Khan, Arthur S 291
Kielland, Soren Th. M. B 305
Kiesselbach, Wilhelm 258
Killmaster, George B 153
Kilpatrick, Judson 220
Page.
Kimberly , Allen 39, 133
Kimura, Atsushi 270
King, Guy 280
King, Hamilton 153, 216, 230
King, H. Gilbert 153
King, Loyal T 19, 27, 153
King, Pendleton 153, 216
King, Rufus 223, 227
King, Walter W 68, 153
King, William R 222
King, Yelverton P 220
Kingcome, Clive 288
Kinney, William B 229
Kirby, Augustus M 60, 153
Kirby, Cornelia M 20, 36, 153
Kirjassoff, Max D 154, 216
Kirk, Alexander C 41, 78, 154
Kirk, Milton B 154
Kirk, Robert C 218, 231
Kirka, Kristo 273
Kirkcormell, Sandy 67, 154
Kiroff, St 260
Kitchen, Conway N 10, 25, 154
Kitchen, William W 154. 216
Kittle, Abraham Falck 304
Kivikoski, Bruno 268
Klay, G 302
Klee, Alfredo Skinner 290
Kleim, Desiderio Roman 303
Klemann, John V 38, 39, 41, 42, 154
Kliefoth, Alfred W 60, 81, 154
Klcicker, Oscar 306
Klotz, Sinion 284
Knabenshue, Paul 74, 79, iS4
Knabenshue, Samuel S 154
Knemeyer, Erma M 12, 24, 154
Knowles, Horace G. 154, 219, 221, 229, 230
Knox, Philander C 3
Knox, Walter 283
Kodding, Trojan 37. 8s> iS4
Koehler, Hugo W 42, 154
Koerner, Gustavus 230
Kofoed, Hans 283
Kolderup, Thomas S. H 306
Kopp, Edgar 154
Koppel, Holger A 282
Koppes, Augustus 296
Komfeld, Joseph Saul 154, 227
Koster, J. C 302
Kozlowski, Wladyslaw 308
Krai, Georgina 17, 36, iS4
Kraske, Erich 286
Krausse, Henry G 70, iS4
Kranz, Peter P 297
KrCmdr, Jan 261
Kriege, Mr 262
Krisel, Alexander is4
Krogh, Gerhard H 154
Krombach, Harry 297
Kroner, Hayes 37, 154
Kucharzewski, Jean 264
Kumler, Preston 10, 30, 154
Kuraz, Rudolf 267
Kuwashima, Kazue 270
Kuykendall, Clark P 71, 85, 154
Kwai, Yung 267
Kyger, J. H 39, iS4
Labbe, Charles H 276, 28s
INDEX OF PERSONS.
331
I
Page.
I,abbie, Alphonse P 65, 154
La Branche, Alcee 231
Lacayo, Renato 303
Lacayo, Virgilio 303
Lacey, Louise E 14, 31, 155
Lacey, Maurice W i4i 34. i5S
Lackey, Mary G 16, 31, 15s
Lacour-Gayet, Robert 268
Ladd, G. Russell 273
Lafferty, Fitzhugh Carter 278
LaGrutta, Teresa M 22, 32, 15s
Laing, James Oliver 155
Lakin, Harry M 62, 81, 155
Lamar, Mirabeau B 221, 226
Lamb, Eugene M 155
Lamm, Olof H 31S
Lancaster, Leon L 299, 317
Landon, Francis G 155
Lane, Arthur Bliss 9. 23, 76, 79, 155
Lane, Charles W 63. iSS
Lane, Rufus H 33. "6, 89, 155
Lane, William Edward 60, 155
Lang, Karl 286
Lang, Paul 155, 216
Langben, J. H 295
Langdon, William R 56, 81, 155
Lange, Erwin F 155
Lange, Henry L 317
Langhome, Marshall 153
Langley, Laura E 20, 27, 155
Langley, Ruth H 19, 31, 155
Langston, John M 221, 224
Lankford, Milton S 57, 153
Lansing, Robert 3
Lapenta, Vincenzo 292
Lappe, V 275
Lardizabal, Antonio 291
LaRicheliere, Edmond W 65, 155
Larkin, Edward Goler 289
Larkin, William E s6, 155
Earned, Frank Henry 64, 155
Lamed, Samuel 220, 227
Larreta, Carlos Rodriguez 259
Larsen, Chr. J 305
Lasseter, Dillard B 153
Latchford, Stephen 10, 25, 156
Latham, Charles L 156
Lathrop, Lorin A 89, 156
Lattin, James W 156
Laub, F. V. H 283
Laughlin, Irwin B 39, 156, 223
Lavandero, Carlos 279
Lawrence, Abbott 223
Lawrence, Albert G 221
Lawrence, Ethel L 10, 25, 156
Lawson, Eldora C 14, 23, 156
Lawson, Frank W 282
Lawson, Stanley R 60, 156
Lawson-Johnston, John Robert. . . 269
Lawton, Alexander R 218
Lawton, Ezra M 66, 78, 156
Lawton, James S 63, 156
Lay, George W 230
Lay, Julius G 62, 76, 156
Lay, Tracy 25, 61, 77, 136
Lay ton, Thomas B. L 156
Leach, Richard S 33. 76. 88, 156
Page.
Leary, Herbert Fairfax. ... 39. 40, 41, 156
Leary, Robert E 68, 156
Leavell, William Haj-ne 156, 224
Leavitt, Arthur H 156
Le Blanc, Alfred 273
Le Bosse, Eugene 290
Lebret, Rodolfo Carlos 317
Le Brun, Ch. Petit 28s
Leckey, Phoebe F 16, 31. 156
Le Clercq, Frederick D. K 40,81, 157
Ledesma Reina, Jos6 314
Ledoux, Urbian J 157
Lee, Albert E 278,302
Lee, Augustus 21,32, 157
Lee, Cecil Charles Arthur 288
Lee, Charles i
Lee, Frank C 61, 80, 157
Lee, Frederic E 157
Lee, James Fenner 7
Lee, Joseph W. J 157, 222, 224
Lee, Parker H 21,33, iS7
Lee, Samuel T 64, 78, 157
Lee, Waldemar E 278,
279.2911302,303,315
Lefiingwell, Albert 137
Lefranc, Eugene Elie 283
Legare, Hugh S 2, 218
Legendre, Josephine C i9>3i> iS7
Leishman, John G. A. . . 137, 222, 224, 231
Leitch, John D 277, 307
Le Neveu, Charles Auguste Louis . 268
Leng Hui 42. iS7
Lens Cuena, Antonio 314
Leonard, Henry H 71, iS7
Leonard, Walter A 74, 80, 157
Leoni, Sylvio C 68, 157
Le Prohon, Ernest de Beaufort. . . 283
Leroux, J 274
Leroux, J. Enrique 58, 157
Le Roy, James A 157, 216
Leslie, H. C 274
Lespinasse, Alphonse J 157
Letcher, Marion 58, 77, 157
Letcher, Robert P 223
Leteve, Aime Jules Jean-Baptiste. 285
Leupold, Richard J 273
Levi, George 278, 308
Levis, Davis B S9, 157
Levisee, Scott S 63, 88, 158
Leviti, Rodolfo 318
Levy, George 301
Lewis, Charles H 228
Lewis, jr., Charles W 64,87, 138
Lewis, Daniel W 20, 27, 138
Lewis, Edward Parke Cutis 228
Lewis, Gertrude G 15,31, 138
Li. Joe Tang 279
Lidell, Elof Valemar 313
Lieber, Peter 158
Lieberknecht, Adam 138
Liedcr, Eugene J 58, 138
Lictcld, E. Theophilus 158
Lilliopoulos, Christo 290
Linard, Drew 70, 85, 138
Linares, Aristides 306
Linares, Josd F 290
Page.
Lincoln, Abraham a
Lincoln, Eunice A 14, 29, 158
Lincoln, Levi i
Lincoln, Robert T 223
Lindfors, Jarl Arthur 284
Lindgren, Henry W 22,32, 138
Lindholm, G. Victor 16, 34, 138
Lindsey, My ma N 19,36, 138
Lineham, Ella C 16,36, 138
Linnell, Irving N 29, 76, 79, 138
Linthicum, J. Charles 239
Linthicum, Walter J 39, 138
Liou-She-Shun, Mr 260
Lipa, Jaroslav 267
Listoe, Soren 138
Little, Edward C 222
Litzler, Louis J 286
Livesey, Frederick 11,33, 158
Livingston, C. Ludlow 158
Livingston, Edward i, 222
Livingston, Lemuel W 138
Livingston, Robert R 222
Livingston, Vanbrugh 221
Lizaire, Raoul 269
Llorca Marti, Juan 279,312,316
Lloveras, James 307
Loar, Mary J 19,31,138
Lobo, Helio 278
Lockhart, Frank P 8,9, 28, 138
Loeb, Adrien 316
Loftus, Edward H 272
Loftus, Victor H 12, 33, 139
Logan, Cornelius A 219,220
Logan, George L 159
Logsden, Seth D 12,33; i59
Lomax, John Gamett 287
Lomba, Jose Maria 310
Lombard, E 268
Lomcn, Carl Joys 304
Long, Boaz W 139, 221. 229
Long, Breckinridge 6
Long, James V 139
Long, John G 222
Longstreet, James 231
Longyear, Robert D 74, 83. 139
Loomis, Francis B 3, 5, 228, 232
Loop, Carl R 139, 216
Lopez Ulloa, Armando 291
Lopez Montero, Ladislao 297
Lord, John H 63, 159
Lord, William P 218
Loredo, Joaquin C 299
Loren, Odin G 71, 159
Lorentzen, Jurgen H. L 68, 139
Lorrilard, George L 159
Loring, George B 228
Lothrop, Alfred P 63, 139
Lothrop, George V. N 229
Lothrop, John A 273
Lothrop, John H 278,317
Loudon, A 270
Lough, E. St. George s9) '59
Louis, E.J 307
Love, Joseph J iS9> 257
Lovejoy , George W 296
Low, Frederick F 220
Lowell, James Russell 223, 230
332
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Lowrie, Walter B s8, iS9
Lowrie, Will L 66, 78, IS9
Lowry, Edward P 70, 86, 159
Lowry , Enloe L 283
Lozano, Alfredo 267
Lubbert, Alejandro 298
Lucas, Alice R 13! 34> '59
Lucchesi Sebastiano 292
lyucci, Telesio 294
Luden, G. P 302
Luening, E. D.J 303
Luetcke, Carl 286
Lule, Arthur B 270, 296
Lumry, Carl C iS9
Lund, Fin 282
Lund, jr., Henry 3°4
Lundahl, Ralph M i9,35, iS9
Lundh, Alexis H. G. O 270
Lundstrom, Edvin 284
Lupian G., Luis 298
Lupton, Stuart K 55, 80, 159
Lyon, Ernest 160, 225, 296
Lyon, John Frederick 289
McAfee, Robert B 220
McAndrews, John E 72, 160
Mc Andrews, Patrick James 65, 160
McArdle, John 57, 87, 160
Macatee, Robert B 64, 83, 160
McBeth, Warren 20, 26, 160
McBride, Harry A 73, 160
McBride, James 224
McCabe, E. R. Warner 40, 160
McCafferty. William J 73, 83, 160
McCally, Marguerite Baird 17, 34, 160
McCarthy, Hugh C 160
McCarthy, Ward B 12, 31, 160
McCashn, Charles 160
MacChesney, Nathan William. . . . 312
McClare, Louise F 18, 31, 160
MacClintock, Samuel 160
McClung, Alexander K 219
McClure, Wallace Mitchell 9, 30. 160
McCoUough, Derrill H 67. 161
McCollum, Arthur H 40, 161
McConnico, Andrew J 7i, 83, 161
McCook, Edward M 224
McCormick, Medill 259
McCormick, Robert S 161,
216, 218, 222, 229
McCormick -Goodhart, Leander. . . 269
McCoy, William D 223
McCreery, Fenton R 161, 221, 224
McCuen, Nina B 16, 34, 161
McCulk)Ugh, Charles A 161, 216
McCunn, John N 89, 161
McCurdy, Charles J 218
McCutcheon, John T 161
McDermott. Michael J 8, 11, 33. 161
McDonald, Alexander 227
McDonald, Donald C 37, 161
McDonald, John J 161, 258
McDonald, P. S 276
MacDonell, Raymond A 317
McDonough, Dayle C SS, 8i, 161
McDonough, R. J 303
MacEachran, Clinton E 55, 83, 161
McEnelly, Thomas 69, 85. 161
McFadden, Faber J 11, 36, i6i
Page.
McFadden, J. Franklin 295
McFarland, Silas C 161, 216
McFetridge. Johnson 13, 33. 161
McGavack, Alice 15. 26, 161
McGee, Ruth E 16, 27, 161
McGilchrist, John 66, 162
McGinnis, John, jr 230
McGlasson. Clifford W 73. 162
McGonigal, Truman G 277, 280, 283
McGoodwin, Preston B 162, 232
McGoogan, George B 162, 216
Macgowau, David B. . . . 38. 40. 41, 80, 162
MacGregor, G. Fernandez 258, 263
McGurk, Joseph F 59, 81. 162
Machuca, Romulo Vargas 29S
Machado, Bernardino 264
Mclnnes, William F 19. 34. 162
Mclntire, Ruth E 16, 33, 162
Mcintosh Milton B 162
Mack, Jason M 66, 162
JIcKay, Arnold A 162
Mackay. Raymond C 162
Mackay d'Almeida, Jayme 277
Mackay d'Almeida, Manoel
Pedro 277, 313
McKenna, James E 9, 11, 24, 162
McKenny, Eileea 13. 29. 162
McKenzie, Jarr>es A 227
McKieman, Charles P 162, 216
McKinley, William 3
McKinney, Luther F 220
McKinney, Walter H 59, 85, 162
McKittrick, William K 40, 162
McLain, Camden L 56, 162
McLane, Louis i, 223
McLane, Robert M 220, 222, 225
^McLean, Arthur 162, 216
McLean, Kem-y C 39, 162
McLean, Henry C 40. 162
McLean, Sarah B 16, 34,.i62
McMackin, John 162, 216
McMahon, Grace E 16, 27, 162
McMahon, Joseph W 12, 34, 162
McMahon, Martin T 227
MacMaster, Frederic D 163
MacMaster, George L 55, 163
McMillan, Neal 163
McMillin, Benton 163, 224, 227
McMillin, Stewart E 55 83, 163
JIcMillion, Georgia E 14, 29, 163
MacMurray, John Van A 5, 8, 25, 163
McNab, R. Calvin 291
McNally, James C 163, 216
McNamee, Luke 39. 163
McNeely, Robert N 163, 217
McNeir, William 7. 8, 11, 35, 163
McNew, Frank O 12, 35, 163
McNiece, Renwick S 66, 83, 163
McPherson, John A 69, 163
Macropoulos, D 290
MacVeagh, John H 38, 83. 163
MacVeaijh, Wayne 224, 231
MacVitty, Karl de G 61, 83, 163
McWilliams, Roy 59. 164
Macy, Clarence E 60, 87, 164
Madden, William Vincent. ... 14, 34, 164
Madison, James i
Madrid Hemlndez, Gabriel 291,317
Page.
Madrigal Mora, Ezequias 180
Madureira, Antonio 310
Maduro, Samuel Levy 28a
Magafia, Ismael 300
Magee, Rufus 230
Magelssen, William C 164. 217
Magill, Samuel E 164, 217
Maginnis, S. Abbot 164, 219
Magnusom, Erik W 61, 86, 164
Magoon, Charles E 164. 217, 227
Magrath, Charles A 257
Magruder, Alexander R 30, 76, 77, 164,, 222
Mahany, Rowland B 221
Mahin, Frank W 89, 164
Mahon, Edith A 16, 34. 164
Mainardi, O. Alvarez 283
Maine, John Penmordam 288
Maio, Giuseppe 292
Makinson, George A 56. 81, 164
Malaga Grenet, Julio 271
Malatrasi, Ciro 294
Maleady, Thomas J 62, 164
Mali, Johnston 273
Malige, Marcel E 59, 86, 164
Mallison, William T 37, 164
Malmberg, Nils 315
Malmros, Oscar 164, 217
^lalmstedt, Frank L 315
Malone, Dudley Field 6
Malvehy, A 279
Mammonas, B 289
Man, Ernest A 164
Mandara, Crespino 21, 30. 164
Manduk, Stanislaw 30S
Maney, Edward S 70, 164
Maney, George 219, 220. 227, 231
Manley, Samuel Robert 288
Mann. Ambrose Dudley 4
Manning. Bernard 164
Manning. Isaac A 164
Manning, Raphael A 74. 88, 164
Manning, Thomas 225
Manning, William R 9, 29, 165
Mansfield, Robert E 163
Manson. Robert 287
Mantilla O.. Carlos 261
Manton. Benjamin D 165, 217
Mantovani, Lawrence A 58, 163
Manzuco Garcia, Manuel 314
Marburg. Theodore 165,219
Marchand, Ray 65, 165
Marcy, William L 2
Mariani, Luigi 269
Mariani, V'iti 292
Marinovitch, Douchan 271
Marian, !Mihail 310
ilarkbreit, Leopold 219
Marling, John L 223
Marqufis. Auguste e84
Martinez Iragorri, Humberto 31S
Marquis, Joseph A 60, 86, 165
Marriner, J. Theodore 29, 76, 79, 165
Marriott, Cyril Herbert Alfred 288
Marsh, Frances M n. 23. 165
Marsh, George P 224, 231
Marsh, O. Gaylord 74, 80, 165
Marsh, Richard O 165
>larshall, Humphrey 220
INDEX OF PERSONS.
333
Page.
llarshali, John i
Marshall, Juan A 297
Marshall, William F 22, 32. 165
Martell, Alonzo A 66, 165
Martin, Chester W 89
Martin, J. L 2, 7, 227
Martin, James to, 31, 165
Martin, John F 42. 79. i6s
Martin, jr., John S 11, 26, 165
Martin, Lewis A 165
Martin, Truman Morris 40, 165
Martin, William 165
Martinez, Abraham 267
Martinez, Alejandro V 298
Martinez Suarez, Francisco 264
Martinez y de Pons, Jos6 Maria. . . 313
Martinez, Rafael 291
Marvin, George 165
Marye, George T 165, 229
Mar>-nowski, Tadeus Z 309
Masia, Luciano 269
Masia y Rodon, Cristino 313
Mason, Dean B 165, 217
Mason, Frank H 165, 217
Mason, James W 225
Mason, John Y 222
Mason, May 18, 31, 165
Mason, Ruth C 20, 36, 166
Masterson, Kathrj-n M 16, 25, 165
Masterson, William W 166, 217
Mata, Luis A 283
Mathee, W. Helmuth 74, 166
Mathews, Rhoda A 19, 35, 166
Mathieu, — Beltran 266, 272
Mates, Jos6 262
Matre, Joseph B 9, 25, 166
Matsudaira, Tsuneo 269
Matteo, Ricco 293
Matthews, Ben Carl 55, 166
Matthews, H. Freeman 40, 85, 166
Mauro, Carlo 294
Maury, Dabney H 2fo
Maverick, Robert Van Wyck 166
Maxcy, Virgil 218
May, Earl F 16, 27, 166
May, Henry Coleman 166
Mayer, Ferdinand L, 37. 78, 166
Maynard, Horace 231
Maj-nard, Lester 59. 79. 166
Maj-nham, Harold B 57. 166
Mayo, Paul 41, 88, 166
Mayorga, Aristides 303
Mayorga, J. Dorlores 290
Mayorga Rivas, Rodolfo 271
Mays, Livingston T 166
Mays, Marshall 1 66, 166
Mazzera. Enrico Albert 292
Meade. Richard K 219
Mears, Adelbcrt W 310
Meana y Padillo, Juan Antonio. . . 313
Medrano y Polanco, Higinio J 281
Meerkamp van Enibden, P. K. A. 302
Meily, John J 57, 85. 166
Meinhardt, Carl D 56. 86, 166
Mejia, Julio C 307
Mel6ndez, Roberto 271
Mel6ndez, Gilbert© 311
Melendy, Franz B 40, 166
Page.
Mellon, Andrew W 258
Melo, Leopoldo 259
Memminger, Lucien 59. 81, 166
Mendes, Jose Augusto 310
Mendes Gon^alves, Roberto 266
Mendez, Fernando L 279
Mendez, Jose 283
Mendez, Porfirio 311
Mendez Rodriguez, Jose 314
Menge, Edward J 280
Merle-Smith, van Santvoord 6
Merrell, Edwin Clay 63, 167
Merrell, jr., George R 39. 83, 167
Merrill, Ayres PhiUips 218
Merrill, E. B 296
Merrill, Edward G 296
Merrill, George W 224
Merrill, Keith 76, 80, 167
Merrill, Selah 167, 217
Merriman, Gladys E 14.31. 167
Merritt, Leonard A 12, 35, 167
Merrow. J 290
Merry. William L. . . 167, 217, 221, 226, 229
Mcrscreau, Claude M 62, 167
Mersman, Scudder 60, 167
Merwin, Robert Lorin 289
Messersmith, George S 54, 78, 167
Metcalf, Horace W 167
Mettome, Xels 306
Metzelaar, Anthony H 302
Metzger, Jacob A 9, 25, 167
Myer, Cord 42, 81, 167
Myer, George von L 167, 224, 229
Meyer, Ira P 19. 35. 167
Meyer, Paul W 37. 7S. 89. 167
Meyer, William 317
Michael, William H 7, 167, 217
Michelson, Albert H 167, 217
Middlekauff, Aura 1 12, 35, 167
Middleton, Henry 229
Middleton, Lillian H 13. 35. 167
Middleton, Minnie D 14, 34, 168
Mignolet, G 274, 275
Milboume, Harvey Lee 57. 87. 168
Miles, Basil 168
Miles, Laura M 16. 34, 168
Miles, Sherman 37. 42, i68
Miles, Thomas 168
Millard, Grace M 16, 28. 168
Millard, Hugh 39. 83. 16S
Miller, A. C 258
Miller, Charles H 13, 32, 168
Miller, Christian Cletus 168
Miller, Clarence A 168
Miller, Daniel 64, 168
Miller, Edith 16, 34, 168
Miller, Ellamanda H 16, 34, 168
Miller, Frederic Valdemar Al-
phouse 281
Miller, George Hermann 286
Miller, G. Harlan 38. 81. 168
Miller, Henry B 168. 217
Miller, Horace H 219
Miller, Hugh S 65, 86, 168
Wilier, J. Martin 168
Miller, Nathan I 258
Miller. Ransford S 69. 78. 168
Miller, Walter A 20. 31. 168
Page.
Miller, \\'illiam 219
Millet, Francisco 301
Mills, Roger S 168
Mills, WiHiam Wallace 168, 217
Millspaugh, Arthur C 169
Milmore, Oscar L 169
Milner, James B 89. 169
Milord y Vazquez, Domingo J. . 280, 312
Minick, Albert W 296
Miniggio, Antonio 293
Mister, John R 60, 83, 169
Min-Yu, Pih 267
Miranda, Jose Maria 297
Mitchell, jr., J. M 67, 169
Mitchell. Lloyd C 13. 35. 169
Mitchell, Mason 89. 169
Mitchell. Tkomas J 71, 169
Mitchell, W. M. Parker 65. 83, 169
Miura, Yoshiakiv 270
Mizner. Lansing B 220
Moe, Alfred K 169
Moe, Mathias 282, 305
Moessner, A\'allace E 64, 169
Moffat, Jay Pierrepont 42. 79. 169
Moffat, Thomas P 169
Motfitt, James P 62, 81. 169
Molina, Larios, Felipe 280
Molina, Miguel Alfredo 274
Monaghan, James C 169, 217
Mongendre, Maxime Anatole Aris-
tide 285
Monges, Richard G 169
Monroe, Ernest L 65, 169
Monroe, jr.. Gustavus L 169
Monroe, Herbert B 14. 36, 169
Monroe, James i, 222, 223
Monroe, Margaret C 14, 25, 169
Monroe, Ernest W 284
Monsalve, Carlos J 307
Monserud, Niels Oliver 305
Montalvo, Leonilo 311
Monteiro Osorio. Jose Augusto. . . 309
Montemayor, Jose F 299
Montgomery, Edmund B 64, 83, 169
Montt, Heman Besa 278
Montyn, W. P 302
Mooers, H. Tobey 72, 85, 169
Moomaw, John C 1 70
Moon, Robert C 296
Mooney, Daniel F 170, 227
Moonlight, Thomas 219
Moore, Alexander P 42, 170, 230
Moore, Charles B 39. i"o
Moore, Fred R 170, 225
Moore, John Bassett 3. 5. 6, 265
Moore, Rupert H 66, 1 70
Moore, Sadie D 15, 36, 170
Moore, Stanton C 15.36. 170
Moore, Thomas Ewing 170
Moore, Thomas P 220
Moorhead, Maxwell K 62, 79, 170
Moos, Morton F 1 70
Morales. DiT genes 272
Morales, Franklin E 39. 170, 224
Morales, Manuel M 317
Moran, Benjamin 228
Moran, John E 64, 88, 170
Morawetz. Albert R 170
334
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Moreno, Mariano 273
Moreno Resales, Emilio 312
Moray, William 170
Morgan, Edwin V 37,
170, 219, 221, 225, 227, 228, 231
Morgan, George W 228
Morgan, jr., Harry H 63, 170
Morgan, Henry H 54, 77, 170
Morgan, Philip H 225
Morgan, Stokeley W 41, 78, 170
Morgan?!, Alfred E 61, 170
Morgenthau, Henry 170, 231
Mori, Kengo 269
Moriarty, Eugene M 16. 34, 170
Moriarty, Francis B 60, 171
Moriarty, jr., G. Andrews 171
Moriarty, Loretta 16, 34, 171
Moringlane, Ernesto 302
Morita, Noburu 270
Morlock, George A 9, u, 23, 171
Morrell, \V. H 273
Morris, Edward Joy 231
Morris, George H 21,35, 171
Morris, Gouvemeur 222
Morris, Ira Nelson 171, 230, 310
Morris, Leiand B 60, 80, 171
Morris, Roland S 171, 225
Morrison, Dorothy D 14, 36, 171
Morrison, Emily S 13. 35. 171
Morrison, Thomas 22
Morse, Philip 277
Morton, Levi P 222
Morse, William W 58, 171
Morton, William R 67, 171
Mosburg, Earl R 15, 34, 171
Moscoso, Guillenno H 308, 317
Moseley, P. Harley 171
Moser, Charles K 171
Moses, George H 171, 223, 226, 259
Moses, H. Claremoni 71, 171
Mosher, Robert Brent 89, 171
Mosher, Vivian R 16, 27, 171
Mosier, Robert L SS)88, 171
Mossman, William A 290, 317
Moss, Marjorie 13, 36, 171
Motley, J. Lothrop 218, 223
Motono, Kozo 270
Mott, T. Bentley 38, 42, 171
Mottu, J. P. Andre 276, 303
Mottu. R. H 302
Mouammer Bey 26s
Moussa, Farag Mikhail 268
Mowrcr, Frank R 171
Moy Back Hin 279
Muccio, John J 61, 87, 171
Miicklow, Walter 287
Muhlenberg, Henry A 218
Muirhead, D. August 65, 171
Mullen, Ann E 17, 25, 172
MuUikin, Hugh 172
Mundy, Louis E 13. 23, 172
Muniz, Joa Carlos 278
Munizaga-Varela, Gustavo 279
Muiioz, Salvador Cuellar 257
Mufioz Valdds, Luis 266
Mufioz y Riera, Josd A 280, 281
Munro, Dana G 8, 29, 76, 79, 172
Murdock, Myra A 17, 31, 172
Page.
Murphy, Dominic 1 89. 172
Murphy, George H 172, 215, 217
Murphy, Henry C 226
Murphy, jr., James J 74, 85, 172
Murphy, J. Lee 70, 85, 172
Murphy, John F 16, 34, 172
Murphy, Raymond E 14, 25, 1 72
Murphy, Robert D 61, 85, 172
Murphy, William S 231
Murray, George Henry Lygou 289
Murray, Helena D 16, 27, 172
Murray, Richard 290
Murray, Wallace S 41, 80, 172
Murray, William B 57, 172
Murray, William Vans 226
^lurray. Woody 14, 34, 172
Muse, Benjamin 42, 81, 172
Mutt, Victor 268, 284
Myers, David J. D 69, 80, 173
Myers, Ethel 13, 36, 173
Myers, Harry D 71, 173
Myers, Louis S 21, 26, 173
Myers, Myrl S 57, 80, 173
Myers, Nellie Vass 14, 31, 173
Myers, R. Baldwin 318
Myers, Willys A 70, 173
Nabel, Eugene 71, 173
Nano, F 271
Naranjo M. , Enrique 279
Nash, James A 11, 25, 173
Nash, Paul 173, 217
Nasmith, Charles Roy 64, 81, 173
Nason, Charles P. H 173
Nason, William F 56, 88, 173
Natali, Giuseppe 293
Nathan, Edward 1 68, 81, 173
Navarasth, Phya Buri 272
Navarro E., Antonio 306
Navas, Julio 303
Neale, Katherine 16, 34, 173
Neeley, Roy H 173
Neesley, Enima L. M 16, 27, 173
Neill, Richard R 173, 217
Nelson, Anders C 71, 173
Nelson, Hugh 230
Nelson, John 2, 231
Nelson, Thomas A. R 220
Nelson, Thomas H 220, 225
Nelson, Tuley W 14, 34, 173
Nervo, Luis Padilla 270
Nesbit, V. G 274
Nester, Alfred T 71, 86, 174
Nettles, Thomas D 280
Neubert, Karel 281
Neumann, Ernst 286
Neuteboom, E 303
Neuville, Emmanuel Leonce 284
Neville, Edwin L 28, 76, 78, 174
Newbill, Hiram E 57, 174
Newcomb, Anna Belle 16, 27, 174
Newcomb, Robert M 66, 174
Newcome, William A 22, 32, 174
Newel, Stanford 225,226
Newell, Constance 16, 33, 174
Newson, H. Dorsey 41, 81, 174
Newton, T. John 22
Nichols, Lois M 15, 27, 174
Page.
Nichols, W. W 258
Nicholson, John B 1 74
Nicholson, Vivian L 174
Nicolas, Alexis 284
Nicolson, Donald 174
Nielsen, Fred K 174, 258
Nielsen, N. M 2S3
Nielsen, Orsen N 62, 83, 174
Niese, H. C 273
Nightingale, Henry Oscar 175
Niles, Nathaniel 229
Nistal y Casas, Alejandrino 312
Noallas, Ricardo 312
Noble, Arthur H 289
Nolde, Baron 264
Nolting, Fred E 276
Nord, Herman J 315
Norquist, Gordon 22,32, 175
Norris, jr., William B 9, 25, 175
Northcott, Elliott 175, 220, 226, 232
Northrup, Alfred S 175
Norton, Edward J 8, 28, 53, 76, 78, 175
Norton, Laurence H 175
Norton, Thomas H 175
Norweb, R. Henry 40, 79, 1 75
Norwood, Dorothy K 16, 34, 175
Nossman, W. L 278
Notarfrancesco, Ismaele 292
Notti, Pierto Maria Amabile 293
Noyes, Edward F 222
Nuida, Eishiro 295
Nurse, William Percy Taylor 287
Nutter, Ellen E 20, 35, 175
Nyhobn, D 261
Oates, Lewis Arthur 287
Obregon, Francisco 300
Obregon, Gonzalo 298
Obregon, Lamberto 1 297
O'Brien, Edward C 175, 227, 231
O'Brien, Thomas J 175, 221, 224, 225
O'Brien, William G 59, 175
O'Connor, Thomas 289
Ocetkiewicz, Arthur Marjan 309
Octavio, Rodrigo 258
Oda, Man 263
O'Donoghue, Sidney E 58, 86, 175
Oerting, Carl McKenzie 282, 315
Offutt, Casper Y 175
O'Hara, John W 175
O'Hara, V. Winthrope 175
Ohashi, Chuichi 295
Ohlin, Gustave Robert 315
Ojeda, Augustin Mariano 273
Ojeda, Jos^ Hernandez 257
Okamoto, Hisakichi 295
O'Keefe, James A 13, 34. 17s
Okerlind, Carl Alfred 315
O'Laughlin, John Callan 5
Olaya, Enrique 267
Olivares, Josd de 63, 80, 175
Oliver, Alton E 175
Oliver, John Bunyan 301, 304
Olney, Richard 3
Olsen, Ingemann 282
Olsen, Victor 282
Olsson, Otto O 19. 34. 17s
Oluf , Johan 282
O'Neil, James R 20, 33, 175
INDEX OF PERSONS.
335
Page.
O'Xeill, Anna A lo. 25, 176
Opitz, Richard 22, 32, 176
Orams, Thomas 72, 1 76
Orci, Arturo H 263
Oreamuno, J. Rafael 267
O'Rear, John D 176, 217, 219
Orfila, Antonio 312
Orlando, Victor Enimanuel 262
Orlob, Thorvald 283
Orlawski, Leon 271
Ornelos, Enrique 299
Orr, Arthur 176
Orr, Cyrus Pitman 286
Orr, George 71, 81, 176
Orr, James L 229
Orsini, Eugene 285
Orth, Godlove S 218
Ortiz, Arzeno Rafael 283
Ortiz, Francisco Ochoa 267
Ortiz, J. F 299
Ortolani, Attilio 294
Orton, Carl 315
Osborn, Howard B 65, 176
Osborn, Thomas A 220
Osborn, Thos. O 218, 219
Osborne, A. A 40, 176
Osborne, John Ball 68, 78, 17^
Osborne, John E 5
Osborne, Lithgow 176
O'Shaughnessy, Kathleen D. . 13, 25, 176
O 'Shaughnessy, Nelson 1 76
Osman Bey 265
Ostertag, Augustus 55. 176
O'Sullivan, John L 228
Oswald, Winne B 16, 31, 176
Otero, Alanuel B 265
Otilio Salinas, Gerardo 303
O'Toole, William Joseph 176, 227
Ott, Harry B 69, 176
Otterbourg, Marcus 225
Otterman, Harvey B 12, 34, 176
Oustinow, Michel 311
Owen, Jacob M 66, 176
Owen, Robert Dale 231
Owen, Somerset A 22, 32, 176
Owens, Louis G 19. 31, 176
Owens, Thomas R 57. 83. 176
Owsley, jr., Harry B 176
Oyaguey Pfliicker, Carlos
Alberto 308
Ozmun, Edward H 176, 217
Pabst, jr., Gustave 37i8s> 176
Pacheco, Romuoldo 220, 224
Pacheco, L. Gonz lies 318
Pack, A. J 269
Packer, Earl L 38,40,41,86, 177
Paddock, Gordon 42, 79, 177
Paddock, Harry L 177
Padro, Arturo 267
Page, Thomas Nelson 177, 217, 224
Page, Walter Hines 177, 217, 223
Paiewensky, Isaac 307
Paillard, Maurice 311
Paillard, Maurice Emile Auguste. 285
Painter, Edward T 19, 34i 177
Pakradooni, Haig Herant 307
Palacios, Alberto 277
Page.
Palcho, jr., John G 14,31, 177
Paillardy, Leo Francis 309
Palmer, Clarence S 281
Palmer, David W 19, 35, 177
Palmer, Ely E 72, 78, 177
Palmer, Olive F 16. 34, 1 77
Palmer, Robert M 218
Palmer, jr., Theodore D 177
Palmer, Thomas W 230
Panagopoulos, Constantin 289
Panaretoff , Stephan 266
Panattoni, Gioacchino Vittorio. . . 292
Pando, Ramon 277
Pangbum, Harry K 69, 177
Pangle, Beulah K 20,31, 177
Paoli, John 310
Paoli, Enrique Pucci 280
Paoli, John Emmanuel 285
Pape, Clemens Julius 286
Papini, Carlo 292
Parati, Arturo 294
Paredes, Juan Francisco 264
Park, James L 61, 177
Park, Nelson R 72, 86, 177
Park, Sam 59, 177
Parker, Edwin B 258
Parker, Peter 220
Parker, William H 225
Parkhill. G. W 301
Parkhurst, John G 219
Parkins, Albina L 16,34, '77
Parks, James E 62,88, 177
Parmelee, Maurice 178
Parra Marquez, Alirio 318
Parsloe, Arthur G ss, 178
Partridge, Frank C 232, 259
Partridge, James R. 219,224, 227,229,232
Paschal, jr., George R 37.75,89. 178
Pastorini, Louisa 20, 35, 178
Patterson y Jauregui, Eduardo . . . 280
Patterson, Jefferson 38, 81, 178
Patterson, Robert R 63, 85. 178
Patton, Kenneth S 73,80, 178
Pawlak, Walter J 72, 178
Paxson, Frances B 17,36, 178
Payne, Charles E. B 64, 178
Payne, Charles F 74, 178
Payne, Christopher H 178
Payne, George 289
Payon, Jose 317
Payson, Charles 6, 221
Paz Campero, Javier 266
Peabody, Frank H 22
Peak, John L 231
Peake, Clarence H '9,34, 178
Pearson, Alfred J 41, 178. 228
Pearson, Frederick F. A 38,81. 178
Pearson, Herbert F 67, 178
Pearson, Madge M 17,34. '78
Pearson, Richmond. 178, 217, 223, 226, 227
Pease, Margaret C 19,36,1 78
Peck, H. E 224
Peck, William L... S9. 88, 179
Peck, Willys R 37,78,179
Peden, James A 218
Peffer, Giuseppe 292
Peirce, Henry A 224
Peirce, Herbert H. D 6. 179,217. 226
Page.
Pelenyi, John 269
Pelly, Bernard 289
Pelton, Walter E 14, 26, 179
Peiia, Francisco 279
Pefia, Lisandro 300
Peiia Toro, Domingo 278
Pendleton, George H 222
Pendleton, John S 218, 220
Penfield, Frederick Courtland. . . . 179,
217, 218, 222
Penn, Melville E 21,35, 179
Pennoyer, Richard E 179
Peralta L., Manuel 311
Perez Saez, Alberto 308
Perez, Francisco 297
Perez Abreu, Luis 299
Perez, Luis Marino 267
Perez, Ovidio 272
Perez y Blanco, Pedro P 281
Perkins, Brigg A 73. 179
Perkins, C . Warwick 54, 88, 1 79
Perkins, Linwood H 19,3s, '79
Perkins, ^lahlon Fay 28, 76, 78, 179
Perkins, William C 61, 179
Perrin, R 301
Perry, Charles B 1 79
Perry, Ernest B 258
Pesmazoglou, Hector M 289
Pesquera, Alfonso 300
Peter, Marc 272
Peter, William 61, 179
Peters, Morris A 58, 179
Peters, Thomas Willing 179
Peterson, Walter Anders 31s
Pettis, S. Newton 219
Petitti, Jerome A 307
Pettengill, George T 37, 179
Peyton, Balie 220
Pfau, Sudye M 15, 26, 179
Pfeiffer, William C i9)3S, 179
Phelan, George R 74, 179
Phelan, Ra>Tnond 73, 179
Phelps, Edward J 223
Phelps, Livingston 179
Phelps, Seth Ledyard 227
Phelps, William Walter 218, 222
Phenix, Spencer 9,30, 179
Philip, Hoffman 42, 180. 218. 220. 231
Phillips, F. L 307
Phillips, Lillian F 19,31, 180
Phillips, William 4,
5)6,37.41. 180. 219, 22s, 226
Phipps, Gerald Hastings 292
Plana, Enrico 292
Picco, Giovanni Maria 292
Pickens, Francis W 229
Pickerell, George H 89, 180
Pickering, Timothy i
Pickett, J. C 227
Pierce, Bertha E 10, 33, 180
Pierce, Charles L 22,32, 180
Pierce, Franklin 2
Pierce, Gilbert A 228
Pierce, Maurice C 7I) 83, 180
Pierce, William A 180
Pierpont, J. Harris 273
Pierrepont, Edwards 223
Pierrepont, Seth Low 180
336
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Piip, Antonius 268
Pike, James S 226
Pike, William J 180, 217
Pilcher, J. Milton 22,32, 180
Pile, William A 232
Piles, Samuel Henrj' 38, 180, 220
Pinckney, Charles 230
Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth. . . . 222
Pinckney, Roswell N 21, 3S) 180
Pinckney, Thomas 223, 230
Pinilla, Macario 260
Pinkerton, Julian L 62, 88, 180
Pinkerton, Lowell C 64, 80, 180
Pinkett, Archibald S i5)3i> 180
Pinkney, William 223, 229, 231
Piodella, Jose Guilherme 309
Pisar, Charles J 65, 81, 180
Pitcaim, Hugh 181, 217
Pitkin, John R. G 218
Place, Frank 17, 34, 181
Plant, George 315
Plastino, Giuseppe 295
Plata, jMitridates 30S
Plaun. Henning 283
Playter, Harold 71, 83, 181
Plessen, Leopold 268
Plitt, Edwin A 75, 86. 181
Plumacher, Eugene H i8i, 217
Poindexter, Miles 41, 181, 227
Poinsett, Joel R 225
Points, J. Franklin 63, 181
Poizat, J. M 278
Politch, Ladislav 264
Politis, Nicolas 262
Polk. Frank Lyon 3, 4
Polk, James K 2
Polk, William H 231
Pollard, Richard 220
Polzin, Alfredo 278
Pomerene, Atlee 259
Pomeroy, Floyd S 19. 34, 181
Pomeroy, George P 222
Pontius, Albert W 181, 217
Poole, De Witt C 62, 77, 181
Poole, William A 14, 34, 181
Pooley, Robert P i8i
Pooser, William W 273
Pope, L. Dale 59, 181
Popovici, Andrei 271
Popovici, J. C 310
Popovitch, Eugene 263
Porras, Belisario 263
Portela Rolan, Avelino 314
Porter, Albert G 224
Porter, David 231
Porter, Horace 222
Porter, James D 4, 220
Porter, Stephen G 259
Porter, Thurston R 181, 257
Potous y Martinez, Juan 314
Potter, Julian 181
Potter, Lorenzo Guerrero 303
Potter, Lovet R 277
Potter, William 224
Potti, Charles Johan 284
Pottle, Edward R 181
Potts, R. Frazier SS, 181
Pou, Carlos Virgilio 283
Page.
Poulet, Acton 60, 181
Pouritch, Bojidar 311
Powell, Estella A 16, 27, 181
Powell, Henry A 257
Powell, William F 221, 224
Power, Ruth Carter 16, 34, 181
Powers, Mary L 17, 31, 181
Pradillo, August Edward 296
Pratt, E. Spencer 227
Preble, William Pitt 226
Frees, Griffith W 182
Preil. Helen Gutman 19. 25, 182
Prendergast, Walter T 37. 83. 182
Preston, jr., Austin R 69, 86, 182
Preston, William 230
Price, Ernest B 56, 83, 182
Price, Hannibal 269
Price, Milton M 182, 217
Price, Tomo H. W 305
Price, William Jennings 182, 227
Prickitt, William A 182
Prieto, Angel 266
Prieto, Manuel G 264, 299
Prince, John Dyneley 38, 182, 221
Prince, Kirby L.' 16, 34, i8e
Prince, jr., Ulysses S. G 21, 26, 182
Pringle, Edward E 16, 35, 182
Prochnik, Edgar L. G 266
Proctor, Robert A 22, 32, 182
Proftit, George H 219
Prosl, Beatrice F 19. 27. 182
Priim, X 276
Pruyn, Robert H 224
Pryor, Ralph W 21, 31, 182
Pueyrredon, Honorio 266
Puga Borne, Federico 260
Purcell, Laurence J 16, 33, 182
Purdy, Henry T 57, 182
Purdy , Milton D wight 182, 257
Purdy, Robert C 67, 182
Purgatorio, Raffaele 292
Pumer, T. W 290
Putnam, James O 218
Putnam, John R 56, 80, 182
Putney, Albert H 183, 307
Quarton, Harold B 59, Si, 183
Quay, Jerome A 183, 217
Quesada, Urbano 291
Quezada Acharan, Armando 260
Quigley, Stephen H 12, 26, 183
Quilichine, Antoine 285
Quinby, William E 226
Quincy , Josiah 4
Quinlan, Joseph B 12, 31, 183
Quintero, John Marshall 280
Quinzada, Antenor 306
Quiroga V., Antonio 277
Quiroz, Roberto E 299
Quist, Alarik Wilhelm 284
Rabillon, Leonce 285
Rabinavicius, Henrikas 270
Racedo, Eduardo 266
Raedy, Margaret H 19, 26,183
Ragan, Earle G 21, 31, 183
Ragland, Joseph P 70, 88, 183
Ragsdalc, James W 183
Page.
Raguet, Condy 219
Rairden, Bradstreet S 89, 183
Rairden, Frank B 183
Raleigh, J.J 290
Ramer, John E 41. 183, 226
Ramirez Pena, Abraham 311
Ramirez, Arturo 290
Ramirez de Arellano, Francisco. . . 280
Ramirez, Sergio 273
Ramnicanu, Comeliu Manolescu. . 264
Ramos y Aguirre, Josd A 281
Ramsay, Thomas 317
Ramsay, Henry O 6x, 183
Rand, Egbert B 40, 75. 89, 182
Rand, Elbridge D 41, 81, 183
Randall, Alexander W 227
Randolph, Edmund 1
Randolph, John 68, 8i, 183, 229
Rankin, Robert L 64, 85, 183
Ransom, Matt W 225
Rasmusen, Bertil M 64, 81, 183
Rasmussen, Julius Frederik 282
Rasmussen, Marinas 282
Ratay. John P 38, 184
Ravenel, D 302
Ravndal, Christian M 60, 86, 184
Ravndal, Gabriel Bie 75. 77, 184
Ray, John A 184
Rayneri y Perez, Francisco 281
Read, John Meredith 223
Read, J. Meredith, jr 223
Ready, Michael J 21, 31, 184
Reat, Samuel C 62, 83, 184
Rebolledo, Alvaro 279
Rector, Berry 17. 34. 184
Redecker, Sydney B 71, 86, 184
Rediker, Frank H 61, 184
Redmond, John W 22,32, 184
Reed, Dwight M 18, 32, 184
Reed, Edward L 29, 76, 80, 184
Reed, Eugene C A 184
Reed, Leslie E 60. 80, 184
Reed, William B 220
Reeder, Charles 21, 24, 184
Reeves, Harman 66, 184
Reguera, Jose 313
Reichert, Dorothy 1 17. 27, 184
Reid, Ruby Francesco 19. 31. 184
Reid, Whitelaw 184, 217, 222, 223
Reineck, Walter S 67, 85, 184
Reinsch, Paul S 185,217,220
Reiter. Prosper 296
Remillard, Horace 68, S3. 185
Remsen, jr., Henry 7
Rencher, Abraham 228
Rendon Quijano, Vicente 299
Renick, Edward 1 7
Reurs, J. H 302
Reyes Guerra, Alonso 264
Reyner, Harry 2S0, 290
Rej-nolds, Conger 61, 86, 185
Reynolds, L. H 296
Reynolds, Robert M 219
Reynor, Harry 283
Rhett, jr., Robert G 278
Rhodes, Russell H 64, 185
Riano y Gayangos, Juan 272
Rice, Allen Thomdike 229
INDEX OF PERSONS.
337
Page.
Richards, B 290
Richards, Herbert Arthur 287
Richards, Rajinond O 58, 185
Richardson, Charles F. P 185
Richardson, Dorsey 8, 9, 29, 185
Richardson, Elliott Verne 80, 185
Richardson, Harry B 185
Richardson, John B 185
Richardson, jr., John S 62, 88, 185
Richardson, Norval 185
Richer, Juan E 300
Richhng, Jose 317
Richmond, Lewis 228
Richmond, Stoughton J 19. 31. iSs
Rickarby, Elliott G 307
Rico, Orazio 293
Riddiford, George G 17, 34, 185
Riddle, John W. . 37,185,218,222, 228, 229
Ridgely, Benjamin H 185, 217
Riestra, Jose 299
Rigal, Jean F. J. E 248
Riggs. Benjamin Reath 42, 81, 185
Riis, Rudolph 282
Rincones, Pedro Rafael 318
Rinker, Ella Ruth 17, 34, 185
Riordan, William A 280, 283
Rios, Arturo 279
Riotte, Charles N 221, 226
Risley, John E 221
Ritsher, Walter H 74, 85
Rivas Mena, Arturo 311
Rivera, Amancio J 273
Riveros, Alejandro Guillermo 308
Rives, George B 186
Rives, George L 4
Rives, AVilliam C 222
Roa, F. Gonzalez 258, 263
Roach, jr.. Charles P i3, 31. 186
Roach, Elizabeth C 17, 31, 186
Roach, James Cuthbert 289
Robbins, Thomas H 275
Robbins, Warren D 39, 77. 186
Robert, Albert W 186
Roberts, David W 40, 186
Roberts, Joseph F 186, 257
Roberts, Quincy F 7S, 87, 186
Roberts, William R 220
Robertson, Archibald W 287
Robertson, Frederick J 63, 186
Robertson, Mary W 17,27,186
Robertson, Randolph 186
Robertson, William H 63, 77, i86
Robinette, Myrtle E 17.31. 186
Robinson, Christopher 227
Robinson, E. T 278
Robinson, Fred R 186, 217
Robinson, Guillermo L. 297
Robinson, Thomas H 61, 86, 186
Roche, James Jeffrey 186, 217
Rochester, William B 219
Rochira, Ubaldo 293
Rockhill, William W 5, 6,
27, 186, 217, 220, 223, 228, 229, 231
Rockwell, Almon F i86
Roddy, Marguerite R 19, 27, 186
Rodgers, C. R. P 41, 186
Rodgers, James Linn 186
Rodgers, J. Donald C 186
Rodney, Caesar A 218
Page.
Rodrigues da Silva Leitc, Joaquin . 309
Rodrigues de Almedia Ribeire,
Arthur 264
Rodrigues Gaspar, Luis 309
Rodriguez Bet eta, Virgilio 290
Rodriguez Campoamor, Benigno. . 314
Rodriguez Embil, Julio 280
Rodriguez Pineres, Eduardo 260
Rodriguez, Rene 2S3
Rodriguez, Salvador 311
Rodriguez, Vicente Valdes 267
Rogeri di Villanova, Delfino 269
Rogers, H. Gold 229
Rogers, John Jacob. 259
Rogers, L. T 306, 318
Roig, Antonio 282
Roji, Carlos Palacios 297
Roland, Charlene 19. 27, 186
Rolfs, Gerhard 286
Roll, Sigurd E 71, 186
Roll, William George 60, 186
Romagny, Jean Marie 285
Romeyn, Nina G 12, 29, 187
Ronca, Felice 293
Roosa, I. P 187, 257
Roosevelt, George W 187, 217
Roosevelt, Robert B 226
Roosevelt, Theodore 3
Root, Elihu 3, 265
Root, Joseph P 220
Ros, Manuel L 277, 317
Rose, WiUiam Henry 277
Rosecrans, William S 225
Rosenberg, Louis James .... 187, 306, 313
Rosenthal, E. W 275
Rosenthal, Guillermo 307
Rosicki, Stefan 309
Ross. Andrew Miller 287
Ross, Guillermo 273
Ross, Jorge Leguia 308
Ross, Sallie F 17, 36, 187
Ross, Thomas Mclntyre 286
Ross, AVilliam 277
Rossi, Paola Alberto 293
Rosso, Augusto 269
Rostworrowski, Michel 264
Roth, James H 55, 187
Rousseau, Richard H 224
Rousset, E. P 283
Roussos, Georges 262
Routsky, Peter A 311
Rove, Olaf I -. . . 306
Rowan, John 231
Rowe, L. S 258, 259
Rowen, John E 187
Rowland, Max 306
Rowley, Charles Scott 308
Rowley, jr., Eugene C 13. 31, 187
Rowley, sr., Eugene C 22, 32, 187
Royds, William Massy 287
Royston, M. H 276
Rublcc, Horace 231
Rubltc, AVilliam A 187, 217
Rudas, Roberto R 279
Ruddock, Albert B 1S7
Ruesga, Rafael 298
Ruftin, John N 187
Ruffner, Walter S 69, 187
Ruiz, Enrique D 300
Page.
Ruiz, Juan Jose 303
Ruiz Sandoval, Alberto 300
Rule. Blanche A' 13, 36, 187
Runyon, Theodore 222
Rush, Richard 1,222, 223
Russ, Edward B 11. 27. 187
Russell, jr., Charles H 187
Russell, Charles W 187, 227
Russell, George M 41, 187
Russell, H. Earle 70, 85, 187
Russell, Jonathan 222, 223, 230
Russell, Thomas 232
Russell, William AV 38^
187, 220, 221, 232
Rutledge, B 276
Ruys de Beerenbrouck, G. L. M. H 263
Ryan, John Latta 187
Ryan, Thomas 225
Ryan, jr., Thomas J 40, 187
Ryder, Frederick M 89, 187
Rydings, Douglas Gerald 287
Ryerson, James 63, 188
Saadeddin Bey 265
Sack, Francis M 64, 188
Sackett, Martin R 188
Sadler, Mary A 17.34, 188
Saenz, Antonio 261
Saenz y Macho, Jose S 280, 306
Safford, O. E 275
Saghaphi, Mirza Mahmoud Kahn . 307
Saito, Hirosi 295
Sakarrophos, L 290
Salati, Armando 294
Salazar, Francisco B 298
Saldana, J 276
Salem Eff, Abu-el-Enein 268
Salerno, Sabastiano 293
Salinas, Jorge F 303
Salisbury, Alfred 188
Salisbury, Laurence E 69, 86, 188
Salmon, David A 8, 10,34, 188
Salz, Edwin 56, 188
Samad-Khan Momtazos-Saltaneh . 263
Sa Miranda, Carlos Alberto 310
Sammons, Thomas "6, 77, 188
Sampaio, Sebastiao 266
Sampselle, Ben B 57, i88
Sampson. Archibald J 221
Sanchez de Bustamante, Antonio. 261
Sanchez Bustamcnte, Daniel 260
Sanchez, Delfino 290
Sanchez y Guerra, Federico 281
Sdnchcz Latour, Francisco 269
Sanders, John O 188
Sands, Rosa Virginia 10, 33, i88
Sands, AA'illiam F 188. 224
Sanford, Henry S 218
Sanford, Horace M 65, 188
Sangston. Howard E 19, 27, 188
Sanguily, Manuel 261
Sankantakul. Swai 272
Sanner, Alfred 28s
San Simon y Ortega. Luis 31a
Santacruz. jr.. Armando 257
Santiago Rodriguez, Josd 265
Santomassimo, Francesco 293
Santos, Alberto 58, 188
Saracco, Alberto 392
338
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Sargent, Aaron A 222
Sargent, Clarence E 188
Sarle, Amos L 188
Sartoris, Algernon 188
Sartorius, Herman U 188
Sasso, David M 301
Sauer, Hmil 55, 80, 188
Saulsbury, Willard 259
Saunders, Romulus M 230
Savage, Herbert B 21,34,188
Savage, John M 66, 81, 188
Savage, John N 21,27,188
Savoy, Edward A 20, 23, 188
Sawada, Setsuzo 269
Sawyer, John B 56, 189
Sawyer, Leroy R J89
Saxton, Guillermo A 317
Sayers, Thomas 21,30, 189
Sayre, Francis Bowes 264
Seanlan, John J 8,11,31, 189
Scanlan, Martin F 40, 189
Scarborough, Walter B 19.35. 189
Scavarda, Dominick A i9>3S)i89
Schafer, Consuelo A 17,31,189
Schanzer, Carlo 262
Schenck, Robert C 219, 223
Schiaffino, Gtiiseppe 313
Schloss, Theresa C 19, 27, 189
Schmedemann, Albert G 189, 226
Schmitt, William H 283
Schmucker, George B 189
Schnare, Lester L S7)8s, 189
Schneider, Elsie M 18,36, 189
Schneider, George 231
Schoellkopf. Walter H 37, 82, 189
Schoenfeld, H. F. Arthur 41. 77. 189
Schoenfeld, Rudolf E 60, 85, 189
Schoenrich, Edwin 56,88, 189
Schoff, Wilfred H 277
Scholle, Gustave 189
Schomburg, Friedrich 286
Schooley, George R 14,31, 189
Schott, William W 68. 88, 190
Schotten, Jerome J 277
Schoyer, Balkam 190,217
Schreck, Alfonso A 3i4r3i7
Schrempp, Ernest J 299
Schroder, Aage Georg 282,315
Schroder, F. G. C 261
Schroeder, Enrique 317
Schroeder, Francis 230
Schiicking, Mr 262
Schultze, George H 12,32, 190
Schumacher, Leo E 60, 190
Schumann, Walter 190
Schurman, Jacob Gould 3 7,
190, 220, 223, 226
Schurz, Carl 230
Schurz, William L 37. 190
Schutt, Warren E 18, 190
Schuyler, Eugene 222,223,228,229
Schuyler, Montgomery. . . 42, 190, 222, 229
Schuyten, E 303
Schwartz, Blanche B 17,23, 190
Schwarz, Julius Carl 286
Schwyter, Guillaimie 316
Scidmore, George H 190. 217
Sconfietti, Cesare 293
Scott, Albert W 63. 190
Page.
Scott, Charles L 232
Scott, George 20, 23, 190
Scott, James Douglas 288
Scott, John A 60, 190
Scott, Lila C 20,31, 190
Scott, Walter 17, 27, 190
Scott, Winfield H 76,87, 190
Scott, Winthrop R 67, 83, 190
Scotten, Robert M 37. 79. 190
Scruggs, William L 220, 232
Sears, Floyd 72, 191
Seay, William A 219
Seeger, Eugene 191
Seferiades, S 262
Seguin, Marc Francois E 275, 285
Seibels, J. J 218
Seibold, Leonelda S 15, 30, 191
Seltzer, George Edward 66, 87, 191
Seltzer, Harry G 191
Selva de Balyeat, Berta 303
Seminario, Jose 1 283
Semple, James 220
Seng, Wilfred 280
Sentous, jr., Louis 284
Sequeira, David 303
Seropyan, Milton 307
Serpan, Stanley 281
Serrano, Gustavo P 257
Serrano, R. P 279
Serratos, Alfredo 298
Settle, Ada G 18,31,191
Settle, Thomas 227
Severance, Luther 224
Severe, Marc L 60, 191
Sevilla, A 283
Sevilla y Montoliu, Eduardo 314
Sewall, Harold M 224
Seward, Frederick W 4
Seward, George F 220
Seward, William H 2
Sewell, William L 191, 217
Seyfert, Augustus G 191
Seymour, Thomas H 229
Seys, John 225
Shand, Miles M 11,28. 191
Shaner, Maurice P 191, 258
Shank, Samuel H 191
Shanklin, Arnold 191
Shannon, James 219
Shannon, Richard Cutts. . . . 221, 226, 229
Shannon, Wilson 225
Shantz, Harold 66, 8s, 191
Sharp, Charles V 55. 191
Sharp, Himter 191. 217
Sharp, William G 191, 217, 222
Sharps, Lloyd 21,28,191
Shaughnessy, Walter D 191
Shaw, George P 67, 85, 191
Shaw, G. Howland 42, 78, 191
Shea, Joseph H 191. 220
Shedd, Margaret R 13, 26, 191
Shefbeck, J. Stephen 291
Sheffield, James Rockwell ... 41, 191, 226
Shellabarger, Samuel 228
Shepard, Donald D 192
Shepard, James M 192
Shepler, Raymond V 10, 25. 192
Sheppard, Henry C 278
Page.
Sheridan, James M 317
Sherman, Anthony 192
Sherman, Harry Tuck 54, 192
Sherman, John 3
Sherrill, Charles H 192, 218
Sherwell, Guillermo A 258
Shibasaki, Mikaeru 29s
Shields, Benjamin G 232
Shigematsu, Nobuo 295
Shingle, Robert W 290
Shipley, Milford A 18, 34, 192
Shipley, Ruth B 9, 11,36, 192
Shipman, Samuel R 21, 25, 192
Shirley, Guilhermede Lima O'Con-
nor 310
Shirley, John H 192
Shockley, William P 68, 192
Shoecraft, Eugene C 192
Sholes, Walter H 73, 82, 192
Short, William 222, 226, 230
Shorter, Ransellear F 21,35, 192
Shotts, George W 192
Shreve, Edgar A 9, 12, 28, 192
Shrigley, Alfred R 306
Shudo, Yasuto 270
Shuler, Adeline C 17, 27, 192
Shutan, William H 38, 192
Sicilian!, Vittore 292
Sickel, Francis J 19, 35, 192
Sickles, Daniel E 230
Sickles, Stanton 192
Sidebotham, Arthur Frederick 305
Sidebottom, John Newell 288
Sidler, Albert 316
Sieberg, Jacob 296
Siegel, Charles 15,34, 192
Sigmond, Frithjof C 71. 192
Sill, John M.B 225
vSilliman, John R 192, 217
Sillitti, Luigi 294
Silva, Bias C 283, 291
Silva y Sapia, Jorge 306
Silvers, Edward E 73, 86, 192
Simmons, Edward T 21,35, i93
Simmons, Paul A 21, 23, 193
Simms, S. Chapman 309
Simon, G. J 274
Simons, John F 60, 83, 193
Simonson, De Witt 62, 193
Simopoulos, Charalambos 269
Simpjch, Frederick 193
Simpson, Julia F 13. 3i) i93
Sims, H. H 269
Sinclair, Neil 62, 193
Singer, Alexander 303
Singer, Berthold 280, 303 , 3 1 1 , 3 13
Singh, Sehawa 193
Sink, H. Hoyle 193
Sisler, Clarence E 12,31. i93
Skellet, Thomas Jensen 282
Skinner, James S 12,34,193
Skinner, Robert P 60, 77, 193
Skinner, Sidney A i3> 34. '93
Slater, Fred C 65, 85, 193
Slattery, Hugh 269
Slaughter, Imogen 18, 35, 193
Slawson, David Henry 60, 193
Sleeper, Jacob 193
INDEX OF PERSONS.
339
Page.
Slidell, John 225
Sloan, Alexander K 67, 85, 193
Slocum, Clarence Rice i9j, 217
Slovarp, Emil P 305
Smale, William A 64, 88, 193
Small, William Keane 288
Smetanka, Jaroslav 2S1
Smiddy, Timothy A 269
Smith, Abraham E 193,217
Smith, A. Donaldson 193
Smith, Arthur J 21, 24. 193
Smith, Barton Hewitt 304
Smith, Calvin F 193
Smith, Carothers H 21, 23, 194
Smith, Charles Emory 229
Smith, Clarence T i973i> i94
Smith, Elizabeth B 15, 30, 194
Smith, Elizabeth L 17, 27, 194
Smith, Ezekiel E 225
Smith, E. Talbot 60, 85, 194
Smith, Felix Willoughby 194, 217
Smith, Frances 1 14,36, 194
Smith, Gaston 63, 83, 194
Smith, Glenn A 12, 34, 194
Smith, Guy Basil Gilliat 287
Smith, H. Armistead 55, 194
Smith, Harold h 73 > 194
Smith, Helen L 19, 36, 194
Smith, James A 194, 217
Smith, John Cotton 219
Smith, J. E 295
Smith, Leland L 60, 85, 194
Smith, Madison R 194. 224
Smith, Marc 61, 194
vSmith, Orlando F 13,31, 194
Smith, Owen L. W 225
Smith, Reginald F 194
Smith, Robert i
Smith, Samuel 194
Smith, Sydney 194
Smith, Sydney Y 10, 24, 194
Smith, Walter E 56, 194
Smith, William 228
Smith, William H 257
Smith, William Walker 195
Smith-Li'te, William 195
Smyth, Cecilia R 22,32, 195
.Smyth, Robert Lacy 56, 88, 195
Smyth, John H 225
Smythe, Henry M 224
Snodgrass, John H 195
Snowden, A. Loudon. . . 223, 228, 229, 230
Snyder, Alban G 7I) 78, 195
Snyder, Mary E 19, 34> i9S
Snyder, Nicholas R 195
Sokobin, Samuel 56, 82, 195
Solano y Garcia, Angel A 280
Solbert, Oscar N 195
Soldati, Agostino 265
Sommati di Mombello, Ettore 269
Sorenson, Soren 267
Soria Galvarro, Manuel 277
Sorsby, William B 195, 217, 219, 224
Sosa, Eduardo M 270
Soto, Emilio V 291
Souffront, P 283
Soule, Edgar C 195
Soul^, Pierre 230
South, John Glover 41, 195, 227
Page.
Southard, Addison E 25, 76, 78, 195
Southgate, Richard B 29, 76, 79, 195
Southworth, William B 41, 82, 195
Spahr, Herman L 195
Spamer, Carl O 70, 83, 19s
Spangler, Frank Le Roy 55. 87, 195
Sparadoski, Genevieve E 17, 24, 196
Spence, Carroll 231
Spencer, Nettie S 17, 27, 196
Spencer, Willing 196
Sperry, Watson R 227
Spiker, Clarence J 56, 83, 196
Sprague, Richard L 63, 83, 196
Spriggs, Carroll 196, 222
Sprigman, Mary 18,27, 196
Springer, Joseph A 57, 196
Springs, L. Pittnian 59, 196
Sprtmt, Walter Payne 288
Squier, Ephraim George 223
Squire, Paul C 59, 83, 196
Squires, Herbert G 196, 217,221,227
Stabler, Jordan Herbert 196
Stabo, Trond 304
Stafford, Maurice L 57, 83, 196
Stallo, John B 224
Stambaugh, George B 12,35, 196
Stambaugh, 2d, John 41, 85, 196
Stanard, Hugh C 196
Stangeland, Charles E 196
Stanley, Elsie M. A 13, 24, 196
Stanoyevitch, Dragicha 311
Stanton, Edwin F 56, 88, 197
Stapleton, W. Maynard 66, 88, 197
Starbuck, George B 57; i97
Starkey, George C 65, 197
Starkweather, David A 220
Starrett, Henry P 61, 78, 197
Staten, Verne G S7> i97
Steams, E. E 276
Steams, Foster 197
Stedman, Nathan Parker 197
Steele, Isaac Nevitt 232
Steele, Joseph D 14, 34, 197
Steen, Daniel 270
Steger, Christian T 60, 85, 197
Steinbach, Rudolph 286
Steinhart, Frank 197
Steinke, Ernst 286
Stejneger, Inga 20,36, 197
Steketee, Jacob 302
Steketee, John 302
Stelian, Thomas 263
Stender, Charles A 71,197
Stephan, Charles H 56, 197
Stephens, Joseph G 197, 217
Sterbini, Paolo 293
Sterling, Frederick A 39. 77, 197
Stemdale, Lord 262
Stevens, Harry E 56, 88, 197
Stevens, John L 224, 227, 230, 231
Stevenson, Andrew 223
Stevenson, Robert E 197
Stevenson, Ronald D 54, 88, 197
Steward, Elwood M. S 37,41, 197
Stewart, Alexander McCulIoch. . . . 288
Stewart, jr., C. Morton 290,315
Stewart, F 303
Stewart, Francis R 58, 82, 198
Stewart , Glenn 198
Page.
Stewart, James B 70, 80, 198
Stewart, Nathaniel B 69, 77, 198
Stewart, Warren C 63, 198
Stewart, Worthington E. . . . 9. 10, 28, 198
Stifel, Arnold George 277
Stiles, Edith F 17,36,198
Stiles, George K 71, 85, 198
Stiles, William H 218
Stillesen, Job Morten August 305
Stillwell, Thomas M 232
Stimson, Frederic Jesup 198, 218
Stoekbridge, Francis B 226
Stockton, John P 227
Stone, Benjamin F 198
Storer, Bellamy 198,217, 218,219,230
Ston'. Harry W 58, 198
Stoughton, Edwin W 229
Stovall, Pleasant A 198, 231
Straight, Eugene 22, 32, 198
Straight, Willard D 198, 217
Stransky , Pavel 267
Strassburger, Ralph B 198
Strasser, Frederick 316
Straus, Oscar S 198, 231, 265
Streeper, Robert B 56, 88, 198
Streeter, Wallace 307
Streit, Georges 262
Strickland, Peter 198
Strobel, Edward H 6, 220, 221
Strother, Shelby F 59, 86, 198
Stuart, Granville 227, 231
Sturgeon, Leo D 68, 86, 198
Sturgis, Hugh L 14,34, 199
Stutesman, James F 199, 217, 219
Styles, Francis H 72, 85, 199
Suarez, Florencio 314
Suastegui, Franciso 270
Subira, Rafael 315
Such, Miguel 295
Sullivan, James M 199, 217, 221
Sullivan, Lucien N 73, 82, 199
Sullivan, Peter 1 220
Sullivan, William B 40, 199
Summerlin, George T 40, 77, 199
Summers, Maddin 199, 217
Summers, Natalia 13, 34i i99
Summers, R 296
Sumner, F. Warren 31a
Sumter, Thomas, jr 228
Sundaro Vachana, Pra 272
Sunderland, Margaret C 18, 27, 199
Sussdorff, jr., Louis A 41, 78, 199
Swaim, Charles Luther 199
Swalm, Albert W 199, 217
Swan, Gustavus Nelson 315
Swan, Harold Couch 287
Swaney, Alexander G 56, 199
Swann, James S 22, 27, 199
Sweet, Florence G 17,
26, 199
Swenson, LauritsS.. 41,199,221,226,231
Swctt, Trevor W 38,40,41, 199
Swift, John F 22S
Swift, Merritt 37, 82, 199
Sycks, Dana C 68, 83, 199
Syphax, Colbert S 22,36. 200
Sze, Sao-Ke Alfred 267
Szebeko, Ignace 364
Sz^ch^nyi, L^szlo 269
340
INDEX OF PERSONS.
Page.
Taboaday Ponce de Leon, Felipe . . 281
Taft, Alphonso 21S, 229
Taft. William H 3
Tagantzeff , Mr 264
Taggart, G. Russell 64, 83, 200
Tait, George 55, 88, 200
Taketomi, Toshihiko 295
Talabot, Jean Baptist e 284
Talbott, Sheridan S7. 89, 200
Tamez, Emiliano 300
Tamura, Teijiro 270
Tanis, Richard C 8, 9, 30, 200
Tanner, Robert Henry 64, 200
Taplin, Charles Farrand 305
Tappin, Charles Frances 200
Tarlcr, G. Cornell 200
Tarrisse, Edwin 1 2, 34, 200
Tashko, Constantin 273
Tasker, Viola 15. 29. 200
Tatem, John W 58, 200
Tavares, Antonio Jose 55, 200
Taylor, Bayard 222
Taylor, Charles H.J 225
Taylor, Eli 69, 200
Taylor, jr., George 7
Taylor, Hannis 230
Taylor, Howard C 61, 89, 200
Taylor, Julian 12, 34, 200
Taylor, Laurence M 70, 200
Taylor, Morgan O 200
Taylor, P. Emerson 200, 217
Taylor, Peter 287
Taylor, Samuel M 200, 217
Taylor, jr., William A 200
Taylor, William H 39, 83, 200
Taylor, William J. H 287, 304
Taylor, Zachary 2
Tchirkow, Georges 311
Teall, Girvan 66, 201
Teichmann, William C 201
Tellez, Manuel C 270
Ten Eyck, Anthony 224
Ten Have, Jean 285
Tennant, Henry F 201
Tennant, Robert A 62, 201
Tenn8y, Charles D 201
Tenney, Raymond P 56, 83, 201
Tenney, William H 201
Tennille, Claybome 21, 23, 201
Ter Braak, H 302
Teran, Emilo M 267
Terrell, Alexander W 231
Terrell, Edwin H 219
Terres. John B 201, 217
Terry. Prentiss M 37, 201
Tewell, Harold S 66, 8s, 201
Thackara, Alexander M 89, 201
Thalman, Paul U 316
Thaw, jr., Benjamin 37, 79, 201
Thayer, Samuel R 226
Theaker, Anna R 17, 34, 201
Thenault, Georges 268
Thiel, Cyril L. F 62, 89, 201
Thiele, Carl Gustav 306
Thomas, Allen 232
Thomas, Edgar 22, 31, 201
Thomas, Edward B 69, 85, 201
Thomas, Francis 227
Thomas, Frederick L 56, 85, 201
Page.
Thomas, George A 22, 31, 201
Thomas, John A 4
Thomas, jr., John R 38, 201
Thomas, Leonard M 201
Thomas, William W., jr 230
Thomason, Oscar 64, 201
Thompson, Archibald Ogilvie. . 281,302
Thompson, Charles 287
Thompson, David E 201, 219, 226
Thompson, David P 231
Thompson, Edward H 201
Thompson, G. H 268
Thompson, John E. W 221, 224
Thompson, Paul D 202
Thompson, Richard N 202
Thompson, Robert J 202
Thompson, Samuel R 62, 83, 202
Thompson, Thomas L 219
Thompson, Thomas P 202
Thompson, Waddy 225
Thomsen, Thomas Cunningham. . 281
Thomson, Alfred R 64. 80, 202
Thomson, Colin 288
Thomson, John Campbell 287
Thomson, Thaddeus Austin.... 202,22c
Thorling, Charles H 202
Thorn, Victor 263
Thomberry, Risher W 202
Thornton, James B 227
Thornton, William O 202
Thrall, Ralph A 62, 202
Throop, Enos T 231
Thurston, Walter C 41. 79. 202
Thyberg, K. R 315
Tierro, Enrique 300
Tigerino, Jose Antonio 270
Tijerino, Francisco 303
Tijerino, jr., Toribio 303
Tillctt, Percy O 17. 34. 202
Tillman, James D 221
Tilmont, Raoul 266
Tilton, Daniel Henry 17. 34, 202
Tinsley. Howard C 74, 202
Tirrell, Ralph 311
Tiscar, Fortunate 294
Tisdel, Willard P 225
Tittman, jr., Harold H 38, 82, 202
Tittoni, Tommaso 262
Tobar y Borgono, CM 261
Tobin, Edward J 22. 29, 202
Tobin, Richard M 41, 202, 226
Tod, David 219
Todd, Charles S 229
Toledo Lopez, Eusebio 291
Tolman, George L 71, 202
Tomasello, Paul i7> 31, 202
Tomii, Masaakira 263
Tompkins, Ralph H 202
Tonkin, Federico 279
Tonner, John A 1 2, 33, 202
Tonner, Laura R ^S- 3^- 202
Torbert, Alfred T. A 229
Toriello, Julio C 290
Tomielli di Crestvolant, Carlo
Cesare 292
Toro, Fernando Miguel 289
Torras, Rosendo. . . . 273, 280, 309, 312, 317
Torres, Hermolao E 297
Tottcn, Ralph J 73, 77, 203
Page. I
Tottenham, F. L 268
Touchette, Joseph 1 59, 89, 203
Touhay. St. Leger A 203, 217 ]
Tower, Arthur F 25, 76, 89, 203 1
Tower, Charlemagne 203, <
217, 218, 222, 229 ,
Tower, Walter S 39, 203 \
Towers, John H 39, 40, 41, 203 1
Townsend, George A 203 '
Townsend, Lawrence 219, 228 j
Townsend, Robert S 203
Toyer, William E 22, 35, 203 ]
Tracey, Roberto E.' 311 ■
Tracy, George Bentley s7. 203 j
Tracy, Harold F 14, 31, 203 j
Travers, Howard K 68, 83, 203 j
Traverse, Conrado 266 \
Treat, A. Wallace 42, 83, 203 !
Tredwell, Roger Culver 53, 77, 203 j
Tree, Lambert 218, 219, 229 j
Trepuk, M. E 310 i
Trescot, William H 4, 219, 220, 227
Tresich Pavichich. Ante 271
Trevifio, Samuel J 300 '
Trimmer, Edwin W 203 '
Tringhetas, P 289 1
Trinidad Raudales, Enrique 291
Tripp, Bartlett 218]
Trist, Nicholas P 7 ;
Troncoso de la Concha, Mr. de J. . 261 j
Trosdahl, Einar Storm 304 1
Trousdale, William 2x9 1
Troutman, Harry L 67, 86, 203
Troy, James A 290
Tsutsumi, Akira 270:
Tua, Giovanni Battista 293 ,
Tuck, S. Pinkney 74. 80. 203
Tucker, Joel H 277 ^
Tucker, William 311 '
Tuckerman, Charles K 223 '
Tudor, William 210
Tuley, Thomas S 277]
Tumulty, Delia 19, 25. 204I
Turlington, Edgar Willis 9, 25, 204;
Turner, A. Campbell 204
Turner, Effie K 18, 34, 204 :
Turner, J. Milton 225:
Turner, Mason 62, 89, 204
Turner, Robert Bennett 315:
Turner, William T 40, 73. 89, 204
Turpin, Edward A 2321
Twells, John Steel 204 1
Tyler, John a!
Udy, Stanley H 204, 258.
Ughet, Serge 271 <
Uhl, Edwin F 3. s, 222]
Ullman, J. M 296,
Ulser, M. E. M 266|
Unckles, Roderick W 57, 204'
Undeland, A. L 305'
Underwood, Wilbur 12, 34. 204,
Upshur, Abel P 2 i
Upson, William F 37, 204 !
Urdanivia Vines, Jose 271 1
Urueta, Carlos Adolfo 260]
I
Vaca Seydel, Timoteo 280!
Vago, Ricardo A 266 '
INDEX OF PERSONS.
341
Page.
Vail, Aaron 7, 2J3, 230
Vail, Delmar J 204, 217
Valarde, Heman 271
Valdes, Hennenegildo 300
Valencia, Gabriel 279
Valentine, Emery 295
Valentini, Antoine 285
Valenzuela, Gilberto 263
Valenzuela, Guillenno 290
Valenzuela, Jose Antonio 298
Vallance, William R 9. 25. 204
Vallez, Leon 263
Van Alen, John Trumbull 221
Van Alst jtie, A. A 306
Van Aschuan Wyck, H 270
Van Beverhoudt, E 276
Van Buren, Harold S 204, 217
Van Buren, Martin i, 223
Vance, Marshall M 63, 83, 204
Van Coenen Torchiana, H. A 301
Van den Arend, Frederik 61, 87, 204
Van den Heuvcl, Jules 260
Van der Elst, Joseph 266
Van der Linden, P. W. A. Cort. . . 263
Van der Spek, A 303
Van Dyke, Edmund W 11, 26, 204
Van Dyke, Henry 205, 225, 226
Van Dyne, Frederick 205, 217
Van DjTie. George W 205
Van Eps, W. P. M 303
Van Home, Thomas B 54, 205
Van Home, William G 239
Van Houten, Archibald C 66, 205
Van Julsingha Blinck, J. R 301
Van Ness, Cornelius P 230
Van Rensselear, William S 205
Van Sant, Howard D 62, 86, 205
Van Valin, Forrest D 14, 32, 205
Van Valkenburgh, Robert B 225
Van Verduynen, Michiels 265
Van Velzan, N. G. M 302
Van Vollenhoven, C 258, 263
Varela, Jacobo 172
Vargas, Canute A 270
Vasquez, Honorato 261
Vazny, Erail 261
Vazquez, Alfredo C. 299
Vazquez, Ismael M 300
Vazquez y Lopez Amor, Juan 313
Vebber, John M 54, 205
Vedel, Axel 261
Vedeler, Georg Tausan 305
Veeder, Mary G 17. 33. 205
Vejar. Antonio Rafael 299, 313
Velarde, Hector 271
Velasquez, Marco E 303
Veloz, Nicholas 317
Venable, William E 223
Vendel, K. Y 315
Vennema, J 302
V^re, Carlos 290, 291
V^re, Charles 306
Verlinden, Michel 276
Vermeren, C 275
Vervena, Mariano 29J
Vifcnte Concha, Josd 260
Vidal, Aristides 306
Vidal Tolosana, Mariano 313
Vidal, Vicente J a77, ago, 317
Page.
Viegelmann, Edgar 286
Viera da Silva jNIarques, Gilberto. . 310
Vignaud, Henry 205, 217
Villaboim, ^lanoel 260
Villafranca Carazo, Francisco 280
Villafranca, Ricardo 308
Villalta, Virgilio G 267
Villanueva. Carlos Elias 317
Villazcn, Eliodoro 260
Villdedrouin, St. Charles 67. 205
Villegas, Lucio Alberto 318
Vilmenay, Thomas A 290
Vincelette, Leo J 17. 34. 205
Vincent, Enos 309
Vincent, George E 259
Viney, John 1 205
Vinti, Antonino 292
Vipond, B. Leslie 11. 25. 205
Vives, Carlos Edwards 278
N'oetter, Thomas W 71, 82, 205
Vogenitz, Heman C 70, 201;
Volkoff, Antoine 311
Voll, Nils 304
Volmerhaus, William 306
Von Brecht. Gustavo 273
von Dardel, Carl Otto David 315
Vongehr. Otto E 205
Von Holt, H. M 301
von Lewinski, Karl 258, 268
von Maltzan, Ago 26S
von Schilling, Leopold M 286
von Selzam, Edwart 268
Von Struve, Henry C 70, 83. 205
Von Tresckow, Egmont C. . . . 55, 84, 205
Von Wiirtemberg, Marks 263
Von Zielinski, Carl M. J 20s
Vopicka, Charles J 205, 228, 230
Vorfeld, Roberto H 307
VoshoU, William H 55, 205
Vroom, Peter D 228
Vuilleumier, Charles 316
Vyse, William Clarke 60, 205
Wadsworth, Craig W 41. 77. 206
Wadsworth, George 29, 76, 84, 206
Wagner, Jacob 7
Wakasugi, Kaname 295
Wakefield, Emest A 65, 85, 206
Waldheim, jr., Carlos 290
Waldron, Elma V 22, 32, 206
Waldron, Frederick Lincoln 304
Waldron, J. W 278
Walford, Guy 302, 305
Walford, Harold 288. 302
Walk, Maurice 63, 87, 206
Walker, Edward B 206
Walker, Ernestine M 18, 31, 206
Walker Alartinez, Joaquin 260
Walker, Jay 58, 206
Walker, Ralph C 22, 3s. 206
Wallace, Hugh Campbell 206, 222
Wallace, Lewis 23 1
Wallace, Thomas R 89, 206
Wallace, William K 206
Wallenberg, Axel F 272
Waller, George P 67, 8s. 206
Wallerstedt, Carl Edvard 315
Wallis, Charles Braithwaite 287
Walsh, Harry L 70, 84, 206
Page.
Walsh, Humphrey M 19, 26, 206
Wanamaker, Rodman 283, 307, 317
Wang, Lingoh 279
Ward , Frank X 10, 25, 206
Ward, John E 220
Ward, jr., William 291
Warden, Sam J 64, 206
Wardman, George B 206
Warne, Clyde A 72, 206
Warner, Southard P 207, 217
Warren, Avra M 64, 80, 207
Warren, Charles Beecher 207, 22s. 226
Warren, Fitz Henry 223
Warren, Fletcher s". 86, 207
Warren, James R 20, 27, 207
Warren, Robert 20, 27, 207
Wash, Carlyle H 39, 207
Washburn, Albert H 37, 207, 218
Washburn, Charles A 227
Washburn, John D 231*
Washbume, Elihu B 2, 222
Washington, George i
Washington, Horace'Lee 64, 77, 207
Waterman, Henry S S7, 84, 207
Waters, Daniel J 207
Waters, Harold G 207
Waters, Thomas W 71, 207
Watson, Arthur G 61, 207
Watson, Frederick 288
Watson, Hugh 63, 207
Watson, Hugh H 59, 80, 207
Watson, John J. C 61, 82, 207
Watson, L. Adelaide 13. 23. 207
Watt, Elbert H 14. 34. 207
Watts, Beaufort T 220
Watts. Ethelbert 208, 217
Watts, Henry M 218
Waymouth, Thomas G. 1 282
WajTnouth, William A 277
Weaver, Frederick S 65, 208
Webb, James Watson 218, 219
Webber, Leroy 56, 86, 208
Webster, Daniel 2
Webster, Daniel Fletcher 7
Webster, David Smith 304
Webster, Edwin Sibley 295
Webster, William H. H 208, 217
Weddell, Alexander W 70, 77, 208
Weeks, Mangum ^'^,33. 208
Wehmiller, Fred 277
Weidel, Gustaf 272
Weiss, Andre 261
Weiss, Paul 316
Weitzel, George T 208, 226
Welch, Florence L 17. 34. 208
Welch, William H 20, 27, 208
Welden, Elwood Austin 20S
Weller, John B 225
Welles, Sumner 20S
Wells, Edward 22, 27, 208
Wells, Francis 208
Wells, John B 14. 34. 208
Wells, T. Tileston 310
Welsh, John 223
Weudclbo, Per Rutger Smith 304
Wengcr, Aloysius 12, 25, 208
Wcssen, Thcophilus L.I 315
West, Emanuel 1 227
West, George N 208, 217
34-
IXDEX OF PERSONS,
Page.
West, Lelaiiu S 22. 36. 208
Westacott, Richard 208,217
Westbrooks, Richard E 296
Westcott. Charles D 60, 80, 208
Westerberg, Frcdrik 315
Westervelt, William 1 38, 208
Westheimer, Irwin F 307
Wetmore, J. Howard 60, 208
Wharton, Clifton R 10, 25, 20S
Wharton, William F 2.3.4
Wheaton, Henry 221. 228
Wheeler, C. J 284
Wheeler, John H 226
Wheeler, Murray 311
Wheeler, Post 76, 77, 209
Wheeler, Willard H 21, 27, 209
Whidden, Benjamin F 224
White, Andrew D 222, 229
White, Charles D 209, 224
■ White, Donald S 54. 209
White, Francis 8, 29, 76, 78, 209
White, Henry 209, 222, 224, 259
White, Howard L, 307
White, Jay 209, 217
White, John C 38, 40, 41, 78, 209
White, Julius 21S
White, Philo 221
White, Thaddeus C 209
White, jr., Wallace 307
White, William Wallace 307
Whitehouse, Sheldon 38, 77, 209
Whiteley. J. G 27s
Whitfield, James V 57, 86, 209
Whitlock, Brand 209, 219
Whitlock, W. P 317
Whitney, Byrle A 19. 35. 209
Whittington, Vallie 19. 35. 209
Wicker, Cyrus F 209
Wickersham, J. P 221
Wickliffe, Robert, jr 229
Widlund, Andrew Isidor 315
Wiehl, Emil 268
Wigg, E. J. Rudgard 317
Wightman, Chauncy B 72, 209
Wilber, David F 209
Wilcox, Henry B 277
Wilcox, Henry T 73. 84, 209
Wilder, Amos P 210
Wiley, John C 41. 79. 210
Wiley. Samuel H 72, 86, 210
Wilking, L. F. J 303
Wilkins, William 229
Wilkinson, James R 74, 86, 210
Wilkinson, Stanley L, 67, 210
Will, James Everett 14, 23. 210
Will, Marvin W 9, 11, 24, 210
Willard, Charles N 210
Willard, Joseph E 210, 215, 217, 230
Willcy, Richard R 62, 89, 210
Williams, Anders 306
Williams, Arthur R 74, 210
Williams, A. S 229
Williams, Charles H 210
Williams, Charles L. L 210
Williams, jr., Curtis C 210
Williams, Daniel W 210
Williams. Edward T 210
Williams, George Fred 210,223,226
Williams, Harrison 0 22,35, 210
Williams, Herbert O 55, 84, 210
Page.
Williams, James 231
Williams, John 219
Williams, jr., John Skelton 63,210
Williams, John T 210
Williams, Reginald H 59, 210
Williams, Robert Kern 210
Williams, William 227, 231
Williams, William G 22,33, 210
Williamson, Adolph A 211
Williamson, George 219
Williamson, Harold L 76,84, 211
Williamson, John G. A 231
Willis, Albert S 224
Willoughby , Charles A 211
Willoughby, Westel Robinson. 10,29, 211
Willrich, Gebhard 89, 211
Willson, Digby A 71,84,211
Willson, Gilbert R 66,84,211
Willm, Edmund D 268
Wilmer, Arthur Ponsonby 289
Wilson, Charles B. G 72, 211
Wilson, Charles S 37, 211, 219
Wilson, Edward Waring 288
Wilson, Edwin C 7, 24, 76, 80, 211
Wilson, George P 68, 211
Wilson, Guillermo P 273
Wilson, Henry Lane 211,
219, 220, 226,922
Wilson, Hugh R 8,28,33,76,77,211
Wilson, Huntington 5, 6, 211
Wilson, James 232
Wilson, jr., Orme 29, 76, 82, 211
Wilson, Ripley 211,217
Wilson, Thomas M 28, 76, 80, 211
Wilson, jr., Walter B 56, 212
Wilson, Warden, McK 37, 82, 212
Wilson, Woodrow 3
Winans, Charles S 58, 78, 212
Winchester, Boyd 23 1
Wing, E. Rumsey 221
Winsel, Charles 274
Winship, North 58, 79, 212
Winslow, Alan F 42,80, 212
Winslow, Alfred A 89, 212
Winslow, Edward D 212
Winslow, L. Lanier 37, 79, 212
Winslow, RoUin R 71, 87, 212
Winston, Frederick H 227
Winter, Charles 291
Winthrop, Robert M 212
Wise, Henry A 219
Wise, John Douglas 212
Wissa Bey, George s8, 212
Withey, Howard F s8, 86, 212
Wlassics, Jules 262
Wo 1, J. William 67, 212
Wokott, Henry M 73,82,212
Wolf, Simon 222
Wolpe, Ethel 17,30, 212
Wood, Bradford R 221
Wood, Charles M 212, 217
Wood, Corey F 67, 212
Wood, Harold C 70, 213
Wood, John Q 70, 79, 213
Wood, John R 60, 213
Wood, Willis 303
Woodard, Granville O 57, 87, 213
Woodbridge, Woodrow 38, 213
Woodford, Archer 55. 213
Woodford, Stewart L 230
Page. '
Woods, Cyrus E 213,225,228,230 ;
Woods, Damon C 60, 84, 213 i
Woods, Leslie E 60,87,213 '
Woodside, Jonathan F 221 J
Woodard, G. Carlton 62.86.213 1
Worden, James Perry 213 j
Worman, James H 213 ''
Wormouth, Romeyn 65,84,213 >
Worster, Stephen Carlton 70,213 ',
Worthington, H. G 218, 231 j
Wright, Frank T 22, 36, 213 1
Wright, Herbert R 213 I
Wright, J. Butler 5,6,8,24,213,257
Wright, Jennie V 19,31,213 1
Wright, Joseph A 228
Wright, Luke E 214,217,225 '
Wright, Maitland S 12,27,214
Wright, Meador 20,31,214 ;
Wright, William F 214 ;
Wroblewski, Ladislas 271 I
Wullweber, Christian 221 I
Wurlitzer, Rodolfo 277 1
Wyles, Charl C. L. B 60, 214 '
Wynkoop, Janet M 17, 27, 214 ;
Wynne, Robert J 214,217
Xanthaky, Theodore A 55. 214 ',
Xanthopoulos, Constantine 269 j
Yagi, Motohachi 295 |
Yamamoto, Chikao 270 \
Yancen, Benjamin C 218 '•
Yaney, Francisco Gerardo 272 '
Yang, Yu Kwei 267
Yangco, Tcodoro R 299 ■
Yatabe, Yasukichi 269 j
Yeaman, George H 221 j
Yelverton, E. Harrison 214 |
Yerby, William J 59,84,214 j
Yih, Koliang 279 '
Yingling, Raymond T 10,25,214 I
Yost, Bartley F 70,84,214 ;
Young, Arthur N 8,9,30,214 1
Young, Clarence Kuangson 267 :
Young, Elmer Joseph 307 \
Young, Even E 8, '
30, 76, 77, 214, 222
Yoimg, Fred R . , i3> 35i 214
Young, George W 214
Young, Harry R 8,11,35,214
Young, Hattie V 18,31,215
Young, James B 68,80.215
Young, John Russell 220 .
Young, Pierce M. B 224 '
Young, Wallace J 215 I
Yoimg, Whitney 215 j
Young, William C 64. 215
Young, William W 70, 215 ;
Yovanovitch, Michailo 264
Yukishita, Katsumi 270 ',
Zabriskie, Luther K 215.217 .
Zacharias, Ellis M 40, 2 15 I
Zadeikis, Povilas 296 j
Zahle, Herluf 261 !
Zalduondo y Echevarria, Benito. . 308 !
Zaval, Ricaurte 283 j
Zelius, Eric Alexander 301,304
Ziegler, Kurt 285 ■
Zirkle, Vernon B 15,34,215
Zorilla de San Martin, Juan 265
Zunini, Leopoldo 292 ]
INDEX OF PLACES.
Page.
Abyssinia 218
Acapuico, Mexico 47. 69
Adelaide, Australia 44, 61, 79
Aden, Arabia 61
Aguadilla, Porto Rico 283, 306, 314
Agua Prieta, Mexico 70
Aguascalientes, Mexico 47, 69, 84
Albania 37, 218, 273
Albany, N. Y 293, 317
Albuquerque, N. !Mex 293, 298
Aleppo, Syria 74, 81, 87
Alexandria, Egypt 58, 80, 86
Algiers, Algeria 59. 78, 218
Alicante, Spain 48, 73
Altoona, Pa 293
Amapala, Honduras 67
Amoy, China 43, 56, 86
Amsterdam, Netherlands 48, 54, 70, 77, 83, 86, 89
Ancon, Canal Zone 304
Angora, Turkey S3
Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia 66
Antilla, Cuba S7. 88
Antofagasta, Chile 5S. 83
Antung, China 43, 56, 81
Antwerp, Belgium 54, 78, 82
Apalachicola, Fla 273
Apia, Samoa 7S. 87
Arecibo, Porto Rico 281, 283, 285, 294, 314, 318
Arequipa, Peru 72
Argentina 37. 43. 54. 218, 259, 266, 273, 274
Arica, Chile 55. 84
Arroyo de Guayama, Porto Rico 269
Assiut, Egypt 58
Ashtabula Harbor, Ohio 284
Astoria, Oreg 284, 288
Asuncion, Paraguay 41, 71, 82, 84
Athens, Greece 39, 46, 54, 67, 78, 79, 82, 88
Atlanta, Ga 275, 280, 287, 289, 306, 317
Attleboro, Mass 317
Auckland. New Zealand 61, 83
Austria 37. 54. 218. 260, 266, 274
Austria-Hungary 218
Bagdad, Iraq (Mesopotamia) 68, 81
Bahia, Brazil 43. 55. 80
Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador 58
Baltimore, Md 273,
275. 277, 278, 279, 280. 282, 283, 285, 286, 287, 290, 292, 296,
298, 302, 303, 20s, 306, 308. 310, 311, 313. 315. 317, 318.
Bangkok, Siam 42, 73, 80. 82
Barbados, West Indies 61, 82
Barcelona, Spain 48, 54, 73, 77, 80, 84
Barranquilla. Colombia 44. 57. 83
Basel, Switzerland 74, 79. 86
Bassorah 68
Batavia. Java 48, 71. 79, 85, 87
Page.
Bathurst, New Brunswick 62
Baton Rouge, La 283
Beaumont, Tex 283, 291. 299, ,si8
Beebe Junction, Quebec 65
Beirut 54. 74. 79. 83. 87
Belfast, Ireland 45, 61, 78, 87
Belgium 37. 54. 55. 218, 260, 266, 274, 277
Belgrade, Serbia 42, 73, 79, 80, 86
Belize, Honduras 61, 84
Bergen, Norway "i, 83
Berkeley, Calif 279
Berlin, Germany 39, 44. 54. 60, 77, 78, 81. 83, 84, 85, 87
Berne, Switzerland 42, 74, 79, 80, 81
Bethesda, Md 310
Biarritz, France 44. 59
Bilbao, Spain 48, 73, 82, 286
Billings, Mont 305
Birmingham, Ala 274, 284, 286, 292
Birmingham, England 45, 61, 79, 86
Bloemfontein, Orange Free State 63
Bluefields, Nicaragua 71. 83
Bocas del Toro, Panama 71
Bogota, Colombia 38, 81
Boise, Idaho 312
Bolivia 37. 55. 219, 260, 266, 277
Bombay, India , 45. 61, 80, 87
Bonacca, Honduras 67
Bordeaux, France 44, 59, 81, 85
Boston, Mass 273, 275, 277, 278,
279, 280, 281, 282, 284, 285, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 29s, 296, 298.
301, 302, 303, 30s, 306, 307. 308, 310, 311, 313, 31S, 317, 318.
Boulogne-sur-mer, France 44, 59, 87
Bradford, England 45, 61, 80
Brazil 37. 43. 55. 219, 260, 266, 277, 278
Bremen, Germany 44, 60, 80
Bremenhaven, Germany 60, 87
Breslau, Germany 44, 60, 83
Bridgeport, Conn 292
Bridgewater, Nova Scotia 63
Brighton, Island of Trinidad 66
Brisbane, Queensland 64
Bristol, England 45, 62, 83
Bronwsville, Tex 285, 299, 314
Brunswick, Ga 273, 277, 280, 287, 309,312,317
Brussels, Belgium 37, 55. 78, 83, 84
Buchalest, Rumania 42, 72, 78, 81. 84, 88
Budapest, Hungary 39. 40. 54, 67. 77, 85, 86, 89
Buenaventura, Colombia 44. 57
Buenos Aires, Argentina 37. 43. 54. 77. 79. 82, 86, 88
Buffalo, N. Y 279, 285, 288, 293, 299, 305,308,315, 317
Bulgaria 37. 55. 219, 260, 266, 278
Bushire, Persia 72
Butte, Mont 293
Cadiz, Spain
Caibarien, Cuba.
8, 73. 82
57
343
344
INDEX OF PLACES.
Page.
Cairo, Eg>-pt 38, S4. 58, 79. 8?
Calais, France 44, 59, 82
Calcutta, India 45, 54, 62, 76, 80, 84, 89
Caldera, Chile 55
Calexico, Calif. 297. 303
Calgary, Alberta 62, 83
Callao-Lima, Peru S4) 72, 80, 86
Calumet, Mich 284, 293
Campbellton, New Brunswick 62, 86
Cananea, Mexico 70
Canton, China 43, 56, 78, 8s, 88
Cape Haitien, Haiti 67, 83
Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope 54, 62, 77, 81
Caracas, Venezuela 42, 49, 74, 80
Cardiff. Wales 4S, 62, 88
Cartagena, Colombia 44! 57, 85
Casa Blanca, Morocco 7°, 85
Catania, Italy 46, 68, 79
Ceara, Brazil 55
Cebu, Philippine Islands 288,302,305,313
Ceiba, Honduras 46, 67, 85
Central 'America 2r9
Central American States 219
Changsha, China 43, 56, 86
Charleston, S. C 274,
276. 278, 281, 282, 286, 289, 294, 29s, 302, 305, 308
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island 62
Chattanooga, Tenn 281
Chefoo, China 43, 56, 80
Cherbourg, France 44, 59, 82
Chester, Pa 291
Chihuahua, Mexico 47, 69, 85
Chicago, 111 273,
274, 275, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 286, 287, 289,
290, 291, 292, 295, 296, 297, 298, 302, 303, 304, 306, 307, 308,
209, 310, 311, 312. 313. 315. 316. 317.
Chile ■. 37, 53, 220, 260, e66, 278, 279, 284
China 37,38,43,56,220,260, 267
Christchurch, New Zealand 66
Chungking, China 43, 56, 88
Cienfuegos, Cuba 57,82
Cincinnati, Ohio.. 276,277,279,285,293,299,303,307.313,316,318
Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela 49, 74
Ciudad Juarez, Mexico 47, 69, 79
Clarksburg, W. Va 314
Cleveland, Ohio 276,
278, 281, 283, 286, 288, 289, 291, 293, 299, 30s, 308, 310, 315
Cobh, Ireland 45, 62, 78, 88
Coblenz, Germany 44, 60, 87
Cologne, Germany 44, 60, 80, 85
Colombia 38,44, 57,220,260, 267, 279, 280
Colombo, Ceylon 62, 89
Colon, Panama 71,89,282,283,287,292,301,307,312,315,317
Concepcion, Chile 55, 88
Constantinople, Turkey 42, 54, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 82, 86
Constanza, Rumania 72,86
Copenhagen, Denmark 38, 54, 58, 77, 79, 86
Coquimbo, Chile 56
Corinto, Nicaragua 71, 83
Corpus Christi, Tex 299
Costa Rica 38, 57, 221, 267, 280
Cristobal, Canal Zone 278, 280, 304
Cruz Grande, Chile 56
Cuba 38, 57, 221, 261, 267, 280, 281
Cumberland, British Columbia 66
Curacao, West Indies 71,82,89
Cyprus, Egypt 58
Czechoslovakia 38,58,221,261,267,281
Page, j
Dairen, Manchuria 43, 68, 86 ;
Dakar, Senegal 59, 84 i
Dallas, Tex 285, 289, 299 j
Damascus, Syria 74, 86
Danzig 58, 81, 281, 28a 1
Danzig, Free City of 58 j
Darien, Ga 287 j
Decorah, Iowa 304 |
Del Rio, Tex 300 |
Denmark 38,58,221,261,267,281 i
Denver, Colo. . 274, 282,284.287, 289, 292, 298, 301,304, 306, 315,316 j
Des Moines, Iowa 292 <
Detroit, Mich 273, 275, 279, 281, 283 ,
284, 285, 288, 290, 291, 293, 298, 305, 306, 307, 308, 313, 315 '
Dieppe, France 44, 59 j
Dominican Republic 38, 58, 221, 261, 267, 283 I
Douglas, Ariz 286, 297 i
Dresden, Germany 44, 60, 77, 85 j
Dublin, Ireland 45,62,78,83,84,86,89 ■
Dubuque, Iowa 27s
Duluth, Minn 284, 288, 293 i
Dundee, Scotland 45, 62, 79, 89
Dunedin, New Zealand 66 ,
Dunfermline, Scotland 45,62.86
Dunkirk, France 44, 59, 83
Durango, Mexico 47, 69, 80
Durban, Natal 62,81,88 ;
J
Eagle Pass, Tex 300 j
East London, Cape of Good Hope 65 ]
Ecuador 58, 58, 221, 261, 267, 283 f
Edinburgh, Scotland 45, 62, 82 1
Edmonton, Alberta 62 j
Egypt 38, 58, 222, 268, 284 I
El Paso, Tex 285, 289,300,314 <
Englewood, N. J 279 !
Ensenada, Mexico 47, 69, 85
Erie, Pa 293
Esmeraldas, Ecuador 58 ;
Esthonia 38, 59, 222, 268, 284 j
Eureka, Calif 292 J
Fall River, Mass 310 j
Fernandina, Fla 277, 280,304,312,317 '
Femie, British Coltmibia 63,87 j
Finland 38, 59, 222, 261, 268, 284
Fiume 46, 68
Florence, Italy 46, 68, 80, 87, 88 j
Flushing, Netherlands 71 (
Foochow, China 43, 56, 83 j
Fort William and Port Arthur, Ontario 63, 83 1
Fort Worth, Tex 280, 294, 304, 306, 318 ,
France 38, 39, 44, 59, 222, 261, 268, 284, 285 1
Frankfort on the Main, Germany 44, 60, 77, 86 I
Fredericton, New Brunswick 63 '
Fredcrikstcd, Virgin Islands 289,317
Fremantle, Australia 61 )
Fresno, Calif 309 j
Frontetiac, Kans 292 I
Frontera, Mexico 47, 69 i
Funchal, Madeira 72, 84
Gait, Ontario 63 1
Galveston, Tex 276, 278, 280, 281, 283, 285, 286, 289, 290, I
291, 294,295,296,300,303,306,310,3x1,3x4,315,317,318 I
Galway, Ireland 45, 62 '
Gaspe, Quebec 62 ;
Geneva, Switzerland 74, 80, 85 ,
INDEX OF PLACES.
345
Page.
Genoa, Italy 46, 54, 68, 78, 82, 87
Georgetown, British Guiana 63, 83
Germany 39. 60, 222, 262, 268, 285. 286
Ghent, Belgium 55> 83
Gibraltar 63, 83
Glasgow, Scotland 45, 63, 77, 88
Gonaives, Haiti 67
Goteborg, Sweden 48, 73, 82
Grand Forks, N. Dak 282, 305, 31S
Grand Rapids, Mich 302
Grays Harbor, Wash 289
Great Britain 39,44,45,46,61,223,262,268,286-289
Greece 39,46,67, 223, 262, 269, 289-290
Green Bay, Wis 277
Grenada, West Indies 66
Guadalajara, Mexico 47, 69, 82
Guadeloupe, West Indies 59) 86
Guanica, Porto Rico 283
Guatemala 39,67, 78, 84, 223,262, 269,290
Guatemala City, Guatemala 39) 67
Guayaquil, Ecuador 54. 58. 86, S9
Gua>'mas, Mexico 47, 69, 80
Gulfport, Miss.. 273,277,281,285,290,293,302,305,306,310,313,318
Habana, Cuba 38, 54, 57, 76, 77, 78, 81, 83, 86, 89, 276
Hague, The, Netherlands {see The Hague) 41, 78, 85
Haiti 39, 67, 80, 224, 262, 269, 290-291
Halifax, Xova Scotia 54, 63, 77, 83
Hamburg, Germany 44,61,79,84,87,88
Hamilton, Bermuda 63,83
Hamilton, Ontario 63, 82, 89
Hankow, China 43, 56, 78, 81, 38
Harbin, China 43,56,80
Hartford, Conn 274, 287, 292
Havre, France 44, 59, 79, 84
Hawaii 224
Helsingfors, Finland 38,59,81,88
Hilo, Hawaii 306,309
Honduras 39, 46, 67, 224, 269, 291
Hongkong 43,63,81,84,87,88
Honolulu, Hawaii 275,277,279,282,
284.287.290,292,295,298,301,304,306,308,309,312,315
Horta, Fayal, Azores 72, 84
Houston, Tex 280,283, 285,290,291,300,304,314
Huelva, Spain 5', 74, 83
Hull, England 45, 63, 89
Humacao, Porto Rico 282,283,314
Hungary 39, 40, 67, 224, 262, 269, 291
Iloilo, Philippine Islands 288,302,305,313
Indianapolis, Ind 279, 292, 298, 307
Iquique, Chile 55, 79
Iraq (Mesopotamia) 68
Irish Free State 269
Italy 40,46,68, 224, 262, 269, 290-295
Jacksonville, Fla 273,
274,277, 280, 287,290,291,301,304,312,315,317
Jamestown, X. Y 315
Japan 40,46,47,68, 224,263,269,295
Jeremie, Haiti 67
Jersey, Channel Islands 46, 66
Jersey City, K. J 290, 296
Jerusalem, Palestine 71,80,84
Johannesburg, Transvaal 63, 78, 88
Juneau, Alaska 295,304
Page.
Kalamata, Greece 46,67
Kalgan, China 43, 56, 88
Kansas City, Kans 303
Kansas City, Mo 275,
277, 280, 281, 28s, 288, 290, 291, 293, 298, 302, 303, 306, 317, 308
Karachi, India 45. 63
Kenora, Ontario 66
Key West, Fla 280, 287, 304, 309. 312
Kingston, Jamaica 45, 63, 80
Kingston, Ontario 63, 85
Kobe, Japan 46, 68, 81, 85, 88, 89
Kongo Association, States of the 225
Konigsberg, Germany 44, 61, 79
Korea 225
Kovmo, Lithuania 69, 82
La Guaira, Venezuela 49, 74, 84
La Oroya 72
La Paz, Bolivia 37, 55, 81, 82
Laredo, Tex 289, 300
La Rochelle, France 44. 59
La Romana, Dominican Republic 58
Las Palmas, Canary Islands 48, 73, 85
Latvia 40, 69, 225, 270, 296
Lausanne, Switzerland 74
Lawrence, Mass 292
Leeds, England 45. 63, 89
Leghorn, Italy 46, 68, 80
Leipzig, Germany 44, 61, 78, 83, 87
Lethbridge, Alberta 62
Lexington, Ky 306
Liberia 41, 69, 225, 296
Liege, Belgium 54. 78
Lille, France 44. 59. 83
Lima, Peru 41, 77, 79, 88
Linierick, Ireland 45, 62
Limoges, France 44, 59, 89
Lisbon, Portugal 42, 48, 54, 72, 78, 81, 85
Lithuania 41, 69, 225, 270. 296
Liverpool, England 45, 63, 77, 85, 87
Liverpool, Nova Scotia 66
Loanda, Angola 72, 85
Lobos, IMe-Kico 70
London, England 39, 45, 54, 64, 77, 80, 81, 82, 83, 87, 88
London, Ontario 64. 83
Long Beach, Calif 303
Los Angeles, Calif 70,
273, 274, 277, 279,280, 282, 283, 284, 285, 287, 290, 291, 292, 295,
296, 297.301,303,304,306,307,309,311, 312,316,317.
Los Mochis, Alexico 70
Louisburg, Nova Scotia 66
Louisville, Ky 275, 277, 280, 285, 290, 292
Lourenco Marques, East Africa 72, 82
Lowell, Mass 310
Lucerne, Switzerland 74, 85
Lunenburg. Nova Scotia 63
Luxemburg 41, 225, 263, 270, 296, 297
Luxemburg, Luxemburg 54
LjTin, Mass 292
Lyon, France 4J, 59,80
McAllen, Tex 300
McAlester, Okia 293
Madras, India ; 45, 64, 80
Madrid, Spain 42, 48, 73, 79, 8r, P4
Malaga, Spain 48, 73, 82
Malmo, Sweden 48, 73, 85, 88
346
INDEX OP PLACES.
Page.
Malta, Maltese Islands 64, 82, 89
Managua, Nicaragua 41. 79
Manaos, Brazil S5
Manchester, England 45, 64, 79, 87
Manchester, N. H 290
Manila, Philippine Islands 273,
276, 278, 279, 282, 285, 286, 288, 294, 295, 296, 299, 302, 303,
305, 308, 310, 311. 314. 315. 316, 318.
Alanzanillo, Cuba 58
Manzanillo, Mexico 47, 69
Maracaibo, Venezuela 49, 74, 84
Maranhao, Brazil 55
Marfa, Tex 300
Marseille, France 44, 59, 77, 82, 88
Martinique, West Indies S9. 89
Matagalpa, Nicaragua 71
Matatnoros, 'Mexico 47. 7°
Matauzas, Cuba 57. 8^
Maui, Hawaii 309
Mayaguez, Porto Rico 276,
281, 282, 283, 285, 291, 294, 302, 308, 314, 317, 318
Mazatlan, ^Mexico 47, 70, 82
Jledan, Sumatra 48, 71, 86
Medellin, Colombia 44. 57
Melbourne, Australia 45, 54, 64, 76, 82, 88
Memphis, Tenn 276, 294
Meriden, Conn 280
Messina, Italy 46, 68, 83,^88
Mexican, Lower California 47, 70, 83
Mexico. . 41, 47, 48, 69, 77, 78, 81, 85, 86, 87, 225, 263, 270, 297, 298, 301
Mexico City, Mexico 41, 47, 54, 70
Miami, Fla 280, 287
Milan, Italy 46, 68, 77, 88
Milwaukee, Wis 280, 295, 301, 306
Minneapolis, Minn 275, 282, 297, 302, 303, 315
Missoula, Mont 315
Mobile, Ala 273 ,
274, 277, 279, 280, 281, 283, 284, 285, 286, 290, 291, 292, 295, 296,
297. 301. 304, 306, 307, 3", 312, 315, 316, 317
Moline, 111 275
Mollendo, Peru 72
Monaco 301
Moncton, New Brimswick 64, 81
Monrovia, Liberia 41
Montenegro 226,
Monterey, Mexico 47, 70, 84
Montevideo, Uruguay 42, 74, 79, 80,
Montreal, Quebec 54, 64, 76, 85,
Morocco 41, 70,
Mukden, China 43, 56, 82, 83, 85
Munich, Germany 44, 61, 77,
Naco, Ariz 297
Nagasaki, Japan 46, 69, 86
Nagoya, Japan 46, 69, 85
Nairobi, Colony of Kenya, Africa 64, 80
Nanaimo, British Columbia 66
Nancy. France 44, 59, 80, 89
Nanking, China 43. s6, 79
Nantes, France 44, 59, 78, 86
Naples, Italy 46, 68, 77, 84, 85, 88
Nassau, New Providence 64. 88, 89
Netherlands 41. 48, 70, 226. 263, 270, 301-303
Newark, N.J 279, 293, 305, 307
New Bedford, Mass 310
Newcastle, New Brunswick 64
Newcastle, New South Wales 45, 64, 8s
Newcastle-on-Tyne, England 45, 64, 81
Page.
New Grenada 226
New Haven, Conn 292
New Orleans, La 273 ,
27s. 277. 278, 279, 280, 282, 283, 285, 286, 287, 290, 291, 292,
295, 296, 298, 302, 303. 304, 306, 307, 308, 309, 3". 313, 315.
316,317.
Newport News, Va 274,
276. 278, 281, 283, 286, 289, 303, 306, 307, 308, 310, 317, 318
New York, N. Y 273,
274, 27s, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 28s, 286, 288,
289, 290, 291, 293, 295, 296, 297, 299, 301, 302, 303, 30s, 306,
307, 308, 309, 310, 311. 312, 313. 31S. 316, 317. 318.
Niagara Falls, N. Y 305
Niagara Falls, Ontario 64, 84, 89
Nicaragua 41, 71,226, 263, 270,303,304
Nice, France 44, 59, 78
Nogales, Ariz 70
Nogales, Mexico 47) 81, 297
Nome, Alaska .-. . . 304,311
Norfolk, Va 274, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 283, 285,
289,290,294,301,303,304,306,307,308,310,314,315,317,318
North Bay, Ontario 66, 87
Norway 41, 71, 226, 263, 270,304,306
Nottingham, England 46, 64, 78, 87
Nueva Gerona, Cuba 57, 88
Nuevitas, Cuba 57, 82
Nuevo Laredo, Mexico 47, 70, 84
Oakland, Calif 309
Ocean Falls, British Columbia 66
Ogden, Utah 303
Oklahoma City, Okla 276, 299
Omaha, Nebr 275,281,282,288,293,305,313
Oporto, Portugal 48, 72, 86
Oran, Africa 59
Orange City, Iowa 302
Oslo, Norway 41, 54, 71, 77, 78, 85, 86
Ottawa, Ontario 54, 65, 76, 86
Paita, Peru 72
Palermo, Italy 46,68,81,88
Palestine 71
Panama 41,
71, 78,81,84, 227,263,270,277,279,282,283, 284, 287,306,307
Panama City, Panama... 41,54,71,292,295,301,303,309,312,315
Papal States 227
Para, Brazil 43, 55, 85, 89
Paraguay 41,71,227,271,307
Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana 63
Paris, France 38, 39, 44, 54, 60, 77, 78, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85, 86, 89
Parral, Mexico 69
Pascagoula, Miss 277, 281, 317
Paterson, N.J 293
Patras, Greece 46, 66, 79, 88
Peking, China 37.38,78,79,80,82,84,89
Penang, Straits Settlements 46, 65, 87
Pensacola, Fla 273, 274, 277, 280,
282, 284, 286, 287, 290, 292,301, 304, 306, 307, 309, 312, 315,317
Pemambuco, Brazil 43, 55, 80
Persia 41, 72, 227, 263, 271, 307
Peru 41, 72,227,264, 271,307,308
Peru-Bolivian Confederation 227
Peterborough, Ontario 66
Philadelphia, Pa 273,
276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 285, 288, 290, 294, 295,
296, 299, 302, 303, 305, 306, 307, 308, 310, 311, 312, 313, 315,
316, 317, 318.
Phoenix, Ariz 292, 297
INDEX OF PLACES.
347
Page.
Piedras Negras, ^Mexico 47, 70, 85, 87, 285
Pittsburgh, Pa 276,281,288,290,291,294,299,309,311,313,317
Plymouth, England 46, 65, 79
PI jinouth. Mass 310
Poland 41, 42, 72, 228, 264, 271, 308, 309
Ponce, Porto Rico 281,
282,283,285,289, 291, 294,302,306,314,315,317
Porto Alegre, Brazil 43i 53
Port Arthur, Tex.. 274,278,283,289,291,294,300,303,306,314,317
Port au Prince, Haiti 39,67,82,83
Port de Paix, Haiti 67
Port Elizabeth, Cape of Good Hope 65, 82
Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia 66
Port Limon, Costa Rica 57. 85
Portland, Me 292,317
Portland, Oreg 273, 276, 278, 279, 282, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288,
293. 295. 299. 302, 305, 307. 308, 313. 31 S. 316, 317
Port Said, Egypt 58. 82
Port Townsend, Wash 306
Portugal 42, 48, 72, 228, 264, 271, 309, 310
Prague, Czechoslovakia 38, 5§, 78, 81, 84, 86
Prescott, Ontario 65, 88, 89
Prince Rupert, British Columbia 65, 85
Progreso, Mexico 47. 7°
Providence, R. 1 289, 290, 294, 299, 310
Prussia 228
Puebla, Mexico 7°
Pueblo, Colo 292
Puerto Barrios, Guatemala 67
Puerto Cabello, Venezuela 49, 74, 84
Puerto Castilla, Honduras 67, 84
Puerto Cortes, Honduras 46, 67, 82
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic 58. 87
Puget Sound, Wash 307
Punta Arenas, Chile SS. 84
Puntarenas, Costa Rica 57
Quebec, Quebec 65, 78
Quito, Ecuador 38, 84
Racine, Wis 280
Rangoon, India 46, 65, 81
Redfield, S. Dak 297
Regina, Saskatchewan 65, 82
Reno, Nev 293
Richmond, Va 276, 278, 289, 294, 307. 317
Riga, Latvia 40, 69, 78, 80, 81, 83, 86, 87
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 3 7. 43. 54. 55. "6. 79. 81, 82, 84, 87. 88
Riogrande, Tex 3°°
Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil 55
Riviere du Loup, Quebec 65, 83, 86
Roberts, Mont 284
Rochester, N. Y 293
Rockford, Mich 293
Rome. Italy 40, 46. 68, 77. 78. 79. 83. 86, 89
Rosario, Argentina 43. 54. 81
Roseau, Dominica 61
Rotterdam, Netherlands 48, 71. 79. 86
Rowood-A jo, Ariz 297
Rumaina 42. 72. 228.264, 271,310
Russia 229, 264, 271, 311
Sacramento, Calif 292. 309
Sagua la Grande, Cuba 57
Saigon, French Indo-China 43, 60, 81, 283
St. Croix, Virgin Islands 283
St. Etienne, France 43, 60, 83
32952—25 23
Page.
St. Gall, Switzerland 74, 82, 89
St. Georges, Bermuda 63
St. John, New Brunswick 65, 84, 89
St. John's. Newfoundland 65. 89
St. Leonards. New Brunswick 65'
St. Louis, Mo 273, 275 ,
277. 279. 280. 281. 282. 285. 288. 289, 290, 291, 293. 295.
296, 298. 302. 303. 305. 306.307, 308, 313, 316, 317, 318
St. Lucia, West Indies 61
St. Marc 67
St. Michaels, Azores 72, 82
St. Paul, Minn 285, 293, 305
St. Stephen, New Brtmswick 65, 84, 89
St. Thomas, Virgin Islands 276. 278, 281, 283, 285, 289, 290,
291, 294. 301, 303. 304, 306, 307, 308, 310, 314, 316, 318
Salaverry, Peru 72
Salina Cruz, Mexico 48, 70
Saloniki, Greece 46, 67, 84
Saltillo, Mexico 48, 70, 86
Salt Lake City, Utah 283,289,294,300,306,315
Salvador 42, 73, 229, 264, 271,311
San Antonio, Tex 285, 286,291,301,308
Sanchez, Dominican Republic 58
San Diego, Calif 277,
280, 284, 287, 290, 292, 297,301,304,306,307.315
San Francisco, Calif 273,
274, 277, 278, 279, 280, 282, 283, 284, 285, 287, 289, 290. 291.
292. 295, 296, 298, 301, 303. 304. 306, 307, 309, 311. 312. 31S,
316, 317.
San Jose, Costa Rica 38,57,82.84
San Jose de Guatemala 67
San Juan, Porto Rico 273,
276, 277, 278. 279. 280. 281. 282. 283, 285. 286. 289, 290, 291
294, 295, 302, 305. 306, 308, 310, 314. 315, 317, 318.
San Leandro, Calif 309
San Luis Potosi, Mexico 48, 70, 80
San Pedro, Calif 290
San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic 58
San Pedro Sula, Honduras 67
San Salvador, Salvador 42, 73,81.83
Santa ^larta, Colombia 44. 57, 87
Santander, Spain 48, 73, 82
Santiago, Chile 37, 79.85
Santiago de Cuba 58, 82
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic 38, 45, 58, 81, 83
Santos, Brazil 43, 85
Sao Paulo, Brazil 43, 55, 78
Sao Vicente, Cape Verde Islands 72
Sardinia 229
Samia, Ontario 65, 85, 89
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario 65
Savannah, Ga 275.
277, 280, 282, 284, 286, 287, 292, 301, 304, 307. 309. 312. 315, 317
Scranton. Pa 294
Seattle, Wash 274, 277, 278, 279, 283, 284, 285,
289,290,295,301,303,304,306,307,308,311,314,316,317,318
Seoul, Chosen 69, 78
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, Kingdom of the 42, 73.
229, 264, 271,311,312
Serbia 229
Seville, Spain 48,73,81,86
Shanghai, China 43,56,77,81,84,85
Sheflield, England 46, 65. 83
Sherbrooke, Quebec 65, 89
Shreveport, La 292
Siam 42,73,230,264,272.312
348
INDEX OF PI.ACES.
Page.
Silver City, N. Mex 306
Singapore, Straits Settlements 46, S4> 65, 78, 86
Sioux City, Iowa 31S
Sioux Falls, S. Dak 216, 305
Skagway, Alaska 286
Smyrna 7S) 79
Soerabaya, Java 48, 71, 87
Sofia. Bulgaria 37> SS. 78, 80, 87
South Bend, Ind 279
Southampton, England 46, 66, 81
Spain 42,48.73-2301264,272,312,313,314
Spokan e, Wash 295
Springfield, 111 292
Springfield, Mass 292
Stavanger, Norway 71,85
Stettin, Germany 44,61,78
Stockholm, Sweden 41,48, 54, 74> 77, 80,81,88, 89
Stoke-on-Trent, England 46, 66, 83
Stockton, Calif 292
Strasbourg, France 44, 60, 81, 87
Stuttgart, Germany 44, 61, 78, 86, 87, 89
Summerside, Prince Edward Island 62
Swansea, Wales 46, 66, 82
Swatow, China 43, s6, 83
Sweden 42,48,73,230,265,272,315,316
Sweden and Norway 230
Switzerland 42, 74, 231, 26s, 272,316
Sydney, Australia 46,66,78,88,89
Sydney, Nova Scotia 66, 79
Syracuse, N. Y 293
Syria 74
Tabriz, Persia 72
Tacoma, Wash 285. 289
Tahiti, Society Islands 60, 84
Taihoku, Taiwan 46, 69, 86
Talcahuano, Chile 55
Tallinn, Esthonia 59,81,88
Tampa, Fla 280,284,287,291,292,298,301,304,306,309,312
Tampico, ^lexico 48, 70, 80, 86, 87
Tananarive, Madagascar ? 60, 82
Tangier, Morocco 41,54, 70, 81,85
Tarragona, Spain 48, 73
Tegucigalpa, Honduras 39,46,67,80,81,85
Teheran, Persia 41, 72, 80, 86
Tela, Honduras 46, 67
Teneriff'e, Canary Islands 48, 73, 83
Texas aji
The Hague, Netherlands 41, 71
Tientsin, China 43, 57, 77, 86, 87
Tirana, Albania 37,85,88
Tokyo, Japan 40, 47, 54, 69, 76, 77, 79, 81, 85, 86, 89
Toledo, Ohio 280, 308
Toronto, Ontario 66,85,88,89
Page.
Torreon, Mexico 48, 70, 84
Trenton, N.J 293
Trieste, Italy 46, 68, 81, 87
Trinidad, Colo 292
Trinidad, West Indies 66, 84
Troy, N . y 303
Tsinan, China 43, 57, 87
Tsingtao, China 43, 57, 80
Tucson, Ariz 297
Tunis, Tunis 60, 85
Turin, Italy 46,68,83
Turkey 42,231,265,316
Tuxpam, Mexico 7c
Two Sicilies 331
United States 265
Uruguay 42, 74> 231, 265, 272,316,317
Utica, N. Y 293
Valencia, Spain 48, 73, 81
Valparaiso, Chile 54, 56, 77, 81, 88
Vancouver, British Columbia 54, 66, 78, 85, 89
Venezuela 42,49,74,231,265,272,317,318
Venice, Italy 46, 68, 80, 88
Vera Cruz, Mexico 48, 70, 79
Vicksburg, Miss 293
Victoria, Brazil 55
Victoria, British Columbia 66, 79, 89
Vienna, Austria 37, 54, 78, 82, 83, 88
Vieques, Porto Rico 285,314
Vigo, Spain 48, 73, 84
Warsaw, Poland 41, 42, 54, 72, 78, 79, 83, 84, 85
Washington, D. C 280, 287,289, 291,297,304,316
Wellington, New Zealand 54, 66, 78, 87, 89
White Horse, Yukon Territory 6s
Wilburton, Okla 293
Wilmington, Calif 303
Wilmington, Del 292
Wilmington, N. C 288,305
Windsor, Ontario 66, 83, 89
Winnipeg, Manitoba 54, 66, 82, 89
Worcester, Mass 292
Yarmouth, Novia Scotia 66, 84, 89
Yokohama, Japan 47, 69, 80, 87
Yonkers, N. Y 293
Youngstown, Ohio 293
Yuma, Ariz 297
Yimnanfu, China 43. 57. 80
Zagreb, Serbia 73; 79
Zamboanga, Mindanao 288
Zurich, Switzerland 54. 74, 77, 86, 87
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