词条 | William D. Pawley |
释义 |
| name = William D. Pawley | image = William_D_Pawley.jpg | imagesize = 100px | smallimage = | caption = | order = United States Ambassador to Peru | term_start = July 20, 1945 | term_end = April 27, 1946 | deputy = | president = Harry S. Truman | predecessor = John Campbell White | successor = Prentice Cooper | order2 = United States Ambassador to Brazil | term_start2 = June 13, 1946 | term_end2 = March 28, 1948 | president2 = Harry S. Truman | secretary2 = | predecessor2 = Adolf A. Berle, Jr. | successor2 = Herschel V. Johnson | birth_name=William Douglas Pawley | birth_date = {{Birth-date|September 7, 1896|September 7, 1896}} | birth_place = Florence, South Carolina | death_date = {{Death date and age|1977|01|07|1896|09|07}} | death_place = Miami Beach, Florida | restingplace = | restingplacecoordinates = | party = Republican Party | spouse = {{marriage|Annie Hahr Dobbs |July 25, 1919|1941|reason=div}} Edna Pawley | children = | education = Gordon Military Academy | profession = Entrepreneur }} William Douglas Pawley (September 7, 1896—January 7, 1977) was a U.S. ambassador, a noted businessman and associated with the Flying Tigers American Volunteer Group (AVG) during World War II. Early lifeWilliam Douglas Pawley was born in Florence, South Carolina on September 7, 1896. His father was a wealthy businessman based in Cuba, and young Pawley attended private schools in both Havana and Santiago. He later returned to the United States, where he studied at the Gordon Military Academy in Georgia. Business careerIn 1927, Pawley began a connection with Curtiss-Wright that would make him an extremely wealthy man. In 1928, he returned to Cuba to become president of Nacional Cubana de Aviación Curtiss, which was sold to Pan American Airlines in 1932. He then became president of Intercontinent Corporation in New York, evidently founded by Clement Keys, the former president of Curtiss. In 1933 he moved to China, where he became president of China National Aviation Corporation an airline running between Hong Kong and Shanghai.[1] Pawley finally sold out to Pan Am again. He later assembled aircraft in partnership with the Chinese Nationalist government under the corporate name of Central Aircraft Manufacturing Company in Hangzhou, Wuhan, and finally Loiwing on the China-Burma border. (CAMCO was owned in partnership with the Chinese government, with the Pawley family interest represented by Intercontinent, which now served as a Pawley family holding company.)[2] World War IIIn 1940, Hindustan Aircraft Limited was set up in India with Pawley providing the initial organization. In 1941, with his brothers Edward and Eugene, he was involved with the organization and support of the 1st American Volunteer Group, popularly known as the Flying Tigers.[2] The brothers established an assembly plant at Mingaladon airport outside Rangoon, Burma, where the AVG's Curtiss P-40 fighter aircraft were assembled, while an Intercontinent office in Rangoon (now Yangon) provided payroll and other housekeeping services to the group while it trained upcountry at Toungoo. Later, when Allied forces were driven out of lower Burma by the Japanese, the CAMCO factory and airfield across the border in Loiwing, China, served as a base for the AVG. When Loiwing in turn was captured by Japan in May 1942, Pawley moved his operation to India as a partner in Hindustan Aircraft Limited.[2] Later yearsPawley was appointed as U.S. Ambassador by Harry Truman to Peru in 1945. He was named U.S. Ambassador to Brazil in 1948.[3] Postwar, Pawley was an active member of the Republican Party. A close friend of both President Dwight Eisenhower and Central Intelligence Agency director Allen W. Dulles, he took part in a policy that later become known as Executive Action, a plan to remove unfriendly foreign leaders from power. Pawley played a role Operation PBSUCCESS, a CIA plot to overthrow the Guatemalan government of Jacobo Arbenz in 1954 after Arbenz introduced reforms affecting the United Fruit Company. Pawley is thought to have served in Peru, Brazil, Panama, Guatemala, Cuba and Nicaragua between 1945 and 1960. Personal lifeOn July 25, 1919, Pawley married Annie Hahr Dobbs of Marietta, Georgia. In 1925, the couple moved to Miami and then to Havana, Cuba, in 1928. They returned with their three children to Miami, where their youngest child was born. The Pawleys then moved to Shanghai, China, with the baby, leaving their other children in Miami Beach with family. Mrs. Pawley lived in China until 1938 with periodic trips back to Miami. They were divorced in 1941.[4][5] His final residence was in Miami Beach, Florida, where he died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, in January 1977,[6] because he suffered from a severe case of the very painful disease - shingles.[4] References
1. ^Moore. Tom. "William D. Pawley (1896–1977)." cnac.org. Retrieved: June 4, 2011. 2. ^Rossi, J. R. "History: The Flying Tigers - American Volunteer Group - Chinese Air Force." AVG: American Fighter Group, The Flying Tigers, 1998. Retrieved: June 4, 2011. 3. ^{{cite news|title=U.S. AIDE COMMENDS RESULTS OF BOGOTA; Armour Says Rioting Did Not Subtract From Success -Delegates Sign Act Today|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9801EEDA173CE733A25753C3A9629C946993D6CF&legacy=true|accessdate=15 January 2018|work=The New York Times|date=30 April 1948}} 4. ^1 2 3 Carrozza, Anthony R. William D. Pawley: The Extraordinary Life of the Adventurer, Entrepreneur, and Diplomat Who Cofounded the Flying Tigers. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books, Inc., 2012. {{ISBN|978-1-59797-714-2}}. 5. ^{{cite news|last1=Illson|first1=Murray|title=A Lone and Varied Career|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/08/archives/a-long-and-varied-career.html|accessdate=15 January 2018|work=The New York Times|date=January 8, 1977}} 6. ^{{cite news|title=William D. Pawley, Financier, Dies at 80|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/08/archives/william-d-pawley-financier-dies-at-80-exambassador-and.html|accessdate=15 January 2018|work=The New York Times|date=January 8, 1977}}
External links{{commons category}}
| title = United States Ambassador to Peru | before = John Campbell White | after = Prentice Cooper | years = July 20, 1945–April 27, 1946 }}{{succession box | title = United States Ambassador to Brazil | before = Adolf A. Berle, Jr. | after = Herschel V. Johnson | years = June 13, 1946–March 26, 1948 }}{{end}}{{US Ambassadors to Brazil}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Pawley, William D.}} 9 : 1896 births|1977 deaths|20th-century American businesspeople|Flying Tigers|People from Florence, South Carolina|Republican Party (United States) politicians|Ambassadors of the United States to Brazil|Ambassadors of the United States to Peru|Florida Republicans |
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