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Frederic Courtland Penfield

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President
  
Woodrow Wilson

Preceded by
  
Edward C. Little

Preceded by
  
Richard C. Kerens

Succeeded by
  
Thomas Harrison

Succeeded by
  
Arthur Hugh Frazier

Name
  
Frederic Penfield

President
  
Grover Cleveland


Frederic Courtland Penfield Frederic Courtland Penfield Wikipedia


Died
  
June 19, 1922, Fifth Avenue, United States

Spouse
  
Anne Weightman (m. 1908), Albert McMurdo (m. 1892)

Frederic courtland penfield last and undervalued us minister to habsburg vienna in crisis


Frederic Courtland Penfield (April 23, 1855 – June 19, 1922) was an American diplomat who served in London, Cairo, and as U.S. Ambassador to Austria-Hungary.

Contents

Biography

Frederic Penfield was born in Haddam, Connecticut, on April 23, 1855 to Daniel Penfield and Sophia Young He received his early education at Russell's military school in New Haven, and later studied in England and Germany. After several years with the Hartford Courant he became the United States vice consul in London in 1885. He married Katharine Albert McMurdo Welles (c1855-1905) in 1892.

He became the United States diplomatic agent to Egypt from 1893 to 1897. His wife died in 1905, and in 1907 he published the travelogue East of Suez: Ceylon, India, China and Japan describing his journeys through those countries. In 1908 he married Anne Weightman Walker, said to be one of the wealtihest women in the world.

He became the United States Ambassador to Austria-Hungary from 1913 to 1917. During the period of United States neutrality (1914-1917) in World War I, he took care of the interests in Austria-Hungary of several of the belligerents.

Penfield died on June 19, 1922, at his home on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan of "congestion of the brain". He was buried at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.

References

Frederic Courtland Penfield Wikipedia