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J Fife Symington Jr

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President
  
Richard Nixon

Name
  
J. Symington

Ex-spouse
  
Martha Howard Frick

Political party
  
Republican

Siblings
  
Donald Symington

Succeeded by
  
Anthony D. Marshall

Education
  
Princeton University

Preceded by
  
William A. Costello

Role
  
Ambassador


Full Name
  
John Fife Symington, Jr.

Born
  
August 27, 1910 Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. (
1910-08-27
)

Relations
  
Helen Clay Frick (grandfather-in-law) Henry Clay Frick (great-grandfather-in-law)

Died
  
December 9, 2007, Balti, Maryland, United States

Children
  
Fife Symington, Martha Frick Symington Sanger, Helen Clay Symington Chace, Arabella Symington Dane

Similar People
  
Fife Symington, Martha Frick Symingto, Donald Symington

John Fife Symington Jr. (August 27, 1910 – December 9, 2007) was a United States ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago and an airline pioneer.

Contents

Early life

Symington was born in Baltimore on August 27, 1910. His uncle, John Hambleton, who was a fighter pilot in World War I and a founder of Pan American World Airways, got him interested in flying. After graduating from Kent School, Kent, Connecticut in 1929, he earned a bachelor's degree at Princeton University in 1933 where he became a member of the Ivy Club; that year, he also rode as a gentleman jockey in the My Lady's Manor and Grand National point-to-point races.

Pan American

During the Depression, he borrowed and traveled on Pan American to Miami, San Juan, Trinidad and South America. After his travels, he got a pilot license and emerged unhurt from three plane crashes. He got a job with the airline in 1934 and was assigned to Rio de Janeiro. When he returned from Brazil, he was given the job of traffic manager when Pan Am opened a terminal on Colgate Creek near Dundalk in 1937.

In 1939, he was assigned to London to open up an international office. There he managed trans-Atlantic traffic for the United States Navy, and held the rank of lieutenant. He left Pan Am in 1948.

Political career

Symington unsuccessfully ran for Congress in Maryland's 2nd congressional district in 1958, 1960 and 1962. He campaigned for Republican Presidential candidate Barry Goldwater in 1964. He hosted a Goldwater event at his Lutherville home that year. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon attended the event.

In 1969, after Nixon was elected President, he named Symington ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago. Symington held the post until 1971. During his time as ambassador he had to deal with a political crisis.

Personal life and death

In 1939 he married Martha Howard Frick, granddaughter of steel magnate Henry Clay Frick; they had three daughters, Martha Frick (Symington) Sanger, Arabella (Symington) Dane, and Helen Clay (Symington) Chace, and one son, Fife Symington, who served as Governor of Arizona from 1991 until 1997. They later divorced. He also had a twenty-year relationship with Natalie Brengle until his death. The two never married.

Symington died on December 9, 2007, at the Gilchrist Center for Hospice Care in Baltimore, Maryland, due to complications of old age. He was survived by all his children.

References

J. Fife Symington Jr. Wikipedia