- Nelson T. Johnson
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Nelson Trusler Johnson (April 3, 1887–December 3, 1954) was the United States ambassador to the Republic of China prior to World War II, and to Australia during World War II.
Contents
Early life and career
Johnson was born in the family row house located at 1st and East Capitol Street (now a part of the location of the United States Supreme Court) in Washington, D.C. He spent a part of his early life in Newkirk, Oklahoma and then Kildare, Oklahoma. He then returned to Washington to complete his schooling at Sidwell Friends School near 8th & I Street NW. He then went to George Washington University and pledged to the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. In his freshman year he decided to take the Foreign Service Examination, claiming his residency as Oklahoma. Successful, he received an appointment to the Foreign Service of the United States as appointments were made based on one's home state. He spent his entire adult life in the service of his government. Although he specialized in China and the Far East, first as a student interpreter, then as consular officer, Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs, next as Assistant Secretary of State, and then as Minister and Ambassador on assignments to China leading up to World War II and to Australia during World War II. [1].
Early influence on Far Eastern policy
Johnson first became intimately involved in shaping American policy toward China in 1925 when he assumed the office of Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs in the State Department. From 1928 to May 1941 he was first assigned as Minister Plenipotentiary, then as Ambassador Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, to China. During those years he contributed heavily to determining the conduct of US relations with that country, based primarily on Johnson's personal papers in the Library of Congress and the published and unpublished State Department records that address his activities over the 1925–1941 period emphasizing his ideas and suggestions regarding American policy to that country.
Johnson made major contributions during the Coolidge, Hoover and early Roosevelt administrations. He favored going as far as American interests would allow in helping China regain her sovereignty and he consistently guided Secretaries of State Kellogg and Stimson on a moderate course in their policy.
Under Kellogg, Johnson continually opposed interference in the civil war in China. He opposed joining the British at Canton and Hankow in punitive measures against Chinese strike pickets and other nationalists. He opposed harsh or recriminatory action against China during the Nanking Incident of 1927. He advocated conciliation in answering China's note of June 1925 requesting treaty revision. He suggested going as far as possible, unilaterally if necessary, in writing a new tariff treaty, and favored gradual relinquishment of extraterritoriality.
Under Secretary Stimson, Johnson made a significant contribution when, as American Minister in China, he influenced the Secretary's policy during the Shanghai affair. His advice that the United States make a statement in favor of upholding the terms of the Nine-Power Treaty was chiefly responsible for Stimson’s letter of February 1932 to Senator William E. Borah.
In the mid-1930s Johnson's influence continued although other officials gained ascendancy as policy became more Japanese oriented. During this period, he grew increasingly impatient with Japanese aggression and began suggesting a reappraisal of American policy toward Japan. Not yet recommending that she assume any responsibility for the Chinese, he merely advocated United States rearmament and reconsideration of its intention to grant independence to the Philippines.
By the end of the decade, Johnson openly advocated material support for China. The Chinese had then established a measure of order, had demonstrated a will to resist Japan and he believed they deserved support. His descriptions of the events of the war and of China's valiant fight were instrumental in the decision to grant assistance.
Personal life
Johnson married Jane Augusta Washington Thornton Beck in Beijing, China (then called Peking). Second daughter of Wyoming pioneer George T. Beck, she was born October 21, 1900, in Cody, Wyoming. She died February 28, 1991, in Washington, D.C. at age 91. They were married in Peking and were then registered at the US Consulate in Tientsin, China, October 10, 1931.
He made the cover of Time in 1933. [2]
Both Nelson and Jane are buried in Rock Creek Cemetery near the Old soldiers' home in N.E. Washington D.C.
References
- The American Secretaries of State and Their Diplomacy, vol. 11.
- Time, December 11, 1939.
Diplomatic posts Preceded by
John V.A. MacMurray (as Envoy to the Republic of China)U.S. Ambassador to China
1929-1941Succeeded by
Clarence E. GaussPreceded by
Clarence E. GaussU.S. Ambassador to Australia
1941-1945Succeeded by
Robert ButlerUnited States Ambassadors to China Envoys to the Qing Empire
1843-1858Caleb Cushing 1843-44 · Alexander Hill Everett 1845-47 · John Wesley Davis 1848-50 · Humphrey Marshall 1852-54 · Robert Milligan McLane 1853-54 · Peter Parker 1855-57 ·
William B. Reed 1857-58Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plentipotentiary to the Qing Empire
1858-1913John Elliott Ward 1858-60 · Anson Burlingame 1861-67 · John Ross Browne 1868-69 · Frederick F. Low 1869-73 · Benjamin Avery 1874-75 · George Seward 1876-80 · James Burrill Angell 1880-81 · John Russell Young 1882-85 · Charles Harvey Denby 1885-98 · Edwin H. Conger 1898-05 · William Woodville Rockhill 1905-09 · William James Calhoun 1909-13
Envoy to the Republic of China
1913-1929Paul Samuel Reinsch 1913-19 · Charles Richard Crane 1920-21 · Jacob Gould Schurman 1921-25 · John MacMurray 1925-29
Ambassador to the Republic of China
1929-1949Nelson T. Johnson 1929-41 · Clarence E. Gauss 1941-44 · Patrick J. Hurley 1944-45 · John Leighton Stuart 1946-49 · Embassy in Taipei 1949-Pres.
Chiefs of the U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing
1973-79David K. E. Bruce 1973-74 · George H. W. Bush 1974-75 · Thomas S. Gates, Jr. 1976-77 ·
Leonard Woodcock 1977-79Ambassador to the People's Republic of China
1979-PresentLeonard Woodcock 1979-81 · Arthur W. Hummel, Jr. 1981-85 · Winston Lord 1985-89 · James R. Lilley 1989-91 · J. Stapleton Roy 1991-95 · Jim Sasser 1996-99 · Joseph Prueher 1999-01 · Clark T. Randt, Jr. 2001-09 · Jon Huntsman, Jr. 2009-11 · Gary Locke 2011-
Categories:- 1887 births
- 1954 deaths
- People from Washington, D.C.
- People from Kay County, Oklahoma
- George Washington University alumni
- United States ambassadors to China
- United States ambassadors to Australia
- Burials at Rock Creek Cemetery
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