American diplomat (1923–2008)
William Schaufele
In office March 30, 1978 – September 11, 1980President Jimmy Carter Preceded by Richard Davies Succeeded by Francis J. Meehan In office December 19, 1975 – July 17, 1977President Gerald Ford Jimmy Carter Preceded by Nathaniel Davis Succeeded by Richard M. Moose In office April 16, 1975 – November 29, 1975President Gerald Ford Preceded by James S. Sutterlin Succeeded by Robert M. Sayre In office October 16, 1969 – July 10, 1971President Richard Nixon Preceded by Elliott Skinner Succeeded by Donald B. Easum
Born William Everett Schaufele Jr.
(1923-12-07 ) December 7, 1923Lakewood, Ohio , U.S.Died January 17, 2008(2008-01-17) (aged 84)Salisbury, Connecticut , U.S. Education Yale University (BA )Columbia University (MA )
William Everett Schaufele Jr. (December 7, 1923 – January 17, 2008) was an American diplomat and official at the United States Department of State .
Life
Schaufele was born in Lakewood, Ohio , the son of William Elias Schaufele and Lillian Bergen.[ 1] He briefly attended Yale University in 1942–43, before enlisting in the United States Army in March 1943.[ 1] During World War II , he served in the 10th Armored Division , a part of the Third United States Army , which was commanded by George S. Patton .[ 1] He participated in the Siege of Bastogne , a part of the larger Battle of the Bulge .[ 1] Following the war, Schaufele resumed his studies at Yale, graduating in 1948 with a bachelor's degree in Government and International Affairs .[ 1] He then enrolled in the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs , from which he received an M.A. in 1950.[ 1]
After graduation, Schaufele joined the United States Foreign Service in 1950.[ 2] His first posting was in Germany as a resident officer in Frankfurt am Main (1950); a resident officer in Pfaffenhausen (1950–52); a resident officer in Augsburg (1952); a labor officer in Düsseldorf (1952); and, finally, as an economic and consular officer in Munich (1953–56).[ 1] He returned to the United States in 1956, taking up an economic affairs position in the United States Department of State in Washington, D.C. , and joining the faculty of the Foreign Service Institute in 1957.[ 1] Schaufele returned to the field in 1959, serving as a political/labor officer in Casablanca until 1963.[ 1]
In 1963, Schaufele opened an American consulate in Bukavu in the Republic of the Congo , which had gained its independence from Belgium in 1960[ 1] He returned to the United States in 1964, serving first as the head of the State Department's Congo desk, and then in a series of increasingly senior positions in the State Department's Bureau of African Affairs .[ 1]
On September 29, 1969, President Richard Nixon appointed Schaufele as United States Ambassador to Upper Volta , a post he held until July 10, 1971.[ 1] Nixon then named Ambassador Schaufele as the U.S.'s representative to the United Nations Security Council (with the rank of ambassador).[ 1] On December 19, 1975, President Gerald Ford appointed Schaufele as Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs , a post he held until July 17, 1977.[ 1] President Jimmy Carter appointed Schaufele United States Ambassador to Poland on February 3, 1978.[ 1] In that capacity, he was present in Poland for the election of Carol Cardinal Wojtila, Archbishop of Kraków , as Pope John Paul II and for the rise of the Solidarity movement.[ 1]
Schaufele retired in 1980 with the rank of career minister.[ 1] In retirement, he served as president of the Foreign Policy Association until 1985.[ 1]
References
International National Other