Natale Hans Bellocchi was born into an ethnic Italian family in 1926 in Little Falls, New York; his parents were Pietro and Marianna (Fenni) Bellocchi.[1] He had an older sister Elsie Bellochhi.[1] After their father died during the Great Depression when Natale was 12, the family had strict finances, but were helped by relatives and friends in the Italian community.[2]
Bellocchi attended the public high school. Disappointed at being rejected in 1944 for the draft, he went away to college.[2] He earned his bachelor's degree in industrial management from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1948.
Bellocchi joined the United States Foreign Service in 1955, first serving as a diplomatic courier. He did a lot of travel by airplane in more difficult conditions than today, including having a plane go down at sea. He and other couriers traveled 100–150 hours per month, with little time for more than changing clothes in between flights. He was also stationed in Manila and Hong Kong. He returned to Europe for two years, where he frequently traveled behind the Iron Curtain. After finally being selected as a Foreign Service Officer (FSO), Bellocchi chose to serve in Asia.[2]
He was initially stationed in Laos and Taiwan, after a period, from 1963–1965, of attending Chinese language school on Taiwan. This intense training required of classroom instruction, independent study and regular immersion in Chinese-only villages. In Hong Kong again from 1968–1970, he worked on business affairs and started an American Chamber of Commerce, during the period when mainland China was in the throes of the Cultural Revolution. In an interview later in his life, he discussed this as the period when American businesses started establishing their own offices and a professional managerial class in Hong Kong.[2] He also worked in Vietnam, India, and Japan.
Bellochi and his family returned to the United States when he retired. He died in Bethesda, Maryland, of heart disease on November 17, 2014.[6][7] A funeral was held in December 2015, at Arlington National Cemetery.[8]
Marriage and family
Bellochi married Lilan Liu. They had two children together.[9][10]
^"Obituaries". State Magazine. United States Department of State. Bureau of Human Resources. Archived from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved May 6, 2015.