William Smith Culbertson was an American diplomat and soldier.
He was born in Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, August 5, 1884 and died in 1966. U.S. Ambassador, Romania, 1925–1928, Chile, 1928 - 1933. Colonel, United States Army. President, United States Tariff Commission 1922 - 1925. Member, United States Tariff Commission, 1916–1922, American Bar Association, Council on Foreign Relations, American Economic Association, Phi Alpha Delta, Phi Beta Kappa. Graduate, Yale Law School, J.D., College of Emporia, B.A.
Read more about William Smith Culbertson: Alexander Hamilton Essay, 1910, William S. Culbertson Papers, 1923, International Economic Policies, A Survey of The Economics of Diplomacy, 1925, Reciprocity, A National Policy For Foreign Trade, 1937, The Culbertson Economic Mission, 1944 - 1945, Liberation, The Threat and The Challenge of Power, 1953
Famous quotes containing the words william and/or smith:
“We agree fully that the mother and unborn child demand special consideration. But so does the soldier and the man maimed in industry. Industrial conditions that are suitable for a stalwart, young, unmarried woman are certainly not equally suitable to the pregnant woman or the mother of young children. Yet welfare laws apply to all women alike. Such blanket legislation is as absurd as fixing industrial conditions for men on a basis of their all being wounded soldiers would be.”
—National Womans Party, quoted in Everyone Was Brave. As, ch. 8, by William L. ONeill (1969)
“We grow with years more fragile in body, but morally stouter, and can throw off the chill of a bad conscience almost at once.”
—Logan Pearsall Smith (18651946)