Hull file photo [756]

Cordell Hull

SurnameHull
Given NameCordell
Born2 Oct 1871
Died23 Jul 1955
CountryUnited States
CategoryGovernment
GenderMale

Contributor:

ww2dbaseCordell Hull was born in Olympus, Tennessee, United States to farmer William Hull and Elizabeth Riley. He became chairman of his county's Democratic Party members in 1890 at the age of 19. In 1891 he graduated from Cumberland University with a law degree. From 1893 to 1897 he was a member of the state congress, and served as an infantry officer during the Spanish-American War. From 1903 to 1907 he served as a judge of the Tennessee Fifth Judicial District. From 1907 until 1931 he was a member of the United States House of Representatives (except during 1921-1923 when he was not elected), then from 1930 to 1933 a member of the Senate. On 4 Mar 1933, he was appointed Secretary of State by Franklin Roosevelt on his reputation as a known proponent of open international trade and overall a veteran of international diplomacy; nevertheless, Roosevelt often excluded Hull in major foreign policy decisions due to the looming, and then on-going, world war. When Charles de Gaulle's forces took over the Vichy-controlled Saint-Pierre and Miquelon islands off Newfoundland, Hull decided to state that the existing governor should be reinstated; this generated some negative publicity against him, but he remained in the Department of State. In Oct 1943 he was sent to Moscow to represent the United States for the Third Moscow Conference. He chaired the Advisory Committee of Postwar Foreign Policy and was a strong supporter of the United Nations. In Nov 1944, Hull resigned due to health reasons. For his contributions for world politics, particularly for his work to establish the United Nations, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945. He passed away in Washington DC in 1955 and now rests in peace in the Chapel of St. Joseph of Arimathea in the Washington Cathedral.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia.

Last Major Revision: Mar 2006

Cordell Hull Interactive Map

Photographs

Norwegian Foreign Minister Halvdan Koht and US Secretary of State Cordell Hull, State Department, Washington DC, United States, 27 Oct 1937US Secretary of State Hull presiding the Davis Cup drawing, Washington DC, United States, 3 Feb 1938Portrait of Cordell Hull, date unknownJapanese Ambassador Admiral Kichisaburo Nomura and Special Envoy Saburo Kurusu with US Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Washington, United States, 17 Nov 1941
See all 9 photographs of Cordell Hull

Cordell Hull Timeline

2 Oct 1871 Cordell Hull was born.
19 Feb 1940 US Secretary of State Cordell Hull extended the American moral embargo to include the Soviet Union.
10 May 1940 US Secretary of State Hull reiterated that the United States would not stand for any country establishing a protectorate over the Dutch East Indies; in response, the Japanese Foreign Minister indicated Japan's desire to maintain the political and economic status quo in the Pacific region.
18 Jun 1940 US Secretary of State Cordell Hull directed Deputy US Ambassador to France Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr. to inform the French government that if France failed to keep its fleet out of German hands, France would "permanently lose the friendship and goodwill of the Government of the United States". French Minister for Foreign Affairs Baudouin reiterated that the French fleet "would never be surrendered to Germany".
5 Nov 1941 Cordell Hull had learned, via Magic intercepts of Japanese messages to Kichisaburo Nomura, that 25 Nov 1941 was Japan's final deadline for the decision on war.
26 Nov 1941 US intelligence detected Japanese troop movements in Indochina. In response, US Secretary of State Cordell Hull submitted the final proposal to Japanese diplomats for readjustment of US-Japanese relations, demanding the Japanese to withdraw all troops from China and Indochina, and with full expectation that the Japanese were not going to entertain this demand in any way.
23 Jul 1955 Cordell Hull passed away.




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Search WW2DB
More on Cordell Hull
Event(s) Participated:
» Third Moscow Conference

Document(s):
» Destroyers for Bases Agreement
» Fourteen Part Message from Japan to the United States and Hull's Response
» Message from Hull to Nomura
» Messages between Hull and Winant
» Part 7: Proclamation Regarding Japanese Enemy Aliens
» Part 8: Proclamation Regarding German Enemy Aliens
» Part 9: Proclamation Regarding Italian Enemy Aliens
» Statement by Cordell Hull on Albania
» US Department of State Press Release on Indochina Situation

Related Books:
» Pearl; December 7, 1941

Cordell Hull Photo Gallery
Norwegian Foreign Minister Halvdan Koht and US Secretary of State Cordell Hull, State Department, Washington DC, United States, 27 Oct 1937
See all 9 photographs of Cordell Hull


Famous WW2 Quote
"All that silly talk about the advance of science and such leaves me cold. Give me peace and a retarded science."

Thomas Dodd, late 1945


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