Arthur Grant Campbell

Arthur Grant Campbell (1916 – July 17, 1996) was a Canadian diplomat. He held diplomatic posts throughout the world, including Botswana, Lesotho, South Africa, Swaziland, Norway, and Iceland.[1]

Education and Second World War

Campbell studied at Selwyn House School in Montreal and Upper Canada College in Toronto before receiving his Bachelor of Arts at McGill University in 1938. He began his working career in 1938, working as an assistant to the secretary of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. He served with the Canadian Army between 1941-1946 during World War II. Campbell served in the United Kingdom, Central Mediterranean, and Northwest Europe. After World War II Campbell joined the United Nations Secretariat.[2][3]

Foreign service

Campbell joined the United Nations division of the Department of External Affairs in 1956 and thereafter was appointed to various other diplomatic positions.[4] He served as the Canadian High Commission to Botswana, Lesotho, and Swaziland between 1972–1976, and as Ambassador to South Africa between 1972–1976, and Norway and Iceland between 1977-1981.[5]

Personal life

In 1940, Campbell married Carol Wright. They had a son, Ian.[6]

Death

According to ancestry.com, Campbell died on July 17, 1996.[7]

gollark: Although you *should* probably find some new terms for "idiot".
gollark: Spirit brightening everyone's day as always!
gollark: It does not imply what you're implying it implies.
gollark: Like "well if the equations work similarly in some contexts that obviously means they're the same thing and very related!"
gollark: I'm sure you're going to say something stupid now.

References

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