Horace Dawson

Horace Greeley Dawson, Jr. (born January 30, 1926, Augusta, Georgia) was an American diplomat who served as the United States Ambassador to Botswana.

Horace Dawson with his Granddaughter, Mia

Life

After graduation from high school, Dawson attended Lincoln University in Pennsylvania for two years before being drafted into the U.S. Army, serving a two-year tour of duty in Europe and the Philippines. Dawson then returned to Lincoln University to finish his studies, earning a B.A. in English in 1949. Dawson went on to study English and comparative literature at Columbia University and received his M.A. the following year.

Dawson began his career as an English teacher at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where he remained three years after earning his M.A.. He then went on to teach at North Carolina Central University, where he worked as an associate professor of English and director of public relations. He also received his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in 1961.

In 1962, Dawson entered the Foreign Service, working as a cultural affairs officer in Uganda and Nigeria, and then as the United States Information Agency Director in Liberia. From 1973 to 1977, Dawson held a prominent position as the director of all American information and cultural programs in Africa. Subsequently, Dawson became the counselor of embassy for public affairs and the director of American information and cultural programs in the Philippines, where he remained until 1979. That year, he was named ambassador to Botswana by President Jimmy Carter. As ambassador, he worked to end apartheid in South Africa. Returning to the United States in 1983, Dawson remained with the State Department until his retirement in 1989. He then joined the faculty at Howard University and was appointed director of the public affairs program. In 1993, Dawson established the Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center at Howard, and in 1997 became the director of that program as well.

Dawson is a member of the Peace Corps Advisory Board, chairman of the Selection Committee for the Franklin H. Williams Memorial Internship Program of the Council on Foreign Relations, and recently ended his term as chairman of the Association of Black American Ambassadors. Listed in Who's Who in America, Dawson has written extensively on the topics of mass media and international affairs. His wife, Lula Cole Dawson, a sociologist and employment specialist, died in 2004. They have two children.

Dawson is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.[1] He is the chairman of the fraternity's World Policy Council, a think tank whose purpose is to expand Alpha Phi Alpha's involvement in politics, and social and current policy to encompass international concerns.[2]

gollark: To obtain extra investment funds, much of it is actually done using quantum computers.
gollark: The various data processing and storage facilities are networked via a combination of RFC 1149 (upgraded with high-density flash chips in place of duct-taped paper) and trans-crustal neutrino beams.
gollark: Long-term data storage is achieved by beaming all data into space as frequency-modulated X-rays, since if FTL travel or something is ever developed they can just be picked up later™.
gollark: Well, actually three of them for redundancy.
gollark: Yes, we actually have a system where all our data is fed in an entirely unstructured way into a somewhat slow-running trillion-node neural network.

References

  1. Alpha Phi Alpha: Politician members
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-12-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Donald Norland
U.S. Ambassador to Botswana
1979– 1982
Succeeded by
Theodore Maino
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