Robert Thomas Hennemeyer

Robert Thomas Hennemeyer (December 1, 1925 Chicago, Illinois - August 21, 2017 Bethesda, Maryland) “embarked on an illustrious thirty-five year career” in 1952 when he entered the US Foreign Service.[1]

Hennemeyer served as Consul General in Germany twice and was the US Ambassador in The Gambia (1984-1986).[2] He taught at the US Naval Academy. While in Tanganyika, he was taken hostage “during an army mutiny in then Tanganyika and narrowly escaped being executed by firing squad.”[1]

He received his Bachelors and master's degrees at the University of Chicago and studied at Oxford University.[1]

Publications

  • Forgiveness in International Politics: An Alternative Road to Peace co-author[1] with William Bole and Drew Christiansen
gollark: So possibly not actually "hacking".
gollark: I bet they used the same password for everything and it got leaked somewhere.
gollark: How do you hack a *phone number*? Do you mean their phone network provider or something?
gollark: You are unlikely to encounter any illegal numbers by accident if they're bigger than 64 bits or so, apparently.
gollark: Yes, it's an interesting weird consequence of laws.

References

  1. "Robert Thomas Hennemeyer". Tribute Archive. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  2. "Robert Thomas Hennemeyer (1925–)". Office of the Historian. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.