Thomas W. Cridler

Thomas Wilbur Cridler (1850-1914) was United States Third Assistant Secretary of State from 1897 to 1901.

Thomas W. Cridler

Biography

Thomas Wilbut Cridler was born in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia on November 13, 1850. He was educated in West Virginia, and Washington, D.C., where he studied law.

On July 1, 1875, Cridler joined the United States Department of State as a clerk. He rose steadily through the ranks of the State Department. He traveled to Europe several times on government business and served as the State Department's special disbursing officer at the International Monetary Conference held in Brussels on November 22, 1892.

In 1897, President of the United States William McKinley named Cridler Third Assistant Secretary of State, with Cridler subsequently holding this office from April 8, 1897 until November 15, 1901. In that capacity, he was present in Paris for the signing of the Treaty of Paris (1898). He was the U.S. Special Commissioner to the 1900 Paris Exhibition and wrote a special report to the United States Congress about the Exposition. During this visit, the Government of France made Cridler an officer of the Legion of Honour.

Upon his resignation from the State Department in 1901, Cridler became Commissioner for Europe for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. In 1911, he became vice president of the Collin Armstrong Advertising Company.

Cridler died at his home in New York City on February 23, 1914.

Works by Thomas W. Cridler

gollark: This is just a ZIP concatted on the end, but if you muck with the formats a lot you could probably use some of the image data to store code.
gollark: So you can run this (`python3 logo96.png`) and it prints hello world, and as you can see it's a valid image.
gollark: <@!336962240848855040> So I don't know if any image format will let you stick a shebang at the start, *but* python apparently happily runs `__main__.py` from ZIP files. And ZIP files are backwards and work fine at the end of an image.
gollark: Anyway, I don't think any widely-used image formats will let you stick in a shebang or whatever at the front, unfortunately, they have headers.
gollark: Yep.

References

Government offices
Preceded by
William Woodward Baldwin
Third Assistant Secretary of State
April 8, 1897 November 15, 1901
Succeeded by
Herbert H. D. Peirce
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