George Clayton Foulk
{{Short description|American diplomat (1856–1893)}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = George Clayton Foulk
|order =
|image = Ensign George Clayton Foulk, USN — NH 85539.jpg
|image_size =
|caption = George Clayton Foulk
|birth_name =
|office = United States Consul General to Korea
Acting
|birth_date = October 30, 1856
|birth_place = Marietta, Pennsylvania, U.S.
|death_date = 1893
|death_place = Kyoto, Japan
|death_cause = congestive heart failure
|resting_place = Nyakuoji Cemetery, Kyoto, Japan
|resting_place_coordinates =
|spouse = Murase Kane
|relations = Clayton Foulk (father) and Caroline Foulk (mother)
|children =
|alma_mater = United States Naval Academy
|profession = U.S. Navy officer, diplomat, teacher
|religion =
|allegiance = {{Flag|United States|1912|size=23px}}
|branch = {{Flagdeco|United States Navy|1864|size=23px}} United States Navy
|serviceyears = 1876–1886
|rank = Ensign
|unit = U.S. Naval Attache
|battles =
|term_start2 = February 19, 1885
|term_end2 = June 12, 1886
|predecessor2 = Lucius Foote
|successor2 = William Harwar Parker
|term_start1 = September 3, 1886
|term_end1 = April 13, 1887
|predecessor1 = William Harwar Parker
|successor1 = Hugh A. Dinsmore
}}
George Clayton Foulk (October 30, 1856 – 1893) was a United States Navy officer and U.S. Naval Attache to the Kingdom of Korea in 1876. He also served as chargé d'affaires to the Kingdom of Korea in the absence of the American minister or consul.
Early life
George Clayton Foulk was born in Marietta, Pennsylvania, son of Clayton and Caroline Foulk.
U.S. envoy to the Kingdom of Korea
Foulk served as the acting chargé d'affaires to the Kingdom of Korea, from 1885–1886 and again, from 1886–1887. Soon after his relief by William Harwar Parker, Foulk was sent back to Korea after a report reached Washington, D.C. that Parker was a "chronic drunkard" who suffered from alcoholism. The United States government considered the situation so serious that a squadron of naval vessels was diverted to intercept Foulk's passenger liner and return him to Korea as soon as possible.
George Foulk was finally recalled several months later and relieved by Hugh A. Dinsmore with the U.S. acting at the behest of the Chinese government. The Chinese were unhappy with Foulk's attempts to build up Korea's ability to counteract Chinese and Japanese influence.
Last years
After his recall, George Foulk became a teacher, at Doshisha College (now Doshisha University), in Kyoto, Japan. On September 7, 1887, he married a Japanese national, Murase Kane, with whom he had corresponded while in Korea.
File:George Foulk Murase Kane together alive - pre 1893.jpg|George Foulk with his spouse, Murase Kane
Death
George Foulk died in 1893. He and his wife were buried together in the Nyakuoji Cemetery, Kyoto.
References
- "Recollections of a Naval Officer", William Harwar Parker (Published 1883)
- America's Man in Korea: The Private Letters of George C. Foulk, 1884–1887, Samuel Hawley, Lexington Books, 2007
- [http://www.samuelhawley.com/hermitkingdom1.html Inside the Hermit Kingdom: The 1884 Travel Diary of George Clayton Foulk by Samuel Hawley]
External links
{{commonscat|George Clayton Foulk}}
- [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7779n8r3/ Guide to the George Clayton Foulk Papers] at The Bancroft Library
- [http://collections.lib.uwm.edu/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=all&CISOFIELD1=CISOSEARCHALL&CISORESTMP=results.php&CISOVIEWTMP=item_viewer.php&CISOMODE=thumb&CISOGRID=thumbnail%2CA%2C1%3Btitle%2CA%2C1%3Bsubjec%2CA%2C0%3Bdescri%2C200%2C0%3Bnone%2CA%2C0%3B20%3Btitle%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone&CISOBIB=title%2CA%2C1%2CN%3Bsubjec%2CA%2C0%2CN%3Bdescri%2C200%2C0%2CN%3Bnone%2CA%2C0%2CN%3Bnone%2CA%2C0%2CN%3B20%3Btitle%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone&CISOTHUMB=20+%284x5%29%3Btitle%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone&CISOTITLE=20%3Btitle%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone&CISOHIERA=20%3Bsubjec%2Ctitle%2Cnone%2Cnone%2Cnone&CISOSUPPRESS=0&CISOBOX1=++foulk&CISOROOT=all&submit=search Photos and Maps of George C. Foulk's at the American Geographical Society Library, UW Milwaukee]
{{s-start}}
{{succession box |
before= Lucius H. Foote
William Harwar Parker |
title= Minister to the Kingdom of Korea |
years= 1885 - 1886 (first term)
1886 - 1887 (second term)|
after= William Harwar Parker
Hugh A. Dinsmore |
}}
{{s-end}}
{{US Ambassadors to Korea}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Foulk, George Clayton}}
Category:American expatriates in Korea