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Irving B. Dudley

American diplomat (1861–1911) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irving B. Dudley
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Irving Bedell Dudley (November 30, 1861  November 27, 1911) was an American lawyer and diplomat, who served as United States Ambassador to Brazil from 1907 to 1911.

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Biography

Born in Ohio, the son of a minister and his wife,[1] Dudley studied at Kenyon College, graduating in 1882,[2] before continuing to study law at Columbian University (now George Washington University), graduating in 1885; he was admitted to the bar that year,[3] and worked for the War Department.[4]

Three years later, in 1888, he moved to San Diego, California, where he was later elected a judge in 1890.[4]

A Republican,[4] Dudley was appointed United States Minister to Peru by President William McKinley on June 25, 1897;[5] he took up his post in September of that year.[6]

In December 1906,[7] McKinley's successor, Theodore Roosevelt, appointed Dudley to be United States Ambassador to Brazil,[8] a post he took up in April 1907.

Illness dogged Dudley and his wife during his career,[9][10][11] and would ultimately contribute to his death: after staying at Johns Hopkins Hospital for treatment of an unrelated complaint,[12] he died there of heart failure.[12][3]

His wife would die in 1960, at the age of 87.[13]

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References

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