Willard L. Beaulac
Willard Leon Beaulac was a United States diplomat. He served as U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay, Colombia, Cuba, Chile and Argentina.Biography
Willard L. Beaulac was born on July 25, 1899 in Pawtucket, Rhode Island to Sylvester Clinton Beaulac and Lena Eleanor Jarvis. He attended Brown University before joining the United States Navy in 1918. After his honorable discharge in 1919, he attended the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and graduated in 1921.
He joined the United States Foreign Service in 1921. He received his first ambassadorial appointment to Paraguay in 1944. in 1947 he was named United States Ambassador to Colombia. He married Catherine Hazel Arrott Greene on February 25, 1935.
From 1951 to 1953 he was United States Ambassador to Cuba. In 1953 he succeeded Claude G. Bowers as United States Ambassador to Chile. From 1956 to 1960 he was United States Ambassador to Argentina. Before retiring around 1962 he was the deputy commandant for foreign affairs of the National War College.
He died of Alzheimer's disease on August 25, 1990 in Washington, DC.Positions
- US Ambassador to Argentina
- US Ambassador to Chile
- US Ambassador to Cuba
- US Ambassador to Colombia
- US Ambassador to Paraguay
- US State Department Consul General, Madrid
- US State Department Counsellor, Havana
- US State Department Assistant Chief, Division of American Republics
- US State Department Assistant Chief, Division of Latin American Affairs
- US State Department Second Secretary, San Salvador, El Salvador
- US State Department Second Secretary, Managua, Nicaragua
- US State Department Third Secretary, Port-au-Prince, Haiti
- US State Department Consul, Arica, Chile
- US State Department Vice Consul, Puerto Castilla, Honduras
- US State Department Vice Consul, Tampico, Mexico
Professor
- Southern Illinois University
- Ball State University
Works
- Career Ambassador, Macmillan, 1951,
- Career Diplomat: A Career in the Foreign Service of the United States
- A Diplomat Looks at Aid to Latin America, Southern Illinois University Press, 1970
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- Franco: Silent Ally in World War II, Southern Illinois University Press, 1986,