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James Rives Childs

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James Rives Childs Veteran

Birth
Lynchburg, Lynchburg City, Virginia, USA
Death
15 Jul 1987 (aged 94)
Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Lynchburg, Lynchburg City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec-E Lot-2B Spc-8
Memorial ID
View Source
Diplomat and writer; son of John William Childs and Lucy Howard Brown Childs.

US diplomat who helped Jews flee Holocaust gets highway marker | The Times of Israel

By AP
16 June 2018

US diplomat who helped Jews flee Holocaust gets highway marker
While stationed in Tangier, James Rives Childs arranged for 1,200 Hungarian Jews to obtain visas to Spanish Morocco
LYNCHBURG, Virginia— A state historical highway marker will be dedicated this month to a diplomat from Virginia who helped 1,200 Hungarian Jews escape the Holocaust.

Lynchburg native James Rives Childs served in the US Army as a code breaker in France during World War I. After working for the American Relief Administration in the Balkans and the Soviet Union, Childs began a 30-year diplomatic career.

During World War II, as charge d'affaires for the American Legation in Tangier, Morocco, he helped Hungarian Jews obtain visas to Spanish Morocco.

In 1946, President Harry Truman presented Childs with the Medal of Freedom. Childs also served as a US ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Ethiopia. Childs died in Richmond in 1987.

The highway marker will be dedicated in Lynchburg on June 25.
Contributor: Anonymous (50160974)
Diplomat and writer; son of John William Childs and Lucy Howard Brown Childs.

US diplomat who helped Jews flee Holocaust gets highway marker | The Times of Israel

By AP
16 June 2018

US diplomat who helped Jews flee Holocaust gets highway marker
While stationed in Tangier, James Rives Childs arranged for 1,200 Hungarian Jews to obtain visas to Spanish Morocco
LYNCHBURG, Virginia— A state historical highway marker will be dedicated this month to a diplomat from Virginia who helped 1,200 Hungarian Jews escape the Holocaust.

Lynchburg native James Rives Childs served in the US Army as a code breaker in France during World War I. After working for the American Relief Administration in the Balkans and the Soviet Union, Childs began a 30-year diplomatic career.

During World War II, as charge d'affaires for the American Legation in Tangier, Morocco, he helped Hungarian Jews obtain visas to Spanish Morocco.

In 1946, President Harry Truman presented Childs with the Medal of Freedom. Childs also served as a US ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Ethiopia. Childs died in Richmond in 1987.

The highway marker will be dedicated in Lynchburg on June 25.
Contributor: Anonymous (50160974)


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