Mahlon Perkins

Mahlon Fay Perkins (23 November 1882 – 1963) was a United States diplomat. After serving in China for many years, he was consul-general in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War.[1] It was his intervention which saved the lives of Charles Orr and Lois Orr after they had been arrested in the Stalinist crackdown on the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM). He visited them several times when they were in captivity, securing their release on 1 July 1937, and placing them on a ship bound for Marseilles on 3 July.[2]

Perkins, born in North Adams, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, graduated from Harvard in 1904.[3] He was U.S. Vice Consul in Chefoo, 1911–12; Shanghai, 1915–17; U.S. Consul in Changsha, 1918–20; Tientsin, 1926–27.

In 1978, his son, also named Mahlon F. Perkins (1918–2011), who was born in Shanghai, featured in a scandal that rocked the New York legal profession. The younger Perkins, then a partner in the law firm of Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine, who was representing Kodak, admitted lying in an antitrust case brought against the company. He was sentenced to a month in prison and subsequently became a civil liberties lawyer,[4] volunteering with the Center for Constitutional Rights for over 11 years.

References

  1. Douglas J. Little, Twenty Years of Turmoil: ITT, the State Department, and Spain, 1924–1944, The Business History Review, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Winter, 1979), pp. 449–472
  2. Víctor Alba and Stephen Schwartz, Spanish Marxism versus Soviet communism: a history of the P.O.U.M., ISBN 0-88738-198-7, 1988
  3. http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1902/12/11/prizes-and-scholarships-pfollowing-is-a/
  4. David Margolick, The Long Road Back for a Disgraced Patrician, New York Times, 19 January 1990


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