Louis Joseph Halle Jr. (17 November 1910, New York City – 13 August 1998, Geneva, Switzerland) was an American naturalist, author, U.S. State Department official, and professor of international studies in Geneva. [1]
Halle received his bachelor's degree from Harvard University in 1932.
As a young man, he worked for a railway company in Central America and later with a publishing house in New York. For a year, he did graduate study in anthropology at Harvard, then explored boundary rivers between Guatemala and Mexico by mule and dugout canoe. [1]
He served in the US Army before World War II and in the Coast Guard during World War II. He was a Latin American specialist employed by the US State Department Policy Planning Staff from the mid 1940s to 1954. From 1954 to 1956 at the University of Virginia, he was a researcher on American foreign policy. He became in 1956 a professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva. He retired there as professor emeritus in 1973 but remained in Geneva. [1]
He was the author of 22 books. [1] In 1941 he received the John Burroughs Medal for Birds Against Men. [2]
Louis J. Halle Jr. married Barbara Mark in 1946 and was the father of five children. [1] The famous inventor and philanthropist Hiram Halle was a brother of Louis J. Halle, Sr. [3] and an uncle of Louis J. Halle Jr.
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link)Louis Joseph Halle Jr. (17 November 1910, New York City – 13 August 1998, Geneva, Switzerland) was an American naturalist, author, U.S. State Department official, and professor of international studies in Geneva. [1]
Halle received his bachelor's degree from Harvard University in 1932.
As a young man, he worked for a railway company in Central America and later with a publishing house in New York. For a year, he did graduate study in anthropology at Harvard, then explored boundary rivers between Guatemala and Mexico by mule and dugout canoe. [1]
He served in the US Army before World War II and in the Coast Guard during World War II. He was a Latin American specialist employed by the US State Department Policy Planning Staff from the mid 1940s to 1954. From 1954 to 1956 at the University of Virginia, he was a researcher on American foreign policy. He became in 1956 a professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva. He retired there as professor emeritus in 1973 but remained in Geneva. [1]
He was the author of 22 books. [1] In 1941 he received the John Burroughs Medal for Birds Against Men. [2]
Louis J. Halle Jr. married Barbara Mark in 1946 and was the father of five children. [1] The famous inventor and philanthropist Hiram Halle was a brother of Louis J. Halle, Sr. [3] and an uncle of Louis J. Halle Jr.
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