Thursday, December 14, 2017

Julia and Paul Child: Blast from the Past on U.S. public Diplomacy




Image, not from entry (assume it's authentic) from

Paul Cushing Child

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Cushing Child
BornJanuary 15, 1902
Montclair, New Jersey, US
DiedMay 12, 1994 (aged 92)
Lexington, Massachusetts, US
Occupation
Spouse(s)Julia Child
(1946–1994; his death)
Paul Cushing Child (January 15, 1902 – May 12, 1994) was an American civil servant and diplomat. He is best known as the husband of celebrity chef Julia Child.

Early life[edit]

Child was born in Montclair, New Jersey, on January 15, 1902, to Bertha Cushing and Charles Tripler Child.[1] When he and his twin brother Charles were six months old, their father died and the twins moved with their mother to her family's home in Boston, where Paul attended Boston Latin School. He took an extension course at Columbia College and later became a teacher in FranceItaly, and the United States, giving instruction in various subjects including photography, English, and French. In 1941, while at Avon Old Farms School, he was a teacher and mentor to John Gillespie Magee, Jr., who later wrote the famous poem "High Flight." Child also taught judo and was a fourth degree black belt.[2][3][4]

Government service and marriage[edit]

During World War II, Child joined the OSS. While stationed in Kandy, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka); he met Julia McWilliams, who also worked for the OSS. They married on September 1, 1946, in Lumberville, Pennsylvania,[5] and later moved to Washington, D.C. Child was known for his sophisticated palate. [6] After he finished his work with the OSS, Child joined the United States Foreign Service and introduced his wife to fine cuisine. In 1948, the U.S. State Department assigned Child to be an exhibits officer with the United States Information Agency. [JB NOTE: There appears to be an error here: USIA was established in 1953. Perhaps the author of this Wiki entry is referring to USIS [United States Information Service, a "cultural/informational" arm of the US government, which existed in 1948 (overseas) and then, after USIA was established, became USIA's designation overseas.] While in Paris, his wife took up cooking and became a student at the famed Paris cooking school, Le Cordon Bleu.
After five years in Paris, Child was reassigned to MarseilleBonn, and Oslo.
In April 1955, he was summoned from Bonn to undergo interrogation in Washington, D.C. While there, he was questioned about his political beliefs and the political beliefs of his co-workers. Specifically, he was questioned about Jane Foster, a friend of the Childs' during World War II. Feeling his privacy had been violated through the interrogation, Child and his wife's oppositions to the Senate investigations were reinforced.[7]
Child retired from government service in 1961.

Later years[edit]

Following his retirement, the Childs moved to CambridgeMassachusetts, where his wife wrote cookbooks and he supplied photographs and illustrations for them. Child was also known as a poet who frequently wrote about his wife. His prose was later celebrated in an authorized biography of Julia. In Appetite for Life, portions of the letters he wrote to his twin brother, Charles, while the Childs lived abroad were included as illustration of his love and admiration for his wife and her cooking skills and talent.[8]
Paul Child died at a nursing home in LexingtonMassachusetts, on May 12, 1994, following a long illness. His widow died ten years later, on August 13, 2004.
Paul Child was portrayed by Stanley Tucci in the 2009 comedy-drama film Julie & Julia, which was adapted in part from Julia Child's memoir My Life in France.
***
JB personal note: The Childs and my diplomat father were friends, in part (I would say) because of their shared interest in gastronomy and affection for France. On Julia Child and my father's papers at Georgetown, see.

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