Thomas Dudley Cabot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornMay 1, 1897
DiedJune 8, 1995 (aged 98)
EducationBuckingham Browne & Nichols (1913)
Harvard University (SB Engineering, 1919)
OccupationBusinessman
Thomas Dudley Cabot
BornMay 1, 1897
DiedJune 8, 1995 (aged 98)
EducationBuckingham Browne & Nichols (1913)
Harvard University (SB Engineering, 1919)
OccupationBusinessman
ParentGodfrey Lowell Cabot (father)

Thomas Dudley Cabot (May 1, 1897[1] – June 8, 1995[3]) was an American businessman. He also became the U.S. Department of State's Director of Office of International Security Affairs.[4]

Cabot was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His father was Godfrey Lowell Cabot,[1] founder of Cabot Corporation[5] and a philanthropist. His mother was Maria Moors Cabot.[1] Cabot was named after Thomas Dudley, the governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony who signed the charter creating Harvard College.[6] Two of his siblings were John Moors Cabot[2] (b. 1901), U.S. Ambassador to Sweden, Colombia, Brazil, and Poland during the Eisenhower and Kennedy administration,[7] and Eleanor Cabot of the Eleanor Cabot Bradley Estate.[8]

Cabot graduated from Browne & Nichols School in 1913.[9] He took some courses at Boston Tech (now known as Massachusetts Institute of Technology)[1] and Curtiss Flying School,[10] becoming a World War I flight instructor at Kelly Field in the U.S. Army Signal Corps,[3] before graduating cum laude from Harvard University with a SB in Engineering, in 1919.[1]

Career

Personal life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI