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George Horton

George Horton (October 11, 1859 – June 5, 1942) was a member of the United States diplomatic corps who held several consular offices in Greece and the Ottoman Empire between 1893 and 1924. During two periods he was the U.S. Consul or Consul General at Smyrna (known as Izmir, Turkey, today), 1911–1917 and 1919–1922.[1] The first ended when the U.S. entered World War I and diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire were terminated. The second covered Greek administration of the city during the Greco-Turkish War. The Greek administration of Smyrna was appointed by the Allied Powers following Turkey's defeat in World War I and the seizure of Smyrna.[citation needed]

George Horton
Born(1859-10-11)October 11, 1859
DiedJune 5, 1942(1942-06-05) (aged 82)
Resting placeOak Hill Cemetery
Washington, D.C.
Alma materGeorge Washington University
Occupations
  • Diplomat
  • writer
Spouse
Catherine Sakopoulos
(m. 1909)
ChildrenNancy Horton

Today Horton is best remembered for The Blight of Asia, his 1926 book about the events, notably the systematic ethnic cleansing of the Christian population, leading up to and during the Great Fire of Smyrna. He briefly summarizes events from 1822 to 1909 and covers in more detail, with eye-witness accounts, events from 1909 to 1922. The title refers to what he considered the abominable behavior of the Ottoman Turks. Horton, in his book records his personal memoirs from life in modern-day-Turkey, while the events he describes are focused on that particular region, and that particular time. The book has been criticised as anti-Turkish by a number of scholars and Horton himself accused of bias against Turks and Muslims.[2][3]

Early life edit

George Horton was born on October 11, 1859, in Fairville in Wayne County, New York.[4] He graduated from George Washington University.[5]

Professional career edit

 
George Horton.

Horton was a literary person. He was a scholar of both Greek and Latin. He translated Sappho, wrote a guide for the interpretation of Scripture, and published several novels. He was also a renowned journalist in Chicago, a party in the so-called Chicago Renaissance.

Journalist edit

Horton started his career as a literary journalist, first as literary editor of the Chicago Times-Herald (1899–1901), then as editor of the literary supplement of the Chicago American (1901–1903).

Diplomat edit

Horton was also both a professional diplomat and a lover of Greece or Philhellene. He became U.S. Consul in Athens in 1893, where he actively promoted the revival of the Olympic Games and inspired the U.S. team's participation. He wrote a lyrical visitor's guide to Athens and composed a reflective description of his stay in Argolis.

Horton served as U.S. Consul in Athens 1893-1898 and 1905–1906. He was US Consul General in Saloniki 1910–1911.

He then served as U.S. Consul in Smyrna 1911–1917, up to the termination of diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire in World War I with the American entry into World War I. He served again after the war from 1919 until the Great Fire began on September 13, 1922, spending the last hours before his own evacuation signing passes for those entitled to American protection and transportation to Piraeus. He has said about his service in Smyrna during those years: "One of the keenest impressions which I brought away with me from Smyrna was a feeling of shame that I belonged to the human race."[6]

The Blight of Asia edit

Today Horton is most remembered for his 1926 book The Blight of Asia[notes 1] which centers on the destruction of Smyrna. The fire ravaged Smyrna starting on September 13, 1922; Horton departed his Consul General's post there on the evening of that day.[7] The fire lasted for 4 days.

Before publication Horton had resigned his diplomatic commission, and he wrote strictly in the capacity of a private citizen, drawing on his own observations and those of the people he quoted.[8] His account remains as controversial as the fire itself.[3]

His account of the forced exodus of Christian inhabitants (Greek and Armenian), by Ottoman Turkish soldiers, chronicles the latter stages of the genocide of Asia Minor's native Christian population.[9]

Contemporary Communications edit

Horton quotes numerous contemporary communications including eyewitness accounts of the massacre of Phocaea in 1914, by a Frenchman, and the Armenian massacres of 1914/15, by an American citizen and by a German missionary. He also published letters that he received at the consulate from Americans living in Smyrna and radio messages that he received while traveling by ship from Smyrna to Athens, which recorded how many lives were being saved by the British Navy.

Review edit

According to James L. Marketos, Horton wanted his book to make four main points.[10]

First, he wanted to illustrate that the catastrophic events in Smyrna were merely "the closing act in a consistent program of exterminating Christianity throughout the length and breadth of the old Byzantine Empire."

Second, he wanted to establish that the Smyrna fire was started by regular Turkish army troops with, as he put it, "fixed purpose, with system, and with painstaking minute details."

Third, he wanted to emphasize that the Allied Powers shamefully elevated their selfish political and economic interests over the plight of the beleaguered Christian populations of Asia Minor, thereby allowing the Smyrna catastrophe to unfold without any effective resistance and, as he said, "without even a word of protest by any civilized government."

And fourth, he wanted to illustrate that pious western Christians were deluded in thinking they were making missionary headway in the Muslim world.

Criticism edit

Historian Biray Kolluoğlu Kırlı has written that "George Horton['s] anti-Turkish bias is crudely explicit".[2] This view is shared by Peter M. Buzanski, who attributed Horton's anti-Turkish stance to his well-known "fanatic" philhellenism and his wife being Greek and wrote "During the Turkish capture of Smyrna, at the end of the Greco-Turkish War, Horton suffered a breakdown, resigned from the diplomatic service, and spent the balance of his life writing anti-Turkish, pro-Greek books."[11] Scholar David Roessel shares a similar view, noting that except for his laments about materialism and the Great War, "Horton reverted to the philhellenic and anti-Turkish rhetoric" in his book.[12]

Another criticism of his work was by Brian Coleman:

George Horton was a man of letters and United States Consul in Greece and Turkey at a time of social and political change. He writes of the re-taking of Smyrna by the Turkish army in September 1922. His account, however, goes beyond the blame and events to a demonization of Muslims, in general, and of Turks, in particular. In several of his novels, written more than two decades before the events of September 1922, he had already identified the Turk as the stock-in-trade villain of Western civilization. In his account of Smyrna, he writes not as historian, but as publicist.[3]

Media coverage edit

The New York Times of September 21 carried a story from Athens attributed to the Associated Press, reporting Horton's account of events in Smyrna. It opened in quotation marks with "the manner in which" he had summarized for the AP: "During my consulship at Saloniki I was bombed by Bulgars and Germans and during my official career I have had many rough experiences with submarines and fire, but never in my life have I seen anything like the Smyrna catastrophe."[13]

Return to the United States edit

Horton's November arrival in New York City was covered by The New York Times primarily in regard to his transport for the American Archaeological Society of thirty gold coins found at Sardis. They were believed to be minted for Croesus, and to represent the earliest coinage of gold anywhere. The story introduced him as "Dr. George Horton, United States Consul General at Smyrna, where he witnessed the burning and sacking of the ancient seaport and the evacuation of 40,000 refugees in five days  ..." and closed with two paragraphs on Smyrna service, including recent personal loss of property and upcoming consultation in Washington concerning missing Americans.[14]

During the Smyrna catastrophe, Turkish military officer Nureddin Pasha had turned Metropolitan Chrysostomos over to an angry mob. The bishop was barbarically beaten, mutilated and killed.[15] Horton reportedly said,[when?]

I have known Monsigneur Chrysostomos for years. He was an active and enthusiastic exponent of Greek ambitions and ideals which it seems to me was quite natural in him as a Greek ... Greeks set him down in their history as a hero and martyr.[15]

Personal life edit

 
Grave of Horton at Oak Hill Cemetery

In 1909, Horton married Catherine Sakopoulos and they had one daughter, Nancy Horton.[4]

Horton died on June 5, 1942, after returning from Budapest on the Drottningholm.[5] He was buried at Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington, D.C.[16][17]

See also edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to George Horton at Wikimedia Commons
  • Works by or about George Horton at Internet Archive
  • The Blight of Asia (1926), full text at Hellenic Resources Network — unpaged with color highlights
  • George Horton at Library of Congress Authorities — with 19 catalog records

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Horton, George, The Blight of Asia, An Account of the Systematic Extermination of Christian Populations by Mohammedans and of the Culpability of Certain Great Powers; with a True Story of the Burning of Smyrna, Foreword by James W. Gerard, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1926. online
  • Horton, George, The Blight of Asia, An Account of the Systematic Extermination of Christian Populations by Mohammedans and of the Culpability of Certain Great Powers; with the True Story of the Burning of Smyrna, Foreword by James W. Gerard, Introduction by James L. Marketos, London: Gomidas Institute (Sterndale Classics), 2nd edition, 2008, ISBN 978-1903656-79-2. (1st edition 2003?)

Citations edit

  1. ^ Horton 2003, p. 105.
  2. ^ a b Kırlı, Biray Kolluoğlu (2005). "Forgetting the Smyrna Fire" (PDF). History Workshop Journal. 60 (60). Oxford University Press: 25–44. doi:10.1093/hwj/dbi005. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Coleman, Brian, "George Horton: the literary diplomat", Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, Volume 30, Number 1, January 2006, pp. 81-93(13). DOI:10.1179/030701306X96618 (subscription required)
  4. ^ a b "Horton", Index to Politicians, Political Graveyard (politicalgraveyard.com).
  5. ^ a b "Rites For George Horton To Be Today; Returned Aboard Drottningholm". The Baltimore Sun. 1942-06-10. p. 6. Retrieved 2022-08-17 – via Newspapers.com. 
  6. ^ Niki Karavasilis (2010). The Whispering Voice of Smyrna. Dorrance Publishing. p. 201. ISBN 978-1-4349-6381-9.
  7. ^ The Blight of Asia, p. 3 of the introduction
  8. ^ Introduction, p. I
  9. ^ Horton 2003, back cover.
  10. ^ Marketos, James L., "George Horton: An American Witness in Smyrna" 2011-07-09 at the Wayback Machine, American Hellenic Institute Noon Forum, September 14, 2006.
  11. ^ Buzanski, Peter Michael (1960). Admiral Mark L. Bristol and Turkish-American Relations, 1919-1922. University of California, Berkeley. p. 176.
  12. ^ Roessel, David (2001). In Byron's Shadow : Modern Greece in the English and American Imagination: Modern Greece in the English and American Imagination. Oxford University Press. pp. 327–8. ISBN 9780198032908.
  13. ^ "Our Smyrna Consul Praises Americans: Horton, in Athens, Says Countrymen Disregarded Their Own Safety to Aid Distressed", The New York Times, September 21, 1922, p. 3.
  14. ^ "Brings Gold Coins Minted by Croesus: Dr. George Horton, Consul General at Smyrna, Arrives with Thirty Specimens", The New York Times, November 4, 1922, p. 28.
  15. ^ a b Stavridis, Stavros T., "Remembering Chrysostomos: a modern day martyr", National Centre for Hellenic Studies and Research, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia. (Reprinted by?) The Chian Foundation.[full citation needed]
  16. ^ "Nancy Phyllis Horton Dies in Athens at 103". Hellenic News. 2016-02-23. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  17. ^ "Oak Hill Cemetery, Georgetown, D.C. (Rock Creek) - Lot 711 East" (PDF). Oak Hill Cemetery. (PDF) from the original on 2022-03-02. Retrieved 2022-08-17.

george, horton, other, people, named, disambiguation, october, 1859, june, 1942, member, united, states, diplomatic, corps, held, several, consular, offices, greece, ottoman, empire, between, 1893, 1924, during, periods, consul, consul, general, smyrna, known,. For other people named George Horton see George Horton disambiguation George Horton October 11 1859 June 5 1942 was a member of the United States diplomatic corps who held several consular offices in Greece and the Ottoman Empire between 1893 and 1924 During two periods he was the U S Consul or Consul General at Smyrna known as Izmir Turkey today 1911 1917 and 1919 1922 1 The first ended when the U S entered World War I and diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire were terminated The second covered Greek administration of the city during the Greco Turkish War The Greek administration of Smyrna was appointed by the Allied Powers following Turkey s defeat in World War I and the seizure of Smyrna citation needed George HortonBorn 1859 10 11 October 11 1859Wayne County New YorkDiedJune 5 1942 1942 06 05 aged 82 Resting placeOak Hill CemeteryWashington D C Alma materGeorge Washington UniversityOccupationsDiplomatwriterSpouseCatherine Sakopoulos m 1909 wbr ChildrenNancy HortonToday Horton is best remembered for The Blight of Asia his 1926 book about the events notably the systematic ethnic cleansing of the Christian population leading up to and during the Great Fire of Smyrna He briefly summarizes events from 1822 to 1909 and covers in more detail with eye witness accounts events from 1909 to 1922 The title refers to what he considered the abominable behavior of the Ottoman Turks Horton in his book records his personal memoirs from life in modern day Turkey while the events he describes are focused on that particular region and that particular time The book has been criticised as anti Turkish by a number of scholars and Horton himself accused of bias against Turks and Muslims 2 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Professional career 2 1 Journalist 2 2 Diplomat 3 The Blight of Asia 3 1 Contemporary Communications 3 2 Review 3 3 Criticism 4 Media coverage 5 Return to the United States 6 Personal life 7 See also 8 External links 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 CitationsEarly life editGeorge Horton was born on October 11 1859 in Fairville in Wayne County New York 4 He graduated from George Washington University 5 Professional career edit nbsp George Horton Horton was a literary person He was a scholar of both Greek and Latin He translated Sappho wrote a guide for the interpretation of Scripture and published several novels He was also a renowned journalist in Chicago a party in the so called Chicago Renaissance Journalist edit Horton started his career as a literary journalist first as literary editor of the Chicago Times Herald 1899 1901 then as editor of the literary supplement of the Chicago American 1901 1903 Diplomat edit Horton was also both a professional diplomat and a lover of Greece or Philhellene He became U S Consul in Athens in 1893 where he actively promoted the revival of the Olympic Games and inspired the U S team s participation He wrote a lyrical visitor s guide to Athens and composed a reflective description of his stay in Argolis Horton served as U S Consul in Athens 1893 1898 and 1905 1906 He was US Consul General in Saloniki 1910 1911 He then served as U S Consul in Smyrna 1911 1917 up to the termination of diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire in World War I with the American entry into World War I He served again after the war from 1919 until the Great Fire began on September 13 1922 spending the last hours before his own evacuation signing passes for those entitled to American protection and transportation to Piraeus He has said about his service in Smyrna during those years One of the keenest impressions which I brought away with me from Smyrna was a feeling of shame that I belonged to the human race 6 The Blight of Asia editToday Horton is most remembered for his 1926 book The Blight of Asia notes 1 which centers on the destruction of Smyrna The fire ravaged Smyrna starting on September 13 1922 Horton departed his Consul General s post there on the evening of that day 7 The fire lasted for 4 days Before publication Horton had resigned his diplomatic commission and he wrote strictly in the capacity of a private citizen drawing on his own observations and those of the people he quoted 8 His account remains as controversial as the fire itself 3 His account of the forced exodus of Christian inhabitants Greek and Armenian by Ottoman Turkish soldiers chronicles the latter stages of the genocide of Asia Minor s native Christian population 9 Contemporary Communications edit Horton quotes numerous contemporary communications including eyewitness accounts of the massacre of Phocaea in 1914 by a Frenchman and the Armenian massacres of 1914 15 by an American citizen and by a German missionary He also published letters that he received at the consulate from Americans living in Smyrna and radio messages that he received while traveling by ship from Smyrna to Athens which recorded how many lives were being saved by the British Navy Review edit According to James L Marketos Horton wanted his book to make four main points 10 First he wanted to illustrate that the catastrophic events in Smyrna were merely the closing act in a consistent program of exterminating Christianity throughout the length and breadth of the old Byzantine Empire Second he wanted to establish that the Smyrna fire was started by regular Turkish army troops with as he put it fixed purpose with system and with painstaking minute details Third he wanted to emphasize that the Allied Powers shamefully elevated their selfish political and economic interests over the plight of the beleaguered Christian populations of Asia Minor thereby allowing the Smyrna catastrophe to unfold without any effective resistance and as he said without even a word of protest by any civilized government And fourth he wanted to illustrate that pious western Christians were deluded in thinking they were making missionary headway in the Muslim world Criticism edit Historian Biray Kolluoglu Kirli has written that George Horton s anti Turkish bias is crudely explicit 2 This view is shared by Peter M Buzanski who attributed Horton s anti Turkish stance to his well known fanatic philhellenism and his wife being Greek and wrote During the Turkish capture of Smyrna at the end of the Greco Turkish War Horton suffered a breakdown resigned from the diplomatic service and spent the balance of his life writing anti Turkish pro Greek books 11 Scholar David Roessel shares a similar view noting that except for his laments about materialism and the Great War Horton reverted to the philhellenic and anti Turkish rhetoric in his book 12 Another criticism of his work was by Brian Coleman George Horton was a man of letters and United States Consul in Greece and Turkey at a time of social and political change He writes of the re taking of Smyrna by the Turkish army in September 1922 His account however goes beyond the blame and events to a demonization of Muslims in general and of Turks in particular In several of his novels written more than two decades before the events of September 1922 he had already identified the Turk as the stock in trade villain of Western civilization In his account of Smyrna he writes not as historian but as publicist 3 Media coverage editThe New York Times of September 21 carried a story from Athens attributed to the Associated Press reporting Horton s account of events in Smyrna It opened in quotation marks with the manner in which he had summarized for the AP During my consulship at Saloniki I was bombed by Bulgars and Germans and during my official career I have had many rough experiences with submarines and fire but never in my life have I seen anything like the Smyrna catastrophe 13 Return to the United States editHorton s November arrival in New York City was covered by The New York Times primarily in regard to his transport for the American Archaeological Society of thirty gold coins found at Sardis They were believed to be minted for Croesus and to represent the earliest coinage of gold anywhere The story introduced him as Dr George Horton United States Consul General at Smyrna where he witnessed the burning and sacking of the ancient seaport and the evacuation of 40 000 refugees in five days and closed with two paragraphs on Smyrna service including recent personal loss of property and upcoming consultation in Washington concerning missing Americans 14 During the Smyrna catastrophe Turkish military officer Nureddin Pasha had turned Metropolitan Chrysostomos over to an angry mob The bishop was barbarically beaten mutilated and killed 15 Horton reportedly said when I have known Monsigneur Chrysostomos for years He was an active and enthusiastic exponent of Greek ambitions and ideals which it seems to me was quite natural in him as a Greek Greeks set him down in their history as a hero and martyr 15 Personal life edit nbsp Grave of Horton at Oak Hill CemeteryIn 1909 Horton married Catherine Sakopoulos and they had one daughter Nancy Horton 4 Horton died on June 5 1942 after returning from Budapest on the Drottningholm 5 He was buried at Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington D C 16 17 See also editWitnesses and testimonies of the Armenian genocideExternal links edit nbsp Media related to George Horton at Wikimedia Commons Works by or about George Horton at Internet Archive The Blight of Asia 1926 full text at Hellenic Resources Network unpaged with color highlights George Horton at Library of Congress Authorities with 19 catalog recordsReferences editNotes edit Horton George The Blight of Asia An Account of the Systematic Extermination of Christian Populations by Mohammedans and of the Culpability of Certain Great Powers with a True Story of the Burning of Smyrna Foreword by James W Gerard Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill 1926 online Horton George The Blight of Asia An Account of the Systematic Extermination of Christian Populations by Mohammedans and of the Culpability of Certain Great Powers with the True Story of the Burning of Smyrna Foreword by James W Gerard Introduction by James L Marketos London Gomidas Institute Sterndale Classics 2nd edition 2008 ISBN 978 1903656 79 2 1st edition 2003 Citations edit Horton 2003 p 105 a b Kirli Biray Kolluoglu 2005 Forgetting the Smyrna Fire PDF History Workshop Journal 60 60 Oxford University Press 25 44 doi 10 1093 hwj dbi005 Retrieved 10 March 2016 a b c Coleman Brian George Horton the literary diplomat Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies Volume 30 Number 1 January 2006 pp 81 93 13 DOI 10 1179 030701306X96618 subscription required a b Horton Index to Politicians Political Graveyard politicalgraveyard com a b Rites For George Horton To Be Today Returned Aboard Drottningholm The Baltimore Sun 1942 06 10 p 6 Retrieved 2022 08 17 via Newspapers com nbsp Niki Karavasilis 2010 The Whispering Voice of Smyrna Dorrance Publishing p 201 ISBN 978 1 4349 6381 9 The Blight of Asia p 3 of the introduction Introduction p I Horton 2003 back cover Marketos James L George Horton An American Witness in Smyrna Archived 2011 07 09 at the Wayback Machine American Hellenic Institute Noon Forum September 14 2006 Buzanski Peter Michael 1960 Admiral Mark L Bristol and Turkish American Relations 1919 1922 University of California Berkeley p 176 Roessel David 2001 In Byron s Shadow Modern Greece in the English and American Imagination Modern Greece in the English and American Imagination Oxford University Press pp 327 8 ISBN 9780198032908 Our Smyrna Consul Praises Americans Horton in Athens Says Countrymen Disregarded Their Own Safety to Aid Distressed The New York Times September 21 1922 p 3 Brings Gold Coins Minted by Croesus Dr George Horton Consul General at Smyrna Arrives with Thirty Specimens The New York Times November 4 1922 p 28 a b Stavridis Stavros T Remembering Chrysostomos a modern day martyr National Centre for Hellenic Studies and Research La Trobe University Melbourne Australia Reprinted by The Chian Foundation full citation needed Nancy Phyllis Horton Dies in Athens at 103 Hellenic News 2016 02 23 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Oak Hill Cemetery Georgetown D C Rock Creek Lot 711 East PDF Oak Hill Cemetery Archived PDF from the original on 2022 03 02 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Horton amp oldid 1174816692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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