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Philip Bonsal

Philip Wilson Bonsal (May 22, 1903 – June 28, 1995) was an American career diplomat with the U.S. Department of State. A specialist in Latin American affairs, he served as United States Ambassador to Cuba from February 1959 until October 1960, the first months of the Castro regime.

Philip Bonsal
United States Ambassador to Morocco
In office
May 24, 1961 – August 8, 1962
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Preceded byCharles Woodruff Yost
Succeeded byJohn H. Ferguson
United States Ambassador to Cuba
In office
March 3, 1959 – October 28, 1960
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byEarl E. T. Smith
Succeeded byJeffrey DeLaurentis (Acting, in 2015)
United States Ambassador to Bolivia
In office
May 10, 1957 – February 6, 1959
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byGerald A. Drew
Succeeded byCarl W. Strom
United States Ambassador to Colombia
In office
April 1, 1955 – April 24, 1957
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byRudolf E. Schoenfeld
Succeeded byJohn M. Cabot
Personal details
Born(1903-05-22)May 22, 1903
New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 28, 1995(1995-06-28) (aged 92)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
SpouseMargaret Lockett
Parent(s)Stephen Bonsal
Henrietta Morris
Relatives

Early years

Bonsal was born in New York City on May 22, 1903. His father was Stephen Bonsal (1865–1951), a well-known journalist who served several years in the US diplomatic corps, wrote several books, and won a Pulitzer Prize.[1][a] The Bonsals descended from English Quakers who participated in founding the colony of Pennsylvania in 1682.[2] His mother was Henrietta Morris, a descendant of Gouverneur Morris, a leader in the American Revolution.[3] He had three brothers,[4] including New York judge Dudley Baldwin Bonsal.

Bonsal's early education took place in the Philippines and Switzerland.[5] He graduated from Yale in 1924.[6]

Bonsal married Margaret Lockett of Knoxville, Tennessee, circa 1929.[5]

After living in Cuba for several months as a student trainee with the Cuban Telephone Company,[7] Bonsal worked in Spain and Chile for its parent company, International Telephone & Telegraph, rising to become chief of its Latin American Division. He then entered government service as a specialist in telephone services with the Federal Communications Commission,[5] where he remained from 1935 to 1937.[8]

Bonsal was fluent in Spanish.[5]

Diplomatic service

Bonsal joined the State Department in 1937.[5] He was Vice Consul and Third Secretary in the US embassy in Havana in 1938 and 1939, followed by a year in Washington as Cuban desk officer at the State Department.[7]

While on the staff of the US embassy in Bolivia in 1944, he tried without success to persuade the State Department to ignore the rhetoric of Bolivia's radical opposition parties, which he excused as reflexive opposition to the recently ousted pro-American regime of Enrique Peñaranda. He told Secretary of State Cordell Hull that the Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario (MNR) embodied the "legitimate and respectable... aspirations of certain sectors of the Bolivian people." Instead, the US forced President Gualberto Villarroel to remove members of the MNR from his cabinet.[9]

Bonsal served as an adviser at the 1954 Geneva Conference on Korea and Indochina.[10]

Colombia

Eisenhower nominated Bonsal as United States Ambassador to Colombia in February 1955.[10] The US Senate confirmed the appointment on February 11,[11] and he presented his credentials on April 1. He maintained friendly relations with opposition politicians, angering Colombian dictator General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla,[5] who persuaded the State Department to reassign him.[7]

In January 1957, representing the US at the United Nations General Assembly's Special Political Committee, he supported a Philippine proposal, endorsed by representatives of Peru, Nepal, and other nations, for the UN to modify its confrontational approach in fighting apartheid in South Africa and to shift to tactics that would promote discussion and recognize the problem of racial discrimination in other countries as well.[12]

Eisenhower nominated him as United States Ambassador to Bolivia on March 18, 1957.[13] He concluded his service in Colombia on April 24, 1957.

Bolivia

Bonsal served as United States Ambassador to Bolivia from 1957 to 1959. He wholeheartedly supported the US economic assistance program under way there, which he later described as a "pioneer" and "solitary example" of what was required of the US in Latin America.[7]

Cuba

In January 1959, Eisenhower named Bonsal United States Ambassador to Cuba just days after Fidel Castro came to power. The New York Times called his appointment "a splendid choice" and described him as "a distinguished career diplomat" with "every qualification that could be asked for the difficult and gratifying task he is taking on."[14] Bonsal's predecessor, Earl E. T. Smith, had maintained friendly relations with Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista and was quickly recalled by the State Department after Batista's ouster. It has been argued that the choice of Bonsal signaled an intention on the part of the State Department to defuse the Cuban Revolution in the same way that it had defused the Bolivian Revolution of 1952.[15]

Bonsal attempted to find a working arrangement with the leader of the new government. Bonsal admitted that "animosity was inevitable" but that he was hopeful that "at some point we can get down to a reasoned dialogue."[16] Castro was critical of the arrival of Bonsal in the Cuban press and compared him to a colonial viceroy,[17] and dialogue was not easily forthcoming.

When Bonsal testified before a closed session of the House Committee on Foreign Relations in May 1959, he explained why the revolution had such widespread popular support: "the corruption and the sadism of many Batista henchmen united most Cubans against the regime." He described how Batista's security forces had killed many while "many, many more were arrested on no charges and kept in jail for indefinite periods."[18]

In August, he protested to Secretary of State Herter that Cuban-American relations were being poisoned by the fact that the US was allowing several hundred Batista allies to live in the country, which appeared to the Cubans as harboring counter-revolutionaries. He urged them to be forced to "move on to some other country."[19]

On September 3, 1959, Bonsal met with Castro and express concern that American businesses, which had complied fully with the Land Reform Law, were concerned that government agents were acting arbitrarily and without legal sanction. He complained of anti-American comments by Guevara, who was then on a world tour. Castro advised patience and forbearance with "the exuberances of young and inexperienced revolutionaries."[20]

In October 1959, Castro called the US "accomplices" of Batista loyalists forces who had launched air attacks on Cuba. Bonsal lodged a formal protest with Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticós on October 27 and blamed Castro for the deterioration of relations.[21]

In mid-1960, the Cuban government reached an agreement to sell 700,000 tons of sugar to the Soviet Union, leading to a series of escalating actions by the US and Cuba. The US suspended sugar imports, Cuba nationalized American-owned businesses, and on October 19, the US imposed an embargo on US exports to Cuba except for food and medicine. Bonsal thought the Eisenhower administration was over-reacting and forcing Castro into an alliance with the Soviets.[22]

After Castro called for a reduction in the staff of the US embassy in Havana, Bonsal was recalled to Washington in October 1960.

Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries were severed shortly afterward, and US diplomatic representation in Cuba was handled by the United States Interests Section in Havana, part of the embassy of Switzerland. That arrangement lasted until July 20, 2015, with the culmination of the Cuban Thaw.

Some leading members of the US Congress felt his attempt at a conciliatory approach to the Castro regime represented an appeasement of communism.

Morocco

Bonsal was United States Ambassador to Morocco from 1961 to 1962. He retired from government service in 1965.[5]

Later years

As of 1971, he called for "disengagement from a bankrupt Vietnam policy" by noting that China and Russia had invested comparatively modest resources in the conflict, compared to the American loss of 40,000 lives. He hoped that all the major powers would nevertheless recognize that "big-power confrontation by proxy is so repulsively destructive of the welfare of the proxies as to render its repetition elsewhere inconceivable".

He also described the Pentagon Papers as "stolen property" and objected to those who ignored the violation of government secrecy standards because the revelations supported their political judgment.[23]

Bonsal published a memoir, "Cuba, Castro and the United States," in 1971.[24]

Bonsal died of pneumonia on June 28, 1995, at the age of 92. He was survived by his wife.[5]

His papers are held by the Library of Congress.[25]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Stephen Bonsal covered the Spanish–American War and many other conflicts for the New York Herald and reported on the revolution in Mexico for the New York Times in 1910–1911. He spent several years in the U.S. diplomatic corps and served as President Wilson's translator at the Paris Peace Conference. Among his eight books, his memoir of the Versailles Peace Conference won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1945.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "Col. Bonsal Dead; Journalist was 86" (PDF). New York Times. June 9, 1951. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  2. ^ "A Voice for Liberty: Dudley Baldwin Bonsal" (PDF). New York Times. July 9, 1956. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  3. ^ "Mrs. Stephen Bonsal" (PDF). New York Times. July 17, 1955. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  4. ^ "Stephen Bonsal Jr., Set 1918 Air Record" (PDF). New York Times. October 29, 1950. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Binder, David (July 1, 1985). "Philip W. Bonsal, 92, Last U.S. Envoy to Cuba". New York Times. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  6. ^ Kenworthy, E.W. (January 14, 1959). "U.S. Said to Pick Envoy to Havana" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d Bonsal, Philip W. (1971). Cuba, Castro, and the United States. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 26–7.
  8. ^ Bonsal, Philip W. (1971). Cuba, Castro, and the United States. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 46.
  9. ^ Dorn, Glenn J. (2011). The Truman Administration and Bolivia. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 16.
  10. ^ a b "Ambassador Nominated" (PDF). New York Times. February 5, 1955. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  11. ^ "Envoy to Colombia Confirmed" (PDF). New York Times. February 12, 1955. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  12. ^ McLaughlin, Kathleen (January 17, 1957). "U.S. Eases Stand on South Africa" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  13. ^ "Sentae Unit Vote Backs Whittaker" (PDF). New York Times. March 19, 1957. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  14. ^ "Havana and Washington" (PDF). New York Times. January 23, 1959. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  15. ^ Rabe, Stephen G. (1988). Eisenhower and Latin America: The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina press. p. 126. ISBN 0807842044.
  16. ^ Diplomat Recalls Cuba Break in 1961 Wayne Smith Library of Congress country notes According to reports
  17. ^ Cuba: The United States and Batista, 1952-58 Hugh Thomas
  18. ^ Colhoun, Jack (2013). Gangsterismo: The United States, Cuba and the Mafia, 1933 to 1966. OR Books. ISBN 9781935928904.
  19. ^ Colhoun, Jack (2013). Gangsterismo: The United States, Cuba and the Mafia, 1933 to 1966. OR Books. ISBN 9781935928904.
  20. ^ Bonsal, Philip W. (1971). Cuba, Castro, and the United States. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 89–91.
  21. ^ Colhoun, Jack (2013). Gangsterismo: The United States, Cuba and the Mafia, 1933 to 1966. OR Books. ISBN 9781935928904.
  22. ^ Colhoun, Jack (2013). Gangsterismo: The United States, Cuba and the Mafia, 1933 to 1966. OR Books. ISBN 9781935928904.
  23. ^ Bonsal, Philip W. (August 6, 1971). "Perspective on Papers" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  24. ^ Raymont, Henry (November 14, 1971). "U.S. Shift on Cuba in 1960 Detailed" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  25. ^ "Philip W. Bonsal papers, 1914-1992". Library of Congress. Retrieved January 31, 2016.

External links

  • U.S. Dept. of State, Office of the Historian: Philip Wilson Bonsal (1903-1995)
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Colombia
April 1, 1955 – April 24, 1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Bolivia
May 10, 1957 – February 6, 1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Cuba
March 3, 1959 – October 28, 1960
Succeeded by
Jeffrey DeLaurentis1
beginning 2015
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Morocco
May 24, 1961 – August 8, 1962
Succeeded by
Notes and references
1. The U.S. and Cuba did not have bilateral diplomatic relations between 1961 and 2015.

philip, bonsal, philip, wilson, bonsal, 1903, june, 1995, american, career, diplomat, with, department, state, specialist, latin, american, affairs, served, united, states, ambassador, cuba, from, february, 1959, until, october, 1960, first, months, castro, re. Philip Wilson Bonsal May 22 1903 June 28 1995 was an American career diplomat with the U S Department of State A specialist in Latin American affairs he served as United States Ambassador to Cuba from February 1959 until October 1960 the first months of the Castro regime Philip BonsalUnited States Ambassador to MoroccoIn office May 24 1961 August 8 1962PresidentJohn F KennedyPreceded byCharles Woodruff YostSucceeded byJohn H FergusonUnited States Ambassador to CubaIn office March 3 1959 October 28 1960PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byEarl E T SmithSucceeded byJeffrey DeLaurentis Acting in 2015 United States Ambassador to BoliviaIn office May 10 1957 February 6 1959PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byGerald A DrewSucceeded byCarl W StromUnited States Ambassador to ColombiaIn office April 1 1955 April 24 1957PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byRudolf E SchoenfeldSucceeded byJohn M CabotPersonal detailsBorn 1903 05 22 May 22 1903New York City U S DiedJune 28 1995 1995 06 28 aged 92 Washington D C U S SpouseMargaret LockettParent s Stephen BonsalHenrietta MorrisRelativesDudley Baldwin Bonsal brother Gouverneur Morris Jr great grandfather Gouverneur Morris great great grandfather Contents 1 Early years 2 Diplomatic service 2 1 Colombia 2 2 Bolivia 2 3 Cuba 2 4 Morocco 3 Later years 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly years EditBonsal was born in New York City on May 22 1903 His father was Stephen Bonsal 1865 1951 a well known journalist who served several years in the US diplomatic corps wrote several books and won a Pulitzer Prize 1 a The Bonsals descended from English Quakers who participated in founding the colony of Pennsylvania in 1682 2 His mother was Henrietta Morris a descendant of Gouverneur Morris a leader in the American Revolution 3 He had three brothers 4 including New York judge Dudley Baldwin Bonsal Bonsal s early education took place in the Philippines and Switzerland 5 He graduated from Yale in 1924 6 Bonsal married Margaret Lockett of Knoxville Tennessee circa 1929 5 After living in Cuba for several months as a student trainee with the Cuban Telephone Company 7 Bonsal worked in Spain and Chile for its parent company International Telephone amp Telegraph rising to become chief of its Latin American Division He then entered government service as a specialist in telephone services with the Federal Communications Commission 5 where he remained from 1935 to 1937 8 Bonsal was fluent in Spanish 5 Diplomatic service EditBonsal joined the State Department in 1937 5 He was Vice Consul and Third Secretary in the US embassy in Havana in 1938 and 1939 followed by a year in Washington as Cuban desk officer at the State Department 7 While on the staff of the US embassy in Bolivia in 1944 he tried without success to persuade the State Department to ignore the rhetoric of Bolivia s radical opposition parties which he excused as reflexive opposition to the recently ousted pro American regime of Enrique Penaranda He told Secretary of State Cordell Hull that the Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario MNR embodied the legitimate and respectable aspirations of certain sectors of the Bolivian people Instead the US forced President Gualberto Villarroel to remove members of the MNR from his cabinet 9 Bonsal served as an adviser at the 1954 Geneva Conference on Korea and Indochina 10 Colombia Edit Eisenhower nominated Bonsal as United States Ambassador to Colombia in February 1955 10 The US Senate confirmed the appointment on February 11 11 and he presented his credentials on April 1 He maintained friendly relations with opposition politicians angering Colombian dictator General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla 5 who persuaded the State Department to reassign him 7 In January 1957 representing the US at the United Nations General Assembly s Special Political Committee he supported a Philippine proposal endorsed by representatives of Peru Nepal and other nations for the UN to modify its confrontational approach in fighting apartheid in South Africa and to shift to tactics that would promote discussion and recognize the problem of racial discrimination in other countries as well 12 Eisenhower nominated him as United States Ambassador to Bolivia on March 18 1957 13 He concluded his service in Colombia on April 24 1957 Bolivia Edit Bonsal served as United States Ambassador to Bolivia from 1957 to 1959 He wholeheartedly supported the US economic assistance program under way there which he later described as a pioneer and solitary example of what was required of the US in Latin America 7 Cuba Edit In January 1959 Eisenhower named Bonsal United States Ambassador to Cuba just days after Fidel Castro came to power The New York Times called his appointment a splendid choice and described him as a distinguished career diplomat with every qualification that could be asked for the difficult and gratifying task he is taking on 14 Bonsal s predecessor Earl E T Smith had maintained friendly relations with Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista and was quickly recalled by the State Department after Batista s ouster It has been argued that the choice of Bonsal signaled an intention on the part of the State Department to defuse the Cuban Revolution in the same way that it had defused the Bolivian Revolution of 1952 15 Bonsal attempted to find a working arrangement with the leader of the new government Bonsal admitted that animosity was inevitable but that he was hopeful that at some point we can get down to a reasoned dialogue 16 Castro was critical of the arrival of Bonsal in the Cuban press and compared him to a colonial viceroy 17 and dialogue was not easily forthcoming When Bonsal testified before a closed session of the House Committee on Foreign Relations in May 1959 he explained why the revolution had such widespread popular support the corruption and the sadism of many Batista henchmen united most Cubans against the regime He described how Batista s security forces had killed many while many many more were arrested on no charges and kept in jail for indefinite periods 18 In August he protested to Secretary of State Herter that Cuban American relations were being poisoned by the fact that the US was allowing several hundred Batista allies to live in the country which appeared to the Cubans as harboring counter revolutionaries He urged them to be forced to move on to some other country 19 On September 3 1959 Bonsal met with Castro and express concern that American businesses which had complied fully with the Land Reform Law were concerned that government agents were acting arbitrarily and without legal sanction He complained of anti American comments by Guevara who was then on a world tour Castro advised patience and forbearance with the exuberances of young and inexperienced revolutionaries 20 In October 1959 Castro called the US accomplices of Batista loyalists forces who had launched air attacks on Cuba Bonsal lodged a formal protest with Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos on October 27 and blamed Castro for the deterioration of relations 21 In mid 1960 the Cuban government reached an agreement to sell 700 000 tons of sugar to the Soviet Union leading to a series of escalating actions by the US and Cuba The US suspended sugar imports Cuba nationalized American owned businesses and on October 19 the US imposed an embargo on US exports to Cuba except for food and medicine Bonsal thought the Eisenhower administration was over reacting and forcing Castro into an alliance with the Soviets 22 After Castro called for a reduction in the staff of the US embassy in Havana Bonsal was recalled to Washington in October 1960 Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries were severed shortly afterward and US diplomatic representation in Cuba was handled by the United States Interests Section in Havana part of the embassy of Switzerland That arrangement lasted until July 20 2015 with the culmination of the Cuban Thaw Some leading members of the US Congress felt his attempt at a conciliatory approach to the Castro regime represented an appeasement of communism Morocco Edit Bonsal was United States Ambassador to Morocco from 1961 to 1962 He retired from government service in 1965 5 Later years EditAs of 1971 he called for disengagement from a bankrupt Vietnam policy by noting that China and Russia had invested comparatively modest resources in the conflict compared to the American loss of 40 000 lives He hoped that all the major powers would nevertheless recognize that big power confrontation by proxy is so repulsively destructive of the welfare of the proxies as to render its repetition elsewhere inconceivable He also described the Pentagon Papers as stolen property and objected to those who ignored the violation of government secrecy standards because the revelations supported their political judgment 23 Bonsal published a memoir Cuba Castro and the United States in 1971 24 Bonsal died of pneumonia on June 28 1995 at the age of 92 He was survived by his wife 5 His papers are held by the Library of Congress 25 See also Edit Cuba portal Politics portalCuba United States relations History of CubaNotes Edit Stephen Bonsal covered the Spanish American War and many other conflicts for the New York Herald and reported on the revolution in Mexico for the New York Times in 1910 1911 He spent several years in the U S diplomatic corps and served as President Wilson s translator at the Paris Peace Conference Among his eight books his memoir of the Versailles Peace Conference won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1945 1 References Edit a b Col Bonsal Dead Journalist was 86 PDF New York Times June 9 1951 Retrieved January 30 2016 A Voice for Liberty Dudley Baldwin Bonsal PDF New York Times July 9 1956 Retrieved January 30 2016 Mrs Stephen Bonsal PDF New York Times July 17 1955 Retrieved January 30 2016 Stephen Bonsal Jr Set 1918 Air Record PDF New York Times October 29 1950 Retrieved January 30 2016 a b c d e f g h Binder David July 1 1985 Philip W Bonsal 92 Last U S Envoy to Cuba New York Times Retrieved January 21 2016 Kenworthy E W January 14 1959 U S Said to Pick Envoy to Havana PDF New York Times Retrieved January 30 2016 a b c d Bonsal Philip W 1971 Cuba Castro and the United States University of Pittsburgh Press pp 26 7 Bonsal Philip W 1971 Cuba Castro and the United States University of Pittsburgh Press pp 46 Dorn Glenn J 2011 The Truman Administration and Bolivia Pennsylvania State University Press p 16 a b Ambassador Nominated PDF New York Times February 5 1955 Retrieved January 30 2016 Envoy to Colombia Confirmed PDF New York Times February 12 1955 Retrieved January 30 2016 McLaughlin Kathleen January 17 1957 U S Eases Stand on South Africa PDF New York Times Retrieved January 30 2016 Sentae Unit Vote Backs Whittaker PDF New York Times March 19 1957 Retrieved January 30 2016 Havana and Washington PDF New York Times January 23 1959 Retrieved January 30 2016 Rabe Stephen G 1988 Eisenhower and Latin America The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism Chapel Hill University of North Carolina press p 126 ISBN 0807842044 Diplomat Recalls Cuba Break in 1961 Wayne Smith Library of Congress country notes According to reports Cuba The United States and Batista 1952 58 Hugh Thomas Colhoun Jack 2013 Gangsterismo The United States Cuba and the Mafia 1933 to 1966 OR Books ISBN 9781935928904 Colhoun Jack 2013 Gangsterismo The United States Cuba and the Mafia 1933 to 1966 OR Books ISBN 9781935928904 Bonsal Philip W 1971 Cuba Castro and the United States University of Pittsburgh Press pp 89 91 Colhoun Jack 2013 Gangsterismo The United States Cuba and the Mafia 1933 to 1966 OR Books ISBN 9781935928904 Colhoun Jack 2013 Gangsterismo The United States Cuba and the Mafia 1933 to 1966 OR Books ISBN 9781935928904 Bonsal Philip W August 6 1971 Perspective on Papers PDF New York Times Retrieved January 30 2016 Raymont Henry November 14 1971 U S Shift on Cuba in 1960 Detailed PDF New York Times Retrieved January 30 2016 Philip W Bonsal papers 1914 1992 Library of Congress Retrieved January 31 2016 External links EditU S Dept of State Office of the Historian Philip Wilson Bonsal 1903 1995 Diplomatic postsPreceded byRudolf E Schoenfeld United States Ambassador to ColombiaApril 1 1955 April 24 1957 Succeeded byJohn M CabotPreceded byGerald A Drew United States Ambassador to BoliviaMay 10 1957 February 6 1959 Succeeded byCarl W StromPreceded byEarl E T Smith United States Ambassador to CubaMarch 3 1959 October 28 1960 Succeeded byJeffrey DeLaurentis1beginning 2015Preceded byCharles Woodruff Yost United States Ambassador to MoroccoMay 24 1961 August 8 1962 Succeeded byJohn H FergusonNotes and references1 The U S and Cuba did not have bilateral diplomatic relations between 1961 and 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip Bonsal amp oldid 1113886289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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