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Encyclopedia > Daniel E. Howard

Daniel Edward Howard (August 4, 1861-July 9, 1935) was president of Liberia from 1912 to 1920. Born in the town of Buchanan, Grand Bassa County, he worked his way up through the civil service to become secretary of the True Whig Party, the country's only political party at the time.


Howard was elected president in 1911 and assumed office on January 1, 1912. With the outbreak of World War I, he attempted to maintain the country's neutrality, though he tended to support the Allies, who colonial territories in Africa surrounded Liberia. Despite German protests, he allowed the French to operate a wireless station in the capital, Monrovia. Realizing that their complaints were in vain, the Germans sent a submarine to attack the city in 1917, forcing the reluctant Howard to side with the Allies and declare war on Germany.


Howard remained in office for two years after the war's end. He died in Monrovia in 1935.


  Results from FactBites:
 
John Eager Howard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (468 words)
Howard was an Episcopalian, and a Brother of a Baltimore lodge of Freemasonry.
His son, George Howard was born in Jennings House during his term as Governor; George eventually returned there as Governor himself forty years after his father's term, and four years after his death.
John Eager Howard is buried at the Old Saint Paul's Cemetery, in Baltimore, where in 1904, an equestrian statue of him by the eminent French sculptor Emmanuel Frémiet was erected.
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