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  Biography -- Julius Grigore, Jr.                                                                             [p1 of 1]

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Julius Grigore, Jr.,  (Captain, U.S. Navy Reserve, Retired), upon recall to active duty with the Navy 1968-1972, Grigore served as Officer in Charge of Shipbuilding, Conversion and Repair at Fort Amador, Canal Zone. During that period he was also senior Navy technical advisor to the Latin American navies, commander of U.S. Naval Industrial Standby Facility – Balboa Shops, and Salvage Officer for Commander, 15th Naval District. 

Before recall to active duty in 1968, he was Assistant Chief/Acting Chief, Industrial Division, of the Panama Canal Company’s shipyard complex. He graduated from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, the University of Detroit, and Harvard Business School, Advanced Management Program. (He and then Lieutenant Governor of the Canal Zone and Vice President of the Panama Canal Company Harold Parfitt, 1965-68, were the only two individuals from the Canal Zone sent to the HBS.* )  

He has authored numerous articles for the National Transportation Journal, Military Engineer, Panama Canal Review, and Explorer’s Journal. He has written seven books and published 57 others as reprints (with update material) about Panama, the Panama Canal, and the Panama Railroad (more on the books at his Cristobal Shops on Ebay at http://stores.ebay.com/CRISTOBAL-SHOPS and at  www.cz images.com).  He is a founding member of the Panama Historical Society.

To view his article The O-5 is Down! (the dramatic rescue and salvage of the U.S. Navy submarine O5 that sank in Limon Bay at the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal in October 1923 after collision with a ship), published in the U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, February 1972, GO TO

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*  Parfitt was later the last Canal Zone Governor/Panama Canal Company President, 1975-79.  Parfitt's daughter Karen Parfitt Hughes was Counselor to President George W. Bush in his first term and appointed Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs in the Department of State in July 2005. 

 

 

THE AIR MAIL HISTORY OF THE CANAL ZONE AND PANAMA

  (1918 THROUGH 1941) 

by

Julius Grigore, Jr.

 

Grigore recently completed his Air Mail History of the Canal Zone and Panama (1918 through 1941) monograph, an 18-year research and writing project, consisting over 1,000 pages and over 900 color illustrations.  It will shortly be offered on Ebay.com.   

The theme of this book centers around three Canal Zone Roosevelt Medalists# who were involved in the evolution of air mail service into the Panama Canal Zone -- Crede H. Calhoun, Director of the  Canal Zone Postal Service; Stacy C. Russell, senior inspector of the Canal Zone Postal Service; and Gerald D. Bliss, Postmaster of the Cristobal Post Office (on the Atlantic side of the Canal Zone).  Bliss's Cristobal Post Office in the late 1920s became the center for dispatching air  mail to and from Panama and throughout Central and South America, Mexico, Cuba, and the West Indies via France Field, the U.S. Army Air Corps airfield near Cristobal. 

Postmaster Bliss was the focus in the air mail history of the Canal Zone and Panama.  He was so essential and prominent in his position that the U.S. Post Office Department, in conjunction with Pan American Airways (the chosen airline of the United States Government), delegated him to personally visit every postal administration in Central and South America and the Caribbean to make the air mail system more effective and efficient.  Bliss was  associated with at least 67 air mail first flight occasions that occurred to and from the United States and various Latin American and Caribbean destinations.  No other air mail history equals the number of signed air mail covers appearing in this monograph -- mainly by Postmaster Bliss, Charles Lindbergh (then technical consultant to Pan American Airways and various air mail pilots (including three Medal of Honor recipients, two of them being Francis Edward Ormsbee, Jr. and Charles Lindberg),  according to the author. 

In his capacity as Postmaster, Cristobal Post Office and as an aside from his air mail affairs, Bliss was commemorated on a Pitcairn Island stamp in 2004.

The principal airlines involved in this air mail history (and in the book) were Pan American Airways (under Juan Terry Trippe, its president), Panagra (Pan American-Grace Airways), and SCADTA (Sociedad Colombiana, Alemana, de Transportes Aereos).  The book also includes other airlines involved.

This book also includes many anecdotes about the pilots who, as heroes of their day, flew the mails over treacherous Caribbean and Central and South America routes, even when only a few letters were aboard.    

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7,399 persons were awarded the Roosevelt Medal while employed by the Isthmian Canal Commission during the construction of the Panama Canal by the Americans, between May 4, 1904 - December 31, 1914 (source:  Julius Grigore, Jr.)  

 

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William H. Ormsbee, Jr.   2006