Sex
Male
Status
Deceased
Brian Edgar writes:
Allman was an American lawyer from Shanghai stuck in HK during the attack. After the repatriation he became head if the Far Eastern Bureau of the OSS (Don's dad's boss?) and later worked for the CIA.
His memoir Shanghai Lawyer is now available free online. Chapter 1 is about his work as legal adviser to the Camp Council and Chapter 18 is the best account I know of the work of the American volunteer drivers during the fighting (and of the controversial Bill Hunt, who was to become the leader of the Americans in Stanley).
http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015009154116;view=1up;seq=9
Comments
Norwood Allman
Norwood Francis Allman was born on 24 July 1893, in Union Hall, Virginia. Allman attended the University of Virginia for one year before sitting the consular exam. He was appointed student interpreter in the American legation in Peking in 1915, and served as a consular officer in various locations finally serving as consul in Shanghai from 1921 to 1924. During that time, he also sat as an assessor on the International Mixed Court. In 1924, he retired from consular service and practised law in Shanghai. He also served as honorary Mexican consul in Shanghai and from 1937 as the editor of the Chinese language Shun Pao newspaper. He was placed on a Japanese black list because of the paper's editorial policies. In 1940 he was elected a member Shanghai Municipal Council. He was in Hong Kong on business when WWII started. After being repatriated, he served in the OSS during the war and continued to work for the CIA after the war. He returned to Shanghai in 1946 to restart his legal practice and also owned and edited the English language China Press. He left China in 1950 and returned to America. He was a broadcaster in America for a number of years. He died in Carlisle Pennsyvania on 28 February 1987.
Fun, easy read. Especially
Fun, easy read. Especially liked the description of the Polo Ponies in Shanghai.
Norwood Francis Alllman
Father of my uncle, William Hamilton Allman (1921-2011), HK resident through the 1960s. He was an AIU executive; he and his wife, Jo, lived at No. 9 Headland Road.
Norwood Francis Allman
Allman's time in the O. S. S. is mentioned in the book "Asian American Spies" by Brian Masaru Hayashi here
After Allman's return to the U. S. on the Gripsholm, both James Arthur Duff, a businessman and Allman, a lawyer were invited to a speaking engagement in Freeport, New York in September 1942 on the assistance rendered to Americans (among them Marsman) during the early days of Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. In 1943, he joined the government service in Washington.
Source:
1. Nassau Daily Review-Star, New York dated 10 September 1942. See: https://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/?a=d&d=ndrs19420910-01.1.26&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN----------
2. The Shanghai Evening Post and Mercury 1 January 1943
Allman Family on the Gripsholm
Allman's family resided in Shanghai when he was trapped in Hong Kong in December 1941. In "Shanghai Lawyer", Allman mentions that he was repatriated on the Asama Maru whilst his wife, Mary and son, John were repatriated from Shanghai on the "Conte Verde". In a happy ending, both ships docked in Lourenco Marques (renamed Maputo), Portuguese East Africa and the family was able to reunite on the "Gripsholm".