Thomas R. Jernigan | |
---|---|
Consul General of the United States, Shanghai | |
In office 1893–1897 | |
Preceded by | Alfred Daniel Jones |
Succeeded by | John Goodnow |
Personal details | |
Born | Barfield, Hertford County, North Carolina, United States of America | 24 February 1847
Died | 1 November 1920 | (aged 73)
Thomas Roberts Jernigan (1847–1920) was US consul in Kobe, Japan (1885–1889), and later US consul general in Shanghai, China (1893–1897). After leaving the diplomatic service he was Standard Oil Company's attorney in China, and served as chairman of the Shanghai International Settlement.[1] From 1905, he went into private practice as a lawyer with Stirling Fessenden under the firm name Jernigan and Fessenden.[2]
Jernigan Road (now, Xianxia Road (仙霞路)) in Shanghai was named after him.[3] He wrote a number of works on Chinese economics.
Jernigan died in 1920 and was buried on a hill overlooking Nanjing. He is remembered on a plaque in Raleigh, North Carolina (corner of W Cabarrus and S McDowell on the north west side of the Raleigh Convention Centre.)[4]