Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Bennett, Martin T.

Bennett, Martin T.

Schulgen, Hodge, Pauley and Bennett at Kempo Air Base

From left to right, General George J. Schulgen, Lieutenant General John R. Hodge (Commanding Officer, U.S. Army Forces in Korea), Ambassador Edwin W. Pauley, and Martin Bennett, standing outside at Kempo Air Base, Seoul, Korea. Photograph taken during the U.S. Reparations Mission. Edwin Pauley was the U.S. Ambassador on the Allied Reparations Committee from 1945-47 (the committee that assessed the reparations the Axis powers could afford to pay the victors).

Swift, Bennett, and Thorne at Party in Beverly Hills

From left to right, Mr. Swift, Martin Bennett, and H. M. Thorne, members of the Reparations Mission, look at a camera at a party in Beverly Hills, California. Photograph taken during the U.S. Reparations Mission. Edwin Pauley was the U.S. Ambassador on the Allied Reparations Committee from 1945-47 (the committee that assessed the reparations the Axis powers could afford to pay the victors).

Members of Pauley's party in railroad station in Mukden, Manchuria

From left to right, Martin Bennett, Mr. Marshall, and Colonel William Mayer, members of Ambassador Edwin W. Pauley's Reparations Mission party, in railroad station in Mukden, Manchuria. Photograph taken during the U.S. Reparations Mission. Edwin Pauley was the U.S. Ambassador on the Allied Reparations Committee from 1945-47 (the committee that assessed the reparations the Axis powers could afford to pay the victors).

Clark, Dubois, Richardson, and Bennett at Dinner Held in Pauley's Honor

From left to right, Lieutenant William Clark; Mr. Josiah Dubois, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury; Mr. Lawrence Richardson, transportation expert; and Mr. Martin T. Bennett, industrial engineer, at an informal dinner given by General Mark W. Clark, CG USFA, for Ambassador Edwin W. Pauley and group visiting Vienna, Austria. Mr. Pauley was the U.S. Ambassador on the Allied Reparations Committee from 1945-47, the committee that assessed the reparations the Axis powers could afford to pay the victors.