

John W. F. Dulles died at North Central Baptist Hospital, San Antonio, Texas, Monday, 23 of June, 2008 at approximately 1:20 A.M. His wife of sixty- eight years, Eleanor Ritter Dulles, died on June 19, four days before his death.
A younger sister, Lillias Pomeroy Dulles Hinshaw died in 1987. Professor Dulles was the first born son of former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Janet Pomeroy Avery.
He was born 1913 in Auburn, New York. He attended St. Bernard's School in New York City and the Gunnery School of Washington, Connecticut before earning a BA from Princeton University in 1935.
He received his MBA from Harvard University in 1937.
After several years at the Bank of New York, and at Callahan mining Company, Mr. Dulles attended the University of Arizona in Tucson, where he earned yet another degree, a BS in Metallurgical Engineering in 1943.
His mining career began at The Duquesne mine of Patagonia, Arizona near Nogales, where he mucked the roads to the mine, and then advanced to underground operations.
On June 15, 1940 he married Eleanor Foster Ritter of Philadelphia. The young couple returned to Arizona.
Their first and second children, Edith and John, were born in Arizona. In 1943, Mr. Dulles took a position with Cia Minera de Peoles, S.A. in Monterrey, Mexico where he became the Assistant General Manager from 1951 to 1959.
Mr. Dulles' two other children, Ellen and Avery, were born in Monterrey. His interest in Mexico grew, and he wrote his first book Yesterday in Mexico: a Chronicle of the Revolution 1919 - 1936.
From 1959 to 1962 he was the Executive Vice President of Cia Mineraco Novalimense of Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
The family resided in Rio de Janeiro and once again the history of this country opened up a new path for this historian and author.
Mr. Dulles became a full time history professor when he returned to the United States as a professor of Latin American Studies at the University of Texas in 1962 and also the University of Arizona from 1966 to 1991.
Mr. Dulles had just finished his forty-fifth year of teaching this past spring at University of Texas at Austin and was planning his fall course material. He published twelve books on the political history of Brazil in the Twentieth Century.
Anarchists and Communists in Brazil, 1900 1935 and Yesterday in Mexico: a Chronicle of the Revolution 1919 - 1936 were seminal works setting the standard for scholarly research on these subjects.
His most recent publication Resisting Brazil's Military Regime: an account of the battles of Sobral Pinto published in 2007 by the University of Texas Press was the second of a two volume biography. The book includes much important information regarding Brazil's struggle for a stable government and the road that has contributed to Brazil's current success. It is widely understood that Professor Dulles's research was impeccable.
Other activities include: advisor to US delegation to OAS Conference, Via Del Mar, Chile, 1967; cons. US Dept of State, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, 1968 '72.
He earned the Achievement medal; University of Arizona, 1960, Partners of the Alliance Medal, Brazilian Govt., 1966. Fellow CA Institute International Studies; member.
One of his proudest nominations was that of The American Society of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem knight. Memberships include American History. Assn., TX Institute of Letters, Phi Kappa Phi, Gamma Sigma Epsilon, Theta Tau.
One avocation was tennis, a game he played late into his eighties. An avid correspondent, his letters to colleagues and friends, his scholarly publications, his considerations to all he knew are legendary.
He is survived by his four children; Mrs. Edith Lawlis Dulles, Dallas, Texas; John F. Dulles II, Broomfield, Colorado; Mrs. Ellen Dulles-Coelho, San Antonio, Texas; R. Avery Dulles, Austin, Texas; nine grandchildren and six great grandchildren; and his younger brother Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J. of New York, N.Y.
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