User:Dckewon5131/송필만

Song Pil-man (Jincheon, 1890 – July 15, 1978) was a South Korean independence activist, jurist, and politician. He was a founding member of the Korean Democratic Party and served as a member of the Democratic Party's old faction along with Shin Ik-hee, Yoon Bo-sun, and Cho Byung-ok.

He attended Jeongchik Middle School, graduated from Chuo University in Japan, and studied at American University in the United States.

In 1919, he was a professor at Yeonhui College, and in 1923, he published the Pacific Magazine as the general secretary of the Central Division of the Korean Independent Comrade. In March 1923, he moved to the United States to study abroad, graduated from Southwest University in 1927, and received a degree from the University of America in 1928. Upon liberation, he served as the head of the organizing department of the National Assembly Preparatory Committee, contributed as an elder to the establishment of the Democratic Party of Korea, and served as the chairman of the Chungbuk Provincial Party of the Democratic

In May 1948, he participated in the May 10 general election and ran in Jincheon-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do and was elected. In 1948, the Constitutional National Assembly member and on August 16, 1949, Kim Sang-deok, Kwak Sang-hoon, and Lee In established a special investigation committee on anti-national activities and became a member of the Anti-People's Special Committee. He served as vice chairman of the Anti-People's Special Committee, a member of the Central Committee of the Democratic Party of Korea, and a chairman of the Chungbuk Provincial Party. In 1960, he served as the fifth member of the National Assembly. As a member of the old Democratic Party, he tried to divide the Democratic Party.

Reference

 * "Republic of Korea Parliamentary Review", Parliamentary General Affairs Committee, 1994
 * Song Pil-man - Constitutional Society of Korea
 * Data on Modern and Contemporary Koreans (National History Compilation Committee)