User:Dckewon5131/장수길 (1911년)

Jang Su-gil (born February 21, 1911 in Hyehwa-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul) is a government official during the Japanese colonial period.

Life
In October 1935, he passed the Administration Department of the Higher Civil Service Examination. After graduating from the Department of Political Science at the Imperial University of Tokyo in March 1936, he began working as a member of the Department of Internal Affairs in Gyeonggi Province, as well as as a tax official at the Finance Bureau from 1937 to October 31, 1938.On November 10, 1938, he was appointed as an executive secretary of the savings promotion committee of the Joseon Governor-General, and on November 30, 1939, he was appointed as an executive secretary of the Gunpowder Committee of the Joseon Governor-General. On February 20, 1940, he was appointed as an instructor at the Tax Management Training Center of the Governor-General of Joseon.

During the Sino-Japanese War, he focused on procuring military supplies, simplifying customs procedures, exempting tariffs, and enacting and revising related special laws, and on April 29, 1940, he received a Hun 6th certificate from the Japanese government in recognizing his cooperation in the Sino-Japanese War. In 1941, while serving as an official of the Finance Bureau of the Japanese Government-General of Korea, he participated in the revision of the Provisional Fund Adjustment Act, domestic fund investigation rules, etc., and actively cooperated in the Japanese invasion war.

He also served as an instructor at the 14th (July 16, 1941, November 10, 1942), and 16th (August 30, 1943) tax lessons, and was appointed as an instructor at the Regional Management Training Center of the Joseon Governor-General on March 10, 1945 and as an official at the Gyeongseong Department on April 17, 1945. From May 5, 1945 to the liberation of Korea in August 1945, he served as the chief investigator of Gyeongseong Buyun, and was ranked sixth in the sect on December 15, 1942 and fourth in Godeunggwan on December 28, 1944, respectively.

Pro-Japanese group It was included in the Joseon Governor-General's Office section of the 708-member list, the bureaucracy section of the National Research Institute's pro-Japanese dictionary list, and the 705-member list of pro-general ethnic activities announced by the Committee.