User:Dckewon5131/장우식 (1886년)

Jang Woo-sik (September 25, 1886) was a Japanese government official, financier, and police officer, the domicile was Indong, and the hometown was Gyeongseong Pilundong.

Life
In July 1899, he graduated from the Government Simsangyangsa Dong Elementary School, and in July 1901, he graduated from the Government Gyodong Elementary School. He entered a government middle school in July 1901, but was expelled from school in September 1901, only two months after entering the school, due to family affair. In July 1903, he entered the Gyeongmu School of the Gyeongmu Office, and in August 1903, he was appointed as a police prosecutor.

In April 1906, he was appointed as a commissioner, and from August 1906 to April 1907, he was promoted to the seventh grade of the Panimgwan while serving as the general secretary of the Gyeongmu Office. From 1910 to 1919, he served as the police chief of the Japanese Government-General of Korea, and received a commemorative letter for the annexation of Korea from the Japanese government in August 1912.

From March 25, 1919 to March 16, 1920, he was ranked eighth in the high official while serving as Gyeongsi of the Japanese Government-General of Korea and Dogyeong-si of Pyeonganbuk-do. From 1923 to 1935, he served as the head of the document division of Hanseong Bank, the deputy manager of Hanseong Bank's headquarters, and the chief of Seodaemun Branch, and in 1926, he served as a councilor of the Joseon Buddhist Order.

From 1930 to 1936, he served as a counselor and director of the Gyeongseong Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and in 1931, he served as a permanent director of the Joseon Chamber of Commerce. He served as an auditor of Gyeongseong Heungsan Co., Ltd. in 1935, and served as a director of Hansung Bank from July 31, 1935 to September 30, 1943. From 1937 to 1939, he served as a commissioned guardian of the Gyeongseong Probation Office, and in October 1938, he served as a member of the National Spiritual Mobilization Shipbuilding Federation's Emergency National Life Improvement Committee.

In November 1938, he was appointed to the touring lecture group (consisting of 43 men and women) organized by the Korean Federation of Mental Mobilization and was dispatched to Jeollabuk-do. In 1939, he served as a member of the Gyeonggi Branch of the Joseon Gyeongbang Association and a member of the Personnel Coordination Committee of the Gyeongseong District Court, and served as a director of Dongsung Academy from 1940 to 1943.

From 1941 to 1944, he served as a member of the National Federation of Korean Industries and Councillors, a member of the Imjeon Countermeasures Council (1941), an auditor of the Joseon Judicial Protection Association (September 1941), and a promoter and a member of the Joseon Imjeonbo National Assembly (October 1941). In September 1941, he participated in the Golden Jung of the two sales stands of the Imjeon Countermeasures Council, and served as a director of the Gwangmyeong Chamber of Commerce from 1943 to 1944. He served as a director of Chohung Bank from October 1943 to the liberation of Korea in 1945, and served as an income investigator at the Jongno Tax Office in May 1944.

pro-Japanese group It was included in the list of 705 pro-Japanese anti-national activities released by the Anti-National Action Committee and other sections of the 708-member list, the police section of the Institute for Ethnic Affairs' pro-Japanese biographical dictionary list.