User:Dckewon5131/전창림

Jeon Chang-rim (born February 23, 1889) was a police officer and government official of the Japanese colonial period, and was from Gilseong-myeon, Gilju-gun, Hamgyongbuk-do, and Gyeongseong-gun, Hamgyong-do.

Life
On February 28, 1910, he was appointed as a police inspector at Gapsan Police Station in Hamgyeongnamdo Province and on July 1, 1910, he was appointed as a police inspector at Samsu Police Station in Tonggambu, and on June 15, 1911, he worked as an interpreter at Seongjin Police Station in Hamgyeongbuk-do.

Since he was appointed as a police officer at Gyeongseong Police Station in North Hamgyong Province on May 21, 1914, he has worked as a police officer at Nanam Police Station in North Hamgyong Province (1920-1921) and as a police officer in North Hamgyong Province in 1923.

On November 16, 1928, he received the Showa Daerye Memorial Medal from the Japanese government, and from 1929 to 1939, he served as the governor of Musan-gun, Hamgyeongbuk-do (appointed November 27, 1929), Gilju-gun, Hamgyeong-do (appointed December 28, 1931), and Myeongcheon-gun, Hamgyeong-do (August 11, 1936 to June 21, 1939).

On September 9, 1930, the Japanese government received the Hun 6th West Guarantee, the Joseon Showa 5-year National Tax Service Memorial Medal on October 1, 1932, and the Hun 5th West Guarantee Award on September 9, 1935, and the 25th anniversary of the municipal administration was received from the Joseon Governor-General in October 1935.

During the Sino-Japanese War when he was serving as the head of Myeongcheon-gun, North Hamgyong Province, military supplies, military requisition, consolation and support from the military, soldiers, and bereaved families, he served in the promotion and propaganda of national defense history, holding a national lecture, and raising funds for national defense donations and national flag donations, and was ranked third in the high school on June 30, 1938 and fifth in July 14, 1939.

pro-Japanese group It was included in the 708-member list, the police section of the National Research Institute's pro-Japanese biographical dictionary list, the bureaucracy section, and the 705-member list of pro-Japanese anti-ethnic activities announced by the Committee.