User:Dckewon5131/조춘원

Cho Chun-won (February 27, 1889 – September 5, 1945) was a bureaucrat during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Wansanjeong, Jeonju-bu, Jeollabuk-do.

Life
He graduated from the government Hansung Normal School in 1911 and served as a vice president of Sunchang Public Common School in Jeollabuk-do from November 1911 to 1913. After serving as a Teacher at Sunchang Public Common School in April 1913, he served as a Teacher at Jeonju 1st Public Common School (1915-1919) and as a Teacher at Jeonju 2nd Public Common School (1920, 1926-1929) and as a Teacher and Taoist inspection and studies at the Ministry of Interior of Jeollabuk-do from December 1920 to 1929.

From July 1927 to 1929, he served as the academic affairs department and local department of the Ministry of Interior of Jeollabuk-do, and received the Showa Daeri Memorial Medal from the Japanese government on November 16, 1928 and the 8th Anniversary of Hun on November 13, 1929. After being appointed as the governor of Imsil-gun, Jeollabuk-do on February 28, 1931), he served as Gochang-gun (appointed on April 12, 1935), Okgu-gun (appointed on March 26, 1938), Iksan-gun (appointed on March 30, 1940), and Wanju-gun (appointed from May 21, 1945 to August 1945).

When he was serving as the governor of Buan-gun and Okgu-gun in Jeollabuk-do, he provided military supplies, consoled soldiers and bereaved families, supplied and promoted defense ideas, raised defense donations, extinguished government bonds, and received a fifth-grade Seobo award from the Japanese government on May 9, 1938.

In October 1940, when he was serving as the governor of Iksan-gun, Jeollabuk-do, he attended the military service division ceremony of the 1st Gyeongseong Division in Jeollabuk-do and announced his thoughts on the conscription system, and was ranked 3rd in the high official on March 31, 1943 and 5th in May 15, 1943.

It was included in the list of 705 pro-Japanese anti-national activities released by the pro-Japanese anti-national activities committee, a bureaucratic section of the National Institute for Ethnic Affairs' list of pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries.