Michael Phelps Evans Hoyt | |
Office1: | Consul of the United States in Stanleyville |
President1: | Lyndon B. Johnson |
Term End1: | 1964 |
Spouse: | Jo Wasson |
Children: | 4 |
Mother: | Elizabeth Hoyt |
Father: | Frank C. Hoyt |
Birth Date: | 16 November 1929 |
Birth Place: | Chicago |
Death Place: | Santa Fe, New Mexico |
Education: | Northwestern University (graduate studies in economics and African affairs) |
Alma Mater: | University of Illinois (Master's Degree in Modern European History) |
Awards: | Secretary's Award |
Michael Phelps Evans Hoyt (Chicago, 16 November 1929 — Santa Fe, New Mexico, 14 December 2016) was an American Foreign Service Officer and, as his country's consul in Stanleyville, a hostage for 111 days during the Simba rebellion.
Michael Hoyt was born in 1929 as the son of Frank and Elizabeth Hoyt.[1] His father Frank C. Hoyt was a quantum physicist involved in the Manhattan Project.[2] Hoyt married Jo Wasson in 1954. He became an air traffic controller during the Korean War.
Hoyt entered US diplomatic service in 1956 and would serve in diplomatic and consular positions in Pakistan, Morocco, Congo, Cameroon, Burundi, Nigeria, Switzerland, and Washington DC. He was the consul of the United States in Stanleyville (current-day Kisangani) at the time of the Simba Rebellion, rebels in the East of the country who claimed to be successors to first Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba. Hoyt negotiated with the rebels, but was at times beaten by the rebels. One episode saw Hoyt and his four assistants in the consulate retire to the office's strong room, leaving one whisky bottle behind for the rebels. The Simba rebels soon reeled away.[3] On 24 November 1964, US and Belgian regiments drove back the rebels during the joint Operation Dragon Rouge. The European and American hostages were rescued, but many foreigners including Paul Carlson died during the raid. Hoyt arrived back in the United States on 26 November 1964.[4] For his "outstanding courage and dignity" during the rebellion, Hoyt was awarded the Secretary's Award of the Department of State.
Hoyt was the Chargé d'affaires in Burundi during the Ikiza killings, often characterised as a genocide, in June 1972, replacing Thomas Patrick Melady.[5]