Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

List of ambassadors of the United States to France

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromUnited States Ambassador to France)

Ambassador of the United States of America to France
Ambassadeur des États-Unis en France
Seal of the United States Department of State
since July 11, 2025[1]
U.S. Department of State
StyleMr. or Madam Ambassador
Reports toUnited States Secretary of State
ResidenceHôtel de Pontalba
SeatEmbassy of the United States, Paris,France
AppointerPresident of the United States
with theadvice and consent of theSenate
Term lengthAt the pleasure of the president
Inaugural holderBenjamin Franklin (as Envoy)
Formation1778
Websitefr.usembassy.gov

TheUnited States ambassador to France is the official representative of thepresident of the United States to thepresident of France. The United States has maintained diplomatic relations with France since theAmerican Revolution. Relations were upgraded to the higherrank of Ambassador in 1893. The diplomatic relationship has continued through France's two empires, three monarchies, and five republics. Since 2006 the ambassador to France has also served as theambassador to Monaco.

List of United States chiefs of mission in France

[edit]

Ministers to the Court of Versailles (1778–1792)

[edit]

Relations between the United States and the French Court of Versailles were established in 1778 with the signing of theTreaty of Amity and Commerce. As a republic, the United States was not entitled to send an ambassador. Instead, relations were maintained at the lowerdiplomatic rank ofMinister. The position was formally known as theMinister Plenipotentiary from the United States of America at the Court of Versailles.

NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
Benjamin FranklinBenjamin FranklinSeptember 14, 1778March 23, 1779May 17, 1785Franklin had represented the United States unofficially since December 1776, prior to France recognizing American Independence.
Thomas JeffersonMarch 10, 1785May 17, 1785September 26, 1789
William ShortApril 20, 1790June 14, 1790May 15, 1792
Gouverneur MorrisJanuary 12, 1792June 3, 1792April 9, 1794Remained as Minister after the First Republic was proclaimed. Mission terminated when the French government requested his recall.

Ministers to the First Republic (1792–1804)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
James MonroeJames MonroeMay 28, 1794August 15, 1794December 9, 1796
Charles C. PinckneySeptember 9, 1796Not presentedFebruary 5, 1797

Diplomatic relations were broken in 1796 due to French anger at U.S. neutrality in theWar of the First Coalition. After theDirectory refused to acceptCharles Cotesworth Pinckney's credentials, a commission was appointed to negotiate with the French Republic. The members of the commission — Pinckney,John Marshall, andElbridge Gerry — were all accredited with the rank ofEnvoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.[2] French officials demanded a bribe before they would commence negotiations, scuttling the mission in theXYZ Affair. Hostilities culminated in the outbreak of theQuasi-War between the U.S. and France. Diplomatic relations were restored with theConvention of 1800.

NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
Robert R. LivingstonOctober 2, 1801December 6, 1801November 18, 1804Remained as Minister after Napoleon Bonaparte was proclaimed emperor.

James Monroe was accredited Minister Plenipotentiary to the French Republic in 1803 to negotiate theLouisiana Purchase.[3] However, Robert Livingston remained chief of mission.

Ministers to the Court of the Tuilleries (1804–1848)

[edit]

SinceVersailles had been stripped of its furnishings during the French Revolution, Napoleon I returned the French court to its pre-1682 home at the Tuilleries. U.S. ministers to all future French monarchs would be accredited to theTuilleries. After theCongress of Vienna standardized the system ofdiplomatic ranks, the United States continued to send aMinister, who was officially credentialed as anEnvoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.

NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
John ArmstrongJune 30, 1804November 18, 1804September 14, 1810
Joel BarlowFebruary 27, 1811November 17, 1811December 26, 1812Died inŻarnowiec during theFrench retreat from Moscow.
William H. CrawfordApril 9, 1813December 14, 1813
August 16, 1814
April 26, 1815 toApril 30, 1815
Albert GallatinFebruary 28, 1815July 16, 1816May 16, 1823
James BrownDecember 9, 1823April 13, 1824June 28, 1829
William Cabell RivesApril 18, 1829October 25, 1829
January 14, 1831
September 27, 1832
Edward LivingstonMay 29, 1833September 30, 1833April 29, 1835
Lewis CassOctober 4, 1836December 1, 1836November 12, 1842
William R. KingApril 9, 1844July 1, 1844September 15, 1846
Richard RushMarch 3, 1847July 31, 1847
April 26, 1848
October 8, 1849Reaccredited to the Second Republic.

Ministers to the Second Republic (1848–1852)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
William Cabell RivesJuly 20, 1849November 8, 1849
January 10, 1853
May 12, 1853Reaccredited to the Second Empire.

Ministers to the Court of the Tuilleries (1852–1870)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
John Y. MasonOctober 10, 1853January 22, 1854October 3, 1859Died at post.
Charles J. FaulknerJanuary 16, 1860March 4, 1860May 12, 1861Sided with theConfederacy during theAmerican Civil War.
William L. DaytonMarch 18, 1861May 19, 1861December 1, 1864Died at post.
John BigelowMarch 15, 1865April 23, 1865December 23, 1866
John Adams DixSeptember 24, 1866December 23, 1866May 23, 1869
Elihu B. WashburneMarch 17, 1869March 23, 1869
May 8, 1871
September 5, 1877Reaccredited to the Third Republic.

Ministers to the Third Republic (1870–1893)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
Edward F. NoyesJuly 1, 1877September 5, 1877August 5, 1881
Levi P. MortonMarch 21, 1881August 5, 1881May 14, 1885
Robert M. McLaneMarch 23, 1885May 14, 1885May 20, 1889
Whitelaw ReidMarch 23, 1889May 21, 1889March 25, 1892
T. Jefferson CoolidgeMay 12, 1892June 10, 1892May 4, 1893

Ambassadors to the Third Republic (1893–1942)

[edit]

After it became a republic, France continued to exchange ambassadors with other Great Powers. This put an end to the longstanding rule that only Great Power monarchies could exchange ambassadors with each other. As the United States grew in population and economic strength, it followed the French example. In 1893, the United States upgraded its diplomatic relations with the other Great Powers to the ambassadorial level.

NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
James B. EustisApril 8, 1893May 6, 1893May 24, 1897
Horace PorterMarch 19, 1897May 26, 1897May 2, 1905
Robert S. McCormickMarch 8, 1905May 2, 1905March 2, 1907
Henry WhiteDecember 19, 1906March 23, 1907November 3, 1909
Robert BaconDecember 21, 1909December 31, 1909April 19, 1912
Myron T. HerrickFebruary 15, 1912April 29, 1912November 28, 1914
William Graves SharpJune 19, 1914December 4, 1914April 14, 1919
Hugh Campbell WallaceFebruary 27, 1919April 22, 1919July 5, 1921
Myron T. HerrickApril 16, 1921July 15, 1921March 31, 1929Died at post.
Walter Evans EdgeNovember 21, 1929December 18, 1929April 13, 1933
Jesse I. StrausMarch 17, 1933June 8, 1933August 5, 1936
William C. Bullitt Jr.August 25, 1936October 13, 1936July 11, 1940
William D. LeahyNovember 29, 1940January 8, 1941May 1, 1942DepartedVichy France;S. Pinkney Tuck served as interimchargé d'affaires until France severed diplomatic relations with the U.S.on November 8, 1942.

Ambassadors to the Fourth Republic (1944–1961)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
Jefferson CafferyNovember 25, 1944December 30, 1944May 13, 1949The Embassy in Paris had been opened to the public December 1, 1944, with Ambassador Caffery in charge pending presentation of his letter of credence.
David K. E. BruceMay 9, 1949May 17, 1949March 10, 1952
James Clement DunnMarch 13, 1952March 27, 1952March 2, 1953
C. Douglas DillonFebruary 27, 1953March 13, 1953January 28, 1957
Amory HoughtonMarch 14, 1957April 17, 1957January 19, 1961

Ambassadors to the Fifth Republic (since 1961)

[edit]
NameAppointmentPresentationTerminationNotes
James M. GavinFebruary 22, 1961March 21, 1961September 26, 1962
Charles E. BohlenSeptember 4, 1962October 27, 1962February 9, 1968
Sargent ShriverApril 22, 1968May 25, 1968March 25, 1970
Arthur K. WatsonApril 8, 1970May 6, 1970October 30, 1972
John N. Irwin IIFebruary 2, 1973March 23, 1973October 20, 1974
Kenneth RushSeptember 19, 1974November 21, 1974March 14, 1977
Arthur A. HartmanJune 8, 1977July 7, 1977October 14, 1981
Evan G. GalbraithNovember 6, 1981December 2, 1981July 15, 1985
Joe M. RodgersJuly 19, 1985September 20, 1985January 8, 1989
Walter CurleyMay 12, 1989July 6, 1989February 11, 1993
Pamela HarrimanMay 8, 1993June 30, 1993February 5, 1997Died at post.
Felix RohatynAugust 1, 1997September 11, 1997December 7, 2000
Howard H. LeachJuly 12, 2001September 4, 2001April 16, 2005
Craig Roberts StapletonJune 21, 2005July 25, 2005January 29, 2009Also accredited toMonaco.
Charles RivkinJune 1, 2009October 2, 2009November 20, 2013
Jane D. HartleySeptember 26, 2014October 31, 2014January 20, 2017
Jamie McCourtNovember 20, 2017December 18, 2017January 20, 2021
Denise BauerDecember 18, 2021February 5, 2022January 20, 2025
Charles KushnerMay 19, 2025July 11, 2025Incumbent

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^@USAmbFrance (July 11, 2025)."It's official! I am honored to be your U.S. Ambassador to France and Monaco" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  2. ^Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth; Gerry, Elbridge; Marshall, John (1798).Authentic Copies of the Correspondence of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, John Marshall, and Elbridge Gerry, Esqrs. Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary to the Republic of France: As Presented to Both Houses of Congress, April 3, 1798, by His Excellency John Adams. J. Derrett. p. 62.The undersigned Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the French Republic, had the honour of announcing to you officially, on the 6th of October, their arrival at Paris, and of presenting to you on the 8th, a copy of their letters of credence.
  3. ^"Image 906 of James Monroe Papers: Series 1, General Correspondence, 1758-1839; 1796 Mar. 22-1803 Oct. 8 (Reel 2)".The Library of Congress.

Public Domain This article incorporatespublic domain material fromU.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets.United States Department of State.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Willson, Beckles.America's Ambassadors to France (1777-1927): A Narrative of Franco-American Diplomatic Relations (1928).

External links

[edit]
Envoys
to France
(1776–1779)
Seal of the US Department of State
Ministers Plenipotentiary
to France
(1778–1815)
Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary
to France
(1816–1893)
Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiary
to France
(1893–present)
Current countries
Suspended relations
Defunct countries
Other places
International organizations
Ambassadors-at-large
Ambassadors by President
Other
Founding of the
United States
Inventions,
other events
Writings
Legacy
In popular culture
Related
Family
Founding
documents of
the United States
French Revolution
Presidency
Other noted
accomplishments
Jeffersonian
architecture
Other writings
Related
Elections
Legacy and
memorials
Cultural
depictions
Family
United States
Founding events
Namesakes
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_ambassadors_of_the_United_States_to_France&oldid=1322248435"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp