The American Consul: A History of the United States Consular Service, 1776-1914
By (Author) Charles Stuart Kennedy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th February 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Diplomacy
327.20973
Hardback
247
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
595g
This book is a history of the United States Consular Service, an unheralded, but significant element in the promotion of American commerce and influence abroad from the Revolution onward. A group of relatively minor officials, appointed by the vagaries of political patronage and virtually ignored by successive Secretaries of State, American consuls were established in most major foreign ports and trading centers early in the history of the Republic. Consular officers were major players in America's overseas presence because of their special responsibility for seamen and shipping. They were the officials most concerned with the Barbary pirates and worked with the United States Navy to remove them from the Mediterranean. Until 1822 they were the only official representative of the U.S. government in the emerging republics of Latin America. American consuls in Britain helped prevent the Confederates from assembling and supplying a fleet out of European ports. The Spanish-American War was essentially a consular war-fought in colonial territories where consuls supplied intelligence and support for American miliary actions. The American Consul is a long overdue history of the Consular Service. It introduces, through brief histories, anecdotes, and vignettes, some of the men sent abroad by an imperfect system to represent our country. It is an evolving chronicle of their contributions to the expansion of American influence from the start of the Revolutionary War to the eve of the First World War, when American diplomats assumed the predominant role in America's foreign relations. This book is must reading for anyone interested in American diplomatic history.
The American Consul is a wonderful compilation of short biographies and anecdotes describing particular consuls and their adventures in often exotic locales. Its overarching theme is the relative competence and success of most consuls even while the consular service itself stood in desperate need of reform. . . . This is a fascinating and useful book.-The Journal of American History
"The American Consul is a wonderful compilation of short biographies and anecdotes describing particular consuls and their adventures in often exotic locales. Its overarching theme is the relative competence and success of most consuls even while the consular service itself stood in desperate need of reform. . . . This is a fascinating and useful book."-The Journal of American History
CHARLES STUART KENNEDY is Director of the Foreign Affairs Oral History Program at Georgetown University. From 1955 to 1985 he was a member of the Consular Service, serving as a consul in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and Consul General in Saigon, Athens, Seoul, and Naples.