List of ambassadors of the United States to the United Kingdom

The United States ambassador to the United Kingdom (known formally as, The Ambassador of the United States of America to the Court of St James's)[1] is the official representative of the president of the United States and the American government to the monarch (Court of St. James's) and government of the United Kingdom.[2] The position is held by Jane D. Hartley, who presented her credentials to Queen Elizabeth II on July 19, 2022.[3]

Ambassador of the
United States of America to the
Court of St James's
Seal of the United States Department of State
Incumbent
Jane D. Hartley
since July 19, 2022
U.S. Department of State
Embassy of the United States, London
StyleHis or Her Excellency (formal)
Mr. or Madam Ambassador (informal)
Reports toUnited States Secretary of State
ResidenceWinfield House
SeatLondon, United Kingdom
AppointerPresident of the United States
with the advice and consent of the Senate
Term lengthAt the pleasure of the President
Inaugural holderJohn Adams
(as Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of St. James's)
Formation1785
WebsiteU.S. Embassy – London

The position is regarded as one of the most prestigious posts in the United States Foreign Service due to the "special relationship" between the United States and the United Kingdom.[4] The ambassadorship has been held by various notable politicians, including five who would later become president: John Adams, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren and James Buchanan. However, the modern tendency of American presidents (of both parties) is to appoint keen political fundraisers from previous presidential campaigns, despite the importance and prestige of the office.[5]

The ambassador and executive staff work at the American Embassy in Nine Elms, London. The official residence of the ambassador is Winfield House in Regent's Park.[1]

Duties

The ambassador's main duty is to present U.S. policies to the government of the United Kingdom and its people, as well as report British policies and views to the federal government of the United States. The ambassador serves as a primary channel of communication between the two nations and plays an important role in treaty negotiations.

The ambassador is the head of the United States' consular service in the United Kingdom. As well as directing diplomatic activity in support of trade, the ambassador is ultimately responsible for visa services and for the provision of consular support to American citizens in the UK and oversees cultural relations between the two countries.

List of U.S. chiefs of mission to the Court of St James's

Ministers (1785–1811)

  Independent

  Democratic-Republican

  Democrat

  Whig

  Republican

John Adams is referred to as the first "ambassador".[6] He is also referred to as the first "minister plenipotentiary".[7] Plenipotentiary means "having full power"; a minister that has power to act for their country in all matters.[8]

NamePortraitAppointmentPresentationTerminationAppointerNotes
John Adams February 24, 1785June 1, 1785February 20, 1788 CongressSecond president of the United States[a]
Thomas Pinckney January 12, 1792August 9, 1792July 27, 1796 George Washington
Rufus King May 20, 1796July 27, 1796May 16, 1803
James Monroe 1803August 17, 1803October 7, 1807 Thomas JeffersonFifth president of the United States
William Pinkney February 26, 1808April 27, 1808May 7, 1811
Jonathan RussellJuly 27, 1811November 15, 1811June 18, 1812James Madison[b]

Ministers (1815–1893)

Diplomatic relations with what had now become the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland were restored after the War of 1812. The Congress of Vienna (1815) established a uniform system of diplomatic rank. Under that system, the highest rank of "ambassador" was a personal representative of a sovereign, and the next rank of "minister", represented a government. As a republic, the United States maintained diplomatic relations with Britain at the rank of Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. The rank was colloquially known as Minister, and the position continued to be referred to as "United States Minister to Great Britain".

NamePortraitAppointmentPresentationTerminationAppointerNotes
John Quincy Adams April 28, 1814June 8, 1815May 14, 1817 James MadisonSixth president of the United States
Richard Rush 1817February 12, 1818April 27, 1825James Monroe
Rufus King May 5, 1825November 11, 1825June 16, 1826John Quincy Adams
Albert Gallatin May 10, 1826September 1, 1826October 4, 1827
William Beach Lawrence Nov 23, 1827November 24, 1828[10][11]
James Barbour May 23, 1828November 24, 1828October 1, 1829
Louis McLane 1829October 12, 1829June 13, 1831 Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren August 8, 1831September 21, 1831March 19, 1832Eighth president of the United States
Aaron Vail July 13, 1832July 13, 1836[c]
Andrew Stevenson March 16, 1836July 13, 1836October 21, 1841
Edward Everett 1841December 16, 1841August 8, 1845 John Tyler
Louis McLane 1845August 8, 1845August 18, 1846 James K. Polk
George Bancroft September 9, 1846November 12, 1846August 31, 1849
Abbott Lawrence August 20, 1849October 20, 1849October 12, 1852 Zachary Taylor
Joseph R. Ingersoll August 21, 1852October 16, 1852August 23, 1853Millard Fillmore
James Buchanan April 11, 1853August 23, 1853March 15, 1856 Franklin PierceFifteenth president of the United States
George M. Dallas February 4, 1856April 4, 1856May 16, 1861
Charles Francis Adams Sr. March 20, 1861May 16, 1861May 13, 1868 Abraham Lincoln
Reverdy Johnson June 12, 1868September 14, 1868May 13, 1869 Andrew Johnson
John Lothrop Motley April 13, 1869June 18, 1869December 6, 1870 Ulysses S. Grant
Robert C. Schenck December 22, 1870June 23, 1871March 3, 1876
Edwards Pierrepont May 22, 1876July 11, 1876December 22, 1877
John Welsh November 9, 1877December 22, 1877August 14, 1879Rutherford B. Hayes
James Russell Lowell January 26, 1880March 11, 1880May 19, 1885
Edward John Phelps March 23, 1885May 19, 1885January 31, 1889 Grover Cleveland
Robert Todd Lincoln March 30, 1889May 25, 1889May 4, 1893 Benjamin Harrison

Ambassadors (1893–present)

Although France became a republic in 1870, the country continued to exchange ambassadors with other Great Powers. In 1893, the United States followed the French precedent and upgraded its relations with other Great Powers to the ambassadorial level. The United States Legation in London became the United States Embassy, and the United States Minister to Great Britain became the United States Ambassador to Great Britain.

NamePortraitAppointmentPresentationTerminationAppointerNotes
Thomas F. Bayard 1893June 22, 1893March 17, 1897 Grover Cleveland
John Hay 1897May 3, 1897September 12, 1898 William McKinley
Joseph Hodges Choate January 19, 1899March 6, 1899May 23, 1905
Whitelaw Reid March 8, 1905June 5, 1905December 15, 1912Theodore Roosevelt
Walter Hines Page April 21, 1913May 30, 1913October 3, 1918 Woodrow Wilson
John W. Davis November 21, 1918December 18, 1918March 9, 1921
George Brinton McClellan Harvey April 16, 1921May 12, 1921November 3, 1923 Warren G. Harding
Frank B. Kellogg 1924January 14, 1924February 10, 1925Calvin Coolidge
Alanson B. Houghton February 24, 1925April 27, 1925March 28, 1929
Charles G. Dawes April 16, 1929June 15, 1929December 30, 1931Herbert Hoover
Andrew W. Mellon February 5, 1932April 9, 1932March 17, 1933
Robert Worth Bingham March 23, 1933May 23, 1933November 19, 1937 Franklin D. Roosevelt
Joseph P. Kennedy January 17, 1938March 8, 1938October 22, 1940
John G. Winant February 11, 1941March 1, 1941April 10, 1946
W. Averell Harriman April 2, 1946April 30, 1946October 1, 1946Harry S. Truman
Lewis W. Douglas March 6, 1947March 25, 1947November 16, 1950
Walter S. Gifford December 12, 1950December 21, 1950January 23, 1953
Winthrop W. Aldrich February 2, 1953February 20, 1953February 1, 1957 Dwight D. Eisenhower
John Hay Whitney February 11, 1957February 28, 1957January 14, 1961
David K. E. Bruce February 22, 1961March 17, 1961March 20, 1969 John F. Kennedy
Walter Annenberg March 14, 1969April 29, 1969October 30, 1974 Richard Nixon
Elliot Richardson February 20, 1975March 21, 1975January 16, 1976Gerald Ford
Anne Armstrong January 29, 1976March 17, 1976March 3, 1977
Kingman Brewster, Jr. April 29, 1977June 3, 1977February 23, 1981 Jimmy Carter
John J. Louis, Jr. May 7, 1981May 27, 1981November 7, 1983 Ronald Reagan
Charles H. Price II November 11, 1983December 20, 1983February 28, 1989
Henry E. Catto, Jr. April 14, 1989May 17, 1989March 13, 1991George H. W. Bush
Raymond G. H. Seitz April 25, 1991June 25, 1991May 10, 1994
William J. Crowe, Jr. May 13, 1994June 2, 1994September 20, 1997 Bill Clinton
Philip Lader August 1, 1997September 22, 1997February 28, 2001
William S. Farish III July 12, 2001August 1, 2001June 11, 2004 George W. Bush
Robert H. Tuttle July 9, 2005October 19, 2005February 6, 2009
Louis Susman July 13, 2009October 13, 2009April 3, 2013 Barack Obama
Matthew Barzun August 6, 2013December 4, 2013January 18, 2017[d]
Lewis Lukens January 18, 2017January 18, 2017November 8, 2017 Donald TrumpChargé d'Affaires[14]
Woody Johnson January 19, 2017November 8, 2017January 20, 2021[15]
Yael Lempert January 20, 2021January 20, 2021August 1, 2021 Joe BidenChargé d'Affaires[3]
Philip Reeker July 15, 2021August 1, 2021July 19, 2022 Chargé d'Affaires[16]
Jane D. Hartley May 25, 2022July 19, 2022 

See also

Notes

References

Further reading