ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Book


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Peter Strickland
New London Shipmaster
Boston Merchant
First Consul to Senegal

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by Stephen H. Grant
Foreword by
Kenneth L. Brown and Michael E. C. Ely

(Washington, D.C.: New Academia Publishing, January, 2007)
231 pp, 30 illustrations, 6 tables, 2 maps, notes, bibliography, index
Softcover $18.00

From the foreward by Kenneth L. Brown, ADST President, and Michael E. C. Ely, DACOR President:

"Stephen Grant's biography [of Captain Peter Strickland] adds to our knowledge of what diplomats do and how they do it....The contributions of our consuls have been too often ignored [and] Grant has taken a significant step toward remedying this. "

Stephen Grant's Peter Strickland: New London Shipmaster, Boston Merchant, First Consul to Senegal is based on extensive research, including U.S. consular dispatches, a detailed personal diary, obscure documents in libraries in the eastern United States, and Consul Strickland's correspondence with French authorities that the author unearthed in the Senegalese national archives. Grant's book recounts how Connecticut Yankee Strickland strove to survive and prosper from 1864 to 1905 in the midst of a strong French colonial presence in Senegal--first as captain of merchant ships in the trans-Atlantic trade and then, after his appointment in 1883, as the first U.S. consul in Senegal, indeed the first in French West Africa.

Consul Strickland may have known more about West African trade than any American of his day. He did his best, in 272 dispatches to the State Department, to educate the American diplomatic and commercial establishments about the potential for trade with Africa. He carried out his consular duties in Senegal for over 20 years without a salary, paying for his own rented office space and lodgings and for his passage to and from post. Although he was authorized to maintain a private export-import business and to keep the consular fees charged to the captains of American ships calling at Dakar, St. Louis, Rufisque, and Goree, he earned little else.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

STEPHEN GRANT served for 25 years as a Foreign Service officer with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), in El Salvador, Indonesia, Egypt, Guinea, and Cote d'Ivoire and published three earlier books. He is now a senior fellow at ADST, assisting authors of publications in ADST's Memoirs and Occasional Papers Series.


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