- David Gray (ambassador)
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For other people named David Gray, see David Gray (disambiguation).
David Gray (1870–1968)[1] was best known as the United States Ambassador to Ireland from 15 April 1940 until 28 June 1947.[2] His official title was 'Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary' and his official residence was Florida.[3] In his own words, his appointment to the Ambassadorship was nepotic, as he was First Lady's Eleanor Roosevelt's uncle through marriage.[4] Gray was the Ambassador through most of the Second World War and the start of the Cold War. He led American efforts to convince Ireland to enter the war on the side of the Allies. His performance was such that Éamon de Valera sought repeatedly to have Gray replaced by another ambassador, especially after the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.[5]
The character of David Gray was played in the RTÉ television series Caught in a Free State by the actor O. Z. Whitehead.
Gray's relationship with President Franklin Roosevelt
As a Roosevelt family member, Gray wrote to President Franklin Roosevelt, as well as Eleanor Roosevelt a number of dry verses and remarks to the President, sometimes humorous and sometimes scathing in his opinion's of De Valera and Irish policy towards the War.
“ Since that time there is no record of his having done what was generous or noble or wise, only what he believed served 'the 'Cause'... he regarded hiself as 'The Cause'... What was good for de Valera became good for Ireland. There was no honest view other than his... he dedicated himself to justifying his mistakes and making them stand in history as not being mistakes...[6] ” Senior lecturer in U.S. Foreign Policy, Timothy J. Lynch, has observed that 'his animus towards his host nation made Gray atypical of American ambassadors in Dublin'.[7]
Gray donated many of his personal papers to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library before his death, including extensive correspondence.
References
- ^ The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Gravley to Gray
- ^ NNDB: US Ambassador to Ireland
- ^ Former Ambassadors - U.S. Embassy Dublin, Ireland
- ^ Tim Pat Coogan. Eamon De Valera The Man who was Ireland. p. 542. ISBN 0760712414.
- ^ Tim Pat Coogan. Eamon De Valera The Man who was Ireland. p. 543. ISBN 0760712414.
- ^ Tim Pat Coogan. Eamon De Valera The Man who was Ireland. p. 544. ISBN 0760712414.
- ^ Lynch, Timothy J. (2004). Turf war: the Clinton administration and Northern Ireland. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 11. ISBN 9780754642947. http://books.google.com/books?id=l4SoDU_daVoC&pg=PA11&dq=gray+ambassador+relationship+de+valera+ireland#v=onepage&q=&f=false. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
External links
United States Ambassadors to Ireland Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary to the Irish Free State
1927–1950Frederick A. Sterling 1927-34 | W. W. McDowell 1934 | Alvin M. Owsley 1935-37 | John Cudahy 1937-40 | David Gray 1940-47 | George A. Garrett 1947-50Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
1950–presentGeorge A. Garrett 1950-51 | Francis P. Matthews 1951-52 | William Howard Taft III 1953-57 | Scott McLeod 1957-61 | Edward G. Stockdale 1961-62 | Matthew H. McCloskey 1962-64 | Raymond R. Guest 1965-68 | Leo J. Sheridan 1968-69 | John D.J. Moore 1969-75 | Walter J.P. Curley Jr. 1975-77 | William V. Shannon 1977-81 | William E. McCann 1981 (acting) | Peter H. Dailey 1982-84 | Robert F. Kane 1984-85 | Margaret M. O'Shaughnessy Heckler 1985-89 | Richard Anthony Moore 1989-92 | William Henry Gerald FitzGerald 1992-93 | Jean Kennedy Smith 1993-98 | Michael J. Sullivan 1999-01 | Richard J. Egan 2001-03 | James C. Kenny 2003-06 | Thomas C. Foley 2006-09 | Dan Rooney 2009-presentCategories:- United States ambassadors to Ireland
- 1870 births
- 1968 deaths
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