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List of ambassadors of the United States to China

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FieldValue
postAmbassador
bodythe United States to the People's Republic of China
美利坚合众国驻华大使
insigniaUS Department of State official seal.svg
insigniasize120px
insigniacaptionSeal of the United States Department of State
imageOfficial portrait of Ambassador David Perdue.jpg
incumbentDavid Perdue
incumbentsinceMay 16, 2025
residenceBeijing
nominatorThe president
appointerThe president
appointer_qualifiedwith Senate advice and consent
formationFebruary 27, 1979
firstLeonard Woodcock
website
flagFlag of a United States ambassador.svg
flagcaptionFlag of a United States ambassador

美利坚合众国驻华大使

The United States ambassador to China is the chief United States diplomat to the People's Republic of China. The United States has sent diplomatic representatives to China since 1844, when Caleb Cushing, as commissioner, negotiated the Treaty of Wanghia. Commissioners represented the United States in China from 1844 to 1857. Until 1898, China did not have a system in place for the Emperor to accept the Letters of Credence of foreign representatives. From 1858 to 1935, the United States representative in China was formally Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to China. The American legation in Nanjing was upgraded to an embassy in 1935 and the Envoy was promoted to Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.

During the republican era, the United States recognized the Beiyang Government in Beijing from 1912 to 1928 and the Nationalist Government in Nanjing (and Chongqing from 1937 to 1945) from 1928 onwards. After the Communist Party established the People's Republic of China in mainland China in 1949 and the Kuomintang moved the Republic of China government from Nanjing to Taipei of Taiwan, the United States continued to recognize the Republic of China as the legitimate Chinese government and maintained its embassy in Taiwan. However, in 1973, the United States established a Liaison Office in Beijing to represent its interests in mainland China. In 1976, the Chief of the Liaison Office was promoted to the rank of ambassador. In December 1978, the United States severed official relations with the Republic of China and in January 1979, established formal relations with the People's Republic of China. The United States Liaison Office in Beijing was upgraded to an embassy on March 1, 1979. The American Institute in Taiwan was established in 1979 to serve as the unofficial United States representative to Taiwan, with the director of its Taipei Office taking the role of a de facto ambassador.

Chronology

Representation is as follows (years refer to dates of actual service):

Qing Empire:

  • Commissioner to the Great Qing: 1843 to 1857
  • Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary: 1858 to 1912 Republic of China:
  • Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Republic of China: 1913 to 1935
  • Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Republic of China: 1935 to 1979
  • Director of the Taipei Office of the American Institute in Taiwan: 1979 to present People's Republic of China:
  • Chief of the United States Liaison Office in the People's Republic of China: 1973 to 1979
  • Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the People's Republic of China: since 1979

List of envoys to the Qing Empire

NamePortraitHome statePresented credentialsTerminated
Caleb Cushing[[File:Caleb Cushing (cropped).jpg100px]]MassachusettsJune 12, 1844August 27, 1844
Alexander Hill Everett[[File:Alexander Hill Everett, 1790-1847, half, facing slightly right (cropped).jpg100px]]MassachusettsOctober 26, 1846June 28, 1847
John W. Davis[[File:John Wesley Davis.jpg100px]]IndianaOctober 6, 1848May 25, 1850
Humphrey Marshall[[File:HMarshall.jpg100px]]KentuckyJuly 4, 1853January 27, 1854
Robert Milligan McLane[[File:Governor robert mclane of maryland.jpg100px]]MarylandNovember 3, 1854December 12, 1854
Peter Parker[[File:Peter Parker (physician) in the 1860s, from - Hon. Parker - NARA - 528706 (cropped).jpg100px]]MassachusettsJuly 15, 1856August 25, 1857
William B. Reed[[File:William Bradford Reed.jpg100px]]PennsylvaniaMay 3, 1858November 11, 1858
John Elliott Ward[[File:John E. Ward cph.3a01040.jpg100px]]GeorgiaAugust 10, 1859December 15, 1860
Anson Burlingame[[File:Burlingame.gif100px]]MassachusettsAugust 20, 1862November 21, 1867
John Ross Browne[[File:J Ross Browne.jpg100px]]CaliforniaOctober 28, 1868July 5, 1869
Frederick Low[[File:FrederickFerdinandLow.png100px]]CaliforniaApril 27, 1870July 24, 1873
Benjamin Avery[[File:Benjamin Parke Avery, 1828-1875. half lgth., (2) U.S. Minister to China LCCN99614240 (cropped).tif100px]]CaliforniaNovember 29, 1874November 8, 1875
George Seward[[File:George Seward.png100px]]CaliforniaApril 24, 1876August 16, 1880
James Burrill Angell[[File:James Burrill Angell.png100px]]MichiganAugust 16, 1880October 4, 1881
John Russell Young[[File:John Russell Young.jpg100px]]New YorkAugust 17, 1882April 7, 1885
Charles Harvey Denby[[File:Charles Denby, 1830-1904 LCCN2002706285.jpg100px]]IndianaOctober 1, 1885July 8, 1898
Edwin H. Conger[[File:Edwin Hurd Conger, 1843-1907.jpg100px]]IowaJuly 8, 1898April 4, 1905
William Woodville Rockhill[[File:William Woodville Rockhill.jpg100px]]District of ColumbiaJune 17, 1905June 1, 1909
William J. Calhoun[[File:Portrait of William J. Calhoun.jpg100px]]IllinoisApril 21, 1910February 26, 1913

List of envoys to the Republic of China

NamePortraitHome statePresented credentialsTerminated
William J. Calhoun[[File:Portrait of William J. Calhoun.jpg100px]]IllinoisApril 21, 1910February 26, 1913
Paul Samuel Reinsch[[File:Portrait of Paul Samuel Reinsch.jpg100px]]WisconsinNovember 15, 1913September 15, 1919
Charles Richard Crane[[File:Portrait of Charles Richard Crane.jpg100px]]IllinoisJune 12, 1920July 2, 1921
Jacob Gould Schurman[[File:June 1925 photo, Bundesarchiv Bild 102-09830, Jacob Gould Schurman (cropped).jpg146x146px]]New YorkSeptember 12, 1921April 15, 1925
John Van Antwerp MacMurray[[File:John Van Antwerp MacMurray restored.jpg100px]]New JerseyJuly 15, 1925November 22, 1929
Nelson T. Johnson[[File:Nelson T. Johnson cph.3c35451.jpg100px]]OklahomaFebruary 1, 1930September 17, 1935
George Marshall[[File:George C. Marshall, U.S. Secretary of State.jpg100px]]VirginiaDecember 20, 1945January 1947

List of ambassadors to the Republic of China

NamePortraitBirthplacePresented credentialsTerminated
Nelson T. Johnson[[File:Nelson T. Johnson cph.3c35451.jpg100px]]OklahomaSeptember 17, 1935May 14, 1941
Clarence E. Gauss[[File:Clarence Gauss.png100px]]ConnecticutMay 26, 1941November 14, 1944
Patrick J. Hurley[[File:PJayHurl.jpg100px]]OklahomaJanuary 8, 1945September 22, 1945
John Leighton Stuart[[File:John Leighton Stuart1948.jpg100px]]Zhejiang ProvinceJuly 19, 1946August 2, 1949

TaipeiThe Communists took the Nationalist capital of Nanjing in April 1949, but Stuart was not recalled from China until August 1949. The United States did not recognize the new government of the People's Republic of China upon its founding in October 1949. The Consulate in Taipei was upgraded to an embassy in 1953, and therefore the Ambassador to China maintained residence at Taipei, Taiwan, in the Republic of China until relations were severed in 1979. (See: Former American Consulate in Taipei)

NamePortraitHome statePresented credentialsTerminated
Karl L. Rankin[[File:American Ambassador Karl Rankin 藍欽大使.jpg100px]]MaineApril 2, 1953December 30, 1957
Everett F. Drumright[[File:Photograph of Everett F. Drumright 59-SO-82-VS-540-58.jpg100px]]OklahomaMarch 8, 1958March 8, 1962
Alan G. Kirk[[File:Alan g kirk.jpg100px]]New YorkJuly 5, 1962January 18, 1963
Jerauld Wright[[File:U.S. Ambassador Jerauld Wright 美國大使賴特.jpg100px]]District of ColumbiaJune 29, 1963July 25, 1965
Walter P. McConaughy[[File:Photograph of Walter P. McConaughy 59-SO-186-VS-255-53.jpg100px]]AlabamaJune 28, 1966April 4, 1974
Leonard S. Unger[[File:Photograph of Leonard S. Unger 59-SO-335-VS-1078-62.jpg100px]]MarylandMay 25, 1974January 19, 1979

For a list of de facto United States ambassadors to Republic of China since 1979, see list of Directors of the American Institute in Taiwan.

List of chiefs of the United States Liaison Office in Beijing

Between May 1973 and March 1979 prior to the official establishment of diplomatic relations, the United States dispatched a head of United States Liaison Office in Beijing.

NamePortraitHome statePresented credentialsTerminated
David K. E. Bruce[[File:David K. E. Bruce.jpg100px]]VirginiaMay 14, 1973September 25, 1974
George H. W. Bush[[File: DCI George Bush.jpg100px]]TexasSeptember 26, 1974December 7, 1975
Thomas S. Gates Jr.[[File:Thomas S Gates Jr..jpg100px]]PennsylvaniaMay 6, 1976May 8, 1977
Leonard Woodcock[[File:Leonard F. Woodcock.jpg100px]]MichiganJuly 26, 1977March 7, 1979

List of ambassadors to the People's Republic of China

The United States established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, and terminated them with the Republic of China, on January 1, 1979. The American Embassy at Taipei closed February 28, 1979, while the American Liaison Office at Beijing was redesignated the American Embassy on March 1, 1979.

NamePortraitHome statePresented credentialsTerminated
Leonard Woodcock[[File:Leonard F. Woodcock.jpg100px]]MichiganMarch 7, 1979February 13, 1981
Arthur W. Hummel Jr.[[File:Arthur W Hummel Jr.jpg100px]]MarylandSeptember 24, 1981September 24, 1985
Winston Lord[[File:Winston Lord.jpg100px]]New YorkNovember 19, 1985April 23, 1989
James Lilley[[File:James Roderick Lilley.jpg100px]]MarylandMay 8, 1989May 10, 1991
J. Stapleton Roy[[File:Roy Stapleton.jpg100px]]PennsylvaniaAugust 20, 1991June 17, 1995
Jim Sasser[[File:James R. Sasser.jpg100px]]TennesseeFebruary 14, 1996July 1, 1999
Joseph Prueher[[File:Ambassador Joseph Prueher.jpg100px]]TennesseeDecember 15, 1999May 1, 2001
Clark T. Randt Jr.[[File:Clark T Randt Jr.jpg100px]]ConnecticutJuly 28, 2001January 20, 2009
Jon Huntsman Jr.[[File:Ambassador Jon Huntsman.jpg100px]]UtahAugust 28, 2009April 30, 2011
Gary Locke[[File:Gary Locke official portrait.jpg100px]]WashingtonAugust 16, 2011February 21, 2014
Max Baucus[[File:Portrait of Ambassador Max Baucus.jpg100px]]MontanaMarch 20, 2014January 16, 2017
Terry E. Branstad[[File:Terry Branstad official photo.jpg100px]]IowaJuly 12, 2017October 4, 2020
R. Nicholas Burns[[File:Nicholas Burns, U.S. Ambassador.jpg100px]]MassachusettsApril 1, 2022January 18, 2025
David Perdue[[File:Official portrait of Ambassador David Perdue (cropped).jpgframeless133x133px]]GeorgiaMay 16, 2025present

Notes

References

Citations

Sources

References

  1. (2022-01-27). "China demands U.S. halt Olympics 'interference'". The Globe and Mail.
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