Post: | Ambassador |
Body: | the United States to the Kingdom of Norway |
Flag: | Flag of a United States ambassador.svg |
Flagsize: | 130 |
Flagcaption: | United States ambassador flag |
Insignia: | US Department of State official seal.svg |
Insigniasize: | 120 |
Insigniacaption: | Seal of the United States Department of State |
Seat: | Oslo, Norway |
Department: | U.S. Department of State Embassy of the United States, Oslo |
Incumbent: | Eric Meyer Chargé d'Affairs ad interim |
Incumbentsince: | August 10, 2024[1] |
Style: | His Excellency (formal) Mr. Ambassador (informal)--> |
Residence: | Villa Otium |
Reports To: | U.S. Secretary of State |
Nominator: | The President of the United States |
Termlength: | At the pleasure of the President |
Termlength Qualified: | No fixed term |
Inaugural: | Charles H. Graves as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary |
Formation: | March 8, 1905 |
Website: | U.S. Embassy - Oslo |
The United States ambassador to Norway (formally the ambassador of the United States to the Kingdom of Norway) is the official representative of the president and the government of the United States of America to the king and government of Norway.
Since the United States was recognized as an independent country in 1783, it first established diplomatic relations with Norway in 1818 when Jonathan Russell was accepted as the Minister Plenipotentiary to Sweden and Norway. From 1814 to 1905, Sweden and Norway were in a personal union. Although each country was fully sovereign, they had a common foreign policy and diplomatic service. The United States ambassador to Sweden thus was the U.S. representative to Norway as well as Sweden. In 1905 Sweden and Norway peacefully separated and Norway continued to be an independent constitutional monarchy. On November 14, 1905, the U.S. State Department instructed Ambassador Charles H. Graves to handle affairs for Sweden and Norway separately and the Ambassador was thus commissioned to Norway equally with Sweden, though he remained in Stockholm.
On June 22, 1906, Herbert H. D. Peirce was appointed to be the first ambassador of the U.S. appointed specifically solely for Norway. On August 6, 1906, the embassy in Stockholm ceased all functions related to Norway. Peirce presented his credentials to the foreign minister of Norway on August 13, 1906.
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