William Phillips (diplomat)


William Phillips was a career United States diplomat who served twice as an Under Secretary of State.

Early life

Phillips was born on May 30, 1878 in Beverly, Massachusetts. His parents were John Charles Phillips, Jr., who married Anna Tucker in London, England on October 23, 1874. His older brother was John Charles Phillips, a prominent zoologist, ornithologist and environmentalist. His sister, Martha Phillips, was married to Andrew James Peters, a U.S. Congressman and former Mayor of Boston.
Phillips was a member of the Boston Brahmin Phillips family and his ancestors included John Phillips, the first Mayor of Boston and his great-grandfather, Wendell Phillips, the abolitionist and his grand-uncle, and Samuel Phillips, Jr., and John Phillips, founders of the Phillips Academy and Phillips Exeter Academy. He was a descendant of the Rev. George Phillips of Watertown, the progenitor of the New England Phillips family in America.
He graduated from Harvard College in 1900 and graduated from Harvard Law School in 1903.

Career

His first political job was working as a private secretary in London to Joseph Hodges Choate, the United States Ambassador to the Court of St. James. Choate was a friend of Phillips' family and also from Massachusetts.
Phillips subsequently went to work for the United States Minister to China in Beijing. After his return from China, he became a member of President Theodore Roosevelt's Tennis Cabinet and thanks to his previous diplomatic experience and new friendship with TR was assigned to set up the State Department's Division of Far Eastern Affairs and was made its first chief. In 1909, he returned to work in London for Ambassador Whitelaw Reid.
In 1914, he was appointed as Assistant Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson and remained in that position until 1920, when he was made the Minister Plenipotentiary to Netherlands and Luxembourg.
From 1922 to 1924, he served as Under Secretary of State. In 1924, he was appointed as Ambassador to Belgium, where he remained until 1927, when he became the first Minister to Canada, until 1929.
He served as Under Secretary of State again from 1933 to 1936.
of American ambassadors after holding a conference with President Franklin D. Roosevelt on December 6, 1938. From left to right: William C. Bullitt, Sumner Welles, Hugh R. Wilson, and Phillips.
In 1936, he was appointed as the Ambassador to Italy, in the immediate aftermath of that country's invasion of Ethiopia. He resigned on October 6, 1941. The following year, he was made chief of the United States Office of Strategic Services in London.
In October 1942, Phillips was appointed as a personal representative of Franklin D. Roosevelt, serving in India. Phillips was said to be extremely unpopular with the British due to his pro-independence views. In 1943, he was made a Special Advisor on European political matters to then- General Dwight D. Eisenhower, with the rank of ambassador.
Phillips retired officially in 1944 but returned briefly to diplomatic life in 1945 when he was made a special assistant to Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius, Jr. In 1946, he served on the Anglo-American Committee on Palestine, opposing the British plan for partitioning the country. In 1947, he was unsuccessful in mediating a border dispute between Siam and French Indo-China.
In 1953, his memoir, Ventures in Diplomacy, was published by the Beacon Press.

Personal life

In 1910, Phillips married Caroline Astor Drayton, the daughter of Charlotte Augusta Astor and J. Coleman Drayton and a granddaughter of William Backhouse Astor Jr. and Caroline Webster Schermerhorn. Through her father, she was a great-granddaughter of U.S. Representative William Drayton. Together, they were the parents of:
Phillips died on February 23, 1968, at the age of 89.