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Pamela
Harriman was one of the remarkable women of the twentieth century. Her
designation in 1993 as the United States ambassador to France was the
culmination of a varied and vivid career.
Relations between France and the United States were sometimes
prickly in the nineteen-nineties. Mrs. Harriman prepared
for her appointment by spending long hours with our best
academic specialists on France. This was typical of the
disciplined and conscientious approach that, accompanied by
linguistic skills, unflagging energy and remarkable charm, made
her an effective representative of her adopted country.
"She made herself," wrote the commentator William
Pfaff from Paris in the International Herald Tribune,
"the most successful American political ambassador of the
decade." After her death in 1997, the French
president Jacques Chirac, calling her "a great ambassador
of the United States and a grand lady," conferred on
her posthumously Frances's highest award, a Legion of Honor
medal. President Clinton and Vice President Gore spoke at
her funeral in the National Cathedral in Washington.
Pamela Harriman had long appreciated the importance of public
service. She felt that foreign service in particular
offered young people a unique opportunity to inform and fulfill
themselves while serving their country. That is why the
College of William and Mary, an institution Pamela Harriman had
long befriended, honored her by establishing the Pamela Harriman
Foreign Service Fellowships.
History had educated Pamela Harriman in the transcendent
significance of public service in a democracy. She was
born in 1920 to an old English county family. Marriage to
Randolph Churchill in 1939 thrust her into the center of the
British government during the Second World War. Winston
Churchill encouraged Pamela's genuine absorption in public
affairs, intelligent curiosity, an instinct for people and a
steely determination to do any job.
In the late nineteen fifties she came to the United States and
in 1960 married Leland Hayward, the theatrical agent and
producer. After his death she married Averell Harriman,
whom she had first met in London during the war. Harriman,
a leading diplomat of his generation as well as a former
governor of New York and a force in the Democratic party,
completed her education in diplomacy and politics.
Accompanying her husband on his foreign travels until his death
in 1986, Pamela Harriman met world leaders on both sides of the
Iron Curtain.
Acquiring American citizenship and established in Washington,
Pamela Harriman was a founder and chairman of Democrats for the
80s, a political action committee. As an influential
political activist, she was among the first to bring to
Washington a then little known governor of Arkansas, William
Jefferson Clinton.
Her abiding concern was foreign affairs and world peace.
And she believed in the young. "It is you," she
once said, "the young people just entering public service,
to whom we look to forge new paths of understanding among the
nations of the world."

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