The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)

Sir Charles Bagot (1781-1843) was one of Europe's principal diplomats. After serving at the British Foreign Office as George Canning's undersecretary (1807-9), Bagot held successive postings abroad. He served briefly in France (1814-15); established his professional credentials as minister...

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Main Author: Krysiek, James Stephen
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: e-Publications@Marquette 1988
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Online Access:https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AAI8904271
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spelling ftmarquetteuniv:oai:epublications.marquette.edu:dissertations-1564 2024-06-09T07:48:20+00:00 The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824) Krysiek, James Stephen 1988-01-01T08:00:00Z https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AAI8904271 English eng e-Publications@Marquette https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AAI8904271 Dissertations (1962 - 2010) Access via Proquest Digital Dissertations text 1988 ftmarquetteuniv 2024-05-15T16:21:39Z Sir Charles Bagot (1781-1843) was one of Europe's principal diplomats. After serving at the British Foreign Office as George Canning's undersecretary (1807-9), Bagot held successive postings abroad. He served briefly in France (1814-15); established his professional credentials as minister to America (1816-19); and represented Britain as ambassador to Russia (1820-24) and the Netherlands (1824-32). Bagot spent his last years as governor general of Canada (1841-43). His public career has never been fully examined. This study focuses on Bagot's early years in the diplomatic service: after considering his work at the Foreign Office and mission to Paris, I concentrate on Bagot's successes and failures at Washington and St. Petersburg. The London government placed great importance on Bagot's mission to the United States. Britain and America had made their peace at Ghent in 1814. Lord Castlereagh expected Bagot to restore amicable relations with Washington. He also instructed the minister to secure America's full compliance with the commercial convention of 1815. Bagot succeeded admirably on both counts. He likewise negotiated the Rush-Bagot Agreement which disarmed the Great Lakes. The minister tried to conclude an arrangement which would have readmitted the Americans to Britain's North Atlantic fisheries; however, Washington held out for better terms. Bagot returned home in 1819; in 1820 he was created a Knight of the Bath. Sir Charles was the obvious choice for the St. Petersburg embassy. Tsar Alexander I was prepared to arbitrate the dispute over American slaves carried away by British forces following the 1812 war. Bagot knew the contentions of both governments; he presented Britain's case and maneuvered to narrow the scope of Alexander's ruling, thereby reducing Britain's obligation to the Americans. The ambassador also labored to resolve Anglo-Russian differences over maritime and territorial rights in the North Pacific and American Northwest. He made substantial progress in this regard before returning to ... Text North Atlantic Marquette University: e-Publications@Marquette Canada Pacific
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description Sir Charles Bagot (1781-1843) was one of Europe's principal diplomats. After serving at the British Foreign Office as George Canning's undersecretary (1807-9), Bagot held successive postings abroad. He served briefly in France (1814-15); established his professional credentials as minister to America (1816-19); and represented Britain as ambassador to Russia (1820-24) and the Netherlands (1824-32). Bagot spent his last years as governor general of Canada (1841-43). His public career has never been fully examined. This study focuses on Bagot's early years in the diplomatic service: after considering his work at the Foreign Office and mission to Paris, I concentrate on Bagot's successes and failures at Washington and St. Petersburg. The London government placed great importance on Bagot's mission to the United States. Britain and America had made their peace at Ghent in 1814. Lord Castlereagh expected Bagot to restore amicable relations with Washington. He also instructed the minister to secure America's full compliance with the commercial convention of 1815. Bagot succeeded admirably on both counts. He likewise negotiated the Rush-Bagot Agreement which disarmed the Great Lakes. The minister tried to conclude an arrangement which would have readmitted the Americans to Britain's North Atlantic fisheries; however, Washington held out for better terms. Bagot returned home in 1819; in 1820 he was created a Knight of the Bath. Sir Charles was the obvious choice for the St. Petersburg embassy. Tsar Alexander I was prepared to arbitrate the dispute over American slaves carried away by British forces following the 1812 war. Bagot knew the contentions of both governments; he presented Britain's case and maneuvered to narrow the scope of Alexander's ruling, thereby reducing Britain's obligation to the Americans. The ambassador also labored to resolve Anglo-Russian differences over maritime and territorial rights in the North Pacific and American Northwest. He made substantial progress in this regard before returning to ...
format Text
author Krysiek, James Stephen
spellingShingle Krysiek, James Stephen
The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
author_facet Krysiek, James Stephen
author_sort Krysiek, James Stephen
title The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
title_short The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
title_full The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
title_fullStr The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
title_full_unstemmed The diplomatic career of Sir Charles Bagot. The early years: London, Paris, Washington, St. Petersburg (1807-1824)
title_sort diplomatic career of sir charles bagot. the early years: london, paris, washington, st. petersburg (1807-1824)
publisher e-Publications@Marquette
publishDate 1988
url https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AAI8904271
geographic Canada
Pacific
geographic_facet Canada
Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Dissertations (1962 - 2010) Access via Proquest Digital Dissertations
op_relation https://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AAI8904271
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