Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Alvin P. Adams Jr.

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President
  
Ronald Reagan

Succeeded by
  
John Pierce Ferriter

Preceded by
  
Brunson McKinley

Name
  
Alvin Adams,

Preceded by
  
Jerrold M. North

President
  
George H. W. Bush

Succeeded by
  
Leslie M. Alexander

Died
  
October 10, 2015, Portland, Oregon, United States

Education
  
Vanderbilt University Law School, Yale University

Alvin Philip Adams Jr. (August 29, 1942 – October 10, 2015) was an American diplomat.

Biography

Born in New York City, he was one of three children to Elizabeth Miller, daughter of Nathan L. Miller, and Alvin P. Adams Sr. His father was a Western Airlines executive. His mother owned a bookstore. The younger Adams attended Yale, like his father, and received a J.D. from Vanderbilt University Law School.

Alvin P. Adams Jr. wwwresumeplacecomAdamsgraphicsalamikejpg

Adams joined the Foreign Service in 1967 and was appointed as the United States Ambassador to Djibouti in 1983 where he served until 1985. His next ambassadorship was to Haiti, where he convinced Prosper Avril to relinquish power in a late night conversation held in March 1990. In 1992, Adams was named ambassador to Peru, serving in that post until his retirement from the Foreign Service in 1996.

Adams also worked in Washington, D.C., for what became the Bureau of Counterterrorism before his Haiti stint and was posted in Vietnam prior to all ambassadorial assignments. There, he met his wife, Mai-Anh Nguyen. Before their divorce, they had two sons, Lex and Tung Thanh, who died in the 1989 USS Iowa turret explosion. Adams lived in Buenos Aires and Honolulu, then moved to Portland, Oregon in 2011, where he died on October 10, 2015, aged 73.

References

Alvin P. Adams Jr. Wikipedia