Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Eugenie Anderson

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
President
  
Harry S. Truman

Preceded by
  
Edward Page, Jr.

Education
  
President
  
John F. Kennedy

Role
  

Succeeded by
  
Robert D. Coe

Name
  
Eugenie Anderson

Preceded by
  
Josiah Marvel, Jr.

Succeeded by
  
Political party
  
Eugenie Anderson photosstategovlibrariesdenmark29778oldambs4

Died
  
March 31, 1997, Red Wing, Minnesota, United States

Longines chronoscope with mrs eugenie anderson


Eugenie Anderson (May 26, 1909 – March 31, 1997), also known as Helen Eugenie Moore Anderson, was a United States diplomat. She is best known as the first woman appointed chief of mission at the ambassador level in US history.

Contents

Eugenie Anderson wwwminnpostcomsitesdefaultfilesimagecachear

KSMQ's "Off 90" Episode 1005


Personal life

Eugenie Anderson Helen Eugenie Anderson

Helen Eugenie Moore was born on May 26, 1909, in Adair, Iowa, one of five children of Rev. Ezekial A. Moore, a Methodist minister, and his wife, FloraBelle. She concentrated in music as a student, and attended the Juilliard School in New York; her original hope was to become a concert pianist. She was a member of the Iowa Beta Chapter of Pi Beta Phi Women's Fraternity at Simpson College. She married John Pierce Anderson in 1929 and had two children, Hans and Johanna.

Public life

Eugenie Anderson Anderson Helen Eugenie Moore 19091997 MNopedia

Anderson's interest in international affairs had been stirred by a trip to Europe in 1937, where in Germany she first saw a totalitarian state in action, as she recalled. On her return she spoke frequently for the League of Women Voters, fighting the strong isolationist policies of the time.

Eugenie Anderson Minnesotan Eugenie Anderson blazed trail for female diplomats MinnPost

Anderson helped to create the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party in 1944. Four years later, as one of the few women, she was elected to an office in the national Democratic Party. In 1948, as the DFL split from the national Democratic Party in a controversy over goals and ideology, she supported Hubert H. Humphrey. She was rewarded for this support in 1949, when she was appointed by President Truman as U.S. ambassador to Denmark (1949–1953). Truman's appointment made her the first woman appointed chief of mission at the ambassador level in US history. (The first female chief of mission at the minister rank was Ruth Bryan Owen in 1933).

Eugenie Anderson Famous Iowans Eugenie Moore Anderson DesMoinesRegistercom

She was later appointed by Kennedy to be ambassador to Bulgaria (1962–1964). Thus Anderson became the first American woman to represent the United States in a country allied with the Soviet Union.

After her retirement from these posts, President Johnson appointed Anderson to the United Nations Trusteeship Council and a year later she served on the United Nations Committee for Decolonization.

References

Eugenie Anderson Wikipedia