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William Stuart (1824–1896)

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Name
  
William Stuart

Role
  
1824–96

Education
  
Trinity College, Cambridge, Eton College

The Hon. Sir William Stuart KCMG CB (3 March 1824 – 1 April 1896) was a British diplomat who was Minister to Argentina, Greece and The Netherlands.

Contents

Career

William Stuart was the third son of General Robert Walter Stuart, 11th Lord Blantyre. He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. He entered the Diplomatic Service in 1845 as unpaid attaché in Paris, and continued unpaid for six years until 1851. In 1856 it fell to Stuart (by then with the rank of First Attaché at Paris) to carry back to London the Ratification, signed by the monarchs of the participating countries, of the Treaty of Paris (1856).

In 1856 Stuart began a series of posts as Secretary of Legation, first at Rio de Janeiro, then at Naples from 1859 until February 1861 when King Francis II was overthrown and the British legation at Naples was closed. Stuart was then appointed to Athens in October 1861, to Washington, D.C. in October 1862, to Constantinople in 1864 and to St Petersburg in 1866.

In 1868 Stuart was appointed Minister to the Argentine Republic, although in March 1871 he was in London acting as Protocolist to a conference on the European Commission of the Danube, when he was awarded the CB. In 1872 he was appointed to be Minister to Greece, and in 1877 to his final post as Minister to the Netherlands and Luxembourg. His duties there included negotiation of a bilateral treaty between Great Britain and Luxembourg on the extradition of criminals in 1880 (superseded by later European conventions, currently the European Arrest Warrant), and the North Sea Fisheries Convention of 1882. While at The Hague he was knighted KCMG in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1886. He retired in 1888.

Family

Stuart married the eldest daughter of Major-General G. B. Tremenheere. Lady Stuart died, aged 52, on 3 January 1900.

References

William Stuart (1824–1896) Wikipedia