The Mission

The building of the Angolan Embassy in Canada
The United States has maintained an official
presence in Canada since Henry Morfit was named U.S. Consular
Agent at Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1827. During the next forty
years, a dozen similar missions were opened across British
North America, including a consular agency headed by William
Patrick at Ottawa in 1866. More than sixty years passed before
Canadian accession to full sovereignty within the British
Commonwealth opened the way to formal diplomatic relations
between the two countries. William Phillips was appointed as
the first U.S. Minister to Canada in 1927. In recognition of
Canada's increasingly independent foreign policy and with a
view to increased wartime cooperation, the U.S. legation in
Ottawa was upgraded to an embassy in 1943.
The U.S. Ambassador to Canada is the personal
representative of the President in conducting official
relations between the two countries. When the Ambassador
engages in negotiations, initiates a policy, delivers an
address, or takes part in ceremonies, he does so on behalf of
the President. He also oversees operations at U.S. consulates
in Halifax, Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto, Calgary, and
Vancouver. In addition to the Ambassador, the U.S. Embassy in
Ottawa includes approximately 225 officers and staff. State
Department sections within the Embassy focus on political,
economic, consular, public affairs and administrative
functions. Personnel from fifteen other U.S. Government
agencies manage commercial, agricultural, customs,
immigration, law enforcement, and military relations - all of
which fall under the authority of the Ambassador.
The U.S. Embassy has played a central role in
U.S.-Canadian relations over the past seven decades.
Substantive highlights in this uniquely productive bilateral
relationship include agreement to construct the St. Lawrence
Seaway (1934), implementation of the Ogdensburg

The Residence of the United States Ambassador to Canada
Treaty (1940),
establishment of the North American Air Defense Command
(1958), negotiation of the Auto Pact (1965), and conclusion of
Great Lakes Water Quality Agreements (1972 and 1978). More
recent diplomatic achievements include negotiation of the
U.S.-Canadian and North American Free Trade Agreements (1989
and 1993), and signing of an Air Transport Agreement Between
the the United States of America and Canada easing
restrictions on air travel between the two countries (1995).
In addition to managing the bilateral relationship, the
Embassy has played an important continuing role in
facilitating U.S.-Canadian cooperation in multilateral fora
including the United Nations, the Organization of American
States (OAS), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO),
the Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation
(OECD) and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC). It
also facilitates travel to Canada of high-ranking U.S.
officials, which has included nine Presidents. |