List of ambassadors of Canada to Germany

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This article includes a list of Canadian ambassadors to the Federal Republic of Germany.

History[]

Canada had no diplomatic mission to Germany before the Second World War, though it had in the country as early as 1872, when Wilhelm Hespeler was sent to Berlin as the Dominion of Canada's official immigration agent for several months. German laws from before the First World War against the solicitation of emigrants delayed the establishment of a permanent immigration office by Canada until 1923. was appointed as Canada's first trade commissioner to Germany in 1910, with an office in Hamburg, which relocated to Berlin before closing in 1914 for the duration of the war. The Hamburg trade office was re-opened in 1922 with Leolyn Dana Wilgress as trade commissioner. It again moved to Berlin in 1938, and both it and the immigration office were closed in 1939 during the Second World War. In 1946, after the end of the war, a trade office was established in Frankfurt, and various immigration offices were also established.[1]

In January 1946, the Canadian government established the Canadian Military Mission to the Allied Control Council in Berlin and appointed Lt.-Gen. Maurice Pope, who was responsible both to the Department of External Affairs and the Department of National Defence, as its first head.[1]

By order-in-council, the Canadian government decided, on November 22, 1949, to establish a diplomatic mission in Bonn, the capital of the new Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany). The mission operated under the auspices of the Canadian Military Mission to the Allied Control Council until July 10, 1951, when the Canadian mission in Bonn was upgraded to an embassy with Thomas Clayton Davis as Canada's first Ambassador to West Germany. Canada established diplomatic relations with the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) on August 1, 1975, but never opened an embassy. Instead, Canada's Ambassador to Poland based in Warsaw was accredited as Ambassador to the German Democratic Republic from 1976 until 1990, when the GDR was dissolved and united with West Germany. In 1999, the Canadian Embassy moved from Bonn to Berlin as a result of Germany relocating the seat of government to that city in the same year.[1]

List of ambassadors[]

Ambassador Start of Term End of Term
Thomas Clayton Davis 1951 1954
Charles Ritchie 1954 1958
Escott Reid 1958 1962
John Kennett Starnes 1962 1966
Richard Plant Bower 1966 1970
Gordon Gale Crean 1970 1975
John Gelder Horler Halstead 1975 1980
Klaus Goldschlag 1980 1983
1983 1987
William Thomas Delworth 1988 1992
Paul Heinbecker 1992 1996
Gaëtan Lavertu 1996 2000
2000 2004
Paul Dubois 2004 2008
Peter Boehm 2008 2012
Marie Gervais-Vidricaire 2013 2017
Stéphane Dion 2017

See also[]

References[]

External links[]


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