Robinson McIlvaine
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Robinson McIlvaine | |
|---|---|
| United States Ambassador to Dahomey | |
| In office July 31, 1961 – March 19, 1964[1] | |
| Preceded by | R. Borden Reams |
| Succeeded by | Clinton E. Knox |
| United States Ambassador to Guinea | |
| In office October 27, 1966 – September 25, 1969[1] | |
| United States Ambassador to Kenya | |
| In office September 30, 1969 – April 4, 1973[1] | |
| Preceded by | Glenn W. Ferguson |
| Succeeded by | Anthony D. Marshall |
| Personal details | |
| Born | July 17, 1913[2] |
| Died | June 24, 2001 (aged 87) |
| Profession | Diplomat |
| Military service | |
| Branch/service | United States Navy |
Robinson McIlvaine (July 17, 1913 – June 24, 2001) was an American career diplomat who was President of the African Wildlife Foundation from 1978 to 1982.
McIlvaine was born in Downingtown, Pennsylvania, in 1913. He graduated from Harvard College.[3] McIlvaine served in the U.S. Navy in Panama prior to the Attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. He was made commanding officer of a submarine chaser in the Guadalcanal area, and later became captain of a destroyer escort on Atlantic convoy duty, reaching the rank of Commander.[4]
McIlvaine's first wife, Jane McClary, was a writer for the Times Herald and Fortune magazine.[5] After they married, in 1946 McIlvaine became the owner, editor and publisher of The Archive, a Downingtown weekly that had been founded 1853 but was no longer much more than an advertising sheet, with 1,750 subscribers. Jane wrote a book about their years at the paper called It Happens Every Thursday. The book was made into a movie starring John Forsythe and Loretta Young, and then into a television series.[6]
While an editor, McIlvaine became active in Republican politics.[3] Leaving the paper, he joined the State Department in 1953 as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs.[7] He held the posts of Deputy Chief of Mission in Lisbon and Director of the Inter-Departmental Seminar. He became Chairman of the U.S. Section of the Caribbean Commission.[4]