Full Title
Abroad for Her Country: Tales of a Pioneer Woman Ambassador in
the U.S. Foreign Service
Description
In Abroad for Her Country, Jean M. Wilkowski shares the story of
her extraordinary career in the U.S. Foreign Service during the last
half of the twentieth century. Born in an era when few women sought
professional careers, Wilkowski graduated from Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods College and the University of Wisconsin and then
rose through the ranks at the Department of State, from Vice Consul
to the first woman U.S. Ambassador to an African country and the
first woman acting U.S. Ambassador in Latin America.
During her thirty-five-year diplomatic career, Wilkowski was sent
first as a vice consul to the Caribbean during World War II, when
the Department of State was "even taking in 4-Fs and women." She
moved on to more challenging assignments in Latin America and
Europe. For much of her career, she specialized in protecting and
promoting U.S. trade and investment interests in such posts as
Paris, Milan, Rome, Santiago, and Geneva. She also served during a
revolution in Bogatá, attacks on the U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa,
and the war between El Salvador and Honduras, when she called in
U.S. humanitarian aid for 50,000 war-displaced persons. In 1977 she
became coordinator of the U.S. preparation for the 1979 United
Nations Conference on Science and Technology in Vienna. She worked
closely with Notre Dame president Theodore Hesburgh, head of the
U.S. delegation, and accompanied the delegation on its fact-finding
visit to the Peoples' Republic of China.
Authors
Jean M. Wilkowski entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1944,
accepting career assignments to nine countries on three continents
before retiring in 1980. She has received six honorary degrees and
is the only woman to receive the Foreign Service Cup from the
Diplomatic and Consular Officers, Retired (DACOR). |