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Consulate of the United States in Liverpool : ウィキペディア英語版
Consulate of the United States, Liverpool

The United States Consulate in Liverpool, England, was established in 1790, and was the first overseas consulate founded by the then fledgling United States of America.〔(Virginia Historical Society ) Retrieved July 12, 2010〕 Liverpool was at the time an important center for transatlantic commerce and a vital trading partner for the former Thirteen Colonies. Among those who served the United States as consul in Liverpool were the writer Nathaniel Hawthorne, the spy Thomas Haines Dudley, and John S. Service, who was driven out of the United States Foreign Service by McCarthyite persecution. After World War II, as Liverpool declined in importance as an international port, the consulate was eventually closed down.
==History==
The first consul was James Maury, who held the office from 1790 to 1829,〔(Liverpool Athenaeum ) Retrieved July 12, 2010〕〔(p.49, United States Congress, Senate, ''Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, Volume 1, '' ) Retrieved July 18, 2010〕 and whose portrait still hangs today in Liverpool Town Hall.〔(US Embassy, London ) Retrieved July 12, 2010〕
In 1801 Maury chaired the inaugural meeting of the American Chamber of Commerce in Liverpool, representing Liverpool merchants trading with the United States. Maury was the first signatory to the society's rules and was its first President.〔 Maury held the position of consul for 39 years, until 1829, when he was removed from office by President Andrew Jackson.〔(Liverpool Athenaeum ) Retrieved June 1, 2010〕
The consulate stood on the quayside of Steers Dock and the Pool of Liverpool. The building was decorated with a golden bald eagle, the national symbol of the United States and a reassuring sign to American sailors or travellers arriving at Liverpool docks.
According to Edwin Williams's New York Annual Register, published in 1835, United States Consuls were not paid, but were:
:"in effect, agents for commerce and seamen. They receive no yearly salaries... and their compensation is derived from the fees which they are allowed by law. () are principally occupied in verifying, in various forms, the legality of the trade of the United States with foreign nations, and in relieving and sending home American seamen, who by accident or misfortune are left destitute".〔( Williams, Edwin, p.438, ''The New York Annual Register'' 1835 ) Retrieved July 18, 2010〕

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