William Walton Butterworth
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William Walton Butterworth (1903 - 1975) was a U.S. diplomat. He was born in New Orleans. Oreleans Parish, La., September 7, 1903. Butterworth attended The Lawrenceville School where he graduated in 1921. He later attended Princeton University, graduating in 1925. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University. He entered the foreign service and began a career that encompassed 40 years of service. His career began with a one year stint at the State Department in Washington. From 1929 to 1931, he was the vice consul to the Embassy in Singapore. Following brief posts in Washington and Ottawa, he was assigned to the American Embassy in London, where he served as second secretary until 1941. During World War II, Butterworth was first secretary of the American Embassy in Madrid from 1942-44, according to a Washington Post obituary. Concurrently, he was in charge of operations for the United States Commercial Co. for the Iberian Pensinsula, a government entity that played war games by procuring strategic war materials, including tungsten. From 1944-46 he was the U.S. Embassy counselor in Madrid. From 1946 to 1947, Mr. Butterworth served as the couselor of the U.S. Embassy in Nanking, China, where he held the rank of minister and was a political advisor to George Marshall. He was one of the authors of the China White Paper which was highly controversial at the time. Following his assignment in China, Butterworth returned as director for Far Eastern Affairs. He was appointed by General Marshall to be the Assistant Secretary for Far Eastern Affairs in 1950. Butterworth later served as U.S. ambassador to Sweden, U.S. representative to the European Coal and Steel Community, U.S. representative to the European Economic Community and European Atomic Energy Community. Butterworth was appointed by President John F. Kennedy to be U.S. Ambassador to Canada. W.W. Butterworth retired in 1968 and died in 1975 of cirrhosis of the liver.