Carol Laise

Caroline Clendening Laise
United States Ambassador to Nepal
In office
1966–1973
President Lyndon B. Johnson
Personal details
Born November 14, 1917(1917-11-14)
Winchester, Virginia
Died July 25, 1991(1991-07-25) (aged 73)
Dummerston, Vermont
Nationality American
Spouse(s) Ellsworth Bunker
Alma mater American University
George Washington University

Carol Laise (November 14, 1917 – July 25, 1991)[1] was an American civil servant, ambassador to Nepal and the first female Assistant Secretary of State.

Biography

Born in Winchester, Virginia to Elizabeth Frances (née Stevens) and James Frederic Laise.[2] She received a Bachelor of Arts degree from American University in 1938, majoring in public administration,[2] and then a Master of Arts in political science from George Washington University in 1940.[3][4]

Laise worked as a coder for the Civil Service Commission in 1940, her first government position. She had a position in the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration for a short time before joining the State Department in 1948. She was an adviser from 1956 to 1961, and in 1962 became deputy director of the Bureau of South Asian Affairs.

In 1965, Laise traveled to India and Pakistan as an adviser to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. After a year in New Delhi, President Lyndon B. Johnson named her ambassador to Nepal in 1966, a position she held until 1973.[3]

On January 3, 1967 she married 72-year-old Ambassador at Large Ellsworth Bunker in Kathmandu.[5] Later that year he was named ambassador to South Vietnam and for nearly the first six years of their marriage they only saw each other monthly, via a special government flight offered by President Johnson as enticement for Bunker to accept the post.[6]

In October 1973, she became Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, and in 1974 became director general of the Foreign Service, until her retirement in 1977.[7]

She died at home in Dummerston, Vermont, of cancer in 1991 at the age of 73.[3]

References

Government offices
Preceded by
Michael Collins
Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs
October 10, 1973 – March 27, 1975
Succeeded by
John Reinhardt