James Creagan

James F. Creagan (born 1940) is a United States diplomat.

Creagan was born James Francis Creagan in Elyria, Ohio in 1940 and grew up on the shores of Lake Erie in nearby Lorain. He is a 1962 graduate of the University of Notre Dame and holds a Ph.D. from the University of Virginia. Creagan is married to Gwyn Jonsson Creagan of Texas. They are residents of San Antonio, Texas and have two sons.

Ambassador Creagan has taught political science at several universities, including Texas A&M University. Creagan speaks Spanish, Portuguese and Italian. He was previously president of John Cabot University in Rome. He currently directs the Center for International Studies at the University of the Incarnate Word, where he is Amy Lee Freeman Chair of Humanities and teaches courses for the Government and International Affairs Department.

A career diplomat with over thirty years of experience, Creagan began his career as a Consul in Naples, Italy. He served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the American Embassy in Italy before arriving in Honduras. He has also served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the American Embassy to the Holy See, the Consul General in São Paulo, Brazil and the Political Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Brasília. Other assignments include serving as the Political Counselor at the American Embassy in Lisbon and as a political and labor officer in U.S. Embassies in Lima, Mexico, San Salvador and Rome.

Following his ambassadorship in Honduras, Ambassador Creagan was asked to serve as a special Chargé d'Affaires in La Paz, Bolivia, during the summer of 2009. This followed a period of tension in the bilateral relationship marked by the September 2008 declaration of Ambassador Philip S. Goldberg as persona non grata by the Bolivian government.

Honduras

He was nominated by President Bill Clinton to be the U.S. Ambassador to Honduras on March 22, 1996 and was sworn in on July 29, 1996. Creagan arrived in Tegucigalpa in August 1996, and presented his credentials to the Government of Honduras on August 29, 1996. He retired from the foreign service in 1999.

Bolivia

Creagan was called to serve in the State Department in the summer of 2009, as Charges d'Affaires to Bolivia following the abrupt exit of Ambassador Philip S. Goldberg. [1]

References

  1. Mary Frances Monckton Hendrix (20 November 2009). "Professor serves his country as ambassador in Bolivia". The Word Online. Retrieved 21 March 2013.

Sources

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
William Thornton Pryce
United States Ambassador to Honduras
1996 1999
Succeeded by
Frank Almaguer