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Robert Charles Brewster
United States Ambassador to Ecuador

In office
October 1, 1973 – April 8, 1976
President Richard Nixon
Preceded by Findley Burns Jr.
Succeeded by Richard J. Bloomfield
Inspector General of the Department of State

In office
January 15, 1979 – January 18, 1981
President Jimmy Carter
Preceded by Theodore L. Eliot Jr.
Succeeded by Robert Lyle Brown
Personal details
Born 1921
Died December 20, 2009
Spouse(s) Mary
Alma mater Grinnell College, University of Washington, Columbia University
Profession Diplomat

Robert Charles Brewster (1921 - December 20, 2009 Washington, DC) was the American Ambassador to Ecuador from 1973 until 1976[1] and Inspector General of the Department of State from 1979 until 1981.[2] During his tenure as ambassador, the US lifted the ban on military sales to Ecuador “in an effort to improve relations with Latin America.”[3]

Biography[]

Ambassador Brewster attended Grinnell College before transferring to the University of Washington, Class of 1943. He enlisted in the Navy and went to Midshipman's School at Columbia before being assigned to the USS O'Brien (DD-415). When he returned from the Navy, he studied international affairs at Columbia University for two years.[4]

Brewster died at the age of 88 at a retirement community in Washington having suffered from Parkinson's Disease and stomach cancer. He was a native of Beatrice, Nebraska.[3]

References[]

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