Piper (fourth from the left with a pocket watch), and other diplomats in New York State, 1863.

Count Carl Edward Vilhelm Piper (1820 - 1891) was a Swedish nobleman and diplomat. In the beginning of his career he worked in the Swedish Foreign Office and had served as Swedish-Norwegian legation-secretary in Copenhagen during the Crimean War. In the late 1850s he served as envoyée to Italy. In 1861 he was appointed minister to the United States and served to 1864, when he was replaced by Baron de Wetterstedt. Initially, Piper was very critical of Americans and the U.S. political system, Americans lacked love of the nation and the constitution needed to be changed.[1] In 1864 he moderated his views, and believed that Americans were basically all right.[2] Piper was very close to Secretary of State William H. Seward.

References

  1. Private letter from Count Edward Piper to Ludvig Manderström, dated 19 November 1861 in Ludvig Manderströms collection, E 4753, Riksarkivet, Stockholm.
  2. Private letter from Count Edward Piper to Ludvig Manderström, dated 26 June 1864, Manderströms collections, E 4753. Riksarkivet, Stockholm.
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