THOMAS D. BOYATT
Ambassador Boyatt
was born in Cincinnati,
Ohio, in 1933. He received his B.A.
in 1955 from Princeton, and an M.A. from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. From 1956-59
he served in the United States Air Force.
Entering the Foreign Service in 1959 Boyatt served as Vice Consul in Antofagasta, Chile (1960-62); Assistant to the Under
Secretary of the Treasury (1962-64); Economic Officer in Luxembourg (1964-66);
and Political Counselor at the Embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus (1967-70). He returned
to Washington as Special Assistant to the
Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East.
He was Director of Cyprus Affairs (1971-74), and named a
member of the Senior Seminar in Foreign Policy the following year. In 1975 Boyatt became Minister-Counselor at the American Embassy in
Santiago,
Chile. Mr. Boyatt was chosen to be Ambassador to Upper Volta in 1978, and in 1980 he was nominated
and confirmed as United States Ambassador to Colombia. In 1983 Ambassador Boyatt was promoted to the personal rank of Career Minister
of the Foreign Service. He speaks Spanish, French and Greek.
Ambassador Boyatt
received the State Department’s Meritorious Honor Award in 1969 “for heroism in
helping injured passengers to safety and negotiating passenger release with
Syria” during the 1969 hijacking of a TWA plane on which he was a passenger by
Palestinian guerillas. He received the William R. Rivkin Award “for intellectual courage, creativity,
disciplined dissent, and taking bureaucratic and physical risks for peace on
Cyprus...” in 1970, and in 1979 was given the Christian A. Herter Award “for extraordinary contributions to the
practice of diplomacy.” In 1999 he received the Foreign Service Cup for post-
retirement contributions to the Service, and the lifetime achievement award from
the American Foreign Service Association (AFSA) in 2001. Several foreign
governments have also decorated him.
Retiring in 1985, Ambassador Boyatt became Vice President of Sears World Trade, and President of US Defense Systems (USDS) in 1990.
>From 1984-88 Boyatt was a Trustee of Princeton University. He has been a member of the
Advisory Boards of the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton, the Patterson School
at the University of Kentucky and is currently a Director of the Institute for
the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown University. He teaches at the Foreign
Service Institute throughout the year, is President of the Foreign Affairs
Council, an umbrella group composed of 11 organizations which support the
Foreign Service, and Treasurer of AFSA-PAC. In August 2004
Ambassador Boyatt was appointed by Secretary Powell to be a member of
the State Department Leadership and Management Advisory Council. He is a member
of the American
Academy of Diplomacy and
several corporate and non-profit boards. He is married to Maxine Shearwood and they have five
children.