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Sumner Gerard

Sumner Gerard
MBE
United States Ambassador to Jamaica
In office
June 4, 1974 – April 15, 1977
President Richard Nixon
Gerald Ford
Jimmy Carter
Preceded by Vincent de Roulet
Succeeded by Frederick Irving
Montana Senate Minority Leader
In office
1965–1966
Preceded by J. S. Brenner
Succeeded by Jean Turnage
Member of the Montana Senate from Madison County
In office
1962–1966
Montana House Minority Leader
In office
1959–1961
Preceded by Rudy Juedeman
Succeeded by James P. Lucas
Member of the Montana House of Representatives from Madison County
In office
1955–1961
Personal details
Born July 15, 1916
Melville, New York, United States
Died February 24, 2005 (aged 88)
Vero Beach, Florida, United States
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Louise Grosvenor (m. 1945; div. 1966)
Teresa Dabrowska (m. 1966; div. 2004)
Parents Sumner K. Gerard
Helen Coster
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge (BA, MA)
Religion Episcopalian
Awards Order of the British Empire
Military service
Allegiance  United States
Service/branch  United States Army
 United States Navy
 United States Marine Corps
Years of service 1940–1945
Rank US-O3 insignia.svg Captain
Battles/wars World War II
Awards Army Commendation Medal

Sumner K. Gerard Jr. MBE (July 15, 1916 – February 24, 2005) was an American businessman, politician, and diplomat. Born in New York to a prominent family descended from Huguenots, Gerard attended Groton School and Trinity College, Cambridge. After serving in the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps during World War II, he moved to Montana and became involved in business, including mining and ranching, and politics.

During the 1950s and 1960s, he was a member of both the Montana House of Representatives and the Montana Senate, serving as Republican minority leader in both. In 1974, President Richard Nixon appointed him United States Ambassador to Jamaica, a position he held through the administration of President Gerald Ford, leaving in 1977. He then moved to Florida, working as an adjunct professor of maritime archaeology at the University of Miami. He later retired and died in 2005 in Vero Beach, Florida, aged 88.

Gerard was born in Melville, New York, a hamlet in the Long Island town of Huntington. Born to Sumner K. Gerard and Helen Coster, he had two brothers, James Watson Gerard and Charles Henry Coster Gerard.

His paternal ancestors, the Gerards, were French Huguenots who emigrated to Massachusetts Colony after several generations in Scotland. One of his ancestors from the maternal side of the Gerard family was Increase Sumner, Governor of Massachusetts and Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and James W. Gerard, the United States Ambassador to Germany during World War I, was his uncle. The family settled in Manhattan in the late 18th century and became prominent in business, law, and politics. Gerard Avenue in The Bronx is named for them. The Gerard family were members of the Episcopal Church.


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