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  1. Pamela Harriman

    Pamela Harriman

    American diplomat

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  1. Pamela Beryl Harriman (née Digby; March 20, 1920 – February 5, 1997), also known as Pamela Churchill Harriman, was an English-born American political activist for the Democratic Party, diplomat, and socialite.

  2. Aug 9, 2024 · Pamela Harriman was a British-born socialite and American political figure who made a name for herself first as the wife or lover of a succession of prominent wealthy and powerful men and later, in the United States, as a doyenne of the Democratic Party.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • She Had Humble Beginnings
    • She Was on Her Own
    • She Had Interesting Tutors
    • She Jumped Hurdles
    • She Had No Real Friends
    • She Dreamt of Escape
    • She Felt Unaccomplished
    • She Was A Liar
    • She Was Still A Country Girl
    • She Went in Blind

    Pamela Harriman, born Pamela Digby, entered the world on March 20, 1920. Her parents, Edward and Constance, laid their firstborn to rest in an interesting crib—the bottom drawer of a wooden chest. But this simple bedding was but a cozy substitute for the bright nursery that awaited her at Minterne Magna, a large manor and property that promised not...

    Pamela Harriman got her first taste of travel when she was only 18 months old. Her parents uprooted the entire family and moved to Australia—a land of better tax advantages and exotic fauna. But there was a dark side to it all. In truth, her parents wanted very little to do with their daughter—it was the English way, after all. She made the trip to...

    Pamela Harriman learned her first words, not from doting parents, but rather...from a doting parrot.Yes, a chatty white pet parrot taught her to speak, but also instilled in her a love for mimicry that she later used to emulate accents such as Winston Churchill’s. She also learned to ride horses at the tender age of three. But instead of being taug...

    By 1924, the Digby family had settled back into their large family home at Minterne, enjoying every comfort of an upper-class existence. It was here, on 1,400 acres of land and countryside, that Pamela had the freedom to hone her talents on horseback and eventually took her riding to the competitive level, performing confidently in shows at the Int...

    Pamela was undeniably a people person and she hated being alone. This made her all the more resentful of her life at Minterne, where her only real friend was her sister Sheila, if she could even consider Sheila a friend. The two girls barely got along and to Pamela, her sister was the farthest thing from the fun-loving people she wishedto surround ...

    Pamela was ambitious and extroverted—she sought the spotlight and thrived in its glow. Unlike her sister, Sheila enjoyed solitude and took to hunting alone in the forest, something Pamela abhorred. At the end of the day, it was Pamela who thought nothing but of escape. To her, the country was mundane and mind-numbingly boring. She dreamed of the ci...

    In 1934, after years of pleading to be sent away to school, the Digbys sent both Pamela and Sheila to a boarding school in Hertfordshire called Downham. After two years studying home economics, she jetted off to Paris for study at a finishing school. Later in her life, Pamela used her time at these institutions to concoct an elaborate lie. It was o...

    As an adult, Pamela embellished her educational accomplishments, effectively lying about her qualifications to hide her embarrassment over her meager academics. She called Downham a college and claimed the ‘B’ she received stood for bachelor, hoping that her peers would believe her to be a college graduate. And then there was the Paris finishing sc...

    When Pamela arrived in Paris, she was still a naive and pampered country girl—bright-eyed, with a head covered in bouncing, red curls. Sheltered by her nannies, she was still more a child than a modern teenager and had difficulty adjusting to the bustle of city life. In addition, she was alsocompletelyuneducated when it came to manners of the heart...

    After Paris, Pamela moved to Munich—but her timing? Not so great. At that point, Munich was the beating heart of Nazi Germany. In 1938, the city served as headquarters for Hitler’s Nationalist Social Party and there were already outward displays of unrest. But Pamela, unphased by the presence of infantrymen in her new city, wasn’t completely anti-G...

  3. Pamela Harriman, the United States Ambassador to France, a leading figure in the Democratic Party and for decades one of the most vivacious women on the international scene, died yesterday at the...

  4. 4 days ago · Remember Pamela Harriman? You’re looking at her Democratic Party. The revered power broker shaped politics on two continents over her 50-year reign as kingmaker.

  5. Feb 6, 1997 · Harriman, a friend and close political ally of the president and co-chairwoman of the 1992 Democratic presidential campaign, died at the American Hospital in suburban Neuilly-Sur-Seine.

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  7. Nov 22, 2015 · Almost 19 years after her death, Pamela Harriman is being exhumed through not just one, but two, novels. In a strange confluence, the oft-wedded socialite and primo political hostess—often dubbed...

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