Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia in Washington, D.C.

Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia
Coordinates 38°55′3.72″N 77°2′53.16″W / 38.9177000°N 77.0481000°W / 38.9177000; -77.0481000Coordinates: 38°55′3.72″N 77°2′53.16″W / 38.9177000°N 77.0481000°W / 38.9177000; -77.0481000
Location Washington, D.C.
Address 2129 Wyoming Avenue, N.W.
Ambassador Vasko Naumovski

The Embassy of Macedonia in Washington, D.C., also known as the Moses House, is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of Macedonia to the United States.

The embassy is located at 2129 Wyoming Avenue Northwest, in the Kalorama neighborhood of Washington, D.C.[1] The current ambassador of the Republic of Macedonia to the United States is Vasko Naumovski.

House

The house in 2010

The Moses House was constructed in 1893 and is a mixture of Queen Anne and Neoclassical architecture. The house was designed by Thomas Franklin Schneider, architect of the Cairo Apartment Building on Q Street NW, and is the oldest standing building in the Kalorama neighborhood. The building was owned by businessman W.H. Moses until it was sold and converted into the Embassy of France in the 1940s. When the French diplomatic mission moved to a new location in 1984, the house sat empty for 20 years until it was purchased by the Macedonian government. Moses House was renovated and opened as the Embassy of Macedonia on October 26, 2005.[2][3]

The embassy is used in the story Crossings by Danielle Steel, where the French ambassador to the United States Armand DeVilliers resides and is preparing to go back to France with his American-born wife Liane DeVilliers in June 1939.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Macedonia — Country Specific Information". United States Department of State. 2008-03-05. Retrieved 2008-05-27.
  2. "The History". Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia — Washington, D.C. Retrieved 2008-05-27.
  3. "District of Columbia — District of Columbia County". National Register of Historic Places. 2007-11-08. Retrieved 2008-05-27.
  4. Steel, Danielle (1982). Crossings. New York: Delacorte. ISBN 0-440-01130-2. OCLC 8281714.
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