The embassy is situated in a compound that includes the
ambassador's residence, as well as the old and new
chanceries. The residence was designed by Sir
Edwin Lutyens to resemble an
English country manor, with the old chancery facing the street. By the 1950s, the old chancery was deemed too cramped, and the new chancery, designed by chief architect
Eric Bedford was constructed from 1955 to 1961, with Queen Elizabeth II laying the foundation stone on 19 October 1957. Part of the old chancery was converted into staff quarters, and the rest is currently occupied by the offices of the
British Council. The
British government was the first nation to build an embassy in the area that would later become known as
Embassy Row. Outside the British ambassador's residence stands
a statue of Sir
Winston Churchill. One of the statue's feet is inside the marked embassy grounds; the other is within the
District of Columbia. The embassy's website states that this symbolizes Churchill's Anglo-American parentage (his father was British, his mother American) and his status as an
honorary citizen of the United States. The gardens of the ambassador's residence were planted by
Elizabeth Sherman Lindsay. Lady Lindsay was a landscape gardener and wife of Sir
Ronald Lindsay, the British ambassador to Washington from 1930 to 1939. BritishEmbassyWashingtonDC01.jpg|The embassy chancery offices British Ambassador's Residence, Washington, D.C.jpg|The
ambassador's residence Churchill Statue, British Embassy, Washington, D.C LCCN2011630702.tif|The
statue of Winston Churchill ==Staff==