Source: After graduating from Princeton, Taft taught English at the
University of Maryland and
Haverford College. During World War II, Taft became an analyst in military intelligence. After the war ended, he went back to Yale and taught there. In 1949, he went to Dublin as part of the
Marshall Plan aid mission and worked for the
Central Intelligence Agency and the
Defense Department from 1951 to 1953.
Ambassador to Ireland In 1953,
President Eisenhower appointed Taft
U.S. ambassador to Ireland. His task as ambassador was made easier by the fact that
John A. Costello (
Taoiseach, 1954–57) was a personal friend; Taft described Costello as "pleasant and unassuming" whereas he had found
Éamon de Valera "formal and aloof". (His predecessor,
George A. Garrett, had also found Costello more sympathetic than de Valera.) Taft played a considerable part in organizing Costello's successful
state visit to the United States in March 1956. In 1957, Eisenhower appointed
R. W. Scott McLeod as his successor to the Ambassadorship and Taft returned to the
State Department as a member of its policy planning staff. He remained with State until 1960, when he became
Consul General in
Mozambique. He retired from the State Department's
bureau for scientific, environmental and space affairs in 1977. ==Personal life==