Sir Augustus John Foster, 1st Baronet, GCHPC (1 or 4 December 1780 – 1 August 1848) was a British diplomat and politician. Born into a notable British family, Foster served in a variety of diplomatic functions in continental Europe and the United States, interrupted by a short stint as a member of parliament. He wrote about his American experiences in Notes on the United States of America.
Ending his service in Turin and his career in the British diplomatic service in 1840, Foster began drafting his Notes on the United States of America.
Foster died in 1848 after cutting his throat at Branksea Castle; he had suffered from delirium because of poor health, and his death was ruled as the result of temporary insanity. His Notes on the United States of America would be rediscovered in a cupboard of his family's home in Northern Ireland in the 1930s, and published posthumously.
Tinkcom, Margaret Bailey (January 1951). "Caviar Along the Potomac: Sir Augustus John Foster's "Notes on the United States," 1804-1812". The William and Mary Quarterly. 8 (1): 68–107. doi:10.2307/1920734. JSTOR1920734.
^Although her brother,George Robert, had succeeded his uncle as 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire in 1804, it was not until 29 September 1832 that a royal order (later to be described as a Royal Warrant of Precedence) was issued and Albina and her sisters were each raised to the rank of an earl's daughter, as if their late father had himself succeeded to that dignity and title: "No. 18981". The London Gazette. 2 October 1832. p. 1.
^The Peerage of the British Empire as at present existing... by Edmund Lodge, Esq, Norroy King of Arms, Second Edition, Saunders and Otley,Conduit Street, 1833.
^Journal of Henry McClintock, transcribed and edited by Pádraig Ó Néill, Published by the County Louth Archeological and Historical Society, 2001.
^Patrick, Rembert (1954). Florida Fiasco. Atlanta, GA: University of Georgia Press. pp. 61–62.