For several years, it housed the US Embassy in France, George C. Marshall and William Averell Harriman.
[1] Maria Anna zu Salm-Salm (1740-1816), widow of the 12th Duke of the Infantado, became the new owner.
The Venetian Ambassador Almoro Pisani rented the premises from 1790 until October 1792, when he moved to London.
[2] It seems Pétion de Villeneuve lived there until he fled in June 1793 and then Lazare Carnot moved in.
In 1939, Jacqueline Piatigorsky - a member of the Rothschild banking family - left France.
[10] Until 2007, it housed the U.S. Consulate in Paris (first replaced by other departments, then leased to various companies, including the American law firm Jones Day).