The first United States Minister to Czechoslovakia was Richard Crane, the grandson of a Chicago plumbing millionaire.
Crane, who had acquired the palace at the end of the First World War, sold the building in 1925 to the United States Government for $117,000.
[1] Rudolf von Colloredo built the present palace between 1643 and 1656 on the site of an earlier building that had been destroyed during the Thirty Years War.
Having lost a leg at the Battle of Lutzen, the count had the flight of steps leading to the first garden terrace built with a special incline to enable him to ride into his palace on horseback.
American diplomat George F. Kennan, in his memoir, wrote that when he arrived in Prague in 1938, there were beautiful terraced gardens behind the palace.