A History of American Foreign RelationsThomas Y. Crowell Company, 1938 - 728 páginas |
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Página 88
... claim- ants . The obligations thus assumed , known as the French spoliation claims , have been met most tardily . Even a pre- liminary payment was deferred till 1891. By 1915 , the Court of Claims had cleared its docket , but no payment ...
... claim- ants . The obligations thus assumed , known as the French spoliation claims , have been met most tardily . Even a pre- liminary payment was deferred till 1891. By 1915 , the Court of Claims had cleared its docket , but no payment ...
Página 237
... claims would afford leverage for a liberal interpre- tation . Polk made their settlement an indispensable object of the mission . It is certain that he desired the negotiations to succeed , though the degree of his actual faith is open ...
... claims would afford leverage for a liberal interpre- tation . Polk made their settlement an indispensable object of the mission . It is certain that he desired the negotiations to succeed , though the degree of his actual faith is open ...
Página 355
... claims , and when the arbitrators finally announced that these claims should be " wholly excluded from the consideration of the tribunal in making its award , " Cockburn reluctantly assented to a con- tinuance of the case.89 Argu : nent ...
... claims , and when the arbitrators finally announced that these claims should be " wholly excluded from the consideration of the tribunal in making its award , " Cockburn reluctantly assented to a con- tinuance of the case.89 Argu : nent ...
Contenido
THE COLONIAL PERIOD | 1 |
THE REVOLUTION | 20 |
DIVIDED WE Fall | 38 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accept action Adams administration affairs alliance American arbitration belligerent boundary Britain British Buchanan Buren cabinet Canada Canadian Charles Charles Francis Adams Chinese claims Clayton-Bulwer Treaty colonial commerce concessions Confederate Congress Court Cuba declared demand diplomacy diplomatic Embargo empire England Europe European favorable Federalist Florida foreign policy foreign relations France French German Henry Ibid instructions interests island issue Jackson James Japan Jay Treaty Jefferson John John Quincy Adams League League of Nations London Lord Lord Palmerston Louisiana Madison ment Mexican Mexico minister mission Mississippi Monroe Doctrine Napoleon nations negotiations neutrality Nicaragua opinion Paris party peace Pinckney political Polk port President President's refused Revolution Roosevelt Russia Santo Domingo Secretary seemed seizure Senate settlement Seward ship Slidell South Spain Spanish Sumner Talleyrand territory Texan Texas tion trade treaty Trent Affair United vessel Washington Webster West William Wilson York