| Caleb Cushing - 1873 - 292 páginas
...Yukon, Porcupine, and Stikine, in Alaska, ascending and descending from, to, and into the sea, shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the subjects of Great Britain [Art. XXVI.]. Rights of local police and regulation are reserved by each... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1912 - 902 páginas
...German emperor. It was further agreed (Art. XXVI.) that the navigation of the river Saint Lawrence shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States. The United States in return declared the Yukon, Porcupine and Stikine open to British commerce, (Art.... | |
| Beckles Willson - 1915 - 610 páginas
...Yukon, Porcupine, and Stickine in Alaska, ascending and descending from, to, and into the sea, shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the subjects of Great Britain." The Treaty of Washington was signed on May 8, 1871. In the following year... | |
| Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Tidewater Association - 1927 - 58 páginas
...latitude, where it ceases to form the boundary between the two countries, from, to, and into the sea, shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States, subject to any laws and regulations of Great Britain or of the Dominion of Canada not inconsistent... | |
| John Beaver Mertie - 1930 - 676 páginas
...8, 1871, the St. Lawrence from Its intersection with the 46th parallel to the sea was forever made " free and open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States." "See 30th Cong., 1st sess., S. Doc. 71, 1848, and Report of the Regents of the University on the boundaries... | |
| 1966 - 430 páginas
...8. 1871. the St. Lawrence from Its Intersection with the 45th parallel to the sea was forever made "free and -open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States." and states that "the British claim had no foundation of any sort or kind" (Mills, 1911, p. 684-687).... | |
| United States. Department of the Interior. Alaska Planning Group - 1975 - 854 páginas
...the rivers Yukon, Porcupine, and Stikine, ascending and descending, from, to, and into the sea, shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the subjects of her Britannic Majesty and to the citizens of the United States, subject to any laws and... | |
| Franklin K. Van Zandt - 1976 - 210 páginas
...8, 1871, the St. Lawrence from its intersection with the 45th parallel to the sea was forever made "free and open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States." TREATY WITH GREAT BRITAIN, 1846 Between 1843 and 1846 there was considerable discussion regarding the... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry - 1980 - 242 páginas
...the Treaty of Washington. In that document, Great Britain, speaking for Canada, guaranteed to the US that navigation of the St. Lawrence River was to "forever...to the citizens of the United States." In 1909, the US and Canada signed the Boundary Waters Treaty which guaranteed throughout Its life that "the navigation... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1911 - 892 páginas
...German emperor. It was further agreed (Art. XXVI.) that the navigation of the river Saint Lawrence shall forever remain free and open for the purpose of commerce to the citizens of the United States. The United States in return declared the Yukon, Porcupine and Stikine open to British commerce, (Art.... | |
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