Narrative and Critical History of America: The United States of North America. 1888Justin Winsor Houghton, Mifflin, 1888 |
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Page 268
... house and customs - revenue systems were begun ( 1789 ) ; the first steps were taken toward the establishment of the census , naturaliza- tion , patents and copyrights , territorial government , pensions , and inter- course with the ...
... house and customs - revenue systems were begun ( 1789 ) ; the first steps were taken toward the establishment of the census , naturaliza- tion , patents and copyrights , territorial government , pensions , and inter- course with the ...
Page 269
... House of Representatives would be called upon to choose between them . This is just what hap- pened in 1800-1 . Every Republican elector voted for Jefferson and Burr , who thus had 73 votes to 65 Federalist votes , but were tied . " It ...
... House of Representatives would be called upon to choose between them . This is just what hap- pened in 1800-1 . Every Republican elector voted for Jefferson and Burr , who thus had 73 votes to 65 Federalist votes , but were tied . " It ...
Page 272
... House , John Randolph , like Burr , was " a crooked gun , " more dangerous to his own party than to its opponents , and was soon in open rebellion . The main reliance was on tolerable political managers , like Varnum of Massachusetts ...
... House , John Randolph , like Burr , was " a crooked gun , " more dangerous to his own party than to its opponents , and was soon in open rebellion . The main reliance was on tolerable political managers , like Varnum of Massachusetts ...
Page 274
... houses , the improvement of harbors , and whatever benefits accrue from the expenditure of taxation , had gone to the seaboard States . A new population was growing up away 1 How far this belief was justified by events is uncertain ...
... houses , the improvement of harbors , and whatever benefits accrue from the expenditure of taxation , had gone to the seaboard States . A new population was growing up away 1 How far this belief was justified by events is uncertain ...
Page 275
... was made for equipping 1 Niles's Register , i . 233 , states the Republican vote in the Senate as 28 to 6 , and in the House as 105 to 37 . • three frigates " for actual service , " at THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL PARTIES . 275.
... was made for equipping 1 Niles's Register , i . 233 , states the Republican vote in the Senate as 28 to 6 , and in the House as 105 to 37 . • three frigates " for actual service , " at THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL PARTIES . 275.
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Popular passages
Page 473 - I will never send another Minister to France without assurances that he will be received, respected, and honored, as the representative of a great, free, powerful, and independent nation.
Page 270 - True, there must ; but does that prove it is either party ? The ultimate arbiter is the people of the Union, assembled by their deputies in convention, at the call of Congress, or of two-thirds of the States. Let them decide to which they mean to give an authority claimed by two of their organs.
Page 502 - In the discussions to which this interest has given rise and in the arrangements by which they may terminate the occasion has been judged proper for asserting, as a principle in which the rights and interests of the United States are involved, that the American continents, by the free and independent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers.
Page 474 - According to these bases, you were right to assert that whatever plenipotentiary the Government of the United States might send to France to put an end to the existing differences between the two countries would be undoubtedly received with the respect due to the representative of a free, independent, and powerful nation.
Page 555 - Britain from the Lake of the Woods to the Summit of the Rocky Mountains.
Page 470 - As, therefore, it is perfectly clear to my understanding that the assent of the House of Representatives is not necessary to the validity of a treaty; as the treaty with Great Britain exhibits in itself all the objects requiring legislative provision, and on these the papers called for can throw no light, and as it is essential to the due administration of the Government that the boundaries fixed by the Constitution between the different departments should be preserved, a just regard to the Constitution...
Page 426 - Barbarities of the Enemy, exposed in a REPORT of the Committee of the House of Representatives of the United States, appointed to enquire into the spirit and manner in which the war has been waged by the enemy, and the DOCUMENTS — accompanying said report.
Page 340 - A Letter from the Hon. Timothy Pickering, a Senator of the United States from the State of Massachusetts, Exhibiting to His Constituents a Vie.w of the Imminent Danger of an Unnecessary and Ruinous War. Addressed to His Excellency James Sullivan, Governor of the Said State.
Page 521 - An Inquiry into the Causes and Consequences of the Orders in Council, and an Examination of the Conduct of Great Britain towards the Neutral Commerce of America.
Page 473 - Directory is disposed to treat with that one of the three, whose opinions, presumed to be more impartial, promise, in the course of the explanations, more of that reciprocal confidence, which is indispensable.