Jay's Treaty: A Study in Commerce and DiplomacyVi (p. 442-488): A. Definitive treaty of peace and independence.--B. Jay's treat (treaty of amith, commerce, and navigation) 1794. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 68
Page 10
... territory of the new boundary line . The land to the north and west of the Ohio and west of a line drawn from the Allegheny River to Fort Stanwix in western New York had been recognized definitely as Indian territory by treaty with the ...
... territory of the new boundary line . The land to the north and west of the Ohio and west of a line drawn from the Allegheny River to Fort Stanwix in western New York had been recognized definitely as Indian territory by treaty with the ...
Page 147
... territory in question would be completely severed from American sovereignty , British traders and the agents of the Canadian Indian Department would continue to have free play for their activities . The resulting buffer zone would shut ...
... territory in question would be completely severed from American sovereignty , British traders and the agents of the Canadian Indian Department would continue to have free play for their activities . The resulting buffer zone would shut ...
Page 148
... Territory thus been separated and placed under nominal Indian control with actual British tutelage it would have been only a few years - unless the process were blocked by war until tutelage over a vanishing race would have been ...
... Territory thus been separated and placed under nominal Indian control with actual British tutelage it would have been only a few years - unless the process were blocked by war until tutelage over a vanishing race would have been ...
Contents
AngloAmerican Relations | 183 |
The Frontier Crisis | 218 |
The War Cloud of 1794 | 253 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Affairs agreed American ships American vessels Anglo-American appointed Archives Armed Neutrality Article Beckwith boundary Britain British Government British Minister British West Indies Canadian citizens colonial commission Commissioners Congress contraband Corres correspondence courts debts declared Detroit diplomatic dispatches Dropmore Dropmore Papers Dundas duties enemy England evacuation exports Federalists Foreign Office France French frontier fur trade Gouverneur Morris Governor Grenville's Hamilton Hammond to Grenville hostile ibid important Indian instructions interest Islands Jay's Treaty Jefferson July June Lake land letter London Lord Dorchester Lord Grenville Majesty Majesty's McKee mediation ment merchants mission Mississippi Morris nations naval negotiations neutral Indian Nootka Nootka controversy Order-in-Council party Philadelphia Pinckney Pitt political ports posts present President proposal Quebec Randolph received Rept respect River Secretary secure sent Sept settlement Simcoe Spain territory Thomas Pinckney tion tonnage treaty of peace tribes United Upper Canada vols Washington western York