| John A. Kasson - Constitutional history - 1904 - 454 pages
...on July 17, 1823, that "we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishments in this continent ; and that we should assume distinctly...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." Here, already announced to the chief of the Holy Alliance more than four months prior to President... | |
| Edwin Erle Sparks - History - 1904 - 522 pages
...them," wrote ex-President Jefferson to Monroe, "so that we shall soon be rid of their neighborhood." "The American continents are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments," said Secretary of State John Quincy Adams to the Russian Minister, in discussing the proper limits... | |
| Edwin Erle Sparks - History - 1904 - 562 pages
...them," wrote ex-President Jefferson to Monroe, "so that we shall soon be rid of their neighborhood." "The American continents are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments," said Secretary of State John Quincy Adams to the Russian Minister, in discussing the proper limits... | |
| William Lindsay Scruggs - Colombia - 1901 - 408 pages
...unoccupied parts of the American continent." 1 The claim put forth by the editor of his " Diary," thaft John Quincy Adams was the first to formulate the Monroe...of that portion of the message relating to the Holy Alliance.8 This is not improbable. Indeed, it 1 Ibid. ; Wharton's Digest, par. 57. 2 Diary, vi. 163.... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1905 - 1020 pages
...North America to the Sist parallel, John Adams told the Czar's minister, Baron de Tuyl, that "we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments," he not only gave the first clear expression in action to the Monroe Doctrine (qv), but he unconsciously... | |
| Francis Bellamy - Presidents - 1905 - 536 pages
...in foreign affairs. He said to the Russian minister, Baron Zuyl, in relation to the northwest coast, "that we should assume distinctly the principle that...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." This utterance Mr. Charles Francis Adams affirmed was the first hint of the Monroe Doctrine. It is... | |
| Frederick Jackson Turner - Mississippi River Valley - 1906 - 428 pages
...having in mind Russia's posts in California, he informed the minister, Baron Tuyl, "that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." * After negotiations, Russia concluded the treaty of April 17, 1824, by which she agreed to form no... | |
| John Bassett Moore - International law and relations - 1906 - 1056 pages
...Russian minister, at a conference at the Department of State, " that we [the United States] should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments.'' Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, VI. 163. See 82 N. Am. Rev. 494: Tucker's Monroe Doctrine, 12-14, 21,... | |
| Frederick Jackson Turner - History - 1906 - 402 pages
...having in mind Russia's posts in California, he informed the minister, Baron Tuyl, "that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." 2 After negotiations, Russia concluded the treaty of April 17, 1824, by which she agreed to form no... | |
| George Washington Crichfield - Latin America - 1908 - 698 pages
...thrown down at our feet. In July, 1823, Secretary Adams told Baron de Tuyl "specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...new European colonial establishments." It has been claimed that these words are "the first hint of the . . . Monroe Doctrine." Mr. Adams then instructed... | |
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