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Side 2
... appear to them to create very opposite and conflicting obligations . On the eighth day of July , 1817 , a treaty was made by the United States with the Cherokee nation of Indians . It appears that , sometime previous to the making of ...
... appear to them to create very opposite and conflicting obligations . On the eighth day of July , 1817 , a treaty was made by the United States with the Cherokee nation of Indians . It appears that , sometime previous to the making of ...
Side 3
... appears , from the last treaty , that the United States are endeavoring to fix the Cherokee Indians upon the soil of Georgia , and thereby render it impossible for them ever to comply with their contract with that state . By this treaty ...
... appears , from the last treaty , that the United States are endeavoring to fix the Cherokee Indians upon the soil of Georgia , and thereby render it impossible for them ever to comply with their contract with that state . By this treaty ...
Side 2
... appears to them , an unavoidable necessity for confining the allowances of the govern- ment within such limits as can , with some degree of certainty , be defined . In deciding upon the claims growing out of the late war , the law , com ...
... appears to them , an unavoidable necessity for confining the allowances of the govern- ment within such limits as can , with some degree of certainty , be defined . In deciding upon the claims growing out of the late war , the law , com ...
Side 5
... appears to have been governed by the construction , which had been given to the act of the 16th March , 1802 , under which the provisional ar- my was disbanded , and to the act of the 3d of March , 1815 , by which the army was reduced ...
... appears to have been governed by the construction , which had been given to the act of the 16th March , 1802 , under which the provisional ar- my was disbanded , and to the act of the 3d of March , 1815 , by which the army was reduced ...
Side 8
... appears to have been used , for the accommodation , not only of General Winchester and his suite , but for the army . The Commissioner does not feel himself authorized to give to that clause so extended a construction . However , as the ...
... appears to have been used , for the accommodation , not only of General Winchester and his suite , but for the army . The Commissioner does not feel himself authorized to give to that clause so extended a construction . However , as the ...
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Congressional Serial Set, Utgave 4049 United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1901 |
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aforesaid Algiers American troops amount annexed appears appointed army barracks barrels believe British buildings Captain certificates Cherokee claimant Colonel command commerce Commissioner Committee of Claims Congress consequence court DECEMBER 12 deponent deposite deputy quartermaster destroyed destruction duly sworn duty East Florida Edward Wood enemy February French Mills Frenchtown Georgia granted Harrison honor House of Representatives hundred Indians James Wood January John Anderson land late loss March memorialist military militia nation November obedient servant occupied October officers opinion Oswego payment petitioner ports quantity received referred the petition Resolved respectfully Richard Bland Lee River Raisin Robert Sackett's Harbor saith Secretary settlement soldier Spanish West Indies Sworn and subscribed taken teams territory of Michigan testimony thousand dollars tion tonnage TREASURY DEPARTMENT treaty treaty of Brownstown United vessels Wagnon West Indies whole House to-morrow William witnesses
Populære avsnitt
Side 3 - ... future amity and concord between the Creek nation and the said States, in conformity with the stipulations of former treaties, fulfil, with punctuality and good faith, her engagements to the said nation : that more than two-thirds of the whole number of chiefs and warriors of the Creek nation, disregarding the genuine spirit of existing treaties, suffered themselves to be instigated to violations of their national honor, and the respect due to a part of their own nation, faithful to the United...
Side 14 - States leave them nothing to fear on their land board, and nothing to desire beyond their present rights. But, on their seaboard, they are open to injury, and they have there, too, a commerce which must be protected. This can only be done by possessing a respectable body of citizen seamen, and of artists and establishments in readiness for shipbuilding.
Side 2 - The State of Georgia cedes to the United States all the right, title, and claim, which the said State has to the jurisdiction and soil of the lands situated within the boundaries of the United States, south of the State of Tennessee, and west of a line beginning on the western bank of the...
Side 10 - Resolved, That the committee of ways and means be instructed to inquire into the expediency of appropriating $30,000, to enable Professor Morse to establish a line of telegraph between Washington and Baltimore.
Side 5 - That all persons who, on the twenty-seventh day of October, one thousand seven hundred and ninetyfive, were actual settlers within the territory thus ceded, shall be confirmed in all the grants legally and fully executed prior to that day, by the former British Government of West Florida, or by the Government of Spain...
Side 9 - Resolved, That our Senators in Congress be instructed, and our Representatives requested, to introduce and vote for a bill to repeal an Act entitled ' an Act respecting fugitives from justice and persons escaping from the service of their masters...
Side 14 - Were the ocean, which is the common property of nil, open to the industry of all, so that every person and vessel should be free to take employment wherever it could be found, the United States would certainly not set the example of appropriating to themselves, exclusively, any portion of the common stock of occupation. They would rely on the...