The merchants of the United States, were the first, and by far the most enterprising adventurers in the new field that was opened to neutrals in the Antilles, and the ports of the French islands were speedily crowded with their vessels. War in Disguise, Or, The Frauds of the Neutral Flags - Stran 20avtor: James Stephen - 1806 - 252 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| Timothy Pitkin - 1835 - 628 strani
...as " a new power that had arisen on the western shore of the Atlantic, whose position, and maritime spirit, were calculated to give new and vast importance,...neutral rights, especially in the American seas." And the author, also, declares, " that not a single merchant ship, under a fiag_ inimical to Great... | |
| Guy Stevens Callender - 1909 - 852 strani
...as " a new power that had arisen on the western shore of the Atlantic, whose position, and maritime spirit, were calculated to give new and vast importance,...neutral rights, especially in the American seas." And the author, also, declares, " that not a single merchant ship, under a flag inimical to Great Britain,... | |
| Great Britain. Foreign Office. Historical Section - 1920 - 578 strani
...seized and brought in for lawful adjudication. This amounted to a restatement of the Rule of 1756. The merchants of the United States were the first,...islands were speedily crowded with their vessels. The United States protested, and fresh Instructions were issued in January, 1794, under which the seizures... | |
| 1920 - 600 strani
...seized and brought in for lawful adjudication. This amounted to a restatement of the Rule of 1756. The merchants of the United States were the first,...islands were speedily crowded with their vessels. The United States protested, and fresh Instructions were issued in January, 1794, under which the seizures... | |
| 1916 - 684 strani
...TRADE ' A new Power had now arisen on the western shore of the Atlantic, whose position and maritime spirit were calculated to give new and vast importance to every question of neutral rights.' — War in Disguise, James Stephen (1806). THE ' Eule of 1756 ' is the incarnation of sea-power ; the... | |
| Marie-Jeanne Rossignol - 2004 - 304 strani
...most: "A new power had now arisen on the western shore of the Atlantic, whose position, and maritime spirit, were calculated to give new and vast importance...islands were speedily crowded with their vessels."-" As is indicated by Monroe's dispatches of 1804, Americans were not willing to excuse a libel such as... | |
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