History of the Pacific States of North America: Arizona and New Mexico. 1888

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A.L. Bancroft, 1888
 

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Stran 517 - against the Apaches. A steady, persistent campaign must be made, following them to their haunts—hunting them to the "fastnesses of the mountains. They must be surrounded, starved into coming in, surprised, or inveigled—by white flags or any other method, human or divine—and then put to death. If these ideas shock any weak-minded individual, who thinks
Stran 417 - from his govt to respect the religious institutions of N. Mex., to protect the property of the church, to cause the worship of those belonging to it to be undisturbed, and their religious rights in the amplest manner preserved to them. Also to protect the persons and property of all quiet and
Stran 417 - between that government and the US, and as the undersigned, at the head of his troops, on the 18th took possession of Sta Fe,... he now announces hU intention to hold the department, with its original boundaries (both sides of the Del Norte)'—so it seems the original boundaries were on both sides
Stran 509 - head from the political fever which had afflicted it, and meditating on the decline and fall of a West Point graduate. There was no other person in Washington, save Gen. Heintzelman, who took any interest in Arizona affairs. They had something el-<e to occupy their attention, and did not even know where Ariz. was.
Stran 340 - 71-81, 112, 115, 123, 129-32, says that the mine was worked by a Spanish superintendent, Juan Onis, for the Span, owner, Francisco Pablo Lagera. 'Within the circumference of three miles there is a mine of copper, gold, and silver, and besides, a cliff of load-stone. The silver mine is not worked,
Stran 517 - a philanthropist, I can only say I pity without respecting his mistaken sympathy. A man might as well have sympathy for a rattlesnake or a tiger;' and 5th, letters from SW Inge, CE Bennett, Joseph Lane, John C. Hays, John Nugent, and Miguel A. Otero, on the wealth, population, and needs of the country. A 3d edition is entitled Arizona and Sonora; the
Stran 426 - Conquest, 64-5. The latter reads: 'Being duly authorized by the pres. of the US of America, I hereby make the following appointments for the government of N. Mex., a territory of the US The officers thus appointed will be obeyed and respected accordingly.' Governor, Charles Bent, part owner of
Stran 688 - I am satisfied of the disaffection of the best of the rank and file in N. Mex.' June 30th, ' chief-justice ' MH McWille wrote from Mesilla: ' Now, might it not be well, secretly, of course, and at an early moment, to fit out an expedition to N. Mex.?.. .The stores, etc., in N. Mex. and Ariz, are immense,
Stran 449 - never pretended to have the power to make a govt for N. Mex., or insist on the old one; but that the president's instructions and all others from Wash, simply advised temporary submission to the old govt as existing by presumed consent of the people. That consent had been withdrawn,
Stran 375 - not been improved by their freedom. Not only had they relapsed to a great extent into their roving and improvident habits, but they had imbibed new ideas of independence, fostered largely by settlers and soldiers. They regarded themselves as entirely free tied in 1555' (really about 1615), ' Tucson in 1560, and San Augustine, Fla, in

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