Island of Cuba: Message from the President of the United States in Reference to the Island of Cuba ...1852 - 59 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 15
Page 5
... despatch and other papers which you will receive with this , you will perceive the great and continued injuries which our commerce is suffering from pirates issuing from thence , the repeated demands made upon the authorities of the ...
... despatch and other papers which you will receive with this , you will perceive the great and continued injuries which our commerce is suffering from pirates issuing from thence , the repeated demands made upon the authorities of the ...
Page 9
... despatched to the West Indies , and stationed in the immediate proximity to the island of Cuba . By measures thus vigorous and peremptory , they obtained from Spain an immediate revocation of the blockade which her generals had pro ...
... despatched to the West Indies , and stationed in the immediate proximity to the island of Cuba . By measures thus vigorous and peremptory , they obtained from Spain an immediate revocation of the blockade which her generals had pro ...
Page 12
... despatch was everything . The gentleman with whom I had this con- versation , though not friendly to England , has always felt the import- ance of securing her good will , if not her assistance , and has , in con- sequence , been one of ...
... despatch was everything . The gentleman with whom I had this con- versation , though not friendly to England , has always felt the import- ance of securing her good will , if not her assistance , and has , in con- sequence , been one of ...
Page 19
... despatch addressed to the Minister of State , by the Conde de la Alcudia , Spanish minister at London , was handed me to - day by a private friend , and may be de- pended on as authentic . As the communication was made to me in the ...
... despatch addressed to the Minister of State , by the Conde de la Alcudia , Spanish minister at London , was handed me to - day by a private friend , and may be de- pended on as authentic . As the communication was made to me in the ...
Page 20
... despatch addressed by the Spanish Minister at Lon- don to the Minister of State . [ CONFIDENTIAL . ] LONDON , June 1 , 1827 . Most EXCELLENT SIR : I deem it my duty to give you notice , for the information of the King , our lord , that ...
... despatch addressed by the Spanish Minister at Lon- don to the Minister of State . [ CONFIDENTIAL . ] LONDON , June 1 , 1827 . Most EXCELLENT SIR : I deem it my duty to give you notice , for the information of the King , our lord , that ...
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Island of Cuba. Message from the President of the United States in Reference ... United States Dept of State No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
agents American answer assurances attempt authorized Britain British government Calutrava Catholic Majesty cession Colombia colonies commerce communication confidential connexion consideration considered consul continue copy Cortes course Cuba and Porto December 17 declaration DEPARTMENT desire despatch direct dominion of Spain duty effect England ernment event extract favorable Foreign Affairs France French friendly Gazette guarantee Gulf of Mexico Havana honor Hugh Nelson importance indemnity independence induce instructions interest island of Cuba JAMES BUCHANAN JOHN FORSYTH JOHN QUINCY ADAMS LEGATION letter loan Lord Palmerston Madrid Majesty's Majesty's government matter ment military Narvaez nation naval negotiation Nelson obedient servant object obtain pledges political population Porto Rico ports possession of Cuba President probably proposition question received reference regard to Cuba relation replied respectfully revenue Secretary Spanish empire Spanish government Spanish minister supposed territory tion trade transmit treaty Union United Washington whilst wishes
Popular passages
Page 54 - You are authorized to assure the Spanish government, that in case of any attempt, from whatever quarter, to wrest from her this portion of her territory, she may securely depend upon the military and naval resources of the United States to aid her in preserving or recovering it.
Page 7 - ... there are laws of political as well as of physical gravitation ; and if an apple, severed by the tempest from its native tree, cannot choose but fall to the ground, Cuba, forcibly disjoined from its own unnatural connexion with Spain, and incapable of self-support, can gravitate only towards the North American Union, which, by the same law of nature, cannot cast her off from its bosom.
Page 6 - Cuba, almost in sight of our shores, from a multitude of considerations, has become an object of transcendent importance to the commercial and political interests of our Union. Its commanding position, with reference to the Gulf of Mexico and the West India seas; the character of its population ; its situation midway between our southern coast and the island of St.
Page 17 - If the war should continue between Spain and the new republics, and those islands should become the object and the theatre of it, their fortunes have such a connection with the prosperity of the United States, that they could not be indifferent spectators ; and the possible contingencies of such a protracted war might bring upon the government of the United States duties and...
Page 7 - ... it is scarcely possible to resist the conviction that the annexation of Cuba to our federal republic will be indispensable to the continuance and integrity of the Union itself.
Page 37 - Should you have reason to suspect any design on the part of Spain to transfer voluntarily her title to the island, whether of ownership or possession and whether permanent or temporary, to Great Britain, or any other Power, you will distinctly state that the United States will prevent it, at all hazards...
Page 26 - Other considerations, connected with a certain class of" our population, make it the interest of the southern section of the Union that no attempt should be made in that island to throw off the yoke of Spanish dependence, the first effect of which would be the sudden emancipation of a numerous slave population, the result of which could not but be very sensibly felt upon the adjacent shores of the United States.
Page 5 - The Government at Washington was in great doubt as to the designs of the European powers upon Cuba, and consequently as to the means of counteracting them. As regarded cession to Great Britain, Mr. Adams wrote that Spain, though disinclined to the transfer, might resist it with more firmness if for a limited period of time she could obtain the joint guarantee of the United States and France securing the island to...
Page 6 - ... its wants, furnishing the supplies and needing the returns of a commerce immensely profitable and mutually beneficial. — give it an importance in the sum of our national interests with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared^ and little inferior to that which binds the different members of this Union together.
Page 9 - The object of this declaration, and of the communication of it here, undoubtedly was to induce the belief that Great Britain entertained no purpose of obtaining the possession of Cuba ; but these assurances were given with reference to a, state of peace then still existing, and which it was the intention and hope of Great Britain to preserve. The condition of all the parties to them has since changed, and however indisposed the British Government might be ungenerously to avail themselves of the distress...