| Henry Charles Carey - 1872 - 492 pages
...in Parliament just then told his countrymen that "it was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation, in order by the glut to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States which the war had forced into existence, contrary to the natural... | |
| William Darrah Kelley - 1872 - 582 pages
...of the Continent renders very unlikely, and because it was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation in order by the glut to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States which the war has forced into existence contrary to the natural... | |
| William Darrah Kelley - 1872 - 572 pages
...which is now making by the Croesus-like capitalists of England " to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States which the war has forced into existence." Our present condition resembles very closely that of the States of Europe at the close of Napoleon's... | |
| Robert Ellis Thompson - 1875 - 438 pages
...of the Continent renders very unlikely; and because it was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation, in order, by the glut, to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States, which the war had forced into existence, contrary to the... | |
| Robert Ellis Thompson, William Wilberforce Newton, Otis H. Kendall - 1878 - 992 pages
...after the peace of 1815, Brougham said, "in order, by the glut, to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States, which the war has forced into existence, contrary to the natural course of things." Such was the attitude of British statesmanship toward us,... | |
| George Bailey Loring - 1881 - 88 pages
...and our country was flooded with British manufactures, " to stifle," as Mr. Brougham said in 1816, " in the cradle those infant manufactures in the United States which the war had forced into existence," that the American people began to learn by sad experience the distresses... | |
| Justin Smith Morrill - 1882 - 56 pages
...to be superseded or overthrown. In 1816 the sound policy of England, as Lord Brougham declared, was to stifle " in the cradle those infant manufactures in the United States which the war had forced into existence." In 1824 the policy, according to Huskisson, was " an extension of the principle... | |
| Robert Ellis Thompson - 1882 - 442 pages
...the Continent renders very unlikely ; and because it was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation, in order, by the glut, to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States, which the war had forced into existence, contrary to the... | |
| Robert Ellis Thompson - 1882 - 430 pages
...the Continent renders very unlikely ; and because it was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation, in order, by the glut, to stifle in the cradle those rising manufactures in the United States, which the war had forced into existence, contrary to the... | |
| Giles Badger Stebbins - 1883 - 214 pages
...that Mr. Brougham remarked in the House of Commons : "It was well worth while to incur a loss upon the first exportation, in order, by the glut, to stifle...infant manufactures in the United States, which the war had forced into existence, contrary to the natural order of things." Mr. Greeley gives his personal... | |
| |