The First RapprochementUniversity of California Press |
Contents
THE JAY TREATY | 1 |
TRANSATLANTIC TIES | 7 |
EMPIRE AND REPUBLIC | 17 |
AMERICA ACCEPTS THE TREATY | 30 |
1796 NEW ENVOYS NEW POLICIES | 44 |
THE PRESS GANGS | 60 |
MERCHANTMEN AND MERCHANT COMMERCE | 70 |
BRITANNIAS RULE OF THE WAVES | 80 |
JEFFERSON AND ADDINGTON STEP FORWARD | 129 |
TWO CONVENTIONS | 138 |
RUFUS KING CLOSES HIS MISSION | 150 |
LOUISIANA | 159 |
EBB TIDE | 172 |
THE FIRST RAPPROCHEMENT | 182 |
APPENDIX | 187 |
NOTES | 189 |
Common terms and phrases
Addington Admiralty agreement American ships Anti-Jacobin Review April August Aurora Boconnoc Boconnoc MSS Britain British government Cabinet claims Cobbett colonial commission concessions Congress convention coöperation Correspondence Court December decision diplomatic dispatch Dundas England favorable February Federalist Foreign Office Foreign Secretary France French Gallatin George George Hammond Grenville to Liston Grenville's Hamilton Hammond ibid important impressment Independent Chronicle India James January Jay treaty John Adams John Quincy Adams July June King MSS King to Madison King to Pickering King's letter Liston to Grenville London Lord Grenville Lord Hawkesbury Louisiana March memorandum ment merchant Merry minister Monroe nation naval negotiations neutral November October Papers peace Philadelphia Pickering MSS Pitt government political ports President Private reëxport reported Republican Robert Liston Royal Navy Rufus King Santo Domingo seizures Senate September Timothy Pickering tions Toussaint trade United vessels Washington West Indies William William Cobbett William Windham wrote York



