| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 566 str.
...as to know the general purport of what we intended to propose. I told him specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments.1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that although... | |
| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 560 str.
...as to know the general purport of what we intended to propose. I told him specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments. 1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that although there would... | |
| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 564 str.
...as to know the general purport of what we intended to propose. I told him specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments.1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that although... | |
| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 560 str.
...as to know the general purport of what we intended to propose. I told him specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...continents are no longer subjects for any new European colonjal establishments.1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that... | |
| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 570 str.
...that we should contest the right I of Russia to any territorial establishment on this continent, and 1 that we should assume distinctly the principle that...subjects for any new European colonial establishments. 1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that although there would... | |
| John Quincy Adams - 1875 - 570 str.
...that we should contest the right! of Russia to any territorial establishment on this continent, and I that we should assume distinctly the principle that...are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments.1 We had a conversation of an hour or more, at the close of which he said that although... | |
| John Torrey Morse (Jr.) - 1882 - 350 str.
...audaciously told the Russian minister, Baron Tuyl, July 17, 1823, "that we should contest the rights of Russia to any territorial establishment on this...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." " This," says Mr. Charles Francis Adams in a foot-note to the passage in the Diary, "is the first hint... | |
| John Torrey Morse (Jr.) - 1882 - 358 str.
...ister, Baron Tuyl, July 17, 1823, " that we / should contest the rights of Russia to any terri/ torial establishment on this continent, and that \. we should...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." " This," says Mr. Charles Francis Adams in a foot-note to the passage in the Diary, " is the first... | |
| George Fox Tucker - 1885 - 152 str.
...in an interview relative to this territorial dispute, that " we should contest the right of Eussia to any territorial establishment on this continent,...are no longer subjects for any new European colonial establishments."1 Mr. Charles Francis Adams, the editor of the Diary from which this is taken, appends... | |
| Eugene Schuyler - 1886 - 484 str.
...instructions to Mr. Middleton, which were told him. Mr. Adams says : " I told him specially that we should contest the right of Russia to any territorial establishment...subjects for any new European colonial establishments." f » This was the first hint of the policy which afterward came to be known as the Monroe doctrine.... | |
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