The American Enlightenment: The Shaping of the American Experiment and a Free SocietyAdrienne Koch |
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Page 156
... United States sympathy , official recognition at The Hague , plus the golden boon of substantial loans from Dutch banking houses . In London , he spent three trying years in the unenviable role of first minister from the United States ...
... United States sympathy , official recognition at The Hague , plus the golden boon of substantial loans from Dutch banking houses . In London , he spent three trying years in the unenviable role of first minister from the United States ...
Page 254
... United States of America have done more than all the economists in France towards propagating in the world this ... United States , or suffer to be imported by our nation only , and in their own ships , those foreign goods which would be ...
... United States of America have done more than all the economists in France towards propagating in the world this ... United States , or suffer to be imported by our nation only , and in their own ships , those foreign goods which would be ...
Page 438
... United States , to insist on the navigation of the Mississippi for the Citizens of the United States in common with the subjects of his Catholic Majesty , as also on a free port or ports below the Northern limit of W. Florida ...
... United States , to insist on the navigation of the Mississippi for the Citizens of the United States in common with the subjects of his Catholic Majesty , as also on a free port or ports below the Northern limit of W. Florida ...
Contents
IntroductionAdrienne Koch | 19 |
Reading and Writing | 56 |
LETTERS | 69 |
Copyright | |
284 other sections not shown
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Abigail Adams America American Enlightenment aristocracy Articles of Confederation assembly authority Benjamin Rush body Britain British character citizens civil colonies commerce common Congress Constitution Convention corruption danger dear debt Declaration doctrine duty effect election England Enlightenment equal established Europe executive exercise France freedom French Revolution friends give Govt Hamilton happiness hope human independent interest James Madison Jefferson John Adams John Quincy Adams justice king labor laws legislative legislature letter liberty live Madison mankind means ment mind monarchy Monticello moral nation natural right nature necessary never object occasion opinion party passions persons philosophical political present preserve principles produce reason religion render republic republican respect revolution sentiments society spirit taxes thing Thomas Jefferson thought tion truth Union United Virginia virtue vote whale oil Whig whole wish