| James Dunwody Bulloch - 1883 - 484 páginas
...commercial dealings between British subjects and the so -sty led Confederate States, whether the object of those dealings be money, or contraband goods, or even ships adapted for warlike purposes.' ' The Alabama might have been legitimately built by a foreign Government, and though a ship-of-war,... | |
| James Dunwody Bulloch - 1883 - 454 páginas
...the dealings between British subjects and the " so-styled " Confederate States, whether the object of those dealings be money or contraband goods, or even ships adapted for war. The seizure of the Alabama would have been altogether unwarrantable by law. She might have been... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - 1902 - 418 páginas
...Majesty's Government cannot interfere with commercial dealings between British subjects and the so-styled Confederate States, whether the subject of those dealings...goods, or even ships adapted for warlike purposes." " The cabinet," he moreover on another occasion stated, " were of opinion that the law [thus set forth]... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - 1902 - 468 páginas
...Majesty's Government cannot interfere with commercial dealings between British subjects and the so-styled Confederate States, whether the subject of those dealings...goods, or even ships adapted for warlike purposes." " The cabinet," he moreover on another occasion stated, " were of opinion that the law [thus set forth]... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - 1902 - 154 páginas
...commercial dealings between British subjects and the so - styled Confederate States, whether the object of those dealings be money, or contraband goods, or even ships adapted for warlike purposes." "The cabinet," he moreover on another occasion stated, " were of opinion that the law [thus set forth]... | |
| Charles Francis Adams - 1902 - 152 páginas
...commercial dealings between British subjects and the so - styled Confederate States, whether the object of those dealings be money, or contraband goods, or even ships adapted for warlike purposes." " The cabinet," he moreover on another occasion stated, " were of opinion that the law [thus set forth]... | |
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