Race and Rapprochement: Anglo-Saxonism and Anglo-American Relations, 1895-1904Fairleigh Dickinson University, 1981 - 237 pages Traces the historical roots of Anglo-Saxonism in Britain and America, showing how the theory of Anglo-Saxonism was developed, and demonstrates the extent to which political leaders allowed Anglo-Saxonist ideas to influence their diplomacy. |
Contents
Acknowledgments | 11 |
for Existence | 62 |
The Venezuela Boundary Dispute and | 95 |
Copyright | |
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Alfred Thayer Mahan Ameri Anglo Anglo-American relations Anglo-American Understanding Anglo-Saxon race Anglo-Saxonist Arthur Balfour Asia believed Beresford Boer Boston Britain British and American British-American Britons and Americans Brooks Adams Campbell Carnegie Cecil Spring Rice Charles China civilization colonial countries December Diplomacy East England English English-speaking race expansion February Fiske foreign policy Foreign Relations friendship German Hay Papers Hay's Henry Adams Henry Cabot Lodge Henry White historian Houghton Mifflin ibid ideas immigration imperial federation influence interests January John Hay Joseph Chamberlain Kidd Letters of Mahan Letters of Roosevelt Letters of Spring Library of Congress Literary Digest Lodge Papers Lord March McKinley nations naval nineteenth century North American Review Olney Pauncefote political racial Darwinism rapprochement Roosevelt Papers Roosevelt to Spring Russian Salisbury Saxon Senate Slav South Africa Spain struggle Theodore Roosevelt tion treaty United University Press vols W. T. Stead Whitelaw Reid William wrote York and London