| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 554 pages
...principle, are a security that no inconveniences will be permitted to arise from repetitions of it. The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by...France, is the subject of another of the memorials. Of this fact we are equally uninformed as of the former. Our citizens have been always free to make,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 656 pages
...principle, are a security that no inconveniences will be permitted to arise from repetitions of it. The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by...France, 'is the subject of another of the memorials. Of this fact we are equally uninformed as of the former. Our citizens have been always free to make,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 1102 pages
...firm determination to do what is equal and right between all the belligerent powers, could inspire. The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by...France, is the subject of another of the memorials. Of this fact we are equally uninformed as of the former. Our citizens have been always free to make,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 582 pages
...permitted to arise from repetitions of it. The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by an agemit of the French government, in this country, with an...France, is the subject of another of the memorials. Of this fact we are equally uninformed as of the former. Our citizemis have been always free to make,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1859 - 620 pages
...principle, are a security that no inconveniences will be permitted to arise from repetitions of it. The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by...France, is the subject of another of the memorials. Of this fact we are equally uninformed as of the former. Our citizens have been always free to make,... | |
| Frederick Waymouth Gibbs - 1863 - 136 pages
...was the export of arms; the other, the equipments. Mr. Jefferson replied, on the 25th of May :โ " The purchase of arms and military accoutrements by...memorials. Our citizens have been always free to make, ยป Wharton's State Trials of the United States, p. 49. ft vend, and export arms. It is the constant... | |
| 748 pages
...tho law. Tho first answer refers to arms and ammunition, not to ships at all. Mr. Joffcrson says, " Our citizens have been always free to make, vend,...arms. It is the constant occupation and livelihood of some of them. To suppress those callings (tho only means, perhaps, of their subsistence) because... | |
| Sir William Vernon Harcourt - 1863 - 240 pages
...State Papers, vol. i.) In 1796 the American Secretary of State wrote :โ Our citizens have always been free to make, vend, and export, arms: it is the constant occupation and livelihood of some of them. To suppress their callings, the only means, perhaps, of their subsistence, because... | |
| Sir William Vernon Harcourt - 1863 - 242 pages
...State Papers, vol. i.) In 1796 the American Secretary of State wrote:โ Our citizens have always been free to make, vend, and export, arms: it is the constant occupation and livelihood of some of them. To suppress their callings, the only means, perhaps, of their subsistence, because... | |
| Lyttleton Forbes Winslow - 1863 - 788 pages
...other grounds which, in my opinion, are quite untenable. " Our citizens," he said, " have always been free to make, vend, and export arms: it is the constant occupation and livelihood of some of them. To suppress their callings, the only means, perhaps, of their subsistence, because... | |
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