1To Thomas Jefferson from Samuel Huntington, enclosing a Resolution of Congress Appointing Peace Commissioners, 15 June … (Jefferson Papers)
Resolved That four persons be joined to Mr. Adams in negotiating a peace between these United States and Great Britain.
2From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 17 July 1783 (Madison Papers)
, No. 183, III, 71, 78–80). These many dispatches had been written, of course, weeks before the commissioners of the United States and Great Britain signed that treaty on 3 September 1783.
3To Thomas Jefferson from Christopher Gore, 27 September 1790 (Jefferson Papers)
...Commonwealth to expel such aliens as may be dangerous to the peace and good order of Government.” There are clauses, in these laws, which may be deemed infractions of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, and soon after the peace, one man, a refugee, was, conformably to the directions of the act of the 24 March AD 1784, committed to the common goal; and afterwards sent...
4To Thomas Jefferson from Richard Harison, 4 December 1790 (Jefferson Papers)
...an Examination of the several legislative Acts and judicial proceedings in this State which may probably have been considered by the British Government as Infractions of the Treaty, between the United States, and Great Britain.—A variety of Circumstances, particularly the necessity of my own absence, and that of some of the public Officers, from this Place for a considerable time have...
5To Thomas Jefferson from David Hartley, 7 December 1790 (Jefferson Papers)
). This appeal through one known to be an advocate of amicable relations between the United States and Great Britain was Boulton’s evidently first effort to detach himself from the intermediation of John H. Mitchell of Charleston (see Michell to Tucker, 22 Mch. 1790, Vol. 16: 342–4). Hartley had been sent to Paris...
6To Thomas Jefferson from Mark Leavenworth, 14 April 1792 (Jefferson Papers)
No. 3158. Leavenworth sought to conceal his American citizenship so that it would not compromise his appeal to a British audience for a more liberal trading relationship between the United States and Great Britain.
7From Alexander Hamilton to Thomas Jefferson, [20–27 May 1792] (Hamilton Papers)
The treaty of peace of 1783 between the United States and Great Britain provided that the states should place no impediments in the way of the collection of debts owed to British merchants and that Congress should earnestly recommend to the states the restitution of confiscated Loyalist property.
8Memorial from William Green, 11 June 1792 (Jefferson Papers)
...reason with Your Memorialist, for Confiding his property to the Management of the said British Merchants, John Buchannan and Robert Charnock, was, that particular Article of the Treaty between the United States and Great Britain, whereby it is stipulated, that there should be no Legal Impediment to the Recovery of the Full Value in Sterling Money of all, Bona Fide, debts...
9To Thomas Jefferson from Thomas Mann Randolph, 22 November 1795 (Jefferson Papers)
A Candid Examination of the Objections to the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, Between the United States and Great-Britain, as Stated in the Report of the Committee, Appointed by the Citizens of the United States, in Charleston, South-Carolina
10To Thomas Jefferson from James Madison, 4 April 1796 (Jefferson Papers)
...President of the United States, Assigning the Reasons which Forbid his Compliance with the Resolution of the Twenty-Fourth Instant, Requesting “A Copy of the Instructions, Correspondence and other Documents, Relative to the Treaty Lately Concluded Between the United States and Great-Britain”