31Notes on Debates, 31 December 1782 (Madison Papers)
...first had commented to the effect that the American commissioners should agree to nothing which would extend greater trading privileges to the British than those guaranteed to the French in the Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the United States and France. For the deleted passage JM substituted an approximate copy of the report of the committee as given in the printed journal of...
32James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 25 May 1810 (Jefferson Papers)
United States; and France [index entry]
33From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 8 February 1799 (Madison Papers)
To the President of the United States, the Secretary of State Respectfully Submits the Following Report on the Transactions Relating to the United States and France
34Memorandum to Thomas Jefferson, 20 April 1804 (Abstract) (Madison Papers)
For “An Act further to suspend the commercial intercourse between the United States and France, and the dependencies thereof,” 17 Feb. 1800, see
35James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 22 June 1810 (Jefferson Papers)
United States; and France [index entry]
36James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 7 May 1810 (Jefferson Papers)
United States; and France [index entry]
37From James Madison to Abraham Van Bibber, 26 December 1804 (Abstract) (Madison Papers)
Statement Showing the Payments of Awards of the Commissioners Appointed under the Conventions between the United States and France
38From James Madison to Edmund Randolph, 7 January 1783 (Madison Papers)
...” JM omitted 285, signifying “cy.” He underlined the ciphers for “tacit.” Article VIII of the “Treaty of Alliance, Eventual and Defensive,” concluded between the United States and France in 1778, reads: “Neither of the two parties shall conclude either truce or peace with Great Britain, without the formal consent of the other first obtained; and they mutually engage not to lay...
39To Thomas Jefferson from James Madison, 25 December 1796 (Jefferson Papers)
During a debate in the House of Representatives on 15 Dec. 1796, Fisher Ames alluded to newspaper accounts to prove that the crisis in relations between the United States and France was caused by
40To Thomas Jefferson from James Madison, 22 January 1797 (Jefferson Papers)
...other documents, the first being a long letter from Timothy Pickering to Charles C. Pinckney of 16 Jan. 1797, which Madison described as “corrosive.” The Pickering letter, with accompanying documentation, reviewed relations between the United States and France since 1793 and served as an answer to the numerous complaints cited by Pierre Auguste Adet in his letter to Pickering of 15 Nov....