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Documents filtered by: Recipient="Boston Patriot" AND Period="Madison Presidency"
Results 91-120 of 126 sorted by date (descending)
WE will now return to Mr. Laurens, on the correspondence upon other subjects. On the 14th of...
24th October, 1780—wrote to my correspondent in London: “Give me leave to trouble you to send me...
Amsterdam, October 4, 1780, wrote to Mr. Dumas—“I should be glad to see a copy of the dispatches...
ON the 20th of September, 1780, wrote to his excellency Joseph Reed, Esq. President, and the...
ON the 12th of September, 1780, wrote to Mr. Dana, at Paris. “This will be delivered you by Mr....
On the 24th of August, 1780, transmitted to Congress, by another conveyance, duplicates of the...
Though I thought I was negociating for peace , to better purpose in Holland than I could in...
HAVING laid together the negociations with the Comte De Vergennes, relative to that sublime...
Project of an answer to the three Belligerent Courts. Answer Mutatis Mutandis. THE courts of...
I mentioned in a former letter that Congress had separated from me my friend, Mr. Dana, and sent...
Not long after the foregoing letter, but I know not how long, the Marquis of Verac communicated...
THE next day I wrote another letter to the Comte. Paris, July 19, 1781. In my letter, sir, of the...
DESIROUS to inform Congress of every step of my proceedings, I wrote a letter, on the 15th in...
On the 13th of July I wrote to the Comte De Vergennes the following letter: Paris July 13, 1781....
On the 17th day of November, 1779, I embarked for Europe, with the hon. Francis Dana, Esq. and...
In a former letter, it was suggested that I found myself obliged to say something of the peace of...
IN page 29. Mr. Hamilton says, "when an ordinary man dreams himself to be a Frederick," &c. To...
IN page 20, Mr. Hamilton says, my "conduct in the office of President was a heterogeneous...
In page 26, Mr. Hamilton says, that the mission “could hardly fail to injure our interests with...
In page 28, Mr. Hamilton acknowledges that "the President had pledged himself in his speech, (he...
IN page 25, is a strain of flimsy rant, as silly as it is indecent. “The supplement to the...
Mr. Hamilton , in his pamphlet, page 21, speaks of the anterior mission of Messieurs Pinckney,...
In pamphlet , page 27, it is said that the great alteration in public opinion had put it...
Mr. Hamilton, in his pamphlet, page 28, speaking of Talleyrand’s dispatches, says, “overtures so...
Another of my crimes, according to my great accuser, page 28, was nominating Mr. Murray, without...
In a A Letter from Alexander Hamilton concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams...
On the 6th of March a letter was written by the Secretary of State by my order, in the following...
At first I intended to encumber your paper with no Documents but such as were absolutely...
Mr. Hamilton, in his famous pamphlet, page 23, says, “the conduct pursued bore sufficient marks...
THE message mentioned in my last letter, was in these words: Gentlemen of the Senate , The...