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By Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States of America. A proclamation
During the wars which ... have unhappily prevailed among the powers of Europe, the United States of America ... have endeavored ... to maintain, with all the belligerents, their accustomed relations of friendship, hospitality, and commercial intercourse. ... A frigate of the United States ... has been surprised and attacked by a British vessel of superior force ... with the loss of a number of men killed and wounded. ... Given at the city of Washington the second day of July ... one thousand eight hundred and seven -
Letter from the secretary of state
accompanying his report on the claim of John Brown Cutting, for a reimbursement of his expeditures, and a compensation for his services, in the year 1790, in liberating and relieving American seamen impressed into the British navy. 27th February, 1799. Read, and ordered to lie on the table. Printed by order of the House of Representatives of the United States -
Letter from the secretary of state
inclosing abstracts of all the returns made to him by the collectors of the different ports, of registered seamen, and of impressed seamen; together with a report, exhibiting abstracts of the communications received by him from the agent employed by virtue of the "Act to revive and continue in force certain parts of the act for the relief and protection of American seamen, and to amend the same," made in pursuance of the said act. 12th December, 1800, ordered to lie on the table. Published by order of the House of Representatives -
A Bill for the Protection, Recovery and Indemnification of American Seamen
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Duplicate from Mr. King, minister plenipotentiary of the United States at London, to Mr. Pickering, secretary of state, dated December 10th, 1796
also, a letter of 28th January, 1797, from Mr. King to Lord Grenville, and a letter in answer -
Message from the president of the United States, communicating copies of letters which have passed between the Secretary of State and the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Great Britain, on the subjects of the orders in council and impressed seamen
June 9th, 1812. Ordered to lie on the table -
Message from the President of the United States, communicating copies of the letters which have passed between the Secretary of State and the envoy ... of Great Britain, on the subjects of the orders in council and impressed seamen
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Message from the President of the United States transmitting a report of the Secretary of State ... of the number of impressed American seamen confined in Dartmoor Prison
the number surrendered, given up, or taken on board British vessels captured during the late war ; together with their places of residence -
Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report of the Secretary of State on the subject of impressments
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14th March, 1796, read the first and second time, and committed to a committee of the whole House, on Monday next
A bill for the relief and protection of American seamen -
Extract from an act, for the relief and protection of American seamen
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District of Salem and Beverly. Extract from an act of the Congress of the United States of America, entitled "An act for the relief and protection of American seamen."
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An extract of the act, entitled "An act, for the relief and protection of American seamen;"
passed in the Fourth Congress of the United States, at the first session, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, on Monday the seventh of December, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five -
Extract from the act of Congress, passed the 28th day of May, 1796, entitled "An act for the relief and protection of American seamen."
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Fourth Congress of the United States: at the first session
begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the seventh of December, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five. -
Extract from the act of Congress, passed the 28th day of May, 1796, entitled "An act for the relief and protection of American seamen."
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Report on the legislative provision necessary for the relief of American seamen, impressed into the service of foreign powers; and on a mode of furnishing American seamen with evidence of their citizenship
Published by order of the House of Representatives -
Letter from the secretary of state
accompanying a report and abstract of all the returns of registered American seamen, and of the protests and returns respecting impressed seamen, since the 17th of February, 1797, the date of his last report, which have been transmitted to him, by the collectors of the different ports, agreeably to the directions of the "Act for the relief and protection of American seamen;" and also, copies or abstracts of such communications from the agents employed by virtue of the same act, in foreign ports, as have been received;-- with sundry communications from the minister plenipotentiary of the United States, at London, on the same subject: in pursuance of a resolution of this House, of the 29th of November last. -
Letter from the secretary of state
accompanying his report on the claim of John Brown Cutting, for a reimbursement of his expenditures, and a compensation for his services, in the year 1790, in liberating and relieving American seamen impressed into the British navy. -
Letter from the secretary of state
inclosing abstracts of all the returns made to him by the collectors of the different ports, of registered and impressed seamen; together with a report exhibiting abstracts of the communications received by him, from the agents employed by virtue of the "Act to revive and continue in force certain parts of the act for the relief and protection of American seamen," and to amend the same;" made in pursuance of the said act. -
Letter from the secretary of state
inclosing abstracts of all the returns made to him by the collectors of the different ports, of registered seamen, and of impressed seamen; together with a report, exhibiting abstracts of the communications received by him from the agents employed by virtue of the "Act to revive and continue in force certain parts of the act for the relief and protection of American seamen, and to amend the same," made in pursuance of the said act. -
Report of the committee to whom was referred ... the petition of thirty-six American citizens confined at Carthagena, in South America, under sentence of slavery
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All impressments unlawful and inadmissible
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Letter from the Secretary of State accompanying statements of applications made to the British government in cases of impressments
prepared in obedience to a resolution of the House -
Letter from the Secretary of State transmitting a report made in obedience to an order of the Senate of the twentieth instant