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Front Page Titles (by Subject) Note on Chinchow - The American Nation: Primary Sources
Note on Chinchow - Bruce Frohnen, The American Nation: Primary Sources [2008]Edition used:The American Nation: Primary Sources, ed. Bruce Frohnen (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2008).
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- Editorial Board
- Alphabetical List of Authors
- Illustrations
- Introduction
- Organization of the Work
- Note On the Texts
- Part One: the Civil War
- The Crittenden Compromise
- South Carolina Ordinance of Secession
- South Carolina Declaration of Causes of Secession
- Mississippi Ordinance of Secession
- Mississippi Declaration of Causes of Secession
- Virginia Ordinance to Repeal the Ratification of the Constitution of the United States of America
- Missouri Act Declaring the Political Ties Heretofore Existing Between the State of Missouri and the United States of America Dissolved
- Ordinance of the Kentucky Convention
- Constitution of the Confederate States of America
- Farewell Speech to the United States Congress
- Inaugural Address
- First Inaugural Address
- Proclamation Calling the Militia and Convening Congress
- Proclamation of Blockade Against Southern Ports
- Message to Congress In Special Session
- Proclamation Suspending Writ of Habeas Corpus
- Message to Congress On Gradual Abolishment of Slavery
- Proclamation Revoking General Hunter’s Emancipation Order
- Emancipation Proclamation
- Emancipation Proclamation
- The Gettysburg Address
- Message to the Congress of Confederate States
- Act to Increase the Military Force of the Confederate States
- Last Order
- Part Two: Reconstruction
- Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
- Veto Message With Wade-davis Proclamation and Bill
- Wade-davis Manifesto
- Special Field Order No. 15
- Second Inaugural Address
- Last Public Address
- Constitution of Indiana, Article Xiii
- Black Code of Mississippi
- U.s. Constitution, Thirteenth Amendment
- Freedmen’s Bureau Bill
- Second Freedmen’s Bureau Bill
- Veto of the Second Freedmen’s Bureau Bill
- Civil Rights Act
- First Reconstruction Act of 1867
- Veto of the First Reconstruction Act
- First Supplement to the First Reconstruction Act of 1867
- Second Supplement to the First Reconstruction Act of 1867
- Articles of Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
- Debate On Proposed Fourteenth Amendment
- U.s. Constitution, Fifteenth Amendment
- Enforcement Act of 1870
- Enforcement Act of 1871
- Enforcement Act of 1875
- The Constitution of the State of Mississippi, As Adopted In Convention
- Inaugural Address
- Civil Rights Cases
- Constitution of the State of Mississippi
- Part Three: Consolidating Markets
- The Homestead Act
- The Pacific Railway Act
- The Morrill Act
- The Gospel of Wealth
- Cross of Gold Speech
- First Inaugural Address
- First Annual Message
- Lochner V. New York
- Part Four: Consolidating Culture?
- Twelfth Annual Report of the Massachusetts State School Board
- Address On Colonization to a Deputation of Negroes
- Address of Booker T. Washington, Principal Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Tuskegee, Ala., At the Opening of the Exposition
- Plessy V. Ferguson
- The Talented Tenth
- Treaty Between the United States of America and the Navajo Tribe of Indians; Concluded June 1, 1868; Ratification Advised July 25, 1868; Proclaimed August 12, 1868.
- Dawes Act
- Proposed Constitutional Amendment
- Massachusetts Constitutional Provision
- Reynolds V. United States
- The Late Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Et Al. V. United States
- Immigration Policy
- The Principles of Scientific Management
- Carrie Buck, By R. G. Shelton, Her Guardian and Next Friend, Plff. In Err., V. J. H. Bell, Superintendent of the State Colony For Epileptics and Feeble Minded
- Introduction to I’ll Take My Stand
- Part Five: Reform Movements
- National People’s Party Platform, Adopted At Omaha, Neb., July 4, 1892
- Coin’s Financial School
- Lecture II: What Pragmatism Means
- The Socialist Party and the Working Class
- Preamble
- The Subjective Necessity For Social Settlements
- Why the Ward Boss Rules
- Declaration of Principles of the Progressive Party
- The Income Tax
- Speech On Constitutionality of an Income Tax
- U.s. Constitution, Sixteenth Amendment
- Direct Election of U.s. Senators
- Resolution Opposing Direct Election of Senators
- U.s. Constitution, Seventeenth Amendment
- First Annual Meeting of the Woman’s State Temperance Society
- Prohibition Debate
- U.s. Constitution, Eighteenth Amendment
- U.s. Constitution, Twenty-first Amendment
- Women’s Suffrage
- The Fundamental Principle of a Republic
- Debate On Women’s Suffrage
- U.s. Constitution, Nineteenth Amendment
- Part Six: Consolidating Government
- The Pendleton Act
- Interstate Commerce Act
- Veto Message—distribution of Seeds
- Sherman Antitrust Act
- President’s Message to the Senate and House of Representatives
- Federal Trade Commission Act
- The Place of the Independent Commission
- Radio Address On Unemployment Relief
- Commonwealth Club Address
- Inaugural Address
- Federal Emergency Relief Act
- National Industrial Recovery Act
- Redistribution of Wealth
- A. L. A. Schechter Poultry Corp. Et Al. V. United States
- Fireside Chat On the Reorganization of the Judiciary
- National Labor Relations Board V. Jones & Laughlin Steel
- Part Seven: America In the World
- Monroe Doctrine—seventh Annual Message
- Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine
- The Fallacy of Territorial Extension
- The Star of Empire
- Open Door Note
- Woodrow Wilson On Neutrality and War
- Statement On American Neutrality
- Address to the Senate
- Dissent In Wartime
- Espionage Act
- Free Speech In Wartime
- Sedition Act
- Schenck V. United States
- Fourteen Points Speech
- Covenant of the League of Nations
- Speech Against the League of Nations
- Kellogg-briand Pact
- Note On Chinchow
- Neutrality and War
- The Atlantic Charter
- The Four Freedoms
- Pearl Harbor Speech
- Sources
Note on Chinchow
January 7, 1932 Henry L. Stimson
With the recent military operations about Chinchow, the last remaining administrative authority of the Government of the Chinese Republic in South Manchuria, as it existed prior to September 18, 1931, has been destroyed. The American Government continues confident that the work of the neutral commission recently authorized by the Council of the League of Nations will facilitate an ultimate solution of the difficulties now existing between China and Japan. But in view of the present situation and of its own rights and obligations therein, the American Government deems it to be its duty to notify both the Government of the Chinese Republic and the Imperial Japanese Government that it can not admit the legality of any situation de facto nor does it intend to recognize any treaty or agreement entered into between those governments, or agents thereof, which may impair the treaty rights of the United States or its citizens in China, including those which relate to the sovereignty, the independence, or the territorial and administrative integrity of the Republic of China, or to the international policy relative to China, commonly known as the open-door policy; and that it does not intend to recognize any situation, treaty, or agreement which may be brought about by means contrary to the covenants and obligations of the Pact of Paris of August 27, 1928, to which treaty both China and Japan, as well as the United States, are parties.
- Neutrality and War, Charles A. Lindbergh, 1939
Most famous for being the first to successfully fly solo and nonstop across the Atlantic, Charles Lindbergh (1902-74) was also a leader in the movement to prevent the United States from entering World War II. Touring the country on behalf of the America First Committee, a group committed to American neutrality in the war going on in Europe, Lindbergh argued that Roosevelt administration policies intended to assist the British and their allies in fighting Nazi Germany went against traditional American policies rooted in the Monroe Doctrine. Lindbergh and the America First Committee were accused of anti-Semitism and pro-Nazi sympathies. The committee disbanded after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Rebuffed in his attempts to rejoin the American air force, Lindbergh traveled to the Pacific theater as an observer and ended up flying a number of combat missions.
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