Instructions sent mutatis mutandis to the United States ambassadors at London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, and Rome, and to the United States minister at Tokyo.

Sir: The —— Government having accepted the declaration suggested by the United States concerning foreign trade in China, the terms of which I transmitted to you in my instruction No. —— of ——, and like action having been taken by all the various powers having leased territory or so-called “spheres of interest” in the Chinese Empire, as shown by the notes which I herewith transmit to you, you will please inform the Government to which you are accredited that the condition originally attached to its acceptance—that all other powers concerned should likewise accept the proposals of the United States—having been complied with, this Government will therefore consider the assent given to it by —— as final and definitive.

You will also transmit to the minister for foreign affairs copies of the present inclosures, and by the same occasion convey to him the expression of the sincere gratification which the President feels at the successful termination of these negotiations, in which he sees proof of the friendly spirit which animates the various powers interested in the untrammeled development of commerce and industry in the Chinese Empire, and a source of vast benefit to the whole commercial world.

I am, etc.,

John Hay.
[Page 143]

Inclosures.1

  • Mr. Delcassé to Mr. Porter (received December 16, 1899), translation.
  • Mr. Jackson to Mr. Hay, telegram, December 4, 1899.
  • Count von Bülow to Mr. White, February 19, 1900, translation.
  • Lord Salisbury to Mr. Choate, November 30, 1899.
  • Marquis Visconti Venosta to Mr. Draper, January 7, 1900, translation.
  • Viscount Aoki to Mr. Buck, December 26, 1899, translation.
  • Count Mouravieff to Mr. Tower, December 18, 1899, translation.
  1. All printed ante.