Great Britain
[233] message from the president of the united states, transmitting a convention between the united states and great britain, to facilitae the construction of a ship canal to connect the atlantic and pacific oceans, signed at washington, november 18, 1901.
White
House,
Washington, December 4, 1901.
Washington, December 4, 1901.
Contents
- Filipino seamen held not to be citizens of the United States (Documents 182–185)
- Exclusion of British and Australasian vessels from trade between the
United States and Hawaii (Documents 186–188)
- Protection of American interests by British consul in the Kongo Free
State (Documents 189–192)
- Passport applications of persons claiming United States citizenship
through naturalization of parents (Documents 193–194)
- Death of Queen Victoria (Documents 195–204)
- Accession of Edward VII (Document 205)
- Exclusion of Chinese persons from the Philippine Islands (Documents 206–207)
- Visit of U. S. S. Brooklyn to Australia and New
Zealand on occasion of tour of Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York (Documents 208–211)
- Erection of tablet in memory of Frederick W. Ramsden, late British
consul-general at Santiago de Cuba (Documents 212–213)
- Claims of United States citizens v. Great Britain
on account of deportation from South Africa (Documents 214–218)
- Supplementary treaty of extradition between the United States and Great
Britain (Document 218a)
- Protection by United States consul of British interests in the
Azores (Documents 219–220)
- Rights of British subjects in Cuba are not governed by treaties, either
with the United States or Spain, but by alien law of 1870 (Documents 221–222)
- Courtesies shown U. S. S. Hartford in
Scotland (Document 223)
- Award by Great Britain of £600 to Charles Lillywhite, a naturalized United
States citizen, on account of his arrest, false imprisonment, and
deportation from New Zealand to England (Documents 224–230)
- Condolences on assassination of President McKinley (Documents 231–232)
- Interoceanic canal (Document 232a)