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This book is a reproduction of the book: Venezuela-British Guiana Boundary Arbitration. THE PRINTED ARGUMENTS ON BEHALF OF THE UNITED STATES OF VENEZUELA BEFORE THE TRIBUNAL OF ARBITRATION. 1898, Vol 2 (of 2), published by The Evening Post Job Printing House, New York.1898. The Arguments were written by J.M de Rojas, Agent of Venezuela; Benjamin Harrison, Benjamin F. Tracy, S. Mallet Prevost, James Russell Soley, Counsel for Venezuela. Editors: Allan R. Brewer-Carías and León Henrique Cottin), Academia de Ciencias Politicas y Sociales, Editorial Jurídica Venezolana, Caracas 2023.
Typed letter (carbon copy) detailing some of Bainton's research findings concerning George Lincoln Burr and Andrew Dickson White. Includes comments on Burr's personality, and Bainton's opinions concerning recent international developments and the world role of the U.S.
This book is a reproduction of the book: Venezuela-British Guiana Boundary Arbitration. THE PRINTED ARGUMENTS ON BEHALF OF THE UNITED STATES OF VENEZUELA BEFORE THE TRIBUNAL OF ARBITRATION. 1898, Vol 1 (of 2), published by The Evening Post Job Printing House, New York.1898. The Arguments were written by J.M de Rojas, Agent of Venezuela; Benjamin Harrison, Benjamin F. Tracy, S. Mallet Prevost, James Russell Soley, Counsel for Venezuela. Editors: Allan R. Brewer-Carías and León Henrique Cottin), Academia de Ciencias Politicas y Sociales, Editorial Jurídica Venezolana, Caracas 2023.
Venezuela's protests against the invasions of the territory of Guayna Esequiba by the British Guiana authorities, which had increased since 1841, led the national government in 1876 to request assistance from the United States, invoking the Monroe Doctrine, in order to force the United Kingdom to resolve the boundary dispute that existed over the Essequibo Territory through international arbitration. After nearly two decades, in 1895, it was the newly appointed U.S. Secretary of State, Richard Olney, who took the matter as the government's own and sent a strong note to the British Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary Lord Salisbury, demanding that the British submit the border dispute to arb...