Expansion Has Been From the Earliest Day the Policy of Our Country the Evidence

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Expansion Has Been From the Earliest Day the Policy of Our Country the Evidence
Albert Henry Walker
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— Alexander Hamilton in a letter to James McHenry, June 21th, 1799.
" I have been long in the habit of con- sidering the acquisition of those countries (Louisiana and Florida) as essential to the permanency of the Union. " — Alexander Hamilton, in a letter to H. G. Otis, Jan. 26th, 1799.
" The Farmer, I am inclined to hope, builds too much upon the present disunion of Canada, Georgia, the Floridas, the Mis- sissippi and Nova Scotia from other Colo- nies. I please myself with the flattering pros
...pect that they will, ere long, unite in one indissoluble chain with the rest of the Colonies. " — Alexander Hamilton, in his " Vindication of the Measures of Con- (jres*" in 1774.
"The whole (the attitude of the United States toward France when France got Louisiana from Spain ) is then a question of expediency. Two courses only present : First, to negotiate, and endeavor to pur- chase ; and if this fails, to go to war. Sec- ondly, to seize at once on the Floridas and New Orleans, and then negotiate.


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