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Extracts from the Memoirs of Secretary of State John Quincy Adams (November 16, 1822. December 1, 1825)

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyA5. Extracts from the Memoirs of Secretary of State John Quincy Adams(Adams, vol. VI, p. 102) November 16, 1822The President read to me the paragraphs relating to foreign affairs which he has drawn up for the...

Daniel Webster’s Speech on The Greek Revolution

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyB1. Eighteenth Congress, January 1824. The Greek Question on the Floor of the House of Representatives: Daniel Webster's Speech on the Greek Revolution(Editor's note: The original transcript of Webster's...

Joel R. Poinsett’s Response to Daniel Webster

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyB2. Joel R. Poinsett's Response to Daniel Webster(Robinson, pp. 88–93)To view this question calmly and dispassionately as a Statesman ought to do, requires us to exercise the utmost control over our...

John Randolph’s Opposition to Daniel Webster’s Resolution

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyB3. John Randolph's Opposition to Daniel Webster's Resolution(Robinson, pp. 93-94)Mr. Randolph said, that this was perhaps one of the finest and the prettiest themes for declamation ever presented to a...

George Cary’s Opposition to Daniel Webster’s Resolution

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyB4. George Cary's Opposition to Daniel Webster's Resolution(Robinson, pp. 94-98)Mr. Cary of Georgia, rose, and said that he felt himself under some embarrassment, in reconciling the circumstances in which he...

Henry Clay, “On the Greek Revolution”

by | | Freedom and Virtue Primary Source Documents, Section IV

IV. The “Greek Question” As An Issue of U.S. Foreign PolicyB5. Henry Clay “On the Greek Revolution”(The Life and Speeches of Henry Clay, pp. 185–93)[The resolution of Mr. WEBSTER, looking to a recognition of the independence of Greece, and making an appropriation to...
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