Great Britain -- Foreign relations -- United States
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Great Britain -- Foreign relations -- United States
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Great Britain
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- Lords of the desert, the battle between the United States and Great Britain for supremacy in the modern Middle East, James Barr
- Governor's message and documents on the subject of the doings of the arbiter, with the report of the committee of the Legislature in relation to the Northeastern Boundary
- The king and the cowboy, Theodore Roosevelt and Edward the Seventh : secret partners, David Fromkin
- Our fishery rights in the North Atlantic
- Interesting political discussion., The diplomatick policy of Mr. Madison unveiled. In a series of essays containing strictures upon the late correspondence between Mr. Smith and Mr. Jackson., By a Bostonian
- Jay's treaty,, a study in commerce and diplomacy,, by Samuel Flagg Bemis
- Churchill, Eisenhower, and the making of the modern world, Christopher Catherwood
- The last thousand days of the British empire, Churchill, Roosevelt, and the birth of the Pax Americana, Peter Clarke
- Definitive statement, on the part of the United States, of the case referred in pursuance of the convention of 29th September, 1827, between the said States and Great Britain, to His Majesty, the King of the Netherlands, for his decision thereon
- An appeal to the people;, being a review of the late correspondence and documents, relating to the rejection of the British minister: including an examination of the "arrangement" of April last., By the editor of the New York Evening post
- The boundaries formerly in dispute between Great Britain and the United States, a lecture, by Sir Francis Hincks
- A letter addressed to the Hon. James Madison, secretary of state of the United States., Printed in America
- An empire on the edge, how Britain came to fight America, Nick Bunker
- Desultory reflections on the new political aspects of public affairs in the United States of America, since the commencement of the year 1799
- Appendix to the two statements on the part of the United States respecting the disputed points of boundary between the United States and Great Britain, referred to His Majesty, the King of the Netherlands, for his decision thereon
- Churchill & Roosevelt, the complete correspondence, edited with commentary by Warren F. Kimball
- Great Britain and the United States;, a history of Anglo-American relations (1783-1952)
- Speech of Mr. Truman Smith, of Conn. on the Oregon question, delivered in the House of Representatives, U.S., February 7th, 1846
- The Churchill complex, the curse of being special, from Winston and FDR to Trump and Brexit, Ian Buruma
- Collateral damage, Britain, America, and Europe in the age of Trump, Kim Darroch
- Letters from the Secretary of State to Messrs. Monroe and Pinkney, on the subjects committed to their joint negotiation, with their communications to the Secretary of State :, accompanying the message of the President of the United States, received of the 22d of March, 1808 ; March 23, 1808 ; printed by order of the House of Representatives, part III
- Analysis of the late correspondence between our administration and Great Britain & France, with an attempt to shew what are the real causes of the failure of the negociation
- An appeal to the people,, on the causes and consequences of a war with Great Britain, By John Lowell
- A vindication of the reign of His present Majesty, King George III
- Last letter of Mr. Buchanan to Mr. Pakenham, on the American title to Oregon
- Analysis of the late correspondence between our administration and Great Britain and France., With an attempt to shew what are the real causes of the failure of the negociation
- A world on fire, Britain's crucial role in the American Civil War, Amanda Foreman
- Roosevelt's lost alliances, how personal politics helped start the Cold War, Frank Costigliola
- Selections from the correspondence of Thomas Barclay,, formerly British Consul-General at New York,, ed. by George Lockhart Rives ..
- The memorial of the merchants & traders of the city of Baltimore
- Letter from Mr. Erskine, the British minister, to the Secretary of State, on the subject of the British Orders in Council of the eleventh of November, 1807;, accompanying a message from the President of the United States, received on the 30th March, 1808., April 2, 1808, printed by order of the House of Representatives
- Three letters, written, and originally published, under the signature of a South Carolina planter, the first on the case of Jonathan Robbins ... : the second on the recent captures of American vessels by British cruisers ... : the third on the right of expatriation, by Charles Pinckney ... ; to which is added, an appendix containing sundry documents concerning Jonathan Robbins
- War or no war? ..., in two letters, by Lycurgus
- Miss Bax of the embassy ..
- The peace of Christmas Eve
- Ties of common blood, a history of Maine's northeast boundary dispute with Great Britain 1783-1942, by Geraldine Tidd Scott
- The lion and the fox, two rival spies and the secret plot to build a Confederate Navy, Alexander Rose
- To keep the British Isles afloat, FDR's men in Churchill's London, 1941, Thomas Parrish
- Speech of the Hon. De Witt Clinton, in the Senate of the state of New-York, on Tuesday, January 31, 1809, introductory to certain resolutions, which met the approbation of both houses
- Important state papers, documents accompanying the President's message to Congress, November 29, 1809
- The great commercial prize, addressed to every American who values the prosperity of his country, By Charles C. Coffin ..
- Mr. Monroe's letter on the rejected treaty,, between the United States and Great Britain; concluded by Messrs. Monroe and Pinkney. Also, the treaty itself, and documents connected with it
- Debate in the Senate, on the nomination of Martin Van Buren, to be minister of the United States to Great Britain
- The ambassador, Joseph P. Kennedy at the Court of St. James's 1938-1940, Susan Ronald
- Pearl Harbor Christmas, a world at war, December 1941, Stanley Weintraub
- The American connection, U.S. guns, money, and influence in Northern Ireland, Jack Holland
- America and world mastery;, the future of the United States, Canada, and the British empire, [by] John MacCormac
- The treaties between the United States and Great Britain, viz, The definitive treaty, signed at Paris, l783 ; Treaty of amity, commerce and navigation, signed in London, 1794, by Mr. Jay ; Monroe and Pinkney's treaty, 1806,rejected by Mr. Jefferson ; also The treaty of peace, signed at Ghent, Dec. 24, 1814
- A union forever, the Irish question and U.S. foreign relations in the Victorian age, David Sim
- Important State papers, No. 2, Boston Gazette Office, Friday, Dec. 8, 1809