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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4 47 13 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 4, 1861., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 52: Tenure-of-office act.—equal suffrage in the District of Columbia, in new states, in territories, and in reconstructed states.—schools and homesteads for the Freedmen.—purchase of Alaska and of St. Thomas.—death of Sir Frederick Bruce.—Sumner on Fessenden and Edmunds.—the prophetic voices.—lecture tour in the West.—are we a nation?1866-1867. (search)
success of the negotiation, principally conducted by one of their number, General Raasloff, who having been at one time consul-general in New York, and later Danish covering the last of Johnson's and the first month of Grant's Administration. Raasloff, to whom Sumner seems to have been personally attracted, was allowed every oppuld have nothing to do with it. The Senate committee, anxious not to embarrass Raasloff at home, kept the matter alive,—refraining from final adverse action at his wrt. A year later it cleared its docket by a report adverse to a ratification. Raasloff returned to Copenhagen, where, by public speech and private letter to Sumner, en slept a long sleep, from which it has never waked. The unhappy negotiator, Raasloff, went out of office with his ministry, which was discredited by the failure, a to the action of the Senate and of its committee, as shown by the records and Raasloff's own letters. The article appeared while the Senate records and files were u
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, chapter 18 (search)
ught them to be an egregious blunder when General Raasloff made them the basis of his appeal. Mr. Sne which enables me to satisfy my friend, General Raasloff, that I have attempted to aid him in the elegraphed Jan. 19, 1867, to Mr. Yeaman, Tell Raasloff, haste important. In a letter to Mr. Yeaman,many as twenty-five letters or notes from General Raasloff to Mr. Sumner,—from December, 1868, to Me was the one member of the committee to whom Raasloff applied freely for good offices, which were ulled for a decisive vote, and both he and General Raasloff knew that there was no time when the treajection. The non-action of the Senate was at Raasloff's express instance, as proved by a contemporaght place, etc.,—words which were repeated by Raasloff in a note to Sumner the next morning, and whiests, any import of favorable action upon it. Raasloff wrote from Copenhagen, May 19:— Let me to stop:— It must, however, continued General Raasloff, not be forgotten that the treaty h[14 more.
Treaty with Denmark. --The ratification of a treaty of amity, commerce, and navigation, with Denmark, which was represented by Col. Raasloff, were exchanged on Friday last. The Sound Does question having heretofore been settled, Denmark is placed on a footing with the most favored nations. This is the first treaty since 1826.