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uffered a series of wrongs and outrages such as we have never patiently borne from any other nation. For these our successful ministers, invoking the faith of treaties, had, in the name of their country, persistently demanded redress and identification, but without the est effect. Indeed, so confident had the Mexican an horatius become of our patient endurance, that they universally believed they might commit these outrages upon American citizens with impunity. Thus wrote our minister in 1856, and expressed the opinion that "nothing a manifestation of the power of the Government, and of its purpose to punish these wrongs, will avail." Afterwards, in 1857, came the adoption of a new constitution for Mexico, the election of a President and Congress under its provisions, and the inauguration of the President. With in one short month, however, this President was expelled from the capital by a rebellious in the army, and the supreme power of the republic was assigned to Gen. Zul
d, in the name of their country, persistently demanded redress and identification, but without the est effect. Indeed, so confident had the Mexican an horatius become of our patient endurance, that they universally believed they might commit these outrages upon American citizens with impunity. Thus wrote our minister in 1856, and expressed the opinion that "nothing a manifestation of the power of the Government, and of its purpose to punish these wrongs, will avail." Afterwards, in 1857, came the adoption of a new constitution for Mexico, the election of a President and Congress under its provisions, and the inauguration of the President. With in one short month, however, this President was expelled from the capital by a rebellious in the army, and the supreme power of the republic was assigned to Gen. Zuloaga. This usurper was in his turn soon compelled to retire and give place to Gen Moramon. Under the constitution which had thus been adopted, Senor Juarez, as chief
n precipitated into a war. This was rendered manifest by the exasperated state of public feeling throughout our entire country, produced by the forcible search of American merchant vessels by British cruisers on the coast of Cuba, in the spring of 1858. The American people hailed with general acclaim the orders of the Secretary of the Navy to our naval force in the Gulf of Mexico, "to protect all vessels of the United States on the high seas from search or detention by the vessels-of-war of anyce of the Supreme Court, became the lawful President of the Republic; and it was for the countenance of the constitution and his authority derived from it that the civil war commenced, and still continues to be prosecuted. Throughout the year 1858 the constitutional party grew stronger and stronger. In the previous history of Mexico a successful military revolution at the capital had almost universally been the signal for submission throughout the republic. Not so on the present occasion.
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