Bancroft does not mince words in his treatment of the subject for he says: " It (the Mexican War) was a premeditated and predetermined affair; it was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior force. The Journal of Race Development - Side 2721914Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| Hubert Howe Bancroft - 1885 - 868 sider
...UNSUCCESSFUL MISSION. IT was a premeditated and predetermined affair, the war of the United States on Mexico; it was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power. There were at Washington enough unprincipled men high in office, senators, congressmen, to say... | |
| Hubert Howe Bancroft - 1885 - 844 sider
...UNSUCCESSFUL MISSION. IT was a premeditated and predetermined affair, the war of the United States on Mexico; it was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power. There were at Washington enough unprincipled men high in office, senators, congressmen, to say... | |
| Hubert Howe Bancroft - 1887 - 840 sider
...UNSUCCESSFUL MISSION. IT was a premeditated and predetermined affair, the war of the United States on Mexico; it was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power. There were at Washington enough unprincipled men high in office, senators, congressmen, to say... | |
| James Ford Rhodes - 1892 - 538 sider
...those who believed the war in its inception to have been an outrage. The Mexicans thought that the war was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power.1 As Birdofredom Sawin, a private in the Mexican war, was told, " Our nation's bigger 'n theirn,... | |
| Hubert Howe Bancroft - 1902 - 842 sider
...UNSUCCESSFUL MISSION. IT was a premeditated and predetermined affair, the war of the United States on Mexico; it was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power. There were at Washington enough unprincipled men high in office, senators, congressmen, to say... | |
| Nevin Otto Winter - 1907 - 526 sider
...warring upon Mexico, though the results have perhaps been for the best with both nations. Bancroft does not mince words in his treatment of the subject...impoverished by the expense of revolutions and official robbery, and with a government changing with every change of the seasons, had neither armies, money... | |
| Nevin Otto Winter - 1907 - 558 sider
...warring upon Mexico, though the results have perhaps been for the best with both nations. Bancroft does not mince words in his treatment of the subject...impoverished by the expense of revolutions and official robbery, and with a government changing with every change of the seasons, had neither armies, money... | |
| Nevin Otto Winter - 1907 - 524 sider
...the results have perhaps been for the best with both nations. Bancroft does not mince words in bis treatment of the subject for he says: " It (the Mexican...deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part The Story of the Republic 361 of the superior force." The result was a foregone conclusion, for Mexico,... | |
| Marguerite Stockman Dickson - 1911 - 650 sider
...the differences by peaceful means. "The Mexicans," says Rhodes in his history, "thought that the war was the result of a deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part of the superior power." And there was a deep-rooted feeling in America that the war was unjustly begun — a feeling... | |
| Nevin Otto Winter - 1913 - 612 sider
...warring upon Mexico, though the results have perhaps been for the best with both nations. Bancroft does not mince words in his treatment of the subject...deliberately calculated scheme of robbery on the part The Story of the Republic 361 of the superior force." The result was a foregone conclusion, for Mexico,... | |
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