Letter
Hamilton Fish to Robert C. Schenck, February 29, 1872
No. 11. Mr. Fish to General Schenck.
[Telegram.]
Department of State, Washington, February 29, 1872.
Cannot agree to Granville’s proposal as made. Desire to meet the British Government in any honorable adjustment of the incidental question which has arisen. Our answer is very friendly, and will, we hope, open the way for a settlement. Whatever the British Commissioners may have intended, or thought among themselves, they did not eliminate the claims for indirect losses, they never asked us to withdraw them, nor did they allude to them directly, or in plain terms; and after the deliberations of the Joint Commission were closed, Tenterden and the British Commissioners allowed them to be formally enumerated in statement of 4th May without a word of dissent.
FISH.
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Sources
FRUS u2014 Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Transmitted to Congress with the Annual Message of the Pr
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U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian. Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Transmitted to Congress with the Annual Message of the Pr.