登陆注册
6243800000001

第1章

A Great Transaction in Land The people of the young Republic of the United States were greatly astonished, in the summer of 1803, to learn that Napoleon Bonaparte, then First Consul of France, had sold to us the vast tract of land known as the country of Louisiana. The details of this purchase were arranged in Paris (on the part of the United States) by Robert R. Livingston and James Monroe. The French government was represented by Barbe-Marbois, Minister of the Public Treasury.

The price to be paid for this vast domain was fifteen million dollars.

The area of the country ceded was reckoned to be more than one million square miles, greater than the total area of the United States, as the Republic then existed. Roughly described, the territory comprised all that part of the continent west of the Mississippi River, bounded on the north by the British possessions and on the west and south by dominions of Spain. This included the region in which now lie the States of Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, parts of Colorado, Minnesota, the States of Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Wyoming, a part of Idaho, all of Montana and Territory of Oklahoma. At that time, the entire population of the region, exclusive of the Indian tribes that roamed over its trackless spaces, was barely ninety thousand persons, of whom forty thousand were negro slaves.

The civilized inhabitants were principally French, or descendants of French, with a few Spanish, Germans, English, and Americans.

The purchase of this tremendous slice of territory could not be complete without an approval of the bargain by the United States Senate. Great opposition to this was immediately excited by people in various parts of the Union, especially in New England, where there was a very bitter feeling against the prime mover in this business,--Thomas Jefferson, then President of the United States. The scheme was ridiculed by persons who insisted that the region was not only wild and unexplored, but uninhabitable and worthless.

They derided "The Jefferson Purchase," as they called it, as a useless piece of extravagance and folly; and, in addition to its being a foolish bargain, it was urged that President Jefferson had no right, under the constitution of the United States, to add any territory to the area of the Republic.

Nevertheless, a majority of the people were in favor of the purchase, and the bargain was duly approved by the United States Senate; that body, July 31, 1803, just three months after the execution of the treaty of cession, formally ratified the important agreement between the two governments.

The dominion of the United States was now extended across the entire continent of North America, reaching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The Territory of Oregon was already ours.

This momentous transfer took place one hundred years ago, when almost nothing was known of the region so summarily handed from the government of France to the government of the American Republic. Few white men had ever traversed those trackless plains, or scaled the frowning ranges of mountains that barred the way across the continent.

There were living in the fastnesses of the mysterious interior of the Louisiana Purchase many tribes of Indians who had never looked in the face of the white man.

Nor was the Pacific shore of the country any better known to civilized man than was the region lying between that coast and the Big Muddy, or Missouri River. Spanish voyagers, in 1602, had sailed as far north as the harbors of San Diego and Monterey, in what is now California; and other explorers, of the same nationality, in 1775, extended their discoveries as far north as the fifty-eighth degree of latitude.

Famous Captain Cook, the great navigator of the Pacific seas, in 1778, reached and entered Nootka Sound, and, leaving numerous harbors and bays unexplored, he pressed on and visited the shores of Alaska, then called Unalaska, and traced the coast as far north as Icy Cape. Cold weather drove him westward across the Pacific, and he spent the next winter at Owyhee, where, in February of the following year, he was killed by the natives.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 残王邪后:极道女王的宠夫

    残王邪后:极道女王的宠夫

    一个是懦弱娇柔的凤离国丞相四小姐,一个是二十一世纪黑道女老大,当强势的她变身懦弱的她,精彩开始上演!乱世风云,英雄逐鹿,她是他的王妃,那么对不不起,不管是身还是心,都必需是她一个人的,别人想垂涎?门都没有!她会助他夺得江山,共同分享!
  • 毕业头三年:决定你职业前途的黄金期

    毕业头三年:决定你职业前途的黄金期

    如果你也正在面对无数企业的HR,做不完的case;你也一样是个怀揣抱负且初登甲板的职海水手;你也很想去体悟办公室里究竟会发生什么事情;或者你更想知道一个草根如何在三年的时间里,由新成“猿”磨练成“首席”、“骨干”;那么,现在就去《毕业头三年(决定职业前途的黄金期)》的故事中体会主人公认真记录下来的每一段历练心得吧!本书由那森著。
  • 花都狂神

    花都狂神

    他,一个从小被遗弃的孤儿,受尽苦难与冷落,唯有一块玉佩,证明着他的身世;他,一个独来独往的仙帝,在成就仙帝之时,却遭最信任的兄弟的背叛。前世,今生,两个灵魂融合之后,出现的,会是什么?仙又如何,神又如何?天若阻我,我变战天;神若挡我,我便屠神。风流一世,潇洒万年,站宇宙之巅,天下万物皆为蝼蚁!
  • 今日王妃有点怪

    今日王妃有点怪

    一朝穿越,苏若依竟成了轿中待嫁的新娘。如此便罢,可本以为是穿越女主的剧本,没想到却是一手反派王妃的好角色。what?穿书穿成最大的反派就算了,可故事情节竟然还和原著不一样?慢慢的,苏若依好像还发现自己身上还有很多谜团?罢了罢了,反正她是自己故事里的女主就够了。。。。。。(《三世韶华录》前传)
  • 总裁你别拽

    总裁你别拽

    楔子她不是祝英台,他不是梁山柏,他们化不成蝴蝶双双飞。踏进爱情坟墓里的宛若在恶婆婆、恶小姑的刻意陷害、恶整下,和宇斯间隙越来越宽,也陷入了一场酝酿已久的阴谋里。她成为了替罪羔羊被遗弃成了牺牲品。多年后,物是人非,她把自己推上了人生的巅峰,她身边也站着别的男人,那个男人是叫她妈妈的小萝卜头的爸爸吗?
  • 绝对领域一空间

    绝对领域一空间

    系统文给你一个绝对空间,你能干嘛?我也不知道!
  • 竺法护传略

    竺法护传略

    《竺法护传略》作者把竺法护对中华文化的巨大贡献,彰显于世,目的在于“为天地立心,为生民立命,为往圣继绝学,为万世开太平”。
  • 哀恸之城

    哀恸之城

    展开梦想的翅膀,打破时空的界限。世间的美好、忧伤、热血、豪情、侠义、浪漫、缺憾、邪恶、阴谋、暗黑……——为你呈现更深层次的精神体验,更畅爽淋漓的阅读快感,无比开阔的视野,撼动心灵的力量。容纳最精彩的中长篇穿越、幻想、灵异、言情、新武侠、少年热血文等类型小说。
  • 这糟糕这生活

    这糟糕这生活

    走在世间,阅尽人生繁华,人生悲苦,一点一滴感受生活的存在
  • 尘封如惊鸿

    尘封如惊鸿

    尘封只是代表暂时的死去,重生是灵魂跟死神之间的一份契约!如梦如惊鸿,灵魂守卫-千年契约,改变生命,签下契约,人生或者可以用另一种方式活着。光华飞逝一水间,梦里徘徊几度闻。奈何天下金分缺,不能牵手到白头。古来生命多忧虑,静目尘封如惊鸿。我突然发现我可以使用通灵术召唤神兽,又可以利用灵魂契约封印灵魂等价交换生命,灵族一直影响着人族!或许我们已经习惯了用现行眼光看待周围的事物,但是你现在影响着过去,你的过去影响着他人!灵魂生生世世,永存不灭!