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SHOEMAKER, NANCY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   158509


Extraterritorial United States to 1860 / Shoemaker, Nancy   Journal Article
Shoemaker, Nancy Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract A tourist in Asia in the 1840s, Doctor B. L. Ball of Northborough, Massachusetts, felt the greatest pleasure in company with people like himself. He went often to American missionaries’ houses, U.S. consulates, and Canton’s “new American hotel” for evenings of “New England singing,” Fourth of July bacchanals, and talk of “home and home affairs.” From Manila, Ball sent a daguerreotype of himself to his mother, taken “by an American, and done as well as in America.” In Canton, he visited historic sites with college friend Elijah Bridgman, the first American missionary to China and a resident since 1830, and met for the first time a former schoolmate’s father, David Geisinger, commander of the U.S. sloop-of-war Plymouth. In Hong Kong, Ball conversed at length about home with another American naval officer from Northborough. And at Shanghai, when the U.S. consul introduced Ball to an American doctor, they were both startled to recognize each other from medical school in Boston. Early in his travels, after returning from supper at the Canton home of missionary Peter Parker, also a doctor from Massachusetts, Ball reported having “retired within my mosquito-net, my mind being full of the strange things of this strange country.” Months later in Shanghai, the jaded traveler remarked after a dinner at the U.S. consul’s, “I begin to think Americans are to be found in every part of the world. If I should go to Pekin or Kamtschatka, I should expect to find Americans already at each place.”
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2
ID:   187746


United States’ First Overseas Possession / Shoemaker, Nancy   Journal Article
Shoemaker, Nancy Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In April 1791, Captain Joseph Ingraham of the Boston brigantine Hope happened upon seven islands not found on any European charts of the Pacific. With patriotic fervor, he named them Washington, Adams, Federal, Lincoln, Hancock, Knox, and Franklin and in a “ceremony of taking possession” claimed them for the United States.1 Few Americans today, historians included, realize that many people in the first half of the nineteenth century believed that the United States did indeed have some kind of claim to these densely populated, Polynesian islands located more than 4000 miles west of Peru
Key Words United States 
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