The Critical Period of American History

Chapter 1

Chapter 1335 wordsPublic domain

RESULTS OF YORKTOWN. PAGE

Fall of Lord North's ministry 1

Sympathy between British Whigs and the revolutionary party in America 2

It weakened the Whig party in England 3

Character of Lord Shelburne 4

Political instability of the Rockingham ministry 5, 6

Obstacles in the way of a treaty of peace 7, 8

Oswald talks with Franklin 9-11

Grenville has an interview with Vergennes 12

Effects of Rodney's victory 13

Misunderstanding between Fox and Shelburne 14

Fall of the Rockingham ministry 15

Shelburne becomes prime minister 16

Defeat of the Spaniards and French at Gibraltar 17

French policy opposed to American interests 18

The valley of the Mississippi; Aranda's prophecy 19

The Newfoundland fisheries 20

Jay detects the schemes of Vergennes 21

And sends Dr Vaughan to visit Shelburne 22

John Adams arrives in Paris and joins with Jay in insisting upon a separate negotiation with England 23, 24

The separate American treaty, as agreed upon:

1. Boundaries 25

2. Fisheries; commercial intercourse 26

3. Private debts 27

4. Compensation of loyalists 28-32

Secret article relating to the Yazoo boundary 33

Vergennes does not like the way in which it has been done 33

On the part of the Americans it was a great diplomatic victory 34

Which the commissioners won by disregarding the instructions of Congress and acting on their own responsibility 35

The Spanish treaty 36

The French treaty 37

Coalition of Fox with North 38-42

They attack the American treaty in Parliament 43

And compel Shelburne to resign 44

Which leaves England without a government, while for several weeks the king is too angry to appoint ministers 44

Until at length he succumbs to the coalition, which presently adopts and ratifies the American treaty 45

The coalition ministry is wrecked upon Fox's India Bill 46

Constitutional crisis ends in the overwhelming victory of Pitt in the elections of May, 1784 47

And this, although apparently a triumph for the king, was really a death-blow to his system of personal government 48, 49