Agreement Regarding the Entrance of French Vessels Into Our Ports
Document 1793Knox outlines the ways in which vessels taken as prizes by the French should be handled if they are brought to American ports.
•War Department August 7, 1793 [To Joshua Clayton, governor of Delaware.] Sir— I am directed by the President of the United States to inform your Excellency, that it has been agreed between the general government and the Minister of France That in case any of the vessels of France shall send any prizes into our ports against which proper allegations shall be made as having been taken within the limits of the protection of the United States, that such prize shall remain in the possession of the Consul of France, until the Executive of the United States, shall have decided thereon. But if the French Consul should reside at the port into which such prize shall arrive, and if the Admiralty Court should not take possession of such prize, then your Excellency will please to have recourse to the means pointed out in my letter of the 20 of May last, and to communicate the case with the evidences in writing for the consideration and decision of the President of the United States thereon. I have the honor to be with great respect, Your Excellency’s obedient humble servant. Henry Knox
This transcription was generated by machine using Anthropic's Claude Code (a mix of sonnet and opus models). It may contain errors or inaccuracies. Please verify against the document image. Learn more about our generative AI methodology.
