Interests of the Union vs. Those of the States
Item
Type
Letter Signed
Title
Interests of the Union vs. Those of the States
Description
Governor Mifflin lectures Knox on the discretionary powers of the President in relation to the State governments. He acknowledges that it is the duty of the President to act in the interests of the whole Union even if an action might be perceived as contrary to the interests of an individual State. However, it his duty as Executive Magistrate of Pennsylvania to act in its best interest unless an action is contrary to the interests of the whole Union.
year created
1794
month created
06
day created
24
author
recipient
in collection
in image
notable person/group
Henry Knox
Thomas Mifflin
James Trimble
President [Washington]
Northern Indians
Six Nations
notable location
Presque Isle establishment
Pennsylvania
notable item/thing
good understanding between the Officers of the Federal and State governments
cordial and harmonizing spirit
law for laying out the town of Presque Isle
hostile disposition
plan of settlement
evidence of official documents
speech delivered by General Chapin
records of your office
old grievances
the Union
inflammatory speech of Lord Dorchester
constant machinations of British agents
corruption of British bribes
principles of society
practice of political communities
safety or welfare of the whole nation
social or political compact
Federal Republic
discretionary power of the Executive Magistrate
execution of a law
welfare and interest of the whole nation
legislature of Pennsylvania
suspension
General Government
interests of the Union
justice, candor, and wisdom
document number
1794062440201
page start
1
Item sets
Transcribe this document
Document instances
In image | In source | Location in source | |
---|---|---|---|
[view document] (4 pages) | NHE21 (4 pages) | Collection: William Irvine Papers | V: 12, P: 65 |
Document names
Type | Name | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Author | Thomas Mifflin | [unknown] | [n/a] |
Recipient | Henry Knox | [unknown] | [n/a] |