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12007: Corbett provides some sources on Grant's plans for annexation



Mark, I am sure that major histories such as Heinl and Heinl will treat
of this, I found these sources in my own library:

Hope this helps.  Bob Corbett
====================

Reference List

	1. 	Grant, Ulysses S. MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED
STATE COMMUNICATING, IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE RESOLUTION TO THE PROPOSED
ANNEXATION OF THE DOMINICAN PORTION OF THE ISLAND OF SAN DOMINGO.
Washington, Dc: U.S. Government ; 1871.

Note: In Gore Vidal's 1776 his main character claims that the DR would
have been sold to the U.S. and that the Dominican president would have
received 1/2 the money and Grant the other half.  Grant was supposedly
furious that congress turned him down.
p. 197 of the novel.

	2. 	Holly, James Theodore and J. Dennis Harris. BLACK
SEPARATISM AND THE CARIBBEAN, 1860. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan
Press; 1970; ISBN: 0-472-45500-1.
Note: Volume contains two works:
     Holly, James Theodore:  A VINDICATION OF THE CAPACITY OF THE NEGRO
RACE FOR SELF-GOVERNMENT AND CIVILIZED PROGRESS AS DEMONSTRATED BY
HISTORICAL EVENTS OF THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION; AND THE SUBSEQUENT ACTS OF
THAT PEOPLE SINCE THEIR NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE
   and

    Harris, J. Dennis. A SUMMER ON THE BORDERS OF THE CARIBBEAN SEA.  from
1860
 original.  Also have pages on Haiti from original (76-127) in xerox at
Bind 23s.


	3. 	Sumner, Charles. VIOLATIONS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND
USURPATIONS OF WAR POWERS. Washington, DC.: F. & J. Rives & Geo. A.
Bailey; 1871.
Note: Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner of Massachusetts on his St. Domingo
Resolutions
delivered in the Senate of the United States.

	4. 	Working. HOLLY, JAMES THEODORE, MAIN .
Note: See Heinl p. 215.  American black settlement plan.

Heinl p. 266.  J.T. was a Liberal consel from 1864 - 1874.

p. 84 Nicholls, 1879
	First black bishop of Angelican church.  1874
p. 118 Nicholls.  He was a freemason  mason
===============================
HOLLY, James Theodore (1829-1911).

A free, black American citizen born in Washington, D.C., Holly came to
Haiti
in 1861 as part of James *Redpath's *emigration program for American
blacks.  Holly was instrumental in establishing the Episcopal Church's
mission in Haiti, and, in 1874 became the first Episcopal bishop of Haiti,
and the
first black bishop in the Episcopal Church.

President Boisrond-Canal, in 1877, recognized Holly's unique strategy of
ordaining and advancing native black clergy, and awarded him money to
travel to England to raise funds for his mission.

Holly was a staunch ally of black ascendency and argued that the mulatto
elite had abrogated its moral responsibility to the nation.  He worked
closely with black American diplomats to Haiti, and, in 1869, along with
Ebenezer Bassett, opposed President Grant's plan to annex Santo Domingo to
the United States.