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PREFACE.
CHAPTER I. - THE NEUTRALITY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Section 5287 provides for the enforcement of the foregoing provisions. It leaves the cognizance of all complaints in the hands of the several district courts, but empowers the President to employ the land and naval forces to enforce all of the restrictions embodied in the neutrality provisions. The following section empowers the President to compel foreign vessels "to depart the United States in all cases in which, by the laws of nations, or by the treaties of the United States they ought not to remain within the United States," Section 5289 requires that a foreign armed vessel shall give bond on clearance. Section 5290 empowers the collectors of the customs to detain foreign vessels: "The several collectors of the customs shall detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart the United States, the cargo of which principally consists of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men on board, or circumstances render it probable that such vessel is intended to be employed by the owners to cruise or commit hostilities upon the subjects, citizens or property of any colony, district or people with whom the United States are at peace, until the decision of the President is had thereon, or until the owner gives such bond and security as is required of the owners of armed vessels by the preceding section." Section 5291 defines the construction to be put upon the neutrality laws. They are not to be construed to extend to any subject or citizen of any foreign State who is only transiently within the United States, nor directly to be construed in such a way as to prevent the prosecution or punishment of treason, or of any piracy defined by the laws of the United States. Possibly the alleged unneutral acts in the territorial waters of the United States did not fall within the strict letter of the restrictions contained in these laws. But if the provisions of 1818 are construed so as to require the maintenance of a perfect neutrality it would seem that they were evaded in the transactions which were permitted at the port of New Orleans.
CHAPTER II. - THE NEUTRALITY OF EUROPEAN POWERS.
CHAPTER III. - CONTRABAND OF WAR AND NEUTRAL PORTS.
GERMAN SEIZURES. BUNDESRATH, HERZOG AND GENERAL.
THE JUDICIAL ASPECTS OF THE SEIZURES.
CHAPTER IV. - TRADING WITH THE ENEMY.
THE SEIZURES. MARIA, MASHONA, BEATRICE, AND SABINE.
THE LEGALITY OF THE SEIZURES.
This scholarly essay delves into the tangled web of international law that emerged during the Anglo‑Boer War. It traces how the United States, initially hesitant, declared a strict neutral stance and what that meant for its diplomats and citizens caught up in the conflict. Drawing on official documents, diplomatic correspondence, and congressional records, the author reconstructs the early diplomatic manoeuvres that set the tone for the war’s legal landscape.
The study then turns to European powers, examining how they articulated their own neutrality and the tensions that arose with British policy. A third section explores the rights and duties of both belligerents and neutral states, especially concerning trade and the movement of goods, revealing stark differences between English practice and Continental or American legal thought. Readers gain insight into the early 20th‑century debates that still shape modern concepts of neutrality.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (294K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1879–1932
A legal historian of the Anglo-Boer War, he is known for a focused early-20th-century study of neutrality and international law. His surviving published record points to careful scholarship rather than a large popular body of work.
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