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  1. [Notes] [Full text] In this critical posture of affairs in China it is deemed appropriate to define the attitude of the United States as far as present circumstances permit this to be done.

  2. THE "OPEN DOOR" POLICY IN THE PHILIPPINES.* BY FRANK D. PAVEY. The policy of "an open door to the world's commerce" in the Philippines has been the subject of much discussion during the past yqar. This policy received formal enunciation at the hands of the Government of the United States, in the course of the

  3. The Open Door policy began with the issuance of a circular (diplomatic note) by U.S. Secretary of State John Hay to Great Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, and Russia on September 6, 1899. Hay issued a second circular to the same countries on July 3, 1900.

  4. its Open-Door Policy by the Secretary of State John Hay on the 6th of September 1899. The Open-Door Notes were issued to keep China open to free trade on equal terms for all states and to prevent any major western power from gaining too much control and influence in the region. The notes were important in

  5. The Changing Concept of the Open Door, 1899-1910. BY RAYMOND A. ESTHUS. For over four decades after Secretary of State John Hay dis-patched his famous notes of September 6, 1899, and circular of July 3, 1900, American Far Eastern policy was based upon the. twin principles of the open door and the integrity of China.

  6. Frank D. Pavey, The "Open Door" Policy in the Philippines, The North American Review, Vol. 169, No. 516 (Nov., 1899), pp. 661-668

  7. Defending the Open Door Policy is the latest book to consider its impact on immigration, nationalism, foreign investment, and labor relations. What Moore promises is ‘a third approach’ to understanding United

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