Pacific Historical Review/Volume 1/Number 1
Contents
MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE Paciric, by Dan Elbert Clark. . . . I
Ear.y SINO-JAPANESE DipLoMATIC RELATIONS, by Payson J. Treat . 18 CALIFORNIA, JAPAN, AND THE ALIEN LAND LEGISLATION OF 1913, by
eee Bh. ee. nb eee. oe ee ee ee ee BS AUSTRALASIA IN CONFERENCE, 1883-1887, by W. Ross Livingston. . 60 From Prerre’s HOLE TO MONTEREY: A CHAPTER IN THE ADVENTURES
oF GrorGcE Nipever, by William Henry Ellison . . . ... . 82 NOTES AND SUGGESTIONS
Biblio-cartography, by Henry R. Wagner DocuMENTS
Bernard Romans and the Pacific, edited by John C. Parish . . . . 11 REvIEWs OF Books
103
Hedges, Henry Villard and the Railways of the Northwest, by Robert E. Riegel 117 Fuller, A History of the Pacific Northwest, by John T.Ganoe - . . . 118 Ghent, The Early Far West, by Dan E. Clark - - + + «© «© «© «© «© « IIQ
a ee
Schafer, California Letters of Lucius Fairchild, by Robert G. Raymer - + - 120 Lecuna, Cartas del Libertador, by Joseph B. Lockey - - - + + + + «+ I21
mage mg ~a . =
Robles, Francisco de Urdifiola, by Lesley Byrd Simpson - - - - + + «+ 123 Caillet-Bois, Nuestros Corsarios, 1, Brown y Bouchard en el Pacifico, 1815-1816,
by: Lewis W. Boulet 65s Shae eR Re 5 RG Wagner, Manuscript Atlases of Battista Agnese, by R. B. Haselden - . ~. 127 Cameron, The Reform Movement in China, 1898-1912, by E. T. Williams . . 128
Morse and McNair, Far Eastern International Relations, by Harold J. Noble. 131
Yakhontoff, Russia and the Soviet Union in the Far East, by A. Lobanov ee a SS BR ow ce ar we, he eet Bae
— saregh pine pat yg oem eg A Seed “smn
Shann, An Economic History of Australia, by Frank J. Klingberg- - + + 133 Comment and Historical News. ... .... + « «© « 135
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Imperial federation, as understood by its supporters, was a defective theory. It would subordinate the part to the whole and this was not federalism in its true sense. The voice of the Australasian colonies would be lost and their influence overwhelmed if they were given representation in an enlarged British House of Commons or House of Lords, and there could be no central ministry or executive power which could function for all the empire without the sacrifice of some of the powers enjoyed and exercised by the several parts. In the Imperial Conference they had "created a new state of the realm, a new organ of public opinion and that without usurping a single prerogative either of the House of Commons or of Colonial parliaments."
Instead of imperial federation, meaning some form of centralization, they would have imperial coöperation which was federalism in its true sense. This might not at first be that "absolute unanimity" which they all desired but it would lead ultimately to that result. It would preserve their own individual freedom and the sovereignty of their parliaments and, at the same time, that spirit of wholeness for the empire without which no union could be successfully maintained.[1] Coöperation, the very essence of all true federalism was the new keynote of Australasian nationalism. Nor did it mean that the Australasian colonies would in the slightest degree shirk or evade their responsibilities either of peace or of war. There was a magnificence and a glory in the ideal toward which they were steadily moving. "I hope to see the time when a powerful fleet for which Australia shall pay, will patrol our coasts and prevent the approach of any hostile cruisers; and I may perhaps even hope to see the day when Australia shall send out for the control of these seas a fleet, built, manned, equipped and maintained by herself" which would give her the control of the Pacific. "The British Empire must consist of many centers, and to be effective Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/85 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/86 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/87 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/88 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/89 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/90 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/91 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/92 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/93 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/94 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/95 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/96 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/97 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/98 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/99 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/100 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/101 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/102 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/103 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/104 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/105 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/106 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/107 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/108 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/109 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/110 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/111 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/112 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/113 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/114 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/115 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/116 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/117 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/118 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/119 Page:Pacific Historical Review, volume 1, number 1.djvu/120
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- ↑ Deakin’s speech at Essenden, July 4, 1887, Melbourne Argus, July 5.