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Guarantees about fishing rights

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That French fishing rights off Newfoundland and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence were to be guaranteed. (ARTICLE XXVII.) Those were British possessions, so why did such guarantees show up in a treaty that didn't involve Britain? Nik42 20:27, 16 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The text of the treaty says that: Neither party will intermeddle in the Fisheries of the other on it's coast nor disturb the other in the exercise of the rights. Which it now holds or may acquire c the coast of Newfoundland, in the Glulph of Saint Lawrence or elsewhere on the American cons northward of the United States But the whale and seal Fisheries. shall be free to both in every quarter of the world. My guess is that, from the way this reads, the French were expecting to gain those rights in a future treaty with Great Britain (with whom they were also negotiating at the time), and wanted a pledge from the U.S. in writing not to interfere with French fishing vessels in that area. 74.251.200.216 03:56, 11 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Old page history

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Some old page history that used to be at the title "Convention of 1800" can now be found at Talk:Convention of 1800/Old history. The only talk page comment that corresponded to the text at that page can be found at the above section "Misspelling/Inclusion in Wikipedia. The WikiProject tags for the law, France, and United States projects were all added to the talk page corresponding to that article history. Graham87 13:22, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]