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  1. 27 de jun. de 2018 · Adams-Onís Treaty (February 22, 1819) Agreement between the USA and Spain. Negotiated by secretary of state John Quincy Adams and Spanish minister Luis de Onís, Spain gave up its land e of the Mississippi River and claims to the Oregon Territory; the US assumed debts of US$5 million and gave up claims to Texas.

  2. www.tshaonline.org › entries › adams-onis-treatyAdams-Onis Treaty - TSHA

    27 de jul. de 2023 · The Adams-Onís (or Florida) Treaty, signed on February 22, 1819, by John Quincy Adams for the United States and by Luis de Onís for Spain, renounced the United States claim to Texas. It fixed the western boundary of the Louisiana Purchase as beginning at the mouth of the Sabine River and running along its south and west bank to the thirty ...

  3. The Adams-Onís Treaty between the United States and Spain was negotiated by Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and the Spanish Minister to the United States, Don Luis de Onís, and signed in February 1819. The principal elements in the treaty were the acquisition of Florida by the United States and the establishment of a boundary line ...

  4. Estados Unidos de América. [ editar datos en Wikidata] El Tratado de Adams-Onís o Tratado de Transcontinentalidad de 1819-1821 (antiguamente titulado Tratado de amistad, arreglo de diferencias y límites entre su Majestad Católica el Rey de España y los Estados Unidos de América y algunas veces denominado Florida Purchase Treaty o Tratado ...

  5. This treaty was concluded February 22, 1819. The ratifications were exchanged February 22, 1821, and proclaimed February 22, 1821. By the treaty of Saint Ildefonso, made October 1, 1800, Spain had ceded Louisiana to France and France, by the treaty of Paris, signed April 30, 1803, had ceded it to the United States

  6. The Adams-Onís Treaty upset many U.S. expansionists, who criticized Adams for not laying claim to all of Texas, which they believed had been included in the Louisiana Purchase. In the summer of 1819, James Long, a planter from Natchez, Mississippi, became a filibuster , or a private, unauthorized military adventurer, when he led three hundred men on an expedition across the Sabine River to ...

  7. Adams–Onís Treaty (1819) Adams-Onís Treaty (1819), an agreement between Spain and the United States ceding the Floridas to the latter. Also known as the Transcontinental Treaty and the Tratado de Cesión, the document was signed on 22 February 1819 by U.S. secretary of state John Quincy Adams and veteran Spanish minister to the United States Luis de Onís y Gonzáles.