the hunters of corse!! at first the scrub jays wanted a treaty so they woud not get shot building nest but the hunters didn care one ayota! so they called a meeting with blues and reds and even the mexican jays. together they form a treaty of no more shooting jays. ahrgg the hunters were real mad at that treaty for sure. jays 100 hunters zero!!lol
southerners
Jay negotiated an unpopular treaty with Great Britain
John Jay. Jay served as Chief Justice from 1789-1795, when he was elected Governor of New York.The Treaty of London (also called the Jay Treaty, 1794) helped avert another war with the British, but was unpopular with American citizens because they believed Jay capitulated too much to Great Britain's demands.Jay's successor, John Rutledge, burned Jay in effigy in the streets of Charleston, SC, in protest of the treaty's provisions. This action eventually lead to a Federalist Congress rejecting Rutledge's appointment as second Chief Justice, ostensibly on the grounds that he was mentally unstable.
Jay's treaty regulated shipping and sailing among the U.S and Great Britain , it corrected the problems thr arose from the Treaty of Paris
i thought a jay was a bird...
southerners
John Jay
Jay negotiated an unpopular treaty with Great Britain
Jay negotiated an unpopular treaty with Great Britain
Jay negotiated an unpopular treaty with great Britain
neutrality
neutrality
its called jays treaty cause it was jay himself who wrote the treaty.
The date in which the Jay Treaty was signed was November 19, 1794.
Many treaties were unpopular among the American public for different reasons. Those reasons will depend greatly on what treaty in particular is being discussed.
John Jay. Jay served as Chief Justice from 1789-1795, when he was elected Governor of New York.The Treaty of London (also called the Jay Treaty, 1794) helped avert another war with the British, but was unpopular with American citizens because they believed Jay capitulated too much to Great Britain's demands.Jay's successor, John Rutledge, burned Jay in effigy in the streets of Charleston, SC, in protest of the treaty's provisions. This action eventually lead to a Federalist Congress rejecting Rutledge's appointment as second Chief Justice, ostensibly on the grounds that he was mentally unstable.
These nuts where president when the John Jay's Treaty was signed in london, in 1794.