250 Mexico: Relaciones -Exteriores 
The delivery of the custom-houses of Vera Cruz, Mazatlan, Guaymas, 
Matamoros, and Tampico by the Americans to the government of 
the Republic, and receipts accrued in them since the treaty of 
peace. Correspondence with the minister of hacienda. 1848. 
Prisoners of war. Correspondence of the minister of relations, the U. S. 
minister to Mexico, and American military officers. 1848. 
Armistice with the Americans. Correspondence with the minister of 
war. Feb., 1848. | 
Report by the consul at Havana that the United States is planning to 
annex Tamaulipas. Related correspondence. Nov., 1848. 
Caja 1849-1853. 
Contract presented by Salvador Iturbide, the secretary of the legation in 
Washington, for the purchase of arms for the military colonies 
and frontier states. Feb., 1849. Other correspondence, 1852. 
Correspondence with the governors and other local authorities. 
Report by the governor of Tamaulipas of guerrillas who joined the 
Americans. Nov., 1849. 
Request by the governor of Chihuahua that the boundary be settled. 
Apr. 12, 1850. | 
Purchase of arms in New York for the use of the governor of Nuevo 
Leon. Oct., 1850. | 
Report by the governor of Jalisco of hostilities between Americans 
and natives at San Blas. Jan., 1851. 
Report by the governor of Chihuahua that it is rumored that the 
United States intends to “alienate”? Sonora, Sinaloa, and Baja 
California. Aug., 1851. 
The reestablishment of a custom-house at Eagle Pass. 
Report by the consul at Brownsville to the effect that funds are lack- 
ing to pay for arms bought in New York. Nov., 1852. 
Id. to the effect that forces are being organized in Texas to patrol 
the Rio Grande. 
The vice-consul at Franklin relative to the custom-house. 
Complaint of outrages committed by Americans at Villa del Paso. 
Nov., 1853. 
Proposal of Jecker, Corra, and Co. to explore and colonize vacant lands 
in Tehuantepec and Sonora. 1853-1865. 
(In order to prevent a preponderance of American influence on the fron- 
tier, it was proposed that part of the colonists should be Europeans.) 
Caja 1854-1856. 
Commission of Rafael de Rafael to purchase arms in the United States. 
Correspondence of Rafael with the minister of relations. 1854. 
Order for the purchase of vaccine in the United States for use at Vera 
Cruz. 
Complaint concerning the blockade of Acapulco by the Dido. Corre- 
spondence with the minister of war. 1854. 
Protest against the annulment of the concession of land in Alta Califor- 
nia to the family of the liberator Iturbide. Correspondence with 
the different departments and with the legation in Washington. 
1855. 
Report by Mexican agents in the United States of arms introduced ille- 
gally across the border. 1856. 
