Serie Segunda 261 
Id. of the consul at New Orleans with Bradburn, at Anahuac, con- 
cerning excesses committed in the Brazos River by the schooners 
Nelson, Tyson, and Sabine. 
(Several letters transmitted by the consul.) 
The Texas-Louisiana boundary. 1833. 
Copies of reports by the commandant-general, transmitted by the 
minister of war, of the work of Mier y Teran; requests for 
Teran’s memoir and for related documents. 1833. 
Difficulties with American traders at Tabasco. 1832. 
Caja 1835-1838. 
Search for the Teran-Sanchez-Berlandier papers. 1836-1837. 
(Inquiry being made for them by the minister of war, they were found 
at Matamoros, Mar., 1836, where they had been left in charge of Luis 
Berlandier, botanist of the boundary commission after the death of 
Sanchez. A list by Berlandier, dated at Matamoros, Oct. 20, 1835, in- 
cludes 9 diaries by Berlandier and Chovell, 14 maps (planos), the diary 
of Amangual from New Mexico to Béxar, letter by Massanet, Teran’s 
diaries and correspondence, 1827-1831, Berlandier’s botanical collec- 
tions, etc.) 
Caja 1839-1842. Nothing noteworthy. 
Caja 1843-1845. 
Circulars to the diplomatic corps and agents abroad. 
Extensive correspondence relative to British commercial relations. 
Note from Waddy Thompson to the minister of relations, thanking him 
for courtesies, etc. Jan. 27, 1844. 
Caja 1846-1851. 
Frémont in California. 1846. 
Thomas O, Larkin, U. S. consul at Monterrey, to the U. S. minister 
in Mexico, stating that there is no danger of California being 
invaded by Americans; that Frémont is still in California, either 
surveying or resting his horses; and that about 400 emigrants 
arrived in California in 1845. Monterrey, Apr. 3, 1846. 
Same to same, giving his view of “ what they call driving Captain 
J. C. Frémont out of the country ”. Mar. 27, 1846. 
Larkin to the U. S. Secretary of State. Mar., 1846. 
(Copies of letters transmitted with the above.) 
Frémont to Larkin, Mar. 5, 1846, transmitted with the above. 
Mutual complaints of Mexicans and Americans, of private character. 
1848, 1851. 
The slave trade. Note from the British minister to Mexico relative to the 
vessels provided by his government to help suppress the trade, 
according to the treaty of Feb. 4, 1841. 
Related correspondence. 
Expenses of the Mexican boundary commission—salaries, escorts, in- 
struments, etc. 1849. 
Correspondence with the legation at Washington with a view to “ recover 
the various expedientes and papers extracted from the Archives 
of Mexico by General Scott, and which passed (pasan) to the 
Secretariat of State of the United States ”. 
(Original letters by Rosa, nos. 19 and 58, referred to in another section.) 
Caja 1852-1854. 
Ransom of Mexican captives held by the Lipan Indians of Texas. 1852. 
(Correspondence of the legation in Washington and of George Howard, 
U. S. Indian agent at San Antonio; claim for indemnity; accounts, etc.) 
