> Yeah, looks like the Wikipedia entry was wrong.

Probably.  Here is the original articles that were ammended by the Senate and 
the explanation given (http://academic.udayton.edu/race/02rights/guadalu.htm):

Original ARTICLE IX 

The Mexicans who, in the territories aforesaid, shall not preserve the 
character of citizens of the Mexican Republic, conformably  with what is 
stipulated in the preceding Article, shall be incorporated into the Union of 
the United States, and admitted as soon as possible, according to the 
principles of the Federal Constitution, to the enjoyment of all the rights of 
citizens of the United States. In the mean time, they shall be maintained and 
protected in the enjoyment of their liberty, their property, and the civil 
rights now vested in them according to the Mexican laws. With respect to 
political rights, their condition shall be on an equality with that of the 
inhabitants of the other territories of the United States; and at least equally 
good as that of the inhabitants of Louisiana and the Floridas, when these 
provinces, by transfer from the French Republic and the Crown of Spain, became 
territories of the United States.  

The same most ample guaranty shall be enjoyed by all ecclesiastics and 
religious corporations or communities, as well in the discharge of the offices 
of their ministry, as in the enjoyment of their property of every kind, whether 
individual or corporate. This guaranty shall embrace all temples, houses and 
edifices  

Finally, the relations and communication between the Catholics living in the 
territories aforesaid, and their respective ecclesiastical authorities, shall 
be open, free and exempt from all hindrance whatever, even although such 
authorities should reside within the limits of the Mexican Republic, as defined 
by this treaty; and this freedom shall continue, so long as a new demarcation 
of ecclesiastical districts shall not have been made, conformably with the laws 
of the Roman Catholic Church. 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Original ARTICLE X 

All grants of land made by the Mexican government or by the competent 
authorities, in territories previously appertaining to Mexico, and remaining 
for the future within the limits of the United States, shall be respected as 
valid, to the same extent that the same grants would be valid, to the said 
territories had remained within the limits of Mexico. But the grantees of lands 
in Texas, put in possession thereof, who, by reason of the circumstances of the 
country since the beginning of the troubles between Texas and the Mexican 
Government, may have been prevented from fulfilling all the conditions of their 
grants, shall be under the obligation to fulfill the said conditions within the 
periods limited in the same respectively; such periods to be now counted from 
the date of the exchange of ratifications of this Treaty: in default of which 
the said grants shall not be obligatory upon the State of Texas, in virtue of 
the stipulations contained in this Article.  

The foregoing stipulation in regard to grantees of land in Texas, is extended 
to all grantees of land in the territories aforesaid, elsewhere than in Texas, 
put in possession under such grants; and, in default of the fulfillment of the 
conditions of any such grant, within the new period, which, as is above 
stipulated, begins with the day of the exchange of ratifications of this 
treaty, the same shall be null and void.
 
THE PROTOCOL OF QUERÉTARO 

In the city of Queretaro on the twenty sixth of the month of May eighteen 
hundred and forty-eight at a conference between Their Excellencies Nathan 
Clifford and Ambrose H. Sevier Commissioners of the United States of America, 
with fuil powers from their Government to make to the Mexican Republic suitable 
explanations in regard to the amendments which the Senate and Government of the 
said United States have made in the treaty of peace, friendship, limits and 
definitive settlement between the two Republics, signed in Guadalupe Hidalgo, 
on the second day of February of the present year, and His Excellency Don Luis 
de la Rosa, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Mexico, it was 
agreed, after adequate conversation respecting the changes alluded to, to 
record in the present protocol the following explanations which Their aforesaid 
Excellencies the Commissioners gave in the name of their Government and in 
fulfillment of the Commission conferred upon them near the Mexican Republic.  

First.  

The american Government by suppressing the IXth article of the Treaty of 
Guadalupe and substituting the III article of the Treaty of Louisiana did not 
intend to diminish in any way what was agreed upon by the aforesaid article 
IXth in favor of the inhabitants of the territories ceded by Mexico. Its 
understanding that all of that agreement is contained in the IIId article of 
tile Treaty of Louisiana. In consequence, all the privileges and guarantees, 
civil, political and religious, which would have been possessed by the 
inhabitants of the ceded territories, if the IXth article of the Treaty had 
been retained, will be enjoyed by them without any difference under the article 
which has been substituted.  

Second.  

The American Government, by suppressing the Xth article of the Treaty of 
Guadalupe did not in any way intend to annul the grants of lands made by Mexico 
in the ceded territories. These grants, notwithstandjng the suppression of the 
article of the Treaty, preserve the legal value which they may possess; and the 
grantees may cause their legitimate tities to be acknowledged before the 
american tribunals.  

Conformably to the law of the United States, legitimate titles to every 
description of property personal and real, existing in the ceded territories, 
are those which were legitimate titles under the Mexican law in California and 
New Mexico up to the I3th of May 1846, and in Texas up to the 2d March 1836.  

Third.  

The Government of the United States by suppressing the concluding paragraph of 
article XIIth of the Treaty, did not intend to deprive the Mexican Republic of 
the free and unrestrained faculty of ceding, conveying or transferring at any 
time (as it may judge best> the sum of the twelve [sic] millions of dollars 
which the same Government of the United States is to deliver in the places 
designated by the amended article.  

And these explanations having been accepted by the Minister of Foreign Affairs 
of the Mexican Republic, he declared in name of his Government that with the 
understanding conveyed by them, the same Government would proceed to ratify the 
Treaty of Guadalupe as modified by the Senate and Government of the United 
States. In testimony of which their Excellencies the aforesaid Commissioners 
and the Minister have signed and sealed in quintuplicate the present protocol.  

[Seal] A. H. Sevier
[Seal] Nathan Clifford
[Seal] Luis de la Rosa
 


> 
> I don't see it anywhere either. I wonder if the Wiki article was in 
> reference to the portions removed by the US Senate.
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Russel Madere [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 9:54 AM
> > To: CF-Community
> > Subject: Re: English in America in trouble?
> > 
> > Which article?  I can't find the word language in it anywhere.  I 
> also
> > can only find one mention of the word Spanish and it references the
> > Spanish Fleet.
> > 
> > >Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
> > >
> > >>
> > 
> > 

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