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What was the first country to officially recognize the United States in 1776?
Question
#87572. Asked by dam22250. (Oct 21 07 3:57 PM)
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star_gazer

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The Netherlands
http://www.netherlands-embassy.org/article.asp?articleref=AR00001808EN
Old Friends
Let me put that conclusion in an even broader context. Let me again go back: to the year 1776. The Netherlands, ladies and gentlemen, was the first country to recognize the newly independent United States of America, shortly after the signing of the Declaration of Independence. No other nation has a longer unbroken relationship with the US than the Netherlands. Many Americans are surprised by that, but it is true. We are indeed your oldest friends!
[Added text from the reference link - McG]
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Halfbrite
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Prior to Morocco, the Nation-State of Dubrovnik officially recognized the United States in 1776, and was the first to send merchant marine vessels into New York Harbor.
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Baloo55th
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Being a nit-picker (and having once produced a page on Dubrovnik for someone) that should read The Republic of Ragusa. This was captured by the French (1808) before falling under Austrian rule. The name was changed officially in 1918.
According to
http://www.marylandciviceducation.org/croatia/ragusa.htm
Ragusa rejected the proposition of official de jure recognition through fear of reprisal from Great Britain and the possibility that the Americans might yet be defeated, although Ragusan ships were accorded free passage by the fledgling USA. Eventually, de facto recognition was given, when everyone else was doing so.
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queproblema
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Here's a link to confirm that assertion.
http://tinyurl.com/googlebooks-rickSteves
This one more modestly says it was "one of the first," not the first.
http://www.dubrovnikfilmfestival.com/Travel_to_Dubrovnik.html
Dubrovnik, also known as the Republic of Ragusa, wasn't, however, a truly sovereign nation, but a small city that voluntarily or involuntarily successively came under the wing of Venice, Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, Croatia, Turkey, and Austria-Hungary, ceasing to exist in the early 1800's.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Ragusa
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Hellebrand
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The Americans themselves at the time interpreted the official salute by the Dutch to their brandnew flag, flying from their naval ship Andrew Doria, on 16 November 1776, as the first recognition of their independence. This happpened in the port of the small Dutch island St. Eustatius.
The island governor became an instant hero and the first purposely built US naval ship was named after him (and the second one after his wife!). His painted portrait came to hang in the State House of Concord, New Hampshire.
US President F.D. Roosevelt acknowledged it as well. When in the port of St. Eustatius in 1939, he presented a plaque to the island stating: "Here the sovereignty of the United States of America was first formally acknowledged to a national vessel by a foreign official." See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Roosevelt_Plaque_Fort_Oranje.jpg
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Hellebrand
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Is there better, stronger endorsement for a claim like this than from a US President ...?
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