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China and the United States concluded the Burlingame-Seward Treaty in 1868 to expand upon the Treaty of Tianjin of 1858. The new treaty established some basic principles that aimed to ease immigration restrictions and represented a Chinese effort to limit American interference in internal Chinese affairs.
====United States sought ties to China to increase trade====Anson Burlingame, a lawyer and former Republican representative to Congress from Massachusetts, became the U.S. Minister to China in 1861 and , under the orders of Secretary of State William Seward, worked to establish the United States concluded the Burlingame-Seward Treaty as a power in 1868 to expand upon the Treaty of Tianjin of 1858East. The new treaty established some basic principles that aimed United States wanted to ease immigration restrictionsgain access to profitable trading opportunities and foster the spread of Christianity in Asia, alongside the leading European nations, and represented a Chinese effort who also sought to limit American interference gain inroads in internal Chinese affairsChina and Japan.
The final article of the Burlingame-Seward Treaty offered China some protection from external influence in internal matters. In this article the U.S. recognized that the decision to begin new construction projects or similar improvements belonged in the hands of the local government, not foreign powers or their representatives. This point was intended to safeguard against undue U.S. involvement in Chinese domestic affairs.
Despite the reciprocal protections that the Treaty afforded Chinese in the United States and Americans in China, the Treaty ultimately reinforced U.S. trade interests with China under the principle of the most-favored-nation concept, and it ensured a steady flow of low-cost Chinese immigrant labor for U.S. firms. For these reasons, American industrial leaders initially celebrated the Treaty as a major advancement for American commercial interests.
====Conclusion====
However, the success of the treaty was short-lived. By the late 1870s, U.S. industrial leaders and politicians could no longer ignore the increasing anti-Chinese sentiment in the United States, particularly in the western states; in fact, industrialists and politicians often promoted anti-Chinese activities. A new treaty signed in 1880 revised the Burlingame-Seward agreement, and the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 abrogated its free immigration clauses altogether.
{{Mediawiki:AmNative}} * Republished from [https://history.state.gov/| Office of the Historian, United States Department of State]* Article: [https://history.state.gov/milestones/1866-1898/burlingame-seward-treaty| The Burlingame-Seward Treaty, 1868]