Great Britain and the American Civil War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 825 pages of information about Great Britain and the American Civil War.

Great Britain and the American Civil War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 825 pages of information about Great Britain and the American Civil War.
opinion in, 222-3;
      officially states Wilkes acted without authorization, 226;
      report on English hope of peaceful settlement, 228, 229;
      on British opinion after settlement of, 238, 240;
      on effect of, in Great Britain, 243;
      view of popular attitude in Britain in the crisis of, ii. 283
    Appreciation and criticisms on: 
      Characterized in The Index, ii. 196
      Lord Lyons’, report on, i. 62-3;
        opinion on, ii. 71 note[4]
      Lord Russell’s view of his diplomacy, ii. 128
      Tory approval of, ii. 197
    Otherwise mentioned, i. 1, 2, 129, 198, 263, 274, 276;
      ii. 31, 100
Adams, C.F., Jun.,
  view of British attitude and the Proclamation of Neutrality, i. 109, 110;
  view of the delay in his father’s journey to England, 112 note;
  view on Seward’s attitude in Declaration of Paris negotiation, 138,
    153-6;
  examination of British action in the negotiation, 154-5;
  review of the Trent affair, cited, 203 note, et seq.
    passim
;
  on American feeling over seizure of Mason and Slidell, 218;
  and the Hotze materials, ii. 154 note
Adams, E.D.: 
  British Interests and Activities in Mexico, cited ii. 117 note[1]
  “The Point of View of the British Traveller in America,” cited,
    i. 23 note; ii. 274 note[1]
Adams, Henry, i. 138;
  ii. 292 note[1];
  view of, on W.E.  Forster, i. 58 note[2];
  on British Proclamation of Neutrality, 110;
  on American exultation in Trent affair, 223;
  on British attitude in Trent affair, 230;
  view of Gregory’s speech on the blockade, 270;
  on British view of prospects in the War, 297;
  on possibility of intervention, ii. 23;
  on advantage of a Northern declaration on slavery, 23;
  on the Trades Unions of London meeting, 292 and note[1] 293
  “Declaration, The, of Paris,”
    1861 ... reviewed, 146 et seq., 153;
    view of Russell’s policy in, 146-150, 159;
    view of Lyons, 147, 150
  Education of Henry Adams quoted, i. 149 note[3];
    ii. 172 note[2];
    cited, ii. 50 note[1]
Adams, John (Second President of the U.S.), i. 62, 81
Adams, John Quincy, i. 11, 20, 62, 81
African Slave Trade, attitude of the South to, i. 85-6;
  ii. 88;
  suppression of, international efforts for, i. 8-10;
  punishment to slave traders in American law, 9;
  American attitude to right of search, 9, 10, 219;
  British anti-slavery policy, 31-2;
  wane of British interest in, 10, 32;
    ii. 90;
  Slave Trade Treaty signed, i. 10, 275, 276;
    ii. 90, 91
Agassiz, L., i. 37 note
Akroyd, Edward, ii. 193 note.
Alabama, The, ii. 35, 116, 119-120;
  departure of, from Liverpool, 118;
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Great Britain and the American Civil War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.