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.
on Lincoln’s assassination,
    263;
  attacks Government on American “piracy proclamation” at end of the war,
    267-8;
  attitude to expansion of the franchise, i. 77;
    ii. 276, 303 and note[1]
  Otherwise mentioned, i. 292, 295; ii. 51 note[2], 166, 210, 214
Dial, The, i. 70 note[1]
Disraeli, Benjamin (Tory leader in the Commons), i. 79;
  on Trent affair, 241;
  connection with Lindsay’s motion, 292, 295, 296, 306;
  ii. 213 and note[1];
  approval of neutrality, ii. 77, 174 note[1];
  in Roebuck’s motion, 153, 171, 174;
  attitude to stoppage of Southern shipbuilding, 197;
  speech, of, on the motion for the
  Address to the Crown on Lincoln’s assassination, 263-4;
  Reform Bill of (1867) ... 3 03 and note[1]
  Mentioned, ii. 270 note[3]
Donoughmore, Earl of, ii. 204 and note[2];
   reply to Mason, 250-1
D’Oubril, ii. 59 note[4], 62 note[5]
Doyle, Percy, i. 218 note[1]
Dublin News, quoted, i. 45, 46 note[1]
Dubuque Sun, The, ii. 22 note
Dudley, U.S.  Consul at Liverpool,
  ii. 118, 130 note[2], 144, 145 note[2]
Dufferin, Lord, i. 240
Duffus, R. L., “Contemporary English Popular Opinion on the American Civil
  War,” i. 41 note[1]; quoted, 41, 48;
  cited, 70 note[1]; ii. 112 note[1]
Dumfermline, Lady, i. 224 note[3]
Dumping of British goods: 
  effect on American feeling, i. 19, 21

Economist, The: 
  attitude in the struggle, i. 41, 54, 57, 173-4;
    ii. 15, 173, 231 note;
  cited or quoted: 
    on Lincoln’s election, i. 39 and note[1];
    on impossibility of Northern reconquest, 57;
    on secession an accomplished fact, 174; ii. 79;
    on Bull Run, i. 179;
    on cotton shortage, i. 55; ii. 14, 15;
    on servile insurrection, 79;
    on Cotton Loan, 160, 162;
    on Roebuck’s motion, 173;
    on extension of the franchise, 277;
    on American institutions and statesmen, 279-80
Edinburgh Review, The: 
  attitude to slavery, i. 33, 45; ii. 281;
  attitude in the conflict, i. 42; ii. 50 note[2], 68;
  on recognition, 46 note[3];
  on the Emancipation Proclamation, 103;
  on the causes of the war, 281
Elliot, charge, i. 14
Elliott, E.N., editor of Cotton is King and Pro-Slavery Arguments,
  ii. 3 note[2]
Emancipation, Proclamation of:  ii. 74, 78, 80, 86 and note[1], 91;
  idea of military necessity for, 81, 82, 85, 87;
  Lincoln’s alleged purpose in, 87;
  purpose of, according to Seward, 99-100;
  viewed as an incitement to servile insurrection, 49, 74, 98, 101, 103
    note[6]
  American reception of, ii. 101, 105
  British attitude to, ii. 101 et seq.;

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Great Britain and the American Civil War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.