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.
  Cotton:  lack of, i. 279, 290, 293-4, 296, 300; ii. 17
  Mediation and armistice, attitude to British unofficial overture
     on, ii. 38-9, 45-6, 59-60
  Ministerial crisis, ii. 39, 45, 59
  Neutrality of, i. 299;
  Northern sentiment on, ii. 225 and note[2]
  Policy in the Civil War:  joint action of, with Great Britain, i.
     84, 88, 156, 166 note[1], 196, 249-50, 252, 259, 260, 284,
     294; ii. 28, 75, 198;
    break in, 77
  Press of, and the events in U.S., ii. 174 note[3], 236
     note[2]
  See also under Mercier, Napoleon, Thouvenel, and under
     subject-headings

Fraser’s Magazine, ii. 284;
  J.S.  Mill’s articles in, i. 240, 242; ii. 81, 90, 285
Fraser, Trenholm & Company:  Confederate financial agents in
     Liverpool, ii. 156, 157
Frederick VII of Denmark:  and Schleswig-Holstein, ii. 203
Free Trade, i. 21; ii. 304
Freeman, E.A., History of Federal Government, cited, ii. 152-3
Fremont, ii. 82

Gallenga,——­, Times correspondent in New York, ii. 189
Gait, Sir J.T., i. 221 note[1]; 222 note
Galveston, Tex. i. 253 note[1]; ii. 266, 268
Garrison, W.L., American abolitionist, editor of the Liberator,
  i. 31, 33, 46 and note[1]
Garrison, Garrison, cited, ii. 91 note[1], 111 note[3]
Gasparin, Count, cited, ii. 92 notes
Geneva Arbitration Court:  American complaint of British Neutrality,
     in, i. 138;
  American argument before, on Declaration of Paris, 146
     note[2]
German opinion on the Civil War, i. 178 note[3]; ii. 111
     note[2];
  press attitude, 285 note[1]
Germany:  the Index quoted on “aid given by, to the North,” ii.
  236 note[2]
Gettysburg, Battle of, ii. 143, 176 note[2], 185, 296
Gladstone, Thomas, letters of, to the Times, i. 32, 33
  The Englishman in Kansas, i. 32 note
Gladstone, W.E., i. 76, 78;
  fear of war with America in Trent affair, 215;
  influence of the commercial situation on, ii. 26;
  attitude to intervention, 26, 27, 30-1, 48, 57;
  Newcastle speech, 47 and note[3], 48, 49, 50 and
     note
[1], 51 and notes, 55, 58;
  memorandum in reply to Lewis, 57;
  supports Napoleon’s suggestion on armistice and blockade, ii. 64,
     69;
  account of Cabinet discussion on Napoleon’s suggestion, 65 and
     note
[1];
  idea of offering Canada to the North, 69, 70 and note[1];
  and the Confederate Cotton Loan, 163 note[2];
  reply of, in Roebuck’s motion, 170-1;
  quoted, on the American dispute as a blow to democracy, 282-3
  Otherwise mentioned, i. 179, 200 note[1], 224, 266; ii. 59,
     66, 77, 80
Goddard, S.A., ii. 108

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