Public opinion and governmental policy of, in relation to America,
i. 15, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30
Public opinion and official views in,
at the opening of the Civil War, i. 40-60;
doubts of Northern cause, 48, 50;
attitude to recognition of the South, 53 note[1],
on secession, 54, 55, 57
Trade:
exclusive basis in, i. 17, 20, 21;
effect of American retaliatory system on, 20;
free trade theory, 21; ii. 304;
hopes from cotton interests, i. 22
Working classes in: Northern sympathies of, ii. 284, 285 note[1]
See also subject-headings
Great Lakes: Armaments agreement, i. 4; ii. 253, 254
Greeley, Horace, editor of New York Times,
attack on Seward by, i. 280 note[1];
and Mercier’s proposal of mediation, ii. 75;
Lincoln’s reply to, on emancipation, 92-3
Gregg, Percy, ii. 154 note[1]
Gregory (Liberal-Conservative, friend of the South),
i. 90, 91 note[1], 267;
motion of, for recognition of the South, 85, 91, 108;
advice to Mason on blockade question, 267;
motion to urge the blockade ineffective, 268-72;
speech in Parliament on distress in Lancashire, ii. 21, 22 and note;
quoted on attitude of Parliament to intervention and recognition, 155;
view of Roebuck’s motion, 175;
question of, on the destruction of British property in America, 265;
mentioned, i. 292; ii. 153, 164
Greville, Charles, quoted, ii. 3
Greville. Colonel, ii. 193 note
Grey, Sir George, i. 163, 207; ii. 171, 263
Grimes, Senator, on the purpose of the Privateering Bill, ii. 123-4
Gros, Baron, ii. 167, 168-9, 170
Grote, George, quoted, i. 1
Haliburton, T.C., ii. 187, 193 note
Hall, Capt. Basil, Travels in North America,
cited, i. 26-7
Hall, Rev. Newman, ii. 111, 224
Hamilton, R.C., “The English Press and the Civil
War,” i. 38 note[2]
Hamilton, Capt. Thomas, Men and Manners in
America, quoted, i. 27
Hammond, E., Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs,
i. 189;
enquiry as to possible action of American
Navy to intercept Southern
Commissioners, 206-7, 210,
211 and note[1];
on Foreign Enlistment Act, ii. 142;
letter of, to Lyons, on seizure of Laird
Rams, 147 note[4];
quoted, on public opinion and Napoleon’s
proposal of mediation, 66;
mentioned, i. 256; ii. 45
Hammond, Senator, of S. Carolina, quoted, ii. 2-3
“Hampton Roads Conference,” The, ii. 252-3
Harcourt, Sir William,
quoted, on Lord Russell’s statesmanship
during the American Civil War,
i. 1;
letters of, in the Times on questions
of International Law,
i. 222 note; ii. 63
and note[2];
and see under “Historicus”
Hardwicke, Earl, i. 94 note[2]


