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.
Harris, T.L., The Trent Affair,
  cited, i. 203 note, 205 note[1], 217 note[1],
    227 note[1], 231 note[2]; ii. 282 note[2];
  citations of anti-Americanism in Times, i. 217 note[1]
Hawthorne, Julian, cited, i. 47
Head, Sir Edmund, Governor of Canada, i. 129, 197 note[2]
Hertslet, Map of Europe by Treaty, cited, i. 94 note[3]
“Historicus,” Letters of, to the Times, cited and quoted,
  i. 222 note; ii. 63, 104, 138 note[1]
Holmes, O.W., i. 37 note
Hood, General, ii. 236 note[2]
Hope, A.J.  Beresford, ii. 187, 189, 193 note, 281-2
Hopwood, i. 305; ii. 11, 18, 21
Horsfall, Mr., ii. 153
Horton, Wilmot, i. 23;
  Committee on Emigration to America, 23, 24
Hotze, H., Confederate agent,
  quoted on effect of Trent affair, i. 243;
  descriptive account of his activities, ii. 154 note[1];
  and the “foul blot” phrase, 240;
  and the Southern arming of negroes, 241;
  mentioned, ii. 68 note[1], 180 note[3], 213
  Hotze Papers, The, ii. 154 note[1], 180
  note[2], 185 note[1]
Houghton, Lord, ii. 265-6, 267
Hughes, Thomas, i. 181; ii. 224 note[3]
Hunt, James, The Negro’s Place in Nature, cited, ii. 222
Hunt’s Merchants Magazine, cited ii. 8 note[2], 14 note[1]
Hunter, Confederate Secretary of State, i. 264
Hunter, General, issues order freeing slaves, ii. 84
Hunter, Mr., editor of the Herald, ii. 213 and note[1]
Huse, Caleb, ii. 120 note[2], 159
Huskisson, cited, i. 20
Huxley’s criticism of Hunt’s The Negro’s Place in Nature, ii. 222

Impressment by Britain:  a cause of irritation to America, i. 6, 7, 8, 16
Index, The, ii., 33 and note[3];
  agitation of, for recognition of the South and mediation, 33-4, 153-4;
  on Gladstone’s Newcastle speech, 51 note[3];
  views of, on Lord Russell and his policy, 51 note[3],
    55 and note[4], 68, 69, 165, 196, 197;
  on reply to French joint mediation offer, 68-9;
  on Laird Rams, 150 note[2];
  quoted on Government attitude to the belligerents, 154, 164-5;
  connection with Hotze, 154 note[1];
  and the fall of Vicksburg, 165, 178 and note[1];
  on French press and policy of France, 174 note[3], 180;
  reports of, on Southern meetings and associations, 188,
    190 and notes, 194 and note[2], 195,
    239 and note[4], 240;
  comments on the Palmerston-Mason interview, 215-6;
  criticism of Palmerston’s reply to deputation on mediation, 216;
  view of mediation, 217;
  defence of slavery in the South, 220-2, 240-1;
  criticism of the Times, 228;
  quotations from the French press on the

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