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.
46 note[4]
McKenzie, (Canadian Rebellion, 1837), i. 4
McLaren, Duncan, ii. 224 note[3]
McRea, opinion of, on Hotze and Slidell, ii. 180 note[3]
Madison, President, i. 11
“Madison’s War,” i. 4
Maine, State of:  boundary controversy, i. 4, 9
Malmesbury, Lord, i. 79, 84, 149; ii. 25, 167
Manchester Emancipation Society, The, ii. no, 224 note[3]
Manchester Examiner and Times, i. 70 note[1];
  ii. 231 note; cited, ii. 136 note[2]
Manchester Guardian, The, ii. 231 note;
  cited, 181 note[2]
Manchester Southern Club, The:  meeting of, and list of delegates,
  ii. 190 and note[2]
“Manchester Union and Emancipation Society,” The, ii. 110;
  leading members and activities of, ii. 224 note[3]
Mann, Southern Commissioner to London, i. 63, 82, 85 notes;
  264, 265, ii. 24 note[2], 241
  See also under heading Confederate Commissioners
Marchand, Captain, of the American ship, James Adger, i. 208;
  instructions of, to intercept the Nashville,
  209, 210, 211 note[1]
Marcy, Secretary of State, and the Declaration of Paris, i. 140-1
Marryat, Captain Frederick:  A Diary in America, etc.,
  cited and quoted, i. 27
Martin, M. Henri, ii. 236 note[2]
Martin, T.P., theses of, on Anglo-American trade relations,
  ii. 8 note[2]
Martineau, Harriet: 
  faith of, in democracy, i. 27;
  ardent advocate of the North, 70 and note[3];
  view of slavery as cause of the Civil War, ii. 79-80
Marx, Karl, and the Trades Unions of London meeting, ii. 291,
  292 and note[1]
Maryland, and the Union:  effect of “border state” policy, i. 173
Mason, James M., Special Commissioner of the Confederates to Britain,
  i. 183 note[2], 203;
  relations with Spence, 183 note[2], 266 note[3];
  captured in the Trent, 204 et seq., 234 and note[2];
  reception of, in England, 264;
  interview with Russell, 265-6, 267, 268;
  statistics of, on the blockade, 268 and note[2];
  effect of the failure of Gregory’s motion on, 272, 273;
  hope in a change of Government, 273;
  views of, on capture of New Orleans, 296;
  comment of, on mediation after the Northern successes, 300,
    and Lindsay’s motion, 305, 306-7;
  on the state of the cotton trade in England, ii. 10;
  request to Lord Russell for recognition of the South, 25, 28;
  and Slidell’s offer to France, 24 and note[2];
  refused an interview:  appeals to Russell for recognition, 27;
  view of the Emancipation Proclamation, 104;
  nominates Spence as financial adviser in England, 156;
  and Confederate cotton obligations, 157, 158, 159;
  and Confederate Cotton Loan, 161, 162;
  in Roebuck’s motion, 167, 168-9,
Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Great Britain and the American Civil War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.