St. Andre, French Acting-Consul at Charleston,
i. 185, 186, 191 note[4]
Salisbury, Lord, quoted on John Bright’s oratory,
ii. 290 note[1]
Salt, price of, in Charleston:
effect of the blockade, i. 270
San Domingo, Seward’s overture to Great Britain
for a convention to
guarantee independence of, i. 126 note[1]
San Francisco, Russian vessels in harbour of, ii.
129 and note[1]
San Jacinto, the, i. 204, 205, 216
Saturday Review, The:
views of, on Lincoln’s election,
i. 39;
judgment of Seward, 39;
views at outbreak of war, 41, 46;
on Southern right of secession, 42;
on Proclamation of Neutrality, 100-1;
on reported American adhesion to Declaration
of Paris, 146 note[1];
on slavery as an issue: attack on
Mrs. H.B. Stowe, 180-1;
on blockade and recognition, 183;
on duration of war and cotton supply,
246 note[3];
on servile insurrection, ii. 80;
and the relation between the American
struggle and British
institutions, 276, 277-8,
280;
on the promiscuous democracy of the North,
277;
on the Republic and the British Monarchy,
277-8;
cited, 111, 231 note
Savannah, Ga., i. 253 note[1];
captured by Sherman, ii. 245, 249, 300-1
Scherer, Cotton as a World Power, cited, ii.
6
Schilling, C., ii. 301 note[3]
Schleiden, Rudolph, Minister of Republic of Bremen,
i. 115, 116 note, 130;
views of, on Seward and Lincoln, 115-6;
offers services as mediator: plan
of an armistice, 121, 122;
visit of, to Richmond, 121-3;
failure of his mediation, 122-3;
report of Russian attitude to privateers,
171 note[1];
on Trent affair, 231 note[2],
242;
on Lincoln and Seward’s attitude
to release of envoys, 231 note[2];
on attitude of Seward and Sumner to Southern
Ports Bill, 248 note[3];
quoted, on slavery, ii. 111 and note[2]
Schleswig-Holstein question, i. 79; ii. 203-4
Schmidt, Wheat and Cotton during the Civil War,
cited,
ii. 7 notes; 167 note[1];
arguments in, examined, 13 note[2]
Scholefield, Wm., ii. 193 note
Schouler,——, on diplomatic controversies
between England and America,
cited, i. 35
Schroeder, quoted on Erlanger’s contract to
issue Confederate Cotton
Loan, ii. 161-2
Schurz, Carl,
papers of, in library of Congress, cited,
i. 117 note;
advocates declaration of an anti-slavery
purpose in the war, ii. 91, 92;
cited i. 83 note[2]
Schwab, The Confederate States of America,
cited,
ii. 156 note[1], 158 note[4],
160 notes,
162 note[3]
Scott, Winfield, American General, on Wilkes’
action in Trent
affair, i. 218
Sears, A Confederate Diplomat at the Court of Napoleon


