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.

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

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