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.

Tariff Bill (U.S.) of 1816, i. 19;
  of 1828, 21
Taylor, P.A., abolitionist, ii. 224;
  eulogy of George Thompson, 224 note[1]
Taylor, Tom, poem by, in Punch, on the death of Lincoln, ii. 259
Tennessee joins Confederate States, i. 173
Texas, State of: 
  revolts from Mexico, i. 12;
  Great Britain sends diplomatic and consular agents to, 12;
  independence of, as affecting British policy, 13-16;
  enters the American Union, 14, 15, 16;
  in War of Independence against Mexico protests against shipbuilding
  for Mexico in Britain, ii. 117 note[1];
  mentioned, 266
Thompson and Wainwright, Confidential Correspondence of G.V.  Fox,
  etc.
, cited, i. 257 note[3]
Thompson, George, organizer of the London Emancipation Society, ii. 91;
  work of, for emancipation, 109, 224 and note[1];
  mentioned, 109 note[2], 184, 191
Thouvenel, M., French Foreign Minister, i. 88, 143;
  in the Declaration of Paris negotiations,
    151, 157, 158, 159, 161, 162, 163;
  initiates negotiations with Confederates, 157, 189;
  policy of, for relief of French need for cotton, 196, 197, 198;
  attitude of, in Charleston consuls case, 189;
  and Southern Ports Bill, 247, 248 and notes, 249 and note[4];
  interview with Slidell, 266 note[1];
  attitude of, to mediation, 266 note[1], 279; ii. 19-20, 28;
  on difficulties due to lack of cotton, i. 279, 293-4;
  conversations on Lindsay’s interview with Napoleon, 291, 293;
  and Mercier’s Richmond visit, 280, 281, 282, 285, 288, 299;
  conversation with Napoleon on the blockade and recognition of
    the South, 294;
  on French neutrality, 299;
  opposition to Napoleon on American policy, ii. 19 and note[3], 20, 39;
  Slidell’s offer to, on mediation, 24, 25;
  reply of, to Russell’s unofficial suggestion of mediation, 38-9, 46;
  retirement of, 45, 59;
  view of England’s advantage from dissolution of the Union, 270 note[2];
  otherwise mentioned, i. 275, 289
Times, The: 
  characteristics of, as newspaper, i. 42, 229 note[2];
  ii. 178 note[2], 228, 230 note[2], 234;
  influence on public opinion, 178 note[3], 189 and note[2], 228;
  influence on public press, 226, 230 note[3];
  accuracy of reports in, 226;
  pro-Southern attitude in last year of the conflict, 226-8, 242, 244
    and note[3];
  attitude to Hotze, 154 note[1];
  relations of, with W. H. Russell,
    i. 177, 178, ii. 228, 229 and note[1]
  Criticisms of: 
    John Bright’s view of, i. 55 note[3];
    citations of anti-Americanism in, 217 note[1];
    Cobden, on, 222 note;
    Canadian opinion on, 222 note;
    in Index, ii. 228;
    in Morning Star, 228;

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