Great Britain and the American Civil War
Chapter 38
close touch with Adams, 22, 36; attacks Government in debate on Southern shipbuilding, 133; rebuked by Palmerston, 135; in Roebuck's motion, 171-2, 175; comment on Southern meetings, 190 _and note_[2] Fort Donelson, Confederate reverse at, i. 272, 273 _note_[1], 274 Fort Henry, Confederate reverse at, i. 272, 273 _note[1]_, 274 Fox, G.V.: _Confidential Correspondence_, cited, i. 257 _note_[3], 268 _note_[2]; ii. 120 _note_[3]; quoted, on Confederate ironclads in England, 130 _note_[2] France: Naval right of search exercised by, i. 6; and American contentions on neutral rights, 18; Confederate Cotton Loan, attitude to, ii. 160 _note_[2] Cotton: lack of, i. 279, 290, 293-4, 296, 300; ii. 17 Mediation and armistice, attitude to British unofficial overture on, ii. 38-9, 45-6, 59-60 Ministerial crisis, ii. 39, 45, 59 Neutrality of, i. 299; Northern sentiment on, ii. 225 _and note_[2] Policy in the Civil War: joint action of, with Great Britain, i. 84, 88, 156, 166 _note_[1], 196, 249-50, 252, 259, 260, 284, 294; ii. 28, 75, 198; break in, 77 Press of, and the events in U.S., ii. 174 _note_[3], 236 _note_[2] _See also under _Mercier, Napoleon, Thouvenel, _and under subject-headings_ _Fraser's Magazine_, ii. 284; J.S. Mill's articles in, i. 240, 242; ii. 81, 90, 285 Fraser, Trenholm & Company: Confederate financial agents in Liverpool, ii. 156, 157 Frederick VII of Denmark: and Schleswig-Holstein, ii. 203 Free Trade, i. 21; ii. 304 Freeman, E.A., _History of Federal Government_, cited, ii. 152-3 Fremont, ii. 82
Gallenga,----, _Times_ correspondent in New York, ii. 189 Gait, Sir J.T., i. 221 _note_[1]; 222 _note_ Galveston, Tex. i. 253 _note_[1]; ii. 266, 268 Garrison, W.L., American abolitionist, editor of the _Liberator_, i. 31, 33, 46 _and note_[1] Garrison, _Garrison_, cited, ii. 91 _note_[1], 111 _note_[3] Gasparin, Count, cited, ii. 92 _notes_ Geneva Arbitration Court: American complaint of British Neutrality, in, i. 138; American argument before, on Declaration of Paris, 146 _note_[2] German opinion on the Civil War, i. 178 _note_[3]; ii. 111 _note_[2]; press attitude, 285 _note_[1] Germany: the _Index_ quoted on "aid given by, to the North," ii. 236 _note_[2] Gettysburg, Battle of, ii. 143, 176 _note_[2], 185, 296 Gladstone, Thomas, letters of, to the _Times_, i. 32, 33 _The Englishman in Kansas_, i. 32 _note_ Gladstone, W.E., i. 76, 78; fear of war with America in _Trent_ affair, 215; influence of the commercial situation on, ii. 26; attitude to intervention, 26, 27, 30-1, 48, 57; Newcastle speech, 47 _and note_[3], 48, 49, 50 _and note_[1], 51 _and notes_, 55, 58; memorandum in reply to Lewis, 57; supports Napoleon's suggestion on armistice and blockade, ii. 64, 69; account of Cabinet discussion on Napoleon's suggestion, 65 _and note_[1]; idea of offering Canada to the North, 69, 70 _and note_[1]; and the Confederate Cotton Loan, 163 _note_[2]; reply of, in Roebuck's motion, 170-1; quoted, on the American dispute as a blow to democracy, 282-3 Otherwise mentioned, i. 179, 200 _note_[1], 224, 266; ii. 59, 66, 77, 80 Goddard, S.A., ii. 108 _Letters on the American Rebellion_, cited, ii. 108 _note_[3], 109 _note_[1] Godkin, E.L., _Daily News_ correspondent, i. 70 _and note_[2] Golder, Dr. F.A., cited, i. 53 _note_[3]. "The Russian Fleet and the Civil War," cited, i. 227 _note_[1]; ii. 129 _note_[1] Goodenough, Captain, report of, on American readiness for foreign war, ii. 199 _note_[3] Gorgas, Col., ii. 5 _note_[1] Gortchakoff, comment of, on Russell's mediation plan, ii. 45 _note_[2]; and idea of Russian mediation, 251 _note_[1]; mentioned, i. 164 _note_[1]; ii. 59 _note_[4], 66 _note_[2], 70 _note_[2] Grant, General, capture of Forts Henry and Donelson by, i. 273 _note_[1], 274; victory at Shiloh, 278; captures New Orleans, 279; Western campaign of, ii. 164, 166, 184-5; capture of Vicksburg by, 176 _note_[2], 185; advance to Richmond, 217, 219; siege of Southern lines at Petersburg, 217; capture of Petersburg and Richmond by, 247-8; _Times_ report of reverses to, 212, 227, 243; condition of his army, Southern account in _Times_, 227; W.H. Russell's comment on Grant's campaign, 232-3; Henry Adams, quoted, on, 243 Otherwise mentioned, ii. 215, 249, 256 Grant's _The Newspaper Press_, cited and quoted, ii. 231 _note_ Granville, Lord, i. 76, quoted, 199 _note_[3]; on difficulties in Washington and attitude of neutrality, 241; opposition of, to Russell's mediation plan, ii. 42 _and note_[2], 43, 44, 46; mentioned, i. 94 _note_[3]; ii. 203 _note_[2] Grattan, Thomas Colley, quoted, i. 36; _Civilized America_, i. 36 _note_[1] Great Britain: Citizenship, theory of, i. 5-6 Colonial system: trade basis of, i. 17, 20, 21 Commercial relations with America after independence, i. 17 _et seq_., 22 Franchise, expansion of the, in, i. 26, 28; ii. 274, 276-7, 301, 302, 303, 304; effect of the American example on political agitation in, 274; connection of the American struggle with the franchise movement in, 276, 277, 278, 286; Radical acceptance of the challenge on democracy, 282, 283, 290, 298, 300; aristocratic and conservative attitude to democracy, 286, 287, 298, 300, 301 Policy toward America: conditions affecting, i. 2 _et seq_. 35; ii. 270; the right of search controversy, i. 6-10; territorial expansion 13-15, 16; extension of slavery, 13, 15; Mexican War, 15-16; commercial interests, 19-22; in the Civil War, 50-4, 58, 59, 79, 84, 136, 178, 199; ii. 270-2; influence of democracy in determining, ii. 303-5; policy of joint action with France. _see under_ France. _See also under_ Lyons, Russell, _and subject-headings._ Public opinion and governmental policy of, in relation to America,