[Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams]@TWC D-Link book
Great Britain and the American Civil War

CHAPTER XVIII
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58 _note_[2], 77; quoted on _Times_ attitude towards the United States, 55 _note_[3]; view of the Northern attempt at reconquest, 72; views of, on the Proclamation of Neutrality, 108, 110; speech on _Trent_ affair, 221-2; letter to Sumner on _Trent_ affair, influence on Lincoln, 232; speech on Britain's attitude on conclusion of _Trent_ affair, 241-2; view on the war as for abolition, 241; on distress in Lancashire, ii.

13, 14; view of the blockade, 14, 15; on the cotton shortage, 15; and Gladstone's Newcastle speech, 48; view of Emancipation Proclamation, 48 _note_[2], 105-6, 111-12; on England's support if emancipation an object in the war, 88-9; the escape of the _Alabama_, 120; at Trades Unions of London meeting, 132-3, 134, 291-3; support of the North, 132, 283-4, 290, 291-295; on the interests of the unenfranchised in the American conflict, 132, 295; on the unfriendly neutrality of the Government, 134; rebuked by Palmerston, 135; trouncing of Roebuck, 172 _and note_[2]; on Britain's neutrality (Nov., 1863), 184; championship of democratic institutions, i.
221-2; ii.

132-3, 276-7, 282, 283; popularity of, as advocate of Northern cause, 224, 225; influence of, for the North, i.

58 _note_[2]; ii.

224; Lincoln's pardon of Alfred Rubery in honour of, 225 _and note_[1]; quoted on feeling of the British Government and people towards United States in Jan., 1865, etc., 247; confidence of, in pacific policy of Lincoln, 255 _and note_[1]; quoted on the ruling class and democracy, 280; attack on Southern aristocracy by, 290; heads deputation to Adams, 294; eulogy of George Thompson by, 224 _note_[1] Adams' opinion on, ii.


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