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

CHAPTER XVIII
108/342

156, 157; _Secret Service under the Confederacy_, cited, ii.

118, 149 _note_ Bunch,--, British Consul at Charleston, description of Jockey Club dinner, i.

43; on Southern anti-British sentiment, 44 _note_[2], ii.

71 _note_[2]; instructions to, on the secession, i.

53 _note_[1]; appeal of, to Judge Black on seizure of Federal customs house, 52; characterizations of Southern leaders, 59; view of President Davis, 59; views on the South and secession, 59, 93; characterizations of Southern Commissioners, 63; negotiations of, with the Confederates on Declaration of Paris, 168 _note_[4], 184-6, 188, 193; attitude of, to the South, 185 _and note_[4], 103, 195 _note_[2]; American complaints of, 187, 189, 193-4; recall of exequatur of, 184, 187 _et seq_., 193, 194-5, 201; defence of his action in the Mure case, 187, 188, 192, 199; subsequent history of, 195 _note_[2]; view of, as scapegoat, 195 _note_[2]; on attitude to the Blockade, 252 _note_[2], 253 _note_[2], 268; on Southern intentions, 252 _note_[2]; view of Southern determination, 252 _note_[2]; on Southern views of England's necessity for cotton, 63, 252 _note_[2]; ii.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books