[Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams]@TWC D-Link bookGreat Britain and the American Civil War CHAPTER XVIII 181/342
20 Huxley's criticism of Hunt's _The Negro's Place in Nature_, ii.
222 Impressment by Britain: a cause of irritation to America, i.
6, 7, 8, 16 _Index, The_, ii., 33 _and note_[3]; agitation of, for recognition of the South and mediation, 33-4, 153-4; on Gladstone's Newcastle speech, 51 _note_[3]; views of, on Lord Russell and his policy, 51 _note_[3], 55 _and note_[4], 68, 69, 165, 196, 197; on reply to French joint mediation offer, 68-9; on Laird Rams, 150 _note_[2]; quoted on Government attitude to the belligerents, 154, 164-5; connection with Hotze, 154 _note_[1]; and the fall of Vicksburg, 165, 178 _and note_[1]; on French press and policy of France, 174 _note_[3], 180; reports of, on Southern meetings and associations, 188, 190 _and notes_, 194 _and note_[2], 195, 239 _and note_[4], 240; comments on the Palmerston-Mason interview, 215-6; criticism of Palmerston's reply to deputation on mediation, 216; view of mediation, 217; defence of slavery in the South, 220-2, 240-1; criticism of the _Times_, 228; quotations from the French press on the war, 236 _note_[2]; and the Presidential election, 236 _note_[2]; on Germany's aid to the North, 236 _note_[2]; on reception of Northern deputations by Adams, 245 _note_[1]; on characteristics of Southern leaders and society, 287; view of Northern democracy, 287; denunciation of the Manchester School 298-9; cited, ii.
181 _note_[2], 186, 190 _note_[3], 199 _note_[4], 232, 241 _note_[1], 242; quoted, 192, 193 _note_[1] Ionian Islands, control of, i.
79 Ireland: Irish emigration to America, i.
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