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* 175 INDEX * * * Accessory Transit Company, 123 Adams, Charles Francis (U.S. minister to Britain), 16, 49, 64n19; and British policy, 9, 42; on British public opinion, 151, 156, 159; diplomatic ability of, 22–23, 74; on Earl of Shaftesbury, 55; and recognition of Confederacy, 5, 45 Adams, Henry, 158 Africa, 111, 118, 121. See also Colonization , of African Americans; Liberia; Sierra Leone African Aid Society, 85 African-American lecturers, 83–87, 92, 94, 98, 100–101 African slave trade, 26, 27, 125, 155 Aitkin,William, 97, 98 Alabama, C.S.S., 13–14, 21 Alabama claims, 21 Alaska, 116 Alexander II (tsar of Russia), 1, 26, 152 American Revolution, 11, 69, 147, 160, 163 Antietam, Battle of, 1, 54, 55, 56, 59, 61, 76n2 Argentina, 137 Arizona, 24, 139 Arman, Lucien, 14 Ashton, 88, 95–98, 106 Asia, 118, 121, 123, 133, 138, 139 Australia, 109, 121 Austria, 64, 65, 130, 134, 167; and abolition of serfdom, 26; and Declaration of Paris, 5; and European affairs, 25, 31 Balance of power, 31, 138, 166 Banks, J. H., 85 Bannon, John, 39n25 Barker, Joseph, 91, 94, 101, 102 Bay Islands, 119, 126 Bazaine, François Achille, 116 Bee, Bernard, 18 Bee-Hive (London), 59, 76n4 Beesly, Edward, 161 Belfast Anti-Slavery Society, 84 Belgium, 26, 65, 130, 133; and dependence on southern cotton, 10; and Guatemala, 119; and recognition of Confederacy, 5, 36n7 Belize, 15, 126 Bell,William, 101 Belly, Félix, 120 Belmont,August, x 176 * Index Benjamin, Judah P. (Confederate secretary of state), 18, 23, 25; and cotton diplomacy , 29, 30, 75, 100; and emancipation diplomacy, 28; and recognition question , 18, 19 Beringer, Richard E., 139n3 Bering Straits, 14 Bidlack Treaty (1846), 122 Bismarck, Otto von, 136 Blackwood’s Magazine, 59 Blair, Montgomery, 129 Blockade. See Union blockade Blockade-runners, 6, 9, 14–16, 38n19, 167 Bosnia, 61 Bourne, Kenneth, 76n3 Brauer, Kinley J., 76n2 Brazil, 19, 34, 137, 162, 167 Bright, John, 76n5, 151, 154 Bristol, 92 British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, 92, 93 British Honduras, 15, 129 British North America, 45, 59–60, 72–73, 110; impact of Civil War upon, 16–17; and St.Albans Raid, 16; and Trent affair, 11–12 British North American Act (1867), 16 British Reform Act (1832), 149 Brooks, John, 105 Brown, Henry “Box,” 83 Brown, John, 27 Brownsville, 15 Brunow, Baron Philip, 79n31 Bulloch, James D., 12, 13, 14 Bull Run, first battle of, 4, 45 Bull Run, second battle of, 49, 50, 51, 53, 55 Burns, Ken, 45 California, 24 Canada. See British North America; Dominion of Canada Caribbean Sea. See Gulf-Caribbean Carl, Prince, of Prussia, 119 Carlotta, Princess, of Belgium, 116, 131, 161 Case, Lynn M., 78n19 Cazneau, Jane M., 123 Cazneau,William L., 123 Central America, 2, 115, 119, 121, 124, 125, 126. See also Gulf-Caribbean Chancellorsville, Battle of, 91, 164 Charleston, 3, 8, 15 Chartists, 97, 113n25, 149 Cherokees, 169 Cheshire, 88, 95, 98, 103 Chesnut, Mary, 8 Chesson, F. W., 86, 93, 94 Chester,T. Morris, 94 Chile, 132 China, 130 Chincha Islands, 2 Cinco de Mayo, 116 Circum-Caribbean. See Gulf-Caribbean Civil War: European observers, 3–4; mortality, 3; transnational issues, 3–4; weaponry, technology, and tactics, 3. See also Immigrants: in Civil War armies Clay, Henry, 72 Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850), 122 Cleburne, Patrick, 28 Coahuila, 17 Cobden, Richard, 58, 151, 159 Cold War, 170 Colombia, 116, 119, 137 Colón, 126 Colonization, of African Americans, 41n39, 57, 104, 129–30 Confederate Aid Association, 93 Confederate States of America: Congress of, and Emancipation Proclamation, 73–74; and cotton exports, 29–30, 37n14, 107–8, 126–27, 150–51; declares war, 4; diplomatic competency of, 23–25, 71, 74–75, 126–28, 135; exiles of, 20, 39n31, 167; expels of British consuls, 18; and European interventions in Latin America, 2–3; flag’s modern [18.232.188.122] Project MUSE (2024-03-28 15:37 GMT) Index * 177 appeal, 25; and Mexican ports, 15, 29– 30, 38n19, 128; organization of, 4; and the pope, 18, 28, 39n25; and privateers, 5, 6, 9, 29, 36n8; and procurement in Europe, 12–13, 126; propaganda agents of, 23, 33, 42n45, 71, 98, 122; and race, 140n3; and recognition abroad, 4–5, 8–9, 17–20, 31, 73–74; and Russia, 20, 32; and self-determination, 25–26; slow communication with diplomats, 23; and SantiagoVidaurri, 17; surrender of, 19, 20; and territorial expansion, 3, 109. See also King cotton Conservatism, 124–25, 149–50...