Great Britain and the American Civil War, page 669 by Ephraim Douglass Adams
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, American and British views on, i. 16
Fairfax, Lieut., of the San Jacinto, i. 205 Farnall's "Reports on Distress in the Manufacturing Districts," ii. 12 note, 20 Fawcett, Prof., ii. 224 note[3] Featherstonaugh, G.W., Excursion through the Slave States, cited, i. 29 Federals. See under Northern Ferguson, Sir James, i. 268; ii. 175 Ferrand, attack by, on cotton manufacturers in the Commons, ii. 164 Fishmongers of London: Meeting in honour of Yancey, ii. 223 note[1] Fitzgerald, Seymour, i. 306; ii. 25 Fitzwilliam, Hon. C., ii. 193 Flahault, M. de, French Ambassador, i. 88, 197, 260 note[1], 288, 291, 293; ii. 19 note[3], 45 Forbes, J.M., and Aspinwall, Mission of, in England, ii. 130 note[2], 297 Forbes, J. M., quoted on the Civil War viewed as a fight for Democracy, ii. 297 Forster, William E., i. 58 and note[2]; a friend of the North, 58 note[2]; ii. 224; quoted, on Harriet Martineau, i. 70 note[3]; question in Commons on privateering, 94, 157; speech against Gregory's motion on blockade, 268, 270; speech on mediation and intervention in debate on Lindsay's motion, ii. 22; 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.