The boarding of the Trent created an uproar in England.
The Union public immediately took an aggressive stance, but President
Abraham Lincoln knew that he could not both hold his nation together and
give battle to the most powerful military in the world. Within a few weeks,
Mason and Slidell were released and Lincoln disavowed the actions of the USS
San Jacinto's captain. None of the great European powers ever officially
recognized the Confederacy and by the fall of 1863, the outcome of the
American Civil War was all but assured.
Matt Dattilo the Editor of
Matt's Today in History
wonders what if Lincoln's advisers had convinced him to stand strong against
the British Empire.. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do
not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).
Confederate President Jefferson Davis and Union President Abraham Lincoln
met at Mount Vernon, south of Alexandria, Virginia. The former home of
George Washington, although dilapidated and
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icon to follow us on Facebook.still years away from a full
restoration, was one of the few places between Richmond and Washington
that could be considered neutral ground.
The two men exchanged formalities and then signed a truce agreed to five
days earlier by representatives of both governments. Orders were
immediately sent to the military forces of both sides specifying how and
where they were to be disposed for border defense. Although a state of war
still existed, the killing was over.
After the signing, Lincoln walked out to the great lawn in front of the
house with his Secretary of State, William Seward. "Seward, I have failed
the nation. I do not believe we can long survive as a people now". Seward
said nothing, for there was no consoling the President when he was in one
of his dark moods. But he knew, as did Lincoln, that continuing the war
would have certainly destroyed the nation. It was bitter consolation.
In December, 1861, when Abraham Lincoln announced that the Union would not
release James Mason and John Slidell, public response in the north was
resoundingly positive. Seven months after the beginning of the War Between
the States, it was obvious that the conflict would be a long and bloody
one. Armchair strategists on both sides had predicted a short, heroic
conflagration, but it was not to be. By the end of 1861, thousands lay
dead on both sides and although Union forces had experienced some success
in the West, the Confederate army seemed to be unstoppable in the East
despite having all the material disadvantages on its side. The northern
public needed a solid victory and the continued imprisonment of the two
Confederate diplomats filled the bill for a time.
As one can imagine, the response to the imprisonment was somewhat sharper
in Richmond and London. Jefferson Davis was outraged that two of his
hand-picked diplomats had been taken off a neutral ship in international
waters with the thin legal argument that the two men were "contraband".
Demands for their immediate release were met with stony silence from
Washington.
When word of the capture reached London at the end of November, the outcry
from both the British public and government was deafening. Prime Minister
Lord Palmerston had steered a course of neutrality with the regard to the
American Civil War and even though Confederate ships had been granted
access to British ports for refit and replenishment, the war was
officially considered an internal matter in which the British Empire would
not interfere. In private, though, those knowledgeable of the situation on
the other side of the Atlantic considered Confederate victory simply a
matter of time. In addition, Britain had strong economic ties to the
southern states because of the empire's unquenchable thirst for cotton. In
1860, almost 80% of the southern US cotton crop had been bought by dealers
from England. While other sources of raw cotton were available, America
was the closest source and the widespread use of slavery on cotton
plantations kept prices competitive. With those advantages in mind, many
cotton purchasers in England could look the other way when the morality of
slavery was discussed.
It was Christmas Eve, 1861 when word of Lincoln's statement concerning
Mason and Slidell reached London. In an emergency cabinet meeting the next
day, Palmerston called for the reinforcement of Canada with British
regulars and the bolstering of the North America and West Indies stations
of the Royal Navy with ships culled from the Home Fleet and Mediterranean
Squadron. The meeting ended with discussion of a final question: should
Britain formally recognize the Confederate States of America and, if so,
should military and financial aid be considered? It was a bold proposition
and one sure to put the United States on a war footing with England, but
as Palmerston put it, "Are we going to let what has been considered an
internal issue change how the world recognizes the rights of sovereign
nations?"
In the end, it was Washington's lack of response which brought the matter
to a head. In February, 1862, the same month in which Lincoln's son Willie
died at the age of 11, the British minister to the US, Lord Lyons, asked
for a meeting with the President. Lincoln was in mourning, and while Lyons
was aware of this he thought the issue of enough importance that he should
be granted a meeting without delay. However, Lyons had the unfortunate
luck of meeting face-to-face with Secretary of State William Seward, who
promptly dismissed Lyons' request as inappropriate. Feeling that he had
been treated in a manner not conducive to good diplomacy, he returned to
London for consultation, leaving his subordinate in Washington.
For Lord Palmerston and, subsequently, Queen Victoria, this was the last
straw. On April 11th, 1862, Britain formally recognized the Confederate
States of America and extended the new nation an essentially limitless
line of credit. London also declared the blockade of southern ports
illegal and stated that any interference with British merchant vessels or
warships by ships of the U.S. Navy would be considered an act of war. By
the time this declaration reached Washington, the first ships full of
rifles and cannons were already crossing the Atlantic.
Although 19th century strategists would not have used the term, Lincoln
faced a no-win situation. In 1861, the U.S. Navy consisted of fewer than
80 warships, almost none of them of modern design. A year into the war,
most of the ships on blockade duty were lightly-armed converted merchant
ships. The British Royal Navy, however, had the largest battle fleet in
the world and while it was not the incredible force which had fought
Napoleon 50 years earlier, it was more than a match for anything that
could be sent to challenge it. If Lincoln ordered the blockade to be
enforced against British shipping, a shooting war would quickly develop
between the US and British navies, a war that would soon spread to the
North American continent.
However, failure to block the British merchant ships and their escorts
approaching the ports of the Confederacy would essentially end the
blockade and ensure that the South's army was well provided for. The Union
had an advantage in manpower, but the rebels had shown, at least so far,
that they had the advantage in military leadership. And so Lincoln's
option were thin: start a war with the British that his nation could not
hope to win under the present circumstances, or allow the Confederacy to
be supplied from Europe, a situation that would change the nature of the
war.
The truce signed at Mount Vernon in March, 1863 and the treaty signed
later that year in London divided the United States into two separate
nations. The border states (Missouri, Kentucky and Maryland) were allowed
to decide by popular vote which nation they wished to join. All three
joined the Confederacy. One important concession won by the Union was the
creation of West Virginia, an area of Virginia that was strongly
pro-Union. As of January 1st, 1864, the new nation consisted of 14 states.
Texas, by far the largest, stretched from the southwest corner of Missouri
to the eastern border of southern California. The agricultural heart of
the nation remained in Union hands.
The intervention of the British into the Civil War was a mixed blessing
for the Confederacy. British arms and financial support helped bring about
the truce that ended the war in the South's favor, but that support came
with a heavy toll. In helping to ensure the creation of the CSA, the
British Empire gained what it had lost 80 years before: a largely agrarian
society dependent on British imports of finished goods, some of them made
with the raw materials purchased from Southern farmers. While the Union
continued to grow what would become the world's largest industrial base by
1900, the Confederacy remained mired in rural stagnation.
Slavery continued in the CSA until 1880. The trans-Atlantic slave trade
ended in 1807 and never resumed. Since the United States was under no
obligation to return escaped slaves who made it across the Ohio River and
other border crossings, a lively escape business developed in which
abolitionist groups paid Confederate residents to help slaves escape to
the US. While the British officially complained to the US government about
this, in practice they paid the controversy nothing but lip service. Most
Southerners did not own slaves and many disliked the institution. 16 years
after the Treaty of London, the last slaves were freed by a vote of the
Confederate Congress.