Read A World on Fire: Britain's Crucial Role in the American Civil War Online

Authors: Amanda Foreman

Tags: #Europe, #International Relations, #Modern, #General, #United States, #Great Britain, #Public Opinion, #Political Science, #Civil War Period (1850-1877), #19th Century, #History

A World on Fire: Britain's Crucial Role in the American Civil War (150 page)

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82.
and
83
. Victory parade of the U.S. Army down Pennsylvania Avenue and the front of the Capitol on May 24, 1865. More than 620,000 soldiers and 50,000 civilians died in the war. At least a further 470,000 soldiers were wounded or maimed, including 50,000 amputees. The North lost 10 percent of its white males ages 20 to 45; the South lost 30 percent.

 

 

84.
Lincoln Memorial, old Calton Cemetery, Edinburgh. On the west side, the inscription reads: “Unveiled 21st August 1893. This plot of ground given by the Lord Provost, Town Council of Edinburgh to Wallace Bruce, US. Consul as a burial place for Scottish soldiers of the American Civil War 1861–5.” On the east: “To preserve the jewel of liberty in the framework of peace. Abraham Lincoln.” Around the base: “Suffrage—Union—Education—Emancipation.”

 

 

85.
The British Stonewall Jackson Memorial, Richmond, Virginia. The inscription on the plaque reads: “Presented by English gentlemen, as a tribute of admiration for the soldier and patriot, Thomas J. Jackson, and gratefully accepted by Virginia in the name of the Southern people. Done A.D. 1875, in the hundredth year of the commonwealth. ‘Look! There is Jackson, Standing like a Stone-Wall.’ ”

 

Acknowledgments

 

I would like to thank the following people for sending me their ancestors’ papers: John Knight, Derrick Mayhew, and Iris Diggle; as well as John Hailey, Bill Torrens, and Beata Duncan for their help.

I have been greatly aided over the years by my assistants, who have done everything from photocopying archives to picking up the children from school: Heather Nedwell, Jay Knowlton, Lorena Crackett, Christina Galbraith, Elizabeth Uzelac, and Olivia Taylor. I also thank all those at Penguin and Random House who have worked on the book.

The following people and libraries provided invaluable material: Library of Congress; U.S. National Archives; U.K. National Archives; Massachusetts Historical Society; South Carolina Historical Society; Museum of the Confederacy; British Library; British Newspaper Library; Royal Museum of Central Africa; Ms. Sam Collenette—Bolton Archives and Local Studies; Roger Bettridge, Linda Haynes, and Bill Torrens—Buckinghamshire Record Office; Kate Fellows and Rachel MacGregor—Birmingham City Archives; John Hopkins and Esther Williams—Cheshire Record Office; Sam Johnston and David Thomas—Cornwall Record Office; Susan Worrall—Coventry Archives; Rachel M. Rowe—Smuts Librarian in South Asian and Commonwealth Studies, University of Cambridge; Diana Chardin—Trinity College Library, Cambridge University; Martin Beckett—State Library of New South Wales; David M. Bowcock—Cumbria Record Office; John Brunton, Susan Laithwaite, Janice Wood, and Tim Wormleighton—Devon Record Office; Jennifer Gill—Durham Record Office; Jane Hogan and Elizabeth Rainey—Archives and Special Collections, Durham University Library; Hugh Jaques and Deborah Stevenson—Dorset Record Office; Sarah Chubb—Dundee University Archives; Ian Flett—Dundee City Archives; Michael Read—Welsh College of Music and Drama; Marion M. Stewart—Dumfries and Galloway Archives; Robert Craigie; Philip Bye—East Sussex Records Office; Dr. Annette Hagan and Hazel Robertson—Special Collections, Edinburgh University Library; Elizabeth Pettitt—Flintshire Records Office; Karan Robson—Southampton University Library; Mr. P. R. Evans—Gloucestershire County Record Office; Pauline Kane—Glasgow Public Library; Lynne Dent, Niki Pollock, and Moira Rankin—Special Collections, Glasgow University Library; Elizabeth Ball—Glasgow University Archive; Steffan ab Owain and J. Dilwyn Williams—Caernarfon Record Office; Martin Taylor—Hull City Archives; Elizabeth Kirwan—Department of Manuscripts, National Library of Ireland; Helen Burton—Special Collections and Archives, Keele University; Bruce Jackson and Neil Sayer—Lancashire Record Office; Dr. Margaret Bonney—Leicestershire Record Office; Adrian Wilkinson—Lincolnshire Archives; Ruth Hobbins, Roger Hull, and Liz Williams—Liverpool Record Office; Stephen Freeth and James R. Sewell—Guildhall Library, Corporation of London; Susan Stead—Special Collections, University College London; Malcolm C. Davis, Paul Howell, and Gillian Moran—Special Collections, Leeds University Library; Gwen McGinty and Dr. Maureen M. Watry—Sydney Jones Library, University of Liverpool; Dr. John Nicholls—London City Mission; Robert Gerrelli; Stephen M. Dixon—Medway Archives and Local Studies Center; Dawn Littler—Merseyside Maritime Museum; John Hodgson and Peter McNiven—John Rylands University Library; Edith Philip—National War Museum of Scotland; Alastair Carroll, Anne Craig, and Michelle Kelly—Public Record Office of Northern Ireland; Helen Sellars—Florence Nightingale Museum Trust; Richard Aspin, Douglas Knock, Nyree Morrison, and Helen Wakely—Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine; Helen Arkwright and Lesley Gordon—Special Collections, Robinson Library, University of Newcastle; Caroline Kelly and Elizabeth Tebbutt—Department of Manuscripts and Special Collections, Hallward Library, University of Nottingham; Jill Davies, Duncan Hartwig, and Kiri Ross-Jones—Manuscripts Department, National Maritime Museum; Tim Hughes; Mrs. S. Wood—Northumberland Record Office; Adrian Henstock—Nottinghamshire Archives; Caroline Dalton—New College Library, Oxford; Clare Brown and Melissa Dalziel—Special Collections and Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library, Oxford; Marie Lewis—Pembrokeshire Record Office; Steve Connelly—Perth and Kinross Council Archive; Josef Keith—Library, Friends House, London; Susan McGann—Royal College of Nursing Archives and U.K. Centre for the History of Nursing; Barbara Mortimer—Queen Margaret University College; Alan Readman—West Sussex Record Office; Angus Johnson and Brian Smith—Shetland Archives; Margaret Myerscough—Stockport Central Library; Di Tapley—Surrey History Centre; Len Reilly—Local Studies Library, Southwark; Robert Fotheringham, John McLintock, and Dr. Alison Rosie—National Archives of Scotland; Daniella Shippey; Dr. Iain G. Brown—National Library of Scotland; Alison Healey—Shropshire Records and Research Center; Christopher Lloyd—Tower Hamlets Local History, Bancroft Library; Rhys M. Jones and Meriel Ralphs—National Library of Wales; Steve Hobbs—Wiltshire and Swindon Record Office; Jeanette Grisold—Warwickshire Record Office; Dr. David Wykes—Dr. Williams’s Library; Elen Wyn Hughes—University of Wales, Bangor; Lyons Papers, courtesy of His Grace the Duke of Norfolk, Arundel Castle; Bob Hale and Lyn Morgan—Sheffield Archives and Conservation Unit; Mrs. C. Boddington—East Riding of Yorkshire Archive; Judith A. Smeaton—North Yorkshire County Record Office; Andrew George, Paul Harris, Ruth Harris, Barbara Hick, and Jayne Rhodes-Gifford—West Yorkshire Police; Elizabeth Briggs—West Yorkshire Archive; Marvel Manning—Hoole Special Collections, University of Alabama; Jim Pate—Birmingham Public Library; Charlotte Chamberlain—Mobile Public Library; Barry Crompton—Archer Memorial Civil War Library; Laura Madokoro—National Archives of Canada; John Rhodehamel—Huntington Library; Richard A. Hanks—A.K. Smiley Public Library; Kathleen Burns—San Diego Public Library; Bonnie Linck—Connecticut State Library; Martha L. Bennett—Fort Delaware Society; Marjorie G. McNinch—Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington; Lynn Conway—Georgetown University Library; Patrick Kerwin and Albert E. Smith—Library of Congress; Tony Gonzalez—National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections; Faye Haskins—Washingtoniana Division, D.C. Public Library; Amy Elizabeth Burton—United States Senate Office; Glovenia E. Snead; Sydney Herbert Davis; C.F. Henningsen; Jim Taylor; Susan Watson—Hazel Braugh Records Center and Archives for the American Red Cross; Trevor Plante—National Archives; Alicia Clarke—Sanford Museum Archive; Anne Thompson—Robert W. Woodruff Library, Emory University; John Phillip Albert—Georgia Historical Society; Melissa Bush—Hagrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Georgia; E. Cheryl Schnirring—Illinois State Historical Library; Olivia Chen—Chicago Historical Society; Andrea Telli—Chicago Public Library, Special Collections and Preservation Division; Kathy J. Koch—Archive, American Association of Nurse Anesthetists; Lori O’Connor—Kentucky Historical Society; Elizabeth Tunis—National Library of Medicine; Anne Sauer—Tisch Library, Tufts University; Pat Boulos—Boston Athenaeum; Diane Gallagher—History of Nursing Archives, Boston University; Alex Rankin—Boston University; Nicholas Graham—Massachusetts Historical Society; Barbara DeWolfe—William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan–Ann Arbor; Michael Hennen—Mississippi Department of Archives and History; Steve Zerbe; Megan Hahn Fraser—New-York Historical Society; Sha Fagan—Sarah Lawrence College; Jim Moske—New York Public Library; Nancy Martin—Rush Rhees Library, University of Rochester; Sarah DeSanctis; Fred Bassett—New York State Library; Mitch Frass—Duke University Library; North Carolina State Archives; Anne Skilton—Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Connie Cedoz—Port Clinton Public Library; Jim Duffey; Nan Card—Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center; Albert Hallenberg—Public Library of Cincinnati; John E. Hass—Ohio Historical Society; Karen Drickamer—Musselman Library, Gettysburg College; John Heiser—historian, Gettysburg National Military Park; Molly Dohrmann—Jean and Alexander Heard Library, Vanderbilt University; Mary Jo Fairchild, Jackie McCall, Carey Lucas Nikonchuk, and Peter L. Wilkerson—South Carolina Historical Society; Ann Drury Wellford—Museum of the Confederacy; and Gregory Stoner—Virginia Historical Society.

Notes

 

To read the comprehensive bibliography for
A World on Fire,
please visit
www.amanda-foreman.com
.

ABBREVIATIONS

 

BL
British Library
BDOFA
British Documents on Foreign Affairs: Reports and Papers from the Foreign Office Confidential Print,
ed. Kenneth Bourne and D. Cameron Watt (Frederick, Md., 1986–)
MHS
Massachusetts Historical Society
MPUS
Message of the President of the United States,
37th Congress (Washington, D.C., 1862)
NARA
National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.
ORN
Official Navy Records
OR
Official Records
PRFA
Papers Relating to Foreign Affairs Accompanying the Annual Message of the President of the United States
PRO
Public Record Office

Prologue

 
1.
Virginia Clay-Copton and Ada Sterling,
A Belle of the Fifties: The Memoirs of Mrs. Clay of Alabama
(New York, 1904), pp. 116, 118.
 
2.
New York Times
, February 19, 1859.
 
3.
Mrs. Roger A. Pryor,
Reminiscences of Peace and War
(New York, 1905), p. 57.
 
4.
C. Vann Woodward (ed.),
Mary Chesnut’s Civil War
(New Haven, 1981), p. 367.
 
5.
Lyons nevertheless understood the importance of providing excellent food and wine at the legation dinners. Hence the chef was from Paris and the wine from his own family cellars. Source: Brian Jenkins.
 
6.
James J. Barnes and Patience P. Barnes (eds.),
Private and Confidential: Letters from British Ministers in Washington to the Foreign Secretaries
(Selinsgrove, Pa., 1993), p. 213, Lyons to Lord Malmesbury, April 12, 1859.
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