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ica_, quoted, i. 37 _note_ Mackay, Dr., editor of the _London Review_, i. 46 _note_[4] McKenzie, (Canadian Rebellion, 1837), i. 4 McLaren, Duncan, ii. 224 _note_[3] McRea, opinion of, on Hotze and Slidell, ii. 180 _note_[3] Madison, President, i. 11 "Madison's War," i. 4 Maine, State of: boundary controversy, i. 4, 9 Malmesbury, Lord, i. 79, 84, 149; ii. 25, 167 Manchester Emancipation Society, The, ii. no, 224 _note_[3] _Manchester Examiner and Times_, i. 70 _note_[1]; ii. 231 _note_; cited, ii. 136 _note_[2] _Manchester Guardian_, The, ii. 231 _note_; cited, 181 _note_[2] Manchester Southern Club, The: meeting of, and list of delegates, ii. 190 _and note_[2] "Manchester Union and Emancipation Society," The, ii. 110; leading members and activities of, ii. 224 _note_[3] Mann, Southern Commissioner to London, i. 63, 82, 85 _notes_; 264, 265, ii. 24 _note_[2], 241 _See also under heading_ Confederate Commissioners Marchand, Captain, of the American ship, _James Adger_, i. 208; instructions of, to intercept the _Nashville_, 209, 210, 211 _note_[1] Marcy, Secretary of State, and the Declaration of Paris, i. 140-1 Marryat, Captain Frederick: _A Diary in America_, etc., cited and quoted, i. 27 Martin, M. Henri, ii. 236 _note_[2] Martin, T.P., theses of, on Anglo-American trade relations, ii. 8 _note_[2] Martineau, Harriet: faith of, in democracy, i. 27; ardent advocate of the North, 70 _and note_[3]; view of slavery as cause of the Civil War, ii. 79-80 Marx, Karl, and the Trades Unions of London meeting, ii. 291, 292 _and note_[1] Maryland, and the Union: effect of "border state" policy, i. 173 Mason, James M., Special Commissioner of the Confederates to Britain, i. 183 _note_[2], 203; relations with Spence, 183 _note_[2], 266 _note_[3]; captured in the _Trent_, 204 _et seq._, 234 _and note_[2]; reception of, in England, 264; interview with Russell, 265-6, 267, 268; statistics of, on the blockade, 268 _and note_[2]; effect of the failure of Gregory's motion on, 272, 273; hope in a change of Government, 273; views of, on capture of New Orleans, 296; comment of, on mediation after the Northern successes, 300, and Lindsay's motion, 305, 306-7; on the state of the cotton trade in England, ii. 10; request to Lord Russell for recognition of the South, 25, 28; and Slidell's offer to France, 24 _and note_[2]; refused an interview: appeals to Russell for recogn
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