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Otherwise mentioned, ii. 25, 26, 66 _note_[3], 70, 100, 101 _note_[1] Sturge, Joseph, _A Visit to the United States in_ 1841, cited, i. 29 Sumner, Charles, i. 79, 80; Brooks' attack on, 33, 80; hope of, for appointment as Minister to England, 55 _and note_[2]; views on annexation of Canada, 55; in _Trent_ affair, 231, 232, 234 _note_[3]; attitude to Southern Ports Bill, 248 _and note_[3]; advocacy of abolition, ii. 81, 90; conversations with Lincoln on abolition, 82, 86; attitude to Privateering Bill, 123, 124; otherwise mentioned, i. 49 _note_, 83, 130 _note_[1], 220; ii. 80, 132, 184, 247, 262, 280 Sumter, Fort, fall of, i. 63, 73, 74, 83, 120, 172, 173; Seward's policy on reinforcement of, 118 Sutherland, Rev. Dr., prayer of in American Senate, i. 233 _note_ Tariff Bill (U.S.) of 1816, i. 19; of 1828, 21 Taylor, P.A., abolitionist, ii. 224; eulogy of George Thompson, 224 _note_[1] Taylor, Tom, poem by, in _Punch_, on the death of Lincoln, ii. 259 Tennessee joins Confederate States, i. 173 Texas, State of: revolts from Mexico, i. 12; Great Britain sends diplomatic and consular agents to, 12; independence of, as affecting British policy, 13-16; enters the American Union, 14, 15, 16; in War of Independence against Mexico protests against shipbuilding for Mexico in Britain, ii. 117 _note_[1]; mentioned, 266 Thompson and Wainwright, _Confidential Correspondence of G.V. Fox, etc._, cited, i. 257 _note_[3] Thompson, George, organizer of the London Emancipation Society, ii. 91; work of, for emancipation, 109, 224 _and note_[1]; mentioned, 109 _note_[2], 184, 191 Thouvenel, M., French Foreign Minister, i. 88, 143; in the Declaration of Paris negotiations, 151, 157, 158, 159, 161, 162, 163; initiates negotiations with Confederates, 157, 189; policy of, for relief of French need for cotton, 196, 197, 198; attitude of, in Charleston consuls case, 189; and Southern Ports Bill, 247, 248 _and notes_, 249 _and note_[4]; interview with Slidell, 266 _note_[1]; attitude of, to mediation, 266 _note_[1], 279; ii. 19-20, 28; on difficulties due to lack of cotton, i. 279, 293-4; conversations on Lindsay's interview with Napoleon, 291, 293; and Mercier's Richmond visit, 280, 281, 282, 285, 288, 299; conversation with Napoleon on the blockade and recognition of the South, 294; on French neutrality, 299; opposition to Napoleon on American poli
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