The U.S. ambassador to Britain during the Civil War was Charles Francis Adams. His counterpart, the British Minister (Ambassador) to the U.S. was Richard Bickerton Pemell Lyons, the First Viscount Lyons.
Canada was British territory & remained neutral during the Civil War
During the American Civil War , Charles Francis Adams, Sr. was the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom from May 16, 1861 - May 13, 1868 .
Jamaica was still part of the British Empire during the American Civil War. So a loose answer is that the would have helped the Union.
India was a British colony during the Civil War, and not the most contented one. Great Britain leaned toward the Confederacy while maintaining diplomatic relations with the Union, but the Civil War likely did not effect India in any significant way, nor did India have any significant effect on the Civil War.
Enrique Dupuy de Lome.
Canada was British territory & remained neutral during the Civil War
Not from the British
This Dick
During the American Civil War , Charles Francis Adams, Sr. was the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom from May 16, 1861 - May 13, 1868 .
Jamaica was still part of the British Empire during the American Civil War. So a loose answer is that the would have helped the Union.
In 1773, during the French and Indian War, George Washington served as an ambassador for the British to the French and the Indians.
It was during the Civil War because the north and south fought against each other. That is what the Civil War is. The Revolutionary War is America fighting against the British to gain their own freedom.
Australia was claimed by Great Britain and colonized by British prisoners. During the Civil War, Australia was still a remote outpost of Great Britain, with no appreciable effect on the war. Of the British colonies, Canada and Jamaica would have had much more of a bearing on the Civil War due to their proximity.
First of all the British wren't in the civil war. It was the North vs. the South. The South attacked Washington D.C. to try to gain control.
Lincoln's ambassador in London was a particularly talented man, C.F. Adams (of the Presidential family), and he did much to keep the British from sending aid to the Confederates. Davis's envoys to London and Paris (Mason and Slidell) did not do such a good job.
The War of 1812. The British sent observers to the Confederate side during the American Civil War, but never actually got involved.
New Zealand was part of the British Empire at the time.