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The Confederacy believed that Great Britain would intervene via "peace talks" to benefit the South. Confederate leaders believed that cotton was a bargaining chip to be used. It was a valid argument. Great Britain's cotton supply came via the South and 75% of its imported cotton was from the Confederacy. Also, the textile mills in England employed 20% of English workers.

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Q: Why did the Confederacy believe Great Britain would intervene in the US Civil War?
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What were the plans for Britain and France for the civil war?

Britain and France were not involved in the American Civil War. The Confederacy asked for Britain's help but they did not get involved.


What hampered the early Confederate attempts to have Great Britain intervene in the US Civil War?

Confederate President Jefferson Davis sought cooperation with Great Britain as soon as possible. He relied on cotton as his leverage. The immediate problem Davis had, however, was that in the early weeks and months of the US Civil War, Great Britain had a cotton surplus, and thus was in no hurry to help the fledgling Confederacy.


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England did not provide any large-scale assistance to the Confederacy during the Civil War. Blockade-runners did manage to ship some cotton to Britain and smuggle weapons and ammunition into the Confederacy, but England remained neutral throughout the conflict.


Did England support the Union in the US Civil War?

Technically, Great Britain remained neutral during the US Civil War. The Confederacy did all it could on a diplomatic basis to gain recognition from Great Britain.


How many groups were there during the civil war?

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During the civil war did the south want to keep England and France out of the war?

The South greatly wanted foreign powers to enter the Civil War; Southern leaders believed that Britain and France would intervene on the Confederacy's behalf. The confederacy hoped that it would gain foreign support and would rush to victory like the colonists did in the American Revolution with French support. However, as we know, this never happened. Abraham Lincoln made sure of that when he issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Once slavery was introduced as a focal point of Civil war conflict, nations like Britain and France, that had banned slavery, would not become embroiled in the conflict.


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What did the confederated believe?

Most people in the Confederacy in the Civil War believed that their cause was just. They were, for the most part, defending their way of life.


France and Great Britain during the civil war?

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