Supporting the Confederacy would have led to outright war with the United States. It would have also caused labor issues, since the industrial workers sympathized with the slaves and were openly opposed to slavery, and some threatened to leave their jobs rather than support the slave holding Confederacy.
Because: 1 - The Confederacy was not able to win a decisive battle in the Union territory. 2 - British public opinion was openly against slavery and would not have approved the recognition of the Confederacy, whose member were slave States, as an independent Nation.
No they did not the only reason they didn't was because they have a small trace of lesbian in them
The Confederacy hoped that the United Kingdom and the French Empire would support them, as these were arguably the two most powerful countries in the world at the time. Additionally, these two countries generally didn't like the idea of a powerful United States, so each had an interest in helping the Confederacy break away. However, Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863 largely ended those hopes. England and France had both banned slavery already, and now could not support the Confederacy, which sought to retain slavery. Later in the summer of 1863, devastating Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg made it clear that the Confederacy had little hope of ultimately winning the war.
The plural form of the noun confederacy is confederacies.The plural possessive form is confederacies'.Example: The Native American confederacies' support has assisted in policies to preserve wilderness areas.
The Confederacy sought to gain the support of border states like Kentucky and Missouri, as well as foreign nations such as Britain and France. They hoped that these alliances would provide military support, economic assistance, and recognition of their sovereignty. The Confederacy believed that their cotton production could leverage trade relationships with these countries, especially in Europe, to secure their backing in the Civil War.
Initially - doubts about the viability of the Confederacy. They wanted to back a winner. Ethical position over slavery - although the war was not originally about slavery, the Lancashire cotton workers said they would sacrifice their jobs, rather than support the Confederacy. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation made it impossible for free nations abroad to support the South without looking pro-slavery themselves. Especially good diplomatic work by Lincoln's envoy in London - C.F. Adams (of the Presidential family).
England and France.
English textile mills depended on Southern cotton. England later began growing cotton in Egypt.
They supported the confederacy.
It was the two leading European superpowers at the time...England and France.
Jefferson Davis was the President of the Confederacy.
The French and the English did not support the Confederacy during the Civil War. Instead, the countries decided to support the Union.
Scallywags
No he was the Commander in Chief of the Union.
The only thing I can imagine is they were trying to get England to come into the war on their side. They may well have done it until Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which would have put England on the side of slavery. The English people would not have stood for that. They wanted the aid of Great Britain and they believed England would support them because the South sold most of their cotton to England. But, England found cotton in the middle east and did not suffer from the loss of Southern cotton. Then, the Confederacy wanted to keep England neutral but the Emancipation prevented that because England had already outlawed slavery.
They fought for the confederacy
They fought for the confederacy