The near war with Britain.  President Davis Appoints John Slidell and James Mason as diplomatic agents with power to enter into agreements with France.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Civil War Part 3.
Advertisements

George Washington’s Precedents as the First President.
War of 1812 Notes on…  Jefferson’s Foreign Policy  Embargo  War of 1812  Era of Good Feelings.
Troubles with Britain and France Chapter 11 Section 3 Pages
New Threats From Overseas
President Jefferson’s Dilemma Dealing with Pirates
Section 6.6: The British Are Defeated. The French ships brought military supplies from Europe They attacked British ships on their way to the colonies.
Battle of Fort Necessity (pg 106) took place on July 3, 1754 Took place in present day Pennsylvania. This was one of the first of many battles to come.
Chapter 9 Test tomorrow! Get out your Notebooks to review……
Road to Civil War Secession and War p
R OAD TO C IVIL W AR : Secession and War. T HE ELECTION OF 1860 The issue of slavery eventually caused a break in the Democratic Party before the 1860.
Canada and the American Civil War Causes of the American Civil War  This was a complex war fought between states in the northern.
Ch. 20 Notes Girding for War: The North and the South.
Advantages & Disadvantages in the Civil War Adapted from: Kyle Woodward Old KY Home Middle School Bardstown, KY.
1862: Antietam and Emancipation. The War So Far The Confederacy was hoping that Great Britain and France might help them in the war, giving the Confederacy.
George Washington
Isolationism vs. Involvement Isolationism is a foreign policy adopted by a nation in which the country refuses to enter into any alliances, foreign trade,
Get a piece of scrap paper Number from 1 to 40 Let’s see what you know! Which one are you?
Get a piece of scrap paper Number from 1 to 40 Let’s see what you know! Which one are you?
THE NEW REPUBLIC BEGINS ! Presented by: Mr. Cook And Mrs. Camuto.
Outgoing President John Adams had issued William Marbury a commission as justice of the peace, but the new Secretary of State, James Madison, refused.
Chapter 9 Section 1 The Opposing Sides.
Chapter 10.3 Troubles Abroad Puts Pressure on America to Interact July 14, 1789 – Citizens of France have rebelled against King Louis XVI. Want to replace.
The John Adams Presidency. Election of 1796 Republicans recruited immigrants heavily Crucial swing states were PA and NY.
The First Battle of Bull Run McClellan and the Army of the Potomac Europe and the War The King C0tton Illusion The Blockade and Foreign Relations The Trent.
The Civil War Texans Go to War p Many Texans Become Soldiers When fighting began, Confederate President Jefferson Davis called for volunteers.
The War Continues. Civil War At Sea  The Trent Affair – 2 Confeds (Mason & Slidell) boarded British ship The Trent in Cuba to try to get British help.
Washington’s Presidency Washington’s Presidency was a time when the Executive Branch set many precedents that defined how the national government under.
John Adams Presidency Election of 1796, X, Y, Z Affair, Alien and Sedition Acts, and nullification CA 8 th Grade US History Standard 8.3.4,
A Call For Freedom.  For the duration of the war, the main goal of the North had been to preserve the Union, not destroy slavery.  Abolitionists did.
 In the early 1800’s, Britain and France were at war.  President Jefferson wanted United States to stay neutral so they could continue to trade with.
The Jefferson Era Part 3 Protecting American Neutrality.
FIGHTING THE CIVIL WAR. Hundreds of military officers resigned from the U.S. army to fight for the South. Robert E. Lee had been offered a command of.
American Studies I CP Politics in the South Set up like Union Problem: States rights over federal government, made it difficult to organize a war.
Chapter 11 Section 1. Once the Civil War began, hundreds of military officers had to choose to support the Union or Confederacy Robert E. Lee-> one the.
Fort Sumter Pages No Time to Celebrate Lincoln had little time to celebrate winning the election. He wanted to save the Union and keep the country.
The British Position The Emancipation Proclamation Dealing with Dissent.
Chapter 20 “Girding for War: The North and South”.
Part 1 Jefferson Begins His Presidency The Jefferson Era.
Politics of War.  Br = no longer dependent on Southern Cotton (Huge inventory from Egypt and India)  Britain – decides on “neutrality”  Trent Affair.
Foreign Affairs in the Young Nation Chapter 12 Vocabulary Words.
EARLY NATIONAL EVENTS. PROCLAMATION OF NEUTRALITY The Proclamation of Neutrality was a formal announcement issued by President George Washington in May.
The Final Years Let’s end this war already!. The Victory at Yorktown Guiding Question: What events occurred in the victory at Yorktown? Washington’s final.
Section American Civil War ( ) The Civil War was a conflict of armies and ideals. The armies of the North (Union) fought against the South.
This web site is dedicated to all the families, friends and the crew members present and past who served aboard the ship named Providence. It is a tribute.
American Foreign Policy
The Politics of War Chapter 11 Section 2. Britain Remains Neutral For many years, the South had supplied Britain with much of its cotton. When the Civil.
The Jefferson Administration The 3 rd President of the United States.
The War Continues Chapter 11, Section 4. The Civil War at Sea Trent Affair – incident in which two Confederate leaders secretly boarded a British ship.
Unit 8: The Louisiana Purchase & The War of 1812 Lesson 4: The U.S. Tries to Stay Out of War.
Opposing Sides. Financing war in the South The Confederacy’s financial reality was poor, and got worse Most southern planters were in debt & could not.
Politics of War Chapter 11.2.
Politics of War.
Battles and Events of the Revolution
U.S. History A The War Continues Pgs
United States of America
Second President of the United States
Topic 5 The Early Republic
War & Expansionism in the US
11.4 Troubles with France and Britain pp
Chapter 8 A New Nation( ) Section 3 The First Political Parties.
The Revolution of 1800.
for Mrs. Stephens’ 4th grade Class
Chapter 20 Girding for War: The North & The South
11.4 Troubles with France and Britain pp
Girding for War: North and the South
12.2 Nullification Controversy
for Mrs. Stephens’ 4th grade Class
Troubles with France and Britain
Chapter 12 Guided Notes (Part I)
Presentation transcript:

The near war with Britain

 President Davis Appoints John Slidell and James Mason as diplomatic agents with power to enter into agreements with France and England

 A. recognition of the Confederate Government  B. Departed to Cuba aboard the blockade runner Theodora

 The intended departure of the diplomats was no secret, and the Union government received daily intelligence on their movements. By October 1 Slidell and Mason were in Charleston, South Carolina. Their original plan was to run the blockade in CSS Nashville, a fast steamer, and sail directly to Britain. But the main channel into Charleston was guarded by five Union ships, and Nashville’s draft was too deep for any side channels. A night escape was considered, but tides and strong night winds prevented this. An overland route through Mexico and departure from Matamoros was also considered, but the delay of several months was unacceptable.

 The steamer Gordon was suggested as an alternative. She had a shallow enough draught to use the back channels and could make over 12 knots, more than enough to elude Union pursuit. The Gordon was offered to the Confederate government either as a purchase for $62,000 or as a charter for $10,000. The Confederate Treasury could not afford this, but a local cotton broker, George Trenholm, paid the $10,000 in return for half the cargo space on the return trip. Renamed the Theodora, the ship left Charleston at 1 A.M. on October 12, and successfully evaded Union ships enforcing the blockade

 On the 14th, she arrived at Nassau in the Bahamas, but had missed connections with a British steamer going to St. Thomas in the Danish West Indies, the main point of departure for British ships from the Caribbean to Britain

 However, they discovered that British mail ships might be anchored in Spanish Cuba, and the Theodora turned southwest towards Cuba. The Theodora appeared off the coast of Cuba on October 15, with its coal bunkers nearly empty. An approaching Spanish warship hailed the Theodora. Slidell and George Eustis, Jr. went aboard, and were informed that British mail packets did indeed dock at the port of Havana, but that the last one had just left, and that the next one, the paddle steamer RMS Trent, would arrive in three weeks.

 Meanwhile, rumors reached the Federal government that Mason and Slidell had escaped aboard the Nashville.Union intelligence had not immediately recognized that Mason and Slidell had left Charleston on Theodora. U.S. Navy Secretary Gideon Welles reacted to the rumor that Mason and Slidell had escaped from Charleston by ordering Admiral Samuel F. DuPont to dispatch a fast warship to Britain to intercept the Nashville

 When Nashville arrived on November 21, the British were surprised that the envoys were not on board.

 The Union steam frigate USS San Jacinto, commanded by Captain Charles Wilkes, arrived in St. Thomas on October 13

 Wilkes learned from a newspaper that Mason and Slidell were scheduled to leave Havana on November 7 in the British mail packet RMS Trent, bound first for St. Thomas and then England. He realized that the ship would need to use the “narrow Bahama Channel, the only deepwater route between Cuba and the shallow Grand Bahama Bank.” Wilkes discussed legal options with his second in command, Lt. D. M. Fairfax, before making plans to intercept and also reviewed law books on the subject. Wilkes adopted the position that Mason and Slidell would qualify as “contraband” subject to seizure by a United States ship

 This aggressive decision making was typical of Wilkes' command style. On one hand, he was recognized as “a distinguished explorer, author, and naval officer”. On the other, he “had a reputation as a stubborn, overzealous, impulsive, and sometimes insubordinate officer.” Treasury officer George Harrington had warned Seward about Wilkes: “He will give us trouble. He has a superabundance of self- esteem and a deficiency of judgment. When he commanded his great exploring mission he court-martialed nearly all his officers; he alone was right, everybody else was wrong

 The Trent left on November 7 as scheduled, with Mason, Slidell, their secretaries, and Slidell’s wife and children aboard. Just as Wilkes had predicted, the Trent passed through Bahama Channel, where the San Jacinto was waiting. Around noon on November 8, lookouts aboard the San Jacinto spotted Trent, which unfurled the Union Jack as it neared. The San Jacinto then fired a shot across the Trent s bow, which Captain James Moir of the Trent ignored. The San Jacinto' s forward pivot gun fired a shot which landed right in front of the Trent. The Trent stopped following the second shot. Lieutenant Fairfax was summoned to the quarterdeck, where Wilkes presented him with the following written instructions

 On boarding her you will demand the papers of the steamer, her clearance from Havana, with the list of passengers and crew. Should Mr. Mason, Mr. Slidell, Mr. Eustice and Mr. McFarland be on board make them prisoners and send them on board this ship and take possession of her [the Trent ] as a prize. … They must be brought on board.  All trunks, cases, packages and bags belonging to them you will take possession of and send on board this ship; any dispatches found on the persons of the prisoners, or in possession of those on board the steamer, will be taken possession of, examined, and retained if necessary

 Fairfax then boarded the Trent from a cutter. Two cutters carrying a party of twenty men armed with pistols and cutlasses sidled up to the Trent. Fairfax, certain that Wilkes was creating an international incident and not wanting to enlarge its scope, ordered his armed escort to remain in the cutter. Upon boarding, Fairfax was escorted to an outraged Captain Moir, and announced that he had orders "to arrest Mr. Mason and Mr. Slidell and their secretaries, and send them prisoners on board the United States war vessel nearby". The crew and passengers then threatened Lieutenant Fairfax, and the armed party in the two cutters beside the Trent responded to the threats by climbing aboard to protect him. Captain Moir refused Fairfax’s request for a passenger list, but Slidell and Mason came forward and identified themselves.

 Mason and Slidell made a formal refusal to go voluntarily with Fairfax, but did not resist when Fairfax's crewmen escorted them to the cutter

 San Jacinto arrived in Hampton Roads, Virginia on November 15, where Wilkes wired news of the capture to Washington. He was then ordered to Boston where he delivered the captives to Fort Warren, a prison for captured Confederates

 Wilkes and the San Jacinto returned to Fortress Monroe with its captured diplomats and Wilkes was hailed as a hero ( temporarily)

 Most Northerners learned of the Trent capture on November 16 when the news hit afternoon newspapers. By Monday, November 18, the press seemed “universally engulfed in a massive wave of chauvinistic elation.” Mason and Slidell, “the caged ambassadors”, were denounced as “knaves”, “cowards”, “snobs”, “cold, cruel, and selfish”.

 British outrage leads to a turnaround in view

 Lincoln was at first enthused about the capture and reluctant to let them go, but as reality set in he stated:  I fear the traitors will prove to be white elephants. We must stick to American principles concerning the rights of neutrals. We fought Great Britain for insisting … on the right to do precisely what Captain Wilkes has done. If Great Britain shall now protest against the act, and demand their release, we must give them up, apologize for the act as a violation of our doctrines, and thus forever bind her over to keep the peace in relation to neutrals, and so acknowledge that she has been wrong for sixty years

 Britain demanded an apology and the return of the prisoners which the Lincoln administration was forced to do. Seward sent the apology and arranged for the exchange of said prisoners.  Britain also demanded no further actions by US ships

 While the Confederate government hoped for a uniting by European nations and a more severe policy than an apology, that is all they got.

 The resolution of the Trent affair dealt a serious blow to Confederate diplomatic efforts. First, it deflected the recognition momentum developed during the summer and fall of It created a feeling in Great Britain that the United States was prepared to defend itself when necessary, but recognized its responsibility to comply with international law. Moreover, it produced a feeling in Great Britain and France that peace could be preserved as long as the Europeans maintained strict neutrality in regard to the American belligerents