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Chained to History: Slavery and US Foreign Relations to 1865: INDEX

Chained to History: Slavery and US Foreign Relations to 1865
INDEX
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Introduction
  2. 1. “Things Odious or Immoral”
  3. 2. “’Tis Ill to Fear”
  4. 3. “Separate from Foreign Alliances”
  5. 4. “Fully Meets Its Responsibility”
  6. 5. “Only Cowards Fear and Oppose It”
  7. 6. “Its Peculiar Moral Force”
  8. Epilogue
  9. Acknowledgments
  10. Notes
  11. Bibliographic Essay
  12. Index

INDEX

  • Aberdeen, Lord, 93, 94, 95, 112, 124–28
  • abolition of slavery: Atlantic slave trade suppression and, 63, 64, 104–5, 107; Britain, antislavery movement, 66, 124–26, 128, 129–31, 155, 165; colonization of freed slaves abroad and, 102; Dutch antislavery movement, 176; emancipation policy and Emancipation Proclamation, 61, 154, 166–74; ending direct effects of slavery on foreign relations, 182; initial downplaying of, in Civil War, 155, 156; Russian serfs, movement to liberate, 172, 216n97. See also moral arguments against slavery
  • ACS (American Colonization Society), 80–82, 84–88, 97, 98, 101, 102
  • Adams, Charles Francis, 154–55, 156, 164, 167
  • Adams, John, and Haitian revolution, 43–53
  • Adams, John Quincy: on Atlantic slave trade, 68–78, 102–3, 110; on “carrying off” of slaves by British in War of 1812, 18–19, 21–26, 28, 29, 181; on colonization of freed slaves, 81–83; Congress of Panama and, 1–3, 5; on destruction of Negro Fort and American acquisition of Florida, 31–32; evolution of views on slavery, 181, 218n1; foreign relations objectives of, 1, 5; Haitian revolution and, 47–48; Negro Seamen Acts and, 91
  • Adams-Onís (Transcontinental) Treaty of 1819, 31, 193n88
  • Africa, Black American colonization of. See colonization of freed slaves abroad
  • Africa Squadron, 101, 113–14, 117–18
  • Africanization scare in Cuba, 138, 143–50
  • Alexander I (tsar), 9, 24–28
  • Alexander II (tsar), 169
  • American Colonization Society (ACS), 80–82, 84–88, 97, 98, 101, 102
  • American Revolution, 2, 6, 9–10, 17, 32, 34–35. See also Paris, Treaty of
  • Amiens, Treaty of (1802), 55
  • La Amistad (vessel), 93, 94
  • Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, Treaty of (Jay’s Treaty, 1794), 13–17, 41–42, 43
  • Amphictyonic Congress of 1826 (Congress of Panama), 1–3, 5
  • Andrus, Joseph R., 84, 85
  • Anglo-American Convention of 1818, 24
  • Antietam, battle of, 167
  • antislavery movement. See abolition of slavery
  • Archer, William S., 132
  • Argyll, duke of, 156
  • Ashburton, Lord, 95, 96, 112–14
  • Ashmun, Jehudi, 87
  • Atlantic Monthly, 155
  • Atlantic slave trade, 62–96; Africa Squadron and, 101, 113–14, 117–18; Brazil and, 113, 114–16; Britain, relations with, 63, 65–75, 89–96, 102–20; British motivations for abolition of, 103–4, 111–12; colonization of freed slaves abroad and, 78–89; congressional legislation against, 64–65, 67–68, 72, 80–81; congressional resolution regarding suppression of, 75–78; Constitution on, 64; convention of 1824 on, 76–78, 104; Cuba and, 106–8, 116–18, 144; domestic politics and, 77; escaped slaves in British territories and Creole Affair, 93–96; faulty international enforcement of ban on, 65–75; France and, 66, 67, 104, 105, 110, 111–12; House Committee on suppression of, 73–74, 80; impressment in War of 1812, legacy of, 67, 69–70, 111, 119; joint cruising, 71–72, 112–14, 118; Lincoln’s concession to search, 65–66, 96, 97, 118–20, 166; Lyons-Seward Treaty (1862) as death knell of, 119–20; Middle Passage (Maafa), 62; Negro Seaman Acts, 89–92; opposition to/abolition of slavery itself and, 63, 64, 104–5, 107; origins of opposition to, 63–64; particular heinousness of, 62–63, 64; piracy, legal equation with, 72, 76, 77, 104; Portugal and, 69, 70, 106, 108; Quintuple Treaty (1841), 110; search of US-flagged vessels in peacetime and, 3, 65–66, 68–70, 73–78, 96, 97, 102–6, 108–14, 118–20, 166; southern states and, 104–5, 107, 111, 114; Spain and, 66, 106–7, 116–18, 144; unilateralism of US and, 69, 71, 76–78, 102–6; “visits” versus searches, 109–12; Webster-Ashburton Treaty (Treaty of Washington; 1842), 96, 112–14
  • Austin, Stephen F., 122
  • Ayers, Eli, 85
  • Bacon, Ephraim, 84
  • Bacon, Samuel, 83–84
  • Bahamas, slaves escaping to, 93–96
  • Baker, Anthony, 18–19
  • Bard, David, 64
  • Bathurst, Lord, 23
  • Bayly, Thomas M., 19–20
  • Bemis, Henry Flagg, 3, 29–30
  • Benjamin, Judah P., 160, 163
  • Benton, Thomas Hart, 113, 131
  • Bergquist, Harold Edward, 28
  • Bermuda, slaves escaping to, 20
  • Black, Jeremy, 66
  • Black Warrior Affair, 149, 212n114
  • Bolívar, Simón, and Congress of Panama, 1, 3
  • Bolkhovitinov, Nikolai N., 28
  • Bonaparte, Napoleon. See specific entries at Napoleon
  • Brazilian slave trade, 113, 114–16
  • Britain: antislavery movement in, 66, 124–26, 128, 129–31, 155, 165; Atlantic slave trade and relations with, 63, 65–75, 89–96, 102–20 (See also Atlantic slave trade); Canadian border, disputes over, 24, 109; Civil War and, 119, 154–57, 158–60, 161, 163–68, 179; colonization of freed slaves abroad and, 78, 80, 83–85, 98–102; in Crimean War, 148, 150; Cuba/Cuban slave trade and, 106–8, 135–36, 138, 141, 142, 144–51; escaped slaves in British territories and Creole Affair, 93–96; Haitian revolution and, 37, 41–42, 45–46, 48–49, 50, 53–57, 168; motivations for abolition of Atlantic slave trade/slavery, 103–4, 111–12, 126, 128, 129–32; Negro Seamen Acts and, 89–92; on neutrals’ right to trade with all nations in time of war, 5; Oregon Territory, disputes over, 24, 81, 109; Russian reactions to British press coverage of Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation, 169–73; territorial expansion, US, and, 109, 122, 124–33, 135–36, 138, 141, 142; Trent Affair, 165–66. See also Paris, Treaty of; War of 1812
  • British Honduras, consideration of sending African Americans to, 174–76
  • Brougham, Lord, 125, 127
  • Brown, Gordon S., 47, 50
  • Buchanan, James: Atlantic slave trade and, 113, 115, 117–18; safety of slavery under presidency of, 161; territorial expansion and, 140, 142, 146, 148–51
  • Bulwer, Sir Henry, 92
  • Bunel, Joseph, 44–45, 46
  • Burrill, James, 68
  • Butler, Benjamin, 170
  • Calderon, Ángel, 145
  • Calhoun, John C.: Atlantic slave trade and, 113, 114; on colonization of freed slaves abroad, 81–82; Congress of Panama and, 2; on territorial expansion, 122, 129–31; War of 1812 arbitration and, 24
  • Camillus essays (Hamilton), 16–17, 30
  • Campbell, Duncan Andrew, 164–65
  • Campbell, Robert Blair, 107
  • Canadian border, disputes over, 24, 109, 163
  • Canney, Donald L., 113
  • Canning, George, 29, 68–76
  • Canning, Stratford, 75, 76, 91, 102–3
  • Caribbean. See Latin America and Caribbean; specific countries and territories
  • Carleton, Sir Guy, 10–11
  • Cass, Louis, 110–11, 113, 116–18, 151, 177
  • Castlereagh, Lord, 21–24, 26, 27, 29, 66–69, 71–75, 192n54
  • Chancerel, Catherine, 143
  • Chase, Salmon P., 172
  • Chiriqí (now Panama), proposed Black settlement at, 174
  • Civil War, 153–79; Atlantic slave trade, suppression of, 78, 90, 96, 118–20; Black soldiers fighting in, 152, 168, 171, 173, 175–76; Britain and, 119, 154–57, 158–60, 161, 163–68, 179; colonization of freed slaves and, 78, 174–78; downplaying slavery in, 154–58, 160–61; emancipation policy and Emancipation Proclamation in, 61, 154, 166–74, 179; European intervention, question of, 119, 154, 158–61, 164, 165–68, 174, 178–79; European responses to and interests in, 161–65; foreign relations during, 4, 6, 90; France and, 157–66, 174, 179; internationalist approach to, 153–54; Mexico, French interests in, 162; non-seceding slaveholding border states in, 154, 156, 170; “race war” in US, European fears of, 168, 171, 172; Russia and, 167, 168–74, 179; Santo Domingo, Seward’s memorandum on French reconquest of, 164–65; Spain and, 162–63; Trent Affair, 165–66; Union cause and abolition of slavery, foreign failure to understand link between, 156–58. See also Lincoln, Abraham
  • Clarendon, Earl of, 116, 146
  • Clavelle, John, 19
  • Clavin, Matthew J., 31–32
  • Clay, Cassius Marcellus, 167, 215n77
  • Clay, Henry: on annexation of Texas, 131–32; on colonization of freed slaves abroad, 80, 87; Congress of Panama and, 1–3, 5; foreign relations objectives of, 1, 5
  • Clayton, Alexander, 147
  • Clayton, John, 137
  • Clinton, Henry, 10
  • Cobden, Richard, 168
  • Cockburn, Sir George, 20, 21
  • colonization of freed slaves abroad, 4; ability of Congress to establish, 81, 88; abolition of slavery and, 102; ACS and, 80–82, 84–88, 97, 98, 101, 102; Atlantic slave trade, efforts to suppress, 78–89; Britain and, 78, 80, 83–85, 98–102; Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation failing to halt interest in, 78, 174–78; early American enthusiasm for, 79–83; failure of privately-run colonization plan, 86–89; foreign relations and US policy regarding, 98–101; Lincoln’s support for, 4, 102, 174–77, 181; as persistent theme in US policy, 78; settlement efforts, 83–86; at Sherbro Island, 83–85; Slave Trade Act (US; 1819) and, 80–83, 88; state involvement in, 97, 98, 101. See also Liberia; Sierra Leone
  • commerce, trade, and economics: agricultural production and demand for slaves, 64; British motivations for abolition of Atlantic slave trade/slavery, 103–4, 111–12, 126, 128, 129–32; Civil War, cotton production, and foreign intervention, 159–60; Haiti, US trade with, 35, 36–37, 42, 44, 46, 48–53, 58–59; national security and commerce, perceived links between, 5, 35, 36, 86; neutrals’ right to trade with all nations in time of war, 5, 66, 69; Paris, Treaty of, and compensation for lost slaves, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17; War of 1812, compensation for lost slaves in, 19, 21, 22, 23, 25, 27–28. See also Atlantic slave trade
  • Confederacy. See Civil War
  • Congress: colonization of freed slaves abroad, ability of Congress to establish, 81, 88; House Committee on Foreign Affairs on relations with Liberia, 100; House Committee on suppression of Atlantic slave trade, 73–74, 80; Kennedy Report (House Committee on Commerce) on Liberia and other free Black colonies, 98–99; legislation against Atlantic slave trade, 64–65, 67–68, 72, 80–81; Lincoln’s annual message to (1862), 172; resolution regarding suppression of Atlantic slave trade, 75–78; search in suppression of Atlantic slave trade, concession to, 119; slave state/free state balance of power in, 86, 131, 140–41; Texas, annexation of, 132–33; Toussaint’s Clause, passage and implementation of, 49–53. See also specific Acts
  • Constitution: on Atlantic slave trade, 64; colonies established by US and, 99; Emancipation Proclamation and, 170; legality of chattel slavery under, 94; mixed courts to enforce slave trade ban, constitutional objections to, 69, 71; Thirteenth Amendment, 5
  • “contagion,” as metaphor for slave revolts, 40, 91, 2002n105
  • cotton production: Civil War, foreign intervention in, 159–60; demand for slaves and, 64
  • Coupland, Reginald, 66, 67, 119–20
  • Coxe, Tench, 57–58
  • Crawford, William H., 2, 30, 77, 82
  • Creole Affair, 93–96
  • Crimean War, 148, 150
  • Crook, D. P., 165
  • Crozer, Samuel A., 83
  • Cuba: Africanization scare, 138, 143–50; Atlantic slave trade and, 106–8, 116–18, 144; Britain and, 106–8, 135–36, 138, 141, 142, 144–51; Buchanan and, 140, 142, 146, 148–51; Civil War and, 163; France and, 138, 139, 142, 143, 145, 147–49, 151, 210n66; Haiti compared, 135, 140, 146, 150–51; national security, importance to, 5, 86; Ostend Manifesto (1854), 149; Pierce administration and, 138–43, 145–50; Polk administration and, 136–37, 147; slave rebellions in, 135; slavery in, US desire to maintain, 133–35; Taylor and Fillmore administrations, and López expeditions, 137–38; ultimate failure of US to annex, 142, 149–51; US desire to annex, 5, 122, 133–52
  • Dallas, George M., 117
  • Davis, Charles W., 147
  • Davis, Jefferson, 140, 141, 159, 160, 162, 165, 170, 179, 214n36
  • Declaration of Independence, 63, 95, 167
  • del Monte, Domingo, 136
  • Democratic Party, 123, 131–33, 137–38, 143, 149, 151, 173
  • Denmark Vesey Conspiracy, 89–90
  • Dessalines, Jean-Jacques, 34, 60
  • disease: colonization efforts in Africa and, 83, 85; “contagion” as metaphor for slave revolts, 40, 91, 2002n105; yellow fever and invasions of Haiti, 42, 60
  • Doolittle, James Rood, 151
  • Douma, Michael J., 174, 217n125
  • Downey, Arthur T., 93
  • Dowty, Alan, 148–49
  • du Bellet, Paul Pecquet, 157–58
  • Dubois, Laurent, 35, 39, 53, 60
  • Dunmore, Lord (governor of Virginia), 9–11
  • Dunning, William A., 105
  • Eastern Question, 148
  • Eaton, John, 134
  • economics. See commerce, trade, and economics
  • Economist, 168
  • Emancipation Proclamation and emancipation policy in Civil War, 61, 154, 166–74, 179
  • England. See Britain
  • Ericson, David F., 86
  • escaped slaves, American concerns over, 8–32; Creole Affair, 93–96; Haitian revolution and, 50; Negro Fort, Spanish East Florida, destruction of, 30; Paris, Treaty of (1783), 6, 9–17 (See also Paris, Treaty of); Texas without slavery and, 127; War of 1812, slaves “carried away” by British in, 17–30 (See also War of 1812)
  • Ettinger, Amos Aschbach, 141
  • Everett, Edward, 94–95, 124, 126, 127, 138
  • Fairfax, Fernando, 79
  • Fauchet, Joseph, 37–38
  • Federalists, 15–16, 41, 43, 49, 50, 52–53, 55, 68
  • Fehrenbacher, Don E., 34, 65, 114, 117, 133, 181
  • filibustering, 137–38, 210nn60–61
  • Fillmore, Willard, 102, 115, 137, 138, 210n60, 210n66
  • Florida: as asylum for fugitive slaves, 31–32, 193n88; Negro Fort, destruction of, 30–32; US acquisition of, 5, 30, 31–32
  • Foner, Eric, 102, 144–45
  • Foner, Philip S., 135
  • Forsyth, John, 106, 108–9
  • HMS Fowey, 9
  • Fox, Sir Henry, 99, 100, 108
  • France: annexation of Texas by US and, 131; Atlantic slave trade and, 66, 67, 104, 105, 110, 111–12; Civil War and, 157–66, 174, 179; Cuba and, 138, 139, 142, 143, 145, 147–49, 151, 210n66; French Revolution, 34–35, 38–39, 41; independent Liberia and, 102; Intercourse Act (1798) banning trade with, 43–44, 46; Napoleonic threat to Haiti, 55–60; Quasi-War with, 43, 44, 46, 48, 52; Russian reactions to French press coverage of Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation, 169–73; Santo Domingo, reconquest of, 164–65; territorial expansion and US relations with, 122, 133, 138, 139, 142, 143; US aid to, in Haitian revolution, 36–39; XYZ Affair, 47. See also Haiti and Haitian revolution
  • Franklin, Benjamin, 8, 9, 29
  • free Blacks, efforts to remove. See colonization of freed slaves abroad
  • Free Soilers, 151
  • Freehling, William W., 131
  • French Revolution, 34–35, 38–39, 41
  • Fry, Joseph A., 164
  • fugitive slaves. See escaped slaves, American concerns over
  • Gabriel’s Rebellion, in Virginia (1800), 40, 55, 57
  • Gaines, Edmund P., 31
  • Galbaud du Fort, François-Thomas, 39
  • Gallatin, Albert, 29, 49–50
  • García Tassara, Gabriel, 151
  • Geggus, David Patrick, 41, 43
  • George III (king of England), 19, 63
  • Ghent, Treaty of (1814), 2, 18, 19, 22, 24, 25, 28, 29
  • Gilded Age, 182
  • Giles, William Branch, 15–16
  • Gilmer, Thomas Walker, 128–29
  • Girard, Philippe R., 39, 43, 58
  • USS Grampus, 109
  • Grant, Alexander, 85
  • Great Britain. See Britain
  • Greek War of Independence, 29
  • Green, Duff, 111, 126, 127
  • Grenville, Lord, 45–46
  • Griffith, Edward, 20–21
  • Guelzo, Allen C., 178
  • Gurley, Ralph R., 87, 102
  • Gutiérrez de la Concha, José, 150
  • Haiti and Haitian revolution, 6, 33–61; John Adams and, 43–53; asylum for fugitive slaves, fears regarding, 50; Britain and, 37, 41–42, 45–46, 48–49, 50, 53–57, 168; Civil War in US and, 168; collapse of white power and emancipation of slaves in, 39; commonalities between US and Haiti, 33; Congress of Panama and, 2; Cuba compared, 135, 140, 146, 150–51; French attempt to restore slavery, 55, 58, 60; French government, US aid to, 36–39; French Revolution and, 38–39; independence from France, 33–34, 43, 45, 47–48, 51, 52, 55, 60; initial uprising, 35; international disruption caused by, 34–35; Jefferson and, 35–41, 52–60; Louisiana, French reacquisition of, 57–59; Napoleon and Leclerc expedition, 55–60; national security and commerce, links between, 35, 36, 86; Negro Fort, Spanish East Florida, destruction of, 30; racist views regarding, 43, 44, 47, 49–50, 51–52, 54, 58; Spanish-held portions of Hispaniola, Toussaint’s invasion of, 55; Toussaint Louverture’s initial involvement in, 42–44; Toussaint’s Clause, passage and implementation of, 49–53; US fears about “contagion” of, 32, 35–37, 40–41, 42, 45, 50, 55, 57, 60–61, 90; US recognition of (1862), 33–34, 60–61, 102, 167, 171; US trade with, 35, 36–37, 42, 44, 46, 48–53, 58–59
  • Hale, John P., 151
  • Hamilton, Alexander: arming of slaves during Revolutionary War, proposal for, 10; commerce and national security, links between, 5; Haitian revolution and, 35, 37, 38–39; Jay’s Treaty and, 16–17, 30, 196n24; remarks on Jay’s Treaty drafted for Washington, 191n31; Edward Stevens and, 50
  • Hamilton, Keith, 111
  • Harper, Robert Goodloe, 87
  • Harrison, William Henry, 123, 124
  • Hewell, John, 93
  • Houston, Sam, 127
  • Howard, Lawrence C., 85
  • Howden, Lord, 144
  • Hunt, Michael, 183
  • Hunter, R. M. T., 163
  • Huzzey, Richard, 103
  • Île á Vache (Cow Island) experiment, 174
  • impressment in War of 1812, legacy of, 67, 69–70, 111, 119
  • Inman, William, 118
  • Intercourse Act (1798), 43–44, 46
  • Ivanov, R. E., 167
  • Jackson, Andrew: Atlantic slave trade suppression and, 104–6; colonization of freed slaves abroad and, 87–88; Congress of Panama and, 2; Negro Fort, Spanish East Florida, and, 30–31; Texas, US recognition of, 123
  • Jamaica, and Haitian revolution, 42, 46
  • Jay, John, 11–13
  • Jay’s Treaty (Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, 1794), 13–17, 41–42, 43
  • Jefferson, Thomas: on Atlantic slave trade, 63, 65, 120; on colonization of freed slaves abroad, 79; Haitian revolution and, 35–41, 52–60, 181; Louisiana Purchase and, 6, 53, 81; “Notes on the State of Virginia” (1781–82), 79
  • John (king of England), 169
  • Johnson, Ronald Angelo, 46–47, 50
  • Johnson, William, 91
  • joint cruising, 71–72, 112–14, 118
  • Jones, Howard, 153, 164, 167–68
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act, 149–50
  • Kapodistrias, Ionnis, 27
  • Karp, Matthew, 3, 111, 115, 133, 135, 139, 141
  • Kendall, Amos, 88
  • Kennedy Report (House Committee on Commerce) on Liberia and other free Black colonies, 98–99
  • Key, Francis Scott, 80
  • King, Rufus, 45, 47, 48, 52, 59
  • La Branche, Alcée, 123
  • Laibach, Congress of, 27
  • Lambert, Andrew, 111
  • Langley, Lester D., 151–52
  • Latin America and Caribbean: colonization of freed slaves in, 174–77; Congress of Panama and, 1–3; independence movements in Latin America, 33–34; Monroe Doctrine, 2, 101. See also specific countries and territories
  • Laurens, Henry, 8, 9
  • League of Nations, proposed amendment to Covenant of, 183–84
  • Lear, Tobias, 54, 56–57
  • Leclerc, Charles Victor Emmanuel, 58–60
  • Lee, Robert E., 172–73
  • Legaré, Hugh S., 124
  • Lessart, Claude Antoine de Valdec de, 38
  • Lhuys, Édouard Drouyn de, 148, 162
  • Liberia: Dutch colonial minister on, 176; establishment of colony of freed slaves in, 83, 85–86; federal support, insufficiency of, 85–86, 87; independence of, 101–2; Kennedy Report (House Committee on Commerce) on, 98–99; Maryland in Africa and other state settlements merging with, 98; nature of US relations with, 98–101; US diplomatic recognition of (1862), 102, 167, 171; US disclaimer of sovereignty over, 86, 101
  • Lincoln, Abraham: annual message to Congress (1862), 172; colonization of freed slaves and, 4, 102, 174–77, 181; downplaying slavery in early Civil War, 154–57, 160–61; emancipation policy and Emancipation Proclamation, 61, 154, 166–74, 179; first inaugural address of, 161; foreign intervention in Civil War, seeking to prevent, 65–66, 158–61, 163, 166–68, 178–79, 180; Haiti and Liberia, diplomatic recognition of (1862), 61, 102, 167, 168; internationalist approach to, 153; on Russia, 169; search of US-flagged vessels in peacetime and suppression of Atlantic slave trade, 65–66, 96, 97, 118–20, 166. See also Civil War
  • Lincoln-Douglas debates (1858), 102
  • Liston, Robert, 45
  • Liverpool, Earl of, 73
  • Livingston, Robert, 58
  • Logan, Raymond, 37, 52
  • London Morning Herald, 172
  • London Morning Post, 170, 172
  • London Times, 167, 168, 169–72
  • López, Narciso, 137–38
  • Louis XVI (king of France), 38
  • Louisiana: colonization movement in, 98; French reacquisition of, 57–59
  • Louisiana Purchase, 6, 53, 81
  • Lyons, Lord, 117–19, 175–76
  • Lyons-Seward Treaty (1862), 119–20
  • Maafa (Middle Passage), 62
  • MacMillan, Margaret, 184
  • MacNeice, Louis, 92
  • Madison, James: on Atlantic slave trade, 67; on colonization of freed slaves abroad, 79; on Haitian revolution, 53, 56–57, 59, 60, 181; slaves “carried off” by Britain, US attempts to recover, 20, 23, 30
  • Magna Carta, 169
  • Magness, Phillip W., 174
  • Mahin, Dean B., 164
  • Maine, Canadian boundary with, 109
  • Maitland, Thomas, 46, 50, 53
  • Maitland-Toussaint convention (1799), 50, 53
  • Marcy, William L., 139–40, 145–49, 210n69
  • Marshall, John, 52, 53
  • Maryland in Africa, Cape Palmas, 98
  • Maryland State Colonization Society, 98
  • Mason, James, 142, 165–66
  • Mason, John Y., 140, 143, 149
  • Mason, Matthew, 94
  • Massachusetts Colonization Society, 101
  • Matthewson, Timothy M., 35, 36, 40, 59
  • May, Robert E., 139, 140–41, 142, 148, 174
  • McCarthy, Charles, 83–84
  • McLane, Louis, 104–6
  • Mercer, Charles Fenton, 76, 77, 80, 104
  • Merk, Frederick, 127, 132
  • Mexican-American War, 101, 102, 122–23
  • Mexico: annexation of Texas by US and European intervention on behalf of, 131; French interests in, and US Civil War, 162; independent Texas, Britain urging recognition of, 125; US prospects of acquisition of, 122
  • Middle Passage (Maafa), 62
  • Middleton, Henry, 24–27
  • Mill, John Stewart, 165
  • Mintz, Sidney, 34–35
  • Mississippi, colonization movement in, 98
  • Missouri crisis (1819), 86
  • Monroe, James: Atlantic slave trade and, 68, 70, 71, 72, 74–78, 81, 103; British “carrying off” of slaves in War of 1812 and, 18–24; colonization of freed slaves abroad and, 80, 82–83, 85, 87, 176; Haitian revolution and, 57
  • Monroe Doctrine, 2, 101
  • moral arguments against slavery: Atlantic slave trade, 62–63, 64–65, 66; Creole Affair and, 94, 95; Paris Treaty/Jay’s Treaty and, 12–13, 17; Union cause in Civil War and, 157–58; War of 1812 and, 22, 25. See also abolition of slavery
  • Morgan, Kenneth, 103
  • Morris, Gouverneur, 41
  • Mortefontaine, Treaty of (1800), 52
  • Motley, John, 167
  • Murphy, William S., 126
  • Napier, Lord, 116, 117
  • Napoleon III (emperor of France), 158, 162, 174
  • Napoleon Bonaparte and Haitian revolution, 55–60
  • Napoleonic Wars, end of, and Atlantic slave trade, 66
  • Nat Turner’s Rebellion (1831), 97
  • National Intelligencer, 131
  • national security: annexation of Texas viewed as matter of, 130; commerce and, 5, 35, 36, 86
  • Nefftzer, Auguste, 157
  • Negro Fort, Spanish East Florida, destruction of, 30–32
  • Negro Seaman Acts, 89–92
  • Nesselrode, Count, 27
  • Netherlands: antislavery movement in, 176; Atlantic slave trade and, 66, 69, 70; Suriname, proposal to send African Americans to, 176–78
  • neutrals’ right to trade with all nations in time of war, 5, 66, 69
  • Neuville, Baron Hyde de, 73
  • Nevins, Allan, 153
  • New York Colonization Society, 98
  • New York Manumission Society, 12
  • New York Times, 145–46
  • Nicholas, John, 15
  • Nicolls, Edward, 30
  • “Notes on the State of Virginia” (Jefferson, 1781–82), 79
  • Oakes, James, 28
  • Ofalia, Count de, 134
  • Oregon Territory, 24, 81, 109
  • HMS Orlando, 19
  • Ostend Manifesto (1854), 149
  • Oswald, Richard, 8, 9
  • Ott, Thomas O., 39, 55, 59, 60
  • Ouseley, William Gore, 111
  • Page, Sebastian N., 174
  • Paine, John S., and Tucker-Paine Agreement (1840), 109–10, 112
  • Pakenham, Richard, 113, 115, 128, 129–31
  • Palmerston, Lord, 95, 104–9, 114–15, 141, 145, 156, 164
  • Panama, Congress of (Amphictyonic Congress of 1826), 1–3, 5
  • Pan-Americanism, 2, 5
  • Paris, Treaty of (1783), 2, 8–17; Camillus essays (Hamilton) and, 16–17, 30; compensation for lost slaves, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17; escaped slaves taking refuge in British lines, 12; Jay’s Treaty (1794) and, 13–17; Laurens clause (Article 7), 8, 9, 14, 18; significance of slave labor for US indicated by, 29; slaves belonging to and remaining with Americans within British lines, 12; slaves captured and disposed of as booty during war, 11–12; slaves “carried away” by British, dispositions regarding, 6, 9–17; violations of, 11–12, 13, 15; West’s unfinished portrait of signing of, 8
  • Patterson, Daniel Todd, 31
  • Peel, Robert, 124
  • Pennsylvania Colonization Society, 98
  • Perry, Horatio J., 139
  • Pezuela, Juan de la, 144–45, 150
  • Pichon, Louis, 55–56, 60
  • Pickering, Timothy, 43, 45–52, 60
  • Pierce, Franklin, 138–43, 145–50
  • Pike, James Shepherd, 177, 178
  • Pinckney, Charles, 36, 40
  • piracy, slave trade legally equated with, 72, 76, 77, 104
  • Pletcher, David, 124
  • Poinsett, Joel, 24
  • Polk, James K.: on Atlantic slave trade, 101, 102, 114–15; on territorial expansion, 132–33, 136–37, 142, 146
  • Polk Corollary (1845), 101
  • Polverel, Étienne, 39
  • Portugal, and Atlantic slave trade, 69, 70, 106, 108
  • USS Princeton, 128–29
  • Pushkin, Alexander, 172
  • Quasi-War with France, 43, 44, 46, 48, 52
  • “race war” in US, European fears of, 168, 171, 172
  • racial hierarchies and definitions of race, 183, 218n4
  • racism: on Haiti and Haitian revolution, 43, 44, 47, 49–50, 51–52, 54, 58; as legacy of interaction of slavery and US foreign relations, 182–84
  • Radical Republicans, 155
  • Randolph, Edmund, 13–15
  • Randolph, John, 80
  • Republican Party (mid-nineteenth century), 150–51, 155, 157–58, 160, 175
  • Republicans (Jeffersonian Republicans and Democratic-Republicans): on Atlantic slave trade, 68; Jay’s Treaty and, 15, 16; on Toussaint’s Clause and Haitian revolution, 49–50, 53, 54–55
  • return of escaped slaves, seeking, 4
  • Revolutionary War, 2, 6, 9–10, 17, 32, 34–35. See also Paris, Treaty of
  • Rigaud, André, 42, 44, 47, 50, 51
  • Robertson, William H., 148, 149
  • Robespierre, Maximilien, 158
  • Roest van Limburg, Theodorus Marinus, 177
  • Rush, Richard, 26, 74, 76
  • Russell, Lord John, 117–19, 144, 164, 175, 176
  • Russia: arbitration of slave issue in War of 1812 by, 4, 9, 23–30; Civil War and, 167, 168–74, 179; Crimean War and, 148; Quintuple Treaty (1841), 110; Santo Domingo, French reconquest of, 164
  • Russian serfs, movement to liberate, 172, 216n97
  • Sainlaude, Stève, 162, 214n31
  • Saltwater Railroad, 93
  • Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti (Russian newspaper), 169–72
  • Santo Domingo, French reconquest of, 164–65
  • Scherr, Arthur, 40–41, 48, 50, 53, 56
  • Schoeppner, Michael, 92
  • Schurz, Carl, 154, 163
  • Scott, Winfield, 138
  • search of US-flagged vessels in peacetime, 3, 65–66, 68–70, 73–78, 96, 97, 102–6, 108–14, 166
  • Seibels, John J., 148
  • Sepinwall, Alyssa Goldstein, 33
  • Sérurier, Louis Barbe Charles, 104
  • Seward, William Henry: Anglophobia, reputation for, 163, 164; colonization of freed slaves and, 174, 175–77; on Cuban annexation, 151; foreign intervention in Civil War, efforts to avoid, 65–66, 119, 160, 162, 163, 167, 178–79, 180; London newspapers on, 172; Lyons-Seward Treaty (1862), 119–20; Santo Domingo, memorandum on French reconquest of, 164–65; search of US-flagged vessels in peacetime and, 65–66, 118–19, 166; slavery issue in Civil War, downplaying, 154–56
  • Shaikh, Farida, 111
  • Sherbro Island, 83–85
  • Sierra Leone: American conflict with British authorities at, 83–85; as colony for London’s “Black poor,” 80; Liberia-US relationship and, 100
  • slave rebellions: “contagion,” as metaphor for, 40, 91, 2002n105; in Cuba, 135; Denmark Vesey Conspiracy, 89–90; Gabriel’s Rebellion, in Virginia (1800), 40, 55, 57; Nat Turner’s Rebellion (1831), 97; South Carolina’s fear of, 89–90; Stono Rebellion (1739), 89. See also Haiti and Haitian revolution
  • Slave Trade Act (UK; 1807), 66
  • Slave Trade Act (US; 1819), 80–83, 88
  • slavery and US foreign relations, 1–7, 180–87; Congress of Panama and, 1–3; frustration of US unilateralism by, 3, 4, 6 (See also unilateralism, US); interaction between, 5–7, 180–82; international approach, advantages of, 3–5; racism as legacy of, 182–84; territorial expansion and, 6 (See also territorial expansion). See also abolition of slavery; Atlantic slave trade; Civil War; colonization of freed slaves abroad; escaped slaves, American concerns over; Haiti and Haitian revolution; Paris, Treaty of; War of 1812
  • Slidell, John, 150–51, 162, 165–66
  • Smith, Caleb, 177
  • Sonthonax, Léger-Félicité, 39, 42
  • Soulé, Pierre, 140, 142–43, 145–49
  • Soulsby, Hugh S., 105, 116
  • South Carolina: Negro Seamen Acts and, 89–92; slave rebellions, fear of, 89–90; voting on importation of slaves, 64, 65, 90
  • South Carolina Association, 91
  • Southard, Samuel L., 87
  • Sovremennik (Russian monthly), 172–74
  • Spain: La Amistad, slave uprising on, 93, 95; Atlantic slave trade and, 66, 106–7, 116–18, 144; Civil War and, 162–63; Florida, destruction of Negro Fort in, 30–32; Louisiana, French reacquisition of, 57; Revolution of 1854, 149; Santo Domingo, French reconquest of, 164–65; territorial expansion and US relations with, 122, 133–51 (See also Cuba)
  • Spalding, Thomas, 20–21
  • Spanish-American War, 182
  • Speed, Joshua, 169
  • Stanton, Edwin M., 172, 177
  • states, US: Atlantic slave trade and southern states, 104–5, 107, 111, 114; colonization of freed slaves abroad, involvement in, 97, 98, 101; non-seceding slaveholding border states, in Civil War, 154, 156, 170; slave state/free state balance of power, 86, 131, 140–41. See also specific states
  • Stevens, Edward, 46–47, 49–51, 53, 54
  • Stevenson, Andrew, 107, 109, 112
  • Stevenson, Brenda E., 62
  • Stoddard, Benjamin, 48
  • Stono Rebellion (1739), 89
  • Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 155
  • Stuart, William, 167, 168
  • sub-Saharan Africa, diplomatic relations with, 4, 78
  • Sumner, Charles, 168, 175, 178
  • Suriname, proposal to send African Americans to, 176–78
  • Swift, Zephaniah, 16
  • Tacón, Miguel, 107
  • Talleyrand-Périgord, Charles-Maurice de, 55–56
  • Tansill, Charles Callan, 56, 57
  • Taylor, Zachary, 115, 137–38
  • Ternant, Jean de, 36, 37, 38, 39
  • territorial expansion, 6, 121–52, 180; Britain, foreign relations with, 109, 122, 124–33, 135–36, 138, 141, 142; Calhoun on, 122, 129–31; Canadian border, disputes over, 24, 109, 163; colony for freed slaves, ability of government to establish, 81, 88; under Constitution, 81; Florida, 5, 30, 31–32; France, foreign relations with, 122, 133, 138, 139, 142, 143; Mexico, 122; Oregon Territory, 24, 81, 109; slavery as factor in, 121–22; Spain, foreign relations with, 122, 133–51. See also Cuba; Texas
  • Texas: Britain, foreign relations with, 109, 122, 124–32; Calhoun’s Pakenham letter on, 129–31; Clay on annexation of, 131–32; Congressional resolution on annexation of, 132–33; Mexican-American War and, 101, 102, 122–23; Negro Seamen Act in, 89; seeking US recognition as independent state, 123; slave state, acquisition as, 5, 122–33, 152
  • Thirteenth Amendment, 5
  • Thompson, Smith, 82, 83–85
  • Thornton, Edward, 54
  • Thouvenel, Édouard, 162
  • tobacco cultivation, wheat replacing, 64
  • Toucey, Isaac, 118
  • Toussaint Louverture, François-Dominique, 42–60; death of, 60; early foreign relations with US and Britain, 44–48; Haitian independence and, 45, 47–48, 51, 52, 55, 60; initial involvement in Haitian revolution, 42–44; Jefferson and, 52–60; US trade with Haiti and, 48–53, 58–59. See also Haiti and Haitian revolution
  • Toussaint-Maitland convention (1799), 50, 53
  • Toussaint’s Clause, passage and implementation of, 49–53
  • trade. See commerce, trade, and economics
  • Transcontinental (Adams-Onís) Treaty of 1819, 31, 193n88
  • Traub, James, 2
  • Trautsch, Jasper M., 18
  • treaties. See specific treaties, e.g., Ghent, Treaty of
  • Trent Affair, 165–66
  • Trist, Nicholas P., 107–8
  • Troup, George, 68
  • Trumbull, Lyman, 160
  • Tucker, William, and Tucker-Paine Agreement (1840), 109–10, 112
  • Turnbull, David, 107
  • Turner, James, 7
  • Turner, Nat, 97
  • Tyler, John: on Atlantic slave trade, 94, 95, 99, 111; USS Princeton disaster and, 128–29; on territorial expansion, 123–29, 132–33, 135, 136; Whigs, alienation from, 208n8
  • Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe), 155
  • unilateralism, US, 97–120; Atlantic slave trade suppression and, 69, 71, 76–78, 102–20; Brazilian and Cuban slave trade, 106–8, 113, 114–18; colonization of freed slaves and, 97–102; diplomacy and frustration of, 3, 4, 6; Liberia, independence of, 101–2; Lincoln’s concession to search, 65–66, 96, 97, 118–20, 166; “right of visit” versus right of search, 109–12; search of US-flagged vessels in peacetime, 3, 65–66, 68–70, 73–78, 96, 97, 102–6, 108–12, 166; Webster-Ashburton Treaty (Treaty of Washington; 1842) and Africa Squadron, 112–14
  • United Kingdom. See Britain
  • Upshur, Abel P., 99, 100, 114, 124–29
  • Valdéz, Gerónimo, 107
  • Van Buren, Martin, 108–10, 123
  • van der Maesen de Sombreff, Paul Therèse, 176
  • Van Zandt, Isaac, 127
  • Varela, Félix, 106–7
  • Vaughn, Charles R., 104, 105
  • Versailles, Treaty of (1918), 183
  • Vesey, Denmark, 89–90
  • Vienna, Congress of (1815), 66
  • Viluma, Marqués de, 148
  • Virginia: Gabriel’s Rebellion (1800) in, 40, 55, 57; “Notes on the State of Virginia” (Jefferson, 1781–82), 79; revolutionary-era proclamations about slavery in, 9–11
  • Walker, Robert, 132
  • War of 1812, 2, 17–32; compensation for lost slaves, 19, 21, 22, 23, 25, 27–28; Ghent, Treaty of (1814), 2, 18, 19, 22, 24, 25, 28, 29; impressment in, legacy of, 67, 69–70, 111, 119; Negro Fort, Spanish East Florida, destruction of, 30–32; slaves “carried away” by British, dispositions regarding, 17–30; third party arbitration of slave issue, 23–30
  • Washington, Bushrod, 80
  • Washington, George: on British “carrying off” of slaves in Revolutionary War, 10–11; commerce and national security, links between, 5; on Lord Dunmore, 10; escape of slaves owned by, to British lines, 10; Haitian revolution and, 35–36, 37; Hamilton’s remarks on Jay’s Treaty drafted for, 191n31; return of escaped slaves, seeking, 4; unilateralist policy, frustration of, 3
  • Washington, Madison, 93
  • Washington, Treaty of (Webster-Ashburton Treaty; 1842), 96, 112–14
  • Webster, Charles, 28
  • Webster, Daniel, 94–96, 112–14, 124, 136
  • Webster-Ashburton Treaty (Treaty of Washington; 1842), 96, 112–14
  • West, Benjamin, 8
  • wheat production and demand for slaves, 64
  • Whigs, 102, 123, 131–32, 137–38, 150, 208n8, 210n61
  • White, Ashli, 40
  • Wilson, Woodrow, 183–84
  • Wiltberger, Charles, 84
  • Winn, Jonathan B., 84–85
  • Wirt, William, 81–82
  • Wise, Henry A., 115
  • Wolcott, Oliver, 51–52
  • HMS Wolverine, 109
  • Wood, Nicholas P., 86
  • XYZ Affair, 47
  • yellow fever, 42, 60
  • Zeuske, Michael, 5, 34, 94

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