Buchanan, President, i. [16], [49], [52], [117], [259]; ii. [278]
Buckingham, James Silk, America, Historical, Statistic and Descriptive, cited, i. [29]
Buckley, Victor, ii. [120] note[2]
Bull Run, Northern defeat at, i. [135], [154], [176], [201]; as affecting Seward's policy, considered, [154], [155]-[6]; effect of, in Great Britain: press views, [176], [177]-[8], [179]; official views, [178], [179] and note[1]; public opinion, [201]
Bullock, Captain J.D., Confederate Agent in Britain, ii. [118], [129], [145]; on the proposed use of the Laird rams, [122] note[1], [143]; shipbuilding contracts of, ii. [156], [157]; Secret Service under the Confederacy, cited, ii. [118], [149] note
Bunch,--, British Consul at Charleston, description of Jockey Club dinner, i. [43]; on Southern anti-British sentiment, [44] note[2], ii. [71] note[2]; instructions to, on the secession, i. [53] note[1]; appeal of, to Judge Black on seizure of Federal customs house, [52]; characterizations of Southern leaders, [59]; view of President Davis, [59]; views on the South and secession, [59], [93]; characterizations of Southern Commissioners, [63]; negotiations of, with the Confederates on Declaration of Paris, [168] note[4], [184]-[6], [188], [193]; attitude of, to the South, [185] and note[4], [103], [195] note[2]; American complaints of, [187], [189], [193]-[4]; recall of exequatur of, [184], [187] et seq., [193], [194]-[5], [201]; defence of his action in the Mure case, [187], [188], [192], [199]; subsequent history of, [195] note[2]; view of, as scapegoat, [195] note[2]; on attitude to the Blockade, [252] note[2], [253] note[2], [268]; on Southern intentions, [252] note[2]; view of Southern determination, [252] note[2]; on Southern views of England's necessity for cotton, [63], [252] note[2]; ii. [4], [5]; on effect of the blockade on Southern cotton industry, [9] note[2]; on burning of Mississippi cotton, [16] note[1], [17] note[4]; on the American system of government as the cause of the Civil War, [278] note[2] British attitude to the controversy over, i. [188]-[9], [190], [191], [194]; French attitude, i. [189], [191] and note[4], [192], [201] note Lyons' views on Bunch controversy, i. [187], [193], [194] and note[1] Russell's views, i. [187], [190], [193], [194] and note[4] Otherwise mentioned, i. [66]; ii. [88]
Burnley, British Ambassador, report of, on prospective war with America, ii. [254]
Butler, General, order to Federal soldiers in New Orleans, i. [302]-[4], [305]; ii. [68]; Palmerston and Adams controversy on, i. [302]-[5]; Lord Russell's advice to Palmerston, [303], [304]
Cairnes, Professor, ii. [224] note[3]; pamphlet by, on "Slave Power," [112]