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Alabama Claims

The Alabama Claims were a series of demands for damages sought by the government of the United States from the United Kingdom in 1869, for the attacks upon Union merchant ships by Confederate Navy commerce raiders built in British shipyards during the American Civil War. The claims focused chiefly on the most famous of these raiders, the CSS Alabama, which took more than sixty prizes before she was sunk off the French coast in 1864.

Painting of the CSS Alabama, the Confederate raider built in Britain.

After international arbitration endorsed the American position in 1872, Britain settled the matter by paying the United States $15.5 million, ending the dispute and leading to a treaty that restored friendly relations between Britain and the United States. That international arbitration established a precedent, and the case aroused interest in codifying public international law. The case too resulted in the warming of relations between Britain and the US, which had begun the 1800s as rivals, and ended the century, as something of partners.

British political involvement edit

The British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston and Foreign Secretary Lord John Russell failed to stop the Alabama from putting to sea from the shipyards of John Laird Sons and Company in Birkenhead. The United States Legation in London had explicitly opposed this, and the American Minister to Britain, Charles Francis Adams, charged that the ship was bound for the Confederacy, where it would be used against the United States.

Though both the Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary were thought to favor the Confederacy at the time of Alabama's construction, British public opinion was divided on the issue, and MPs such as Richard Cobden campaigned against it. The subsequent departure of the Alabama proved to be publicly embarrassing, and Palmerston and Russell were later forced to admit that the ship should not have been allowed to depart. The Government had requested advice from the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, Sir Alexander Cockburn, who ruled that her release did not violate Britain's neutrality, because she was not outfitted with guns at the time that she left British ports.[1]

In the next year, Britain detained two ironclad warships constructed in Birkenhead and destined for the Confederacy. As a result of the uproar over the Alabama, Palmerston instructed the British Admiralty to tender an offer for the purchase of the ships. They had been bought by a go-between, Monsieur Bravay of Paris (who had ordered their construction as an intermediary for Confederate principals).

 
John Bull (Great Britain) is dwarfed by a gigantic inflated American "Alabama Claim" cartoon in Punch--or the London Charivari 22 Jan 1872.

The claims edit

In what were called the Alabama Claims, in 1869 the United States claimed direct and collateral damage against Great Britain. In the particular case of the Alabama, the United States claimed that Britain had violated neutrality by allowing five warships to be constructed, especially the Alabama, knowing that it would eventually enter into naval service with the Confederacy.

Other particulars included the following: In the summer of 1862, the British-built steam warship Oreto was delivered to Nassau in the Bahamas with the secret understanding that it would be later transferred to the Confederate States Navy. Upon transfer, it was commissioned CSS Florida. British Royal Navy Admiral George Willes Watson (1827–1897) aided the transfer, and Watson's actions were reviewed by the tribunal.[2]

Other warships included the CSS Shenandoah (built at Alexander Stephen and Sons in Glasgow), CSS Lark (built at John Laird and Sons, like the Alabama), and CSS Tallahassee (built at J & W Dudgeon in London).

Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, the chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, also demanded that "indirect damages" be included, specifically the British blockade runners.[3] British blockade runners played a pivotal role in sustaining the war effort of the Confederacy, smuggling through the Union blockade thousands of tons of gunpowder, half a million rifles, and several hundred cannons to the Confederacy.[4] Such an act lengthened the Civil War by two years and cost 400,000 more lives of soldiers and civilians on both sides.[5][6]

Payment edit

Because of Britain's "direct" and "indirect damages" inflicted on the United States during the Civil War, Sumner originally asked for $2 billion in damages, or alternatively, the ceding of Canada to the U.S. When American Secretary of State William H. Seward negotiated the Alaska Purchase in 1867, he intended it as the first step in a comprehensive plan to gain control of the entire northwest Pacific Coast. Seward was a firm believer in "Manifest Destiny", primarily for its commercial advantages to the United States. Seward expected the West Coast Province of British Columbia to seek annexation to the United States and thought Britain might accept this in exchange for the Alabama claims. Soon other U.S. politicians endorsed annexation, with the goal of annexing British Columbia, the central Canadian Red River Colony (later Manitoba), and eastern Nova Scotia, in exchange for dropping the damage claims.

The idea reached a peak in the spring and summer of 1870, with American expansionists, Canadian separatists, and British anti-imperialists seemingly combining forces. The plan was dropped for several reasons: London continued to stall, American commercial and financial groups pressed Washington for a quick settlement of the dispute in cash, Canada offered to have British Columbia enter the Canadian Confederation on very generous terms, which bolstered nationalist sentiment in British Columbia that already favored fealty to the British Empire, Congress became preoccupied with Reconstruction, and most Americans showed little interest in territorial expansion after the long years, expenses and losses of the Civil War.[7][8]

Treaty of Washington edit

In 1871, Hamilton Fish, President Ulysses S. Grant's Secretary of State, worked out an agreement with British representative Sir John Rose to create a commission in Washington comprising six members from the British Empire and six members from the United States. Its assignment was to resolve the Alabama claims, refinancing, and other international disputes between Canada and the United States by treaty.[9] On March 8, 1871, the Treaty of Washington was signed at the State Department and the U.S. Senate ratified the treaty on May 24, 1871.[10] In accord with the treaty, an international arbitration tribunal met in Geneva. The treaty had provisions regarding the settlement process for the Alabama Claims but did not include "indirect damages", settled disputed Atlantic fisheries and the San Juan Boundary (concerning the Oregon boundary line). Britain and the United States became perpetual allies after the treaty, with Britain having expressed regret over the Alabama damages.[11]

The tribunal edit

 
Commemorative plate and model of the CSS Alabama in the Salle de l'Alabama of the Geneva town hall.

The tribunal was composed of representatives:

Negotiations had taken place in Suitland, Maryland, at the estate of businessman Samuel Taylor Suit. The tribunal session was held in a reception room of the Town Hall in Geneva, Switzerland. This has been named salle de l'Alabama.

The final award of $15,500,000 formed part of the Treaty of Washington and was paid out by Great Britain in 1872. This was balanced against damages of $1,929,819 paid by the United States to Great Britain for illegal Union blockade practices and ceded fishing privileges.[13]

Legacy edit

This established the principle of international arbitration, and launched a movement to codify public international law with hopes for finding peaceful solutions to international disputes. The arbitration of the Alabama claims was a precursor to the Hague Convention,[14] the League of Nations, the World Court, and the United Nations.[15] The Alabama Claims inspired international jurist Gustave Moynier to pursue legal arrangements to enforce international treaties in the 1870s.[16] The Soviet Union carefully studied the Alabama claims when assessing whether it could claim damages in response to Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War.[17]

According to Vladimir Nabokov, the core incident has a legacy in literary reference, being used as a plot device in Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy. In one early passage, Stiva Oblonsky has a dream that may show his having read of the Alabama Claims through the Kölnische Zeitung.[18] And in the Jules Verne novel Around the World in Eighty Days Inspector Fix warns Phileas Fogg that the riot they encounter in San Francisco may be connected to the claim.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hansard. The Foreign Enlistment Act- Question, March 27, 1863. https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1863/mar/27/united-states-the-foreign-enlistment-act
  2. ^ Kenneth M.. Startup, "'This Small Act of Courtesy:' Admiral Sir George Willes Watson, Trouble, Trials, and Turmoil in Bahama Waters," Journal of the Bahamas Historical Society, October 2009, Vol. 31, pp. 57–62.
  3. ^ John W. Dwinelle (1870). American Opinions on the "Alabama," and other political questions. pp. 37–39.
  4. ^ Gallien, Max; Weigand, Florian (December 21, 2021). The Routledge Handbook of Smuggling. Taylor & Francis. p. 321. ISBN 9-7810-0050-8772.
  5. ^ David Keys (June 24, 2014). "Historians reveal secrets of UK gun-running which lengthened the American civil war by two years". The Independent.
  6. ^ Paul Hendren (April 1933). "The Confederate Blockade Runners". United States Naval Institute.
  7. ^ Doris W. Dashew, "The Story of an Illusion: The Plan to Trade Alabama Claims for Canada," Civil War History, December 1969, Vol. 15 Issue 4, pp. 332–348
  8. ^ David E. Shi, "Seward's Attempt to Annex British Columbia, 1865–1869", Pacific Historical Review, May 1978, Vol. 47 Issue 2, pp. 217–238.
  9. ^ Smith, Jean Edward (2001). Grant. New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks. ISBN 0-684-84927-5. pp. 510, 511.
  10. ^ Smith (2001), 512–514.
  11. ^ Smith (2001), 512–515.
  12. ^ "EVARTS, William Maxwell - Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov.
  13. ^ Thomas A. Bailey, A Diplomatic History of the American People, NY (1958), 6th ed., pp. 388–389.
  14. ^ Brent, Richard (2021). "The Alabama Claims Tribunal: The British Perspective". The International History Review. 44: 21–58. doi:10.1080/07075332.2021.1898439. ISSN 0707-5332. S2CID 233610373.
  15. ^ Cook (1975)
  16. ^ Dromi, Shai M. (2020). Above the fray: The Red Cross and the making of the humanitarian NGO sector. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press. p. 172. ISBN 9780226680101.
  17. ^ K (1922). "Russia after Genoa and the Hague". Foreign Affairs. 1 (1): 139. doi:10.2307/20028203. JSTOR 20028203.
  18. ^ Nabokov, Vladimir (1981). Lectures on Russian Literature. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p. 132. ISBN 0151495998.
  19. ^ Verne, Jules (1872). Around the World in Eighty Days.[page needed]

Bibliography edit

  • Adams, E. D. (1924). Great Britain and the American Civil War. New York: Russell & Russell. (see external links)
  • Balch, T. W. (1900). The Alabama Arbitration. Philadelphia: Allen, Lane & Scott.
  • Beaman, C. C. (1871). The National and Private Alabama Claims and their Final and Amicable Settlement. Washington: W. H. Moore., reprinted in the Michigan Historical Reprint Series, ISBN 1-4181-2980-1
  • Bingham, T. (2005). "The Alabama Claims Arbitration". International and Comparative Law Quarterly. 50: 1–25. doi:10.1093/iclq/54.1.1., reprinted in Bingham, T. (2011). Lives of the Law: Selected Essays and Speeches 2000-2010. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 13–40. ISBN 978-0-19-969730-4.
  • Blegen, Theodore C. "A Plan for the Union of British North America and the United States, 1866." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 4.4 (1918): 470-483 online.
  • Bowen, C. S. C. (1868). The Alabama Claims and Arbitration Considered from a Legal Point of View. London.
  • Cook, Adrian. (1975). The Alabama Claims. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801408939., the standard scholarly history
  • deKay, T. (2003). The Rebel Raiders: The Warship "Alabama", British Treachery and the American Civil War. London: Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-6490-4.

Further reading edit

  • "The United States," The Times, September 23, 1873, 8d.

External links edit

  • "Alabama Claims" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
  • Geneva Arbitration, 1872 (in English and French)
  • Cartoons from Harper's Weekly:
    • "John Bull's Neutrality", November 1, 1862
    • "King Andy", November 3, 1866. Note that the medallion worn by Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles is engraved with the number "290", the original dockyard number for the Alabama.
    • "The Apple of Discord at the Geneva Convention", October 5, 1872
    • "Columbia Lays Aside her Laurels", November 9, 1872. Note that the "laurels" laid aside are those won at the Geneva arbitration.
  • Great Britain and the American Civil War Op. cit. at Project Gutenberg
  • (in French)
  • Edwin H. Abbott Papers, W.S. Hoole Special Collections Library, University of Alabama

alabama, claims, were, series, demands, damages, sought, government, united, states, from, united, kingdom, 1869, attacks, upon, union, merchant, ships, confederate, navy, commerce, raiders, built, british, shipyards, during, american, civil, claims, focused, . The Alabama Claims were a series of demands for damages sought by the government of the United States from the United Kingdom in 1869 for the attacks upon Union merchant ships by Confederate Navy commerce raiders built in British shipyards during the American Civil War The claims focused chiefly on the most famous of these raiders the CSS Alabama which took more than sixty prizes before she was sunk off the French coast in 1864 Painting of the CSS Alabama the Confederate raider built in Britain After international arbitration endorsed the American position in 1872 Britain settled the matter by paying the United States 15 5 million ending the dispute and leading to a treaty that restored friendly relations between Britain and the United States That international arbitration established a precedent and the case aroused interest in codifying public international law The case too resulted in the warming of relations between Britain and the US which had begun the 1800s as rivals and ended the century as something of partners Contents 1 British political involvement 2 The claims 2 1 Payment 2 2 Treaty of Washington 3 The tribunal 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksBritish political involvement editMain article Britain and the American Civil War The British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston and Foreign Secretary Lord John Russell failed to stop the Alabama from putting to sea from the shipyards of John Laird Sons and Company in Birkenhead The United States Legation in London had explicitly opposed this and the American Minister to Britain Charles Francis Adams charged that the ship was bound for the Confederacy where it would be used against the United States Though both the Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary were thought to favor the Confederacy at the time of Alabama s construction British public opinion was divided on the issue and MPs such as Richard Cobden campaigned against it The subsequent departure of the Alabama proved to be publicly embarrassing and Palmerston and Russell were later forced to admit that the ship should not have been allowed to depart The Government had requested advice from the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Sir Alexander Cockburn who ruled that her release did not violate Britain s neutrality because she was not outfitted with guns at the time that she left British ports 1 In the next year Britain detained two ironclad warships constructed in Birkenhead and destined for the Confederacy As a result of the uproar over the Alabama Palmerston instructed the British Admiralty to tender an offer for the purchase of the ships They had been bought by a go between Monsieur Bravay of Paris who had ordered their construction as an intermediary for Confederate principals nbsp John Bull Great Britain is dwarfed by a gigantic inflated American Alabama Claim cartoon in Punch or the London Charivari 22 Jan 1872 The claims editIn what were called the Alabama Claims in 1869 the United States claimed direct and collateral damage against Great Britain In the particular case of the Alabama the United States claimed that Britain had violated neutrality by allowing five warships to be constructed especially the Alabama knowing that it would eventually enter into naval service with the Confederacy Other particulars included the following In the summer of 1862 the British built steam warship Oreto was delivered to Nassau in the Bahamas with the secret understanding that it would be later transferred to the Confederate States Navy Upon transfer it was commissioned CSS Florida British Royal Navy Admiral George Willes Watson 1827 1897 aided the transfer and Watson s actions were reviewed by the tribunal 2 Other warships included the CSS Shenandoah built at Alexander Stephen and Sons in Glasgow CSS Lark built at John Laird and Sons like the Alabama and CSS Tallahassee built at J amp W Dudgeon in London Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts the chairman of the U S Senate Foreign Relations Committee also demanded that indirect damages be included specifically the British blockade runners 3 British blockade runners played a pivotal role in sustaining the war effort of the Confederacy smuggling through the Union blockade thousands of tons of gunpowder half a million rifles and several hundred cannons to the Confederacy 4 Such an act lengthened the Civil War by two years and cost 400 000 more lives of soldiers and civilians on both sides 5 6 Payment edit Because of Britain s direct and indirect damages inflicted on the United States during the Civil War Sumner originally asked for 2 billion in damages or alternatively the ceding of Canada to the U S When American Secretary of State William H Seward negotiated the Alaska Purchase in 1867 he intended it as the first step in a comprehensive plan to gain control of the entire northwest Pacific Coast Seward was a firm believer in Manifest Destiny primarily for its commercial advantages to the United States Seward expected the West Coast Province of British Columbia to seek annexation to the United States and thought Britain might accept this in exchange for the Alabama claims Soon other U S politicians endorsed annexation with the goal of annexing British Columbia the central Canadian Red River Colony later Manitoba and eastern Nova Scotia in exchange for dropping the damage claims The idea reached a peak in the spring and summer of 1870 with American expansionists Canadian separatists and British anti imperialists seemingly combining forces The plan was dropped for several reasons London continued to stall American commercial and financial groups pressed Washington for a quick settlement of the dispute in cash Canada offered to have British Columbia enter the Canadian Confederation on very generous terms which bolstered nationalist sentiment in British Columbia that already favored fealty to the British Empire Congress became preoccupied with Reconstruction and most Americans showed little interest in territorial expansion after the long years expenses and losses of the Civil War 7 8 Treaty of Washington edit Further information Treaty of Washington 1871 Hamilton Fish and Presidency of Ulysses S Grant In 1871 Hamilton Fish President Ulysses S Grant s Secretary of State worked out an agreement with British representative Sir John Rose to create a commission in Washington comprising six members from the British Empire and six members from the United States Its assignment was to resolve the Alabama claims refinancing and other international disputes between Canada and the United States by treaty 9 On March 8 1871 the Treaty of Washington was signed at the State Department and the U S Senate ratified the treaty on May 24 1871 10 In accord with the treaty an international arbitration tribunal met in Geneva The treaty had provisions regarding the settlement process for the Alabama Claims but did not include indirect damages settled disputed Atlantic fisheries and the San Juan Boundary concerning the Oregon boundary line Britain and the United States became perpetual allies after the treaty with Britain having expressed regret over the Alabama damages 11 The tribunal edit nbsp Commemorative plate and model of the CSS Alabama in the Salle de l Alabama of the Geneva town hall The tribunal was composed of representatives Britain Sir Alexander Cockburn United States Charles Francis Adams with William Maxwell Evarts serving as counsel 12 Italy Federico Sclopis Switzerland Jakob Stampfli Brazil Marcos Antonio de Araujo 2nd Baron of Itajuba Negotiations had taken place in Suitland Maryland at the estate of businessman Samuel Taylor Suit The tribunal session was held in a reception room of the Town Hall in Geneva Switzerland This has been named salle de l Alabama The final award of 15 500 000 formed part of the Treaty of Washington and was paid out by Great Britain in 1872 This was balanced against damages of 1 929 819 paid by the United States to Great Britain for illegal Union blockade practices and ceded fishing privileges 13 Legacy editThis established the principle of international arbitration and launched a movement to codify public international law with hopes for finding peaceful solutions to international disputes The arbitration of the Alabama claims was a precursor to the Hague Convention 14 the League of Nations the World Court and the United Nations 15 The Alabama Claims inspired international jurist Gustave Moynier to pursue legal arrangements to enforce international treaties in the 1870s 16 The Soviet Union carefully studied the Alabama claims when assessing whether it could claim damages in response to Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War 17 According to Vladimir Nabokov the core incident has a legacy in literary reference being used as a plot device in Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy In one early passage Stiva Oblonsky has a dream that may show his having read of the Alabama Claims through the Kolnische Zeitung 18 And in the Jules Verne novel Around the World in Eighty Days Inspector Fix warns Phileas Fogg that the riot they encounter in San Francisco may be connected to the claim 19 See also editPrize law Blockade runners of the American Civil War The Great RapprochementReferences edit Hansard The Foreign Enlistment Act Question March 27 1863 https api parliament uk historic hansard commons 1863 mar 27 united states the foreign enlistment act Kenneth M Startup This Small Act of Courtesy Admiral Sir George Willes Watson Trouble Trials and Turmoil in Bahama Waters Journal of the Bahamas Historical Society October 2009 Vol 31 pp 57 62 John W Dwinelle 1870 American Opinions on the Alabama and other political questions pp 37 39 Gallien Max Weigand Florian December 21 2021 The Routledge Handbook of Smuggling Taylor amp Francis p 321 ISBN 9 7810 0050 8772 David Keys June 24 2014 Historians reveal secrets of UK gun running which lengthened the American civil war by two years The Independent Paul Hendren April 1933 The Confederate Blockade Runners United States Naval Institute Doris W Dashew The Story of an Illusion The Plan to Trade Alabama Claims for Canada Civil War History December 1969 Vol 15 Issue 4 pp 332 348 David E Shi Seward s Attempt to Annex British Columbia 1865 1869 Pacific Historical Review May 1978 Vol 47 Issue 2 pp 217 238 Smith Jean Edward 2001 Grant New York Simon amp Schuster Paperbacks ISBN 0 684 84927 5 pp 510 511 Smith 2001 512 514 Smith 2001 512 515 EVARTS William Maxwell Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Thomas A Bailey A Diplomatic History of the American People NY 1958 6th ed pp 388 389 Brent Richard 2021 The Alabama Claims Tribunal The British Perspective The International History Review 44 21 58 doi 10 1080 07075332 2021 1898439 ISSN 0707 5332 S2CID 233610373 Cook 1975 Dromi Shai M 2020 Above the fray The Red Cross and the making of the humanitarian NGO sector Chicago Univ of Chicago Press p 172 ISBN 9780226680101 K 1922 Russia after Genoa and the Hague Foreign Affairs 1 1 139 doi 10 2307 20028203 JSTOR 20028203 Nabokov Vladimir 1981 Lectures on Russian Literature Harcourt Brace Jovanovich p 132 ISBN 0151495998 Verne Jules 1872 Around the World in Eighty Days page needed Bibliography editAdams E D 1924 Great Britain and the American Civil War New York Russell amp Russell see external links Balch T W 1900 The Alabama Arbitration Philadelphia Allen Lane amp Scott Beaman C C 1871 The National and Private Alabama Claims and their Final and Amicable Settlement Washington W H Moore reprinted in the Michigan Historical Reprint Series ISBN 1 4181 2980 1 Bingham T 2005 The Alabama Claims Arbitration International and Comparative Law Quarterly 50 1 25 doi 10 1093 iclq 54 1 1 reprinted in Bingham T 2011 Lives of the Law Selected Essays and Speeches 2000 2010 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 13 40 ISBN 978 0 19 969730 4 Blegen Theodore C A Plan for the Union of British North America and the United States 1866 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 4 4 1918 470 483 online Bowen C S C 1868 The Alabama Claims and Arbitration Considered from a Legal Point of View London Cook Adrian 1975 The Alabama Claims Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801408939 the standard scholarly history deKay T 2003 The Rebel Raiders The Warship Alabama British Treachery and the American Civil War London Pimlico ISBN 0 7126 6490 4 Further reading edit The United States The Times September 23 1873 8d External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Alabama Arbitration Alabama Claims Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Geneva Arbitration 1872 in English and French Cartoons from Harper s Weekly John Bull s Neutrality November 1 1862 King Andy November 3 1866 Note that the medallion worn by Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles is engraved with the number 290 the original dockyard number for the Alabama The Apple of Discord at the Geneva Convention October 5 1872 Columbia Lays Aside her Laurels November 9 1872 Note that the laurels laid aside are those won at the Geneva arbitration Great Britain and the American Civil War Op cit at Project Gutenberg La salle de l Alabama in the Hotel de Ville Geneva in French Edwin H Abbott Papers W S Hoole Special Collections Library University of Alabama Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alabama Claims amp oldid 1177419609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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