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Canada and the American Civil War

At the time of the American Civil War (1861–1865), Canada did not yet exist as a federated nation. Instead, British North America consisted of the Province of Canada (parts of modern southern Ontario and southern Quebec) and the separate colonies of Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Vancouver Island, as well as a crown territory administered by the Hudson's Bay Company called Rupert's Land. Britain and its colonies were officially neutral for the duration of the war. Despite this, tensions between Britain and the United States were high due to incidents such as the Trent Affair, blockade runners loaded with British arms supplies bound for the Confederacy, and the Confederate Navy commissioning of the CSS Alabama from Britain.[1]

Canadians were largely opposed to slavery, and Canada had recently become the terminus of the Underground Railroad. Close economic and cultural links across the long border, also encouraged Canadian sympathy towards the Union. Between 33,000 and 55,000 men from British North America enlisted in the war, almost all of them fighting for Union forces. Some press and churches in Canada supported the secession, and some others did not.[2] There was talk in London in 1861–62 of mediating the war or recognizing the Confederacy. Washington warned this meant war, and London feared Canada would quickly be seized by the Union army.[3]

Trent Affair edit

In November 1861 tensions escalated between Washington and London when an American warship stopped the British mail ship RMS Trent on the high seas and seized two Confederate diplomats, James Mason and John Slidell. London demanded their return and an apology, and to signal its intention to defend its possessions sent 14,000 combat troops to Canada and the Maritimes, while the Canadians planned to raise 40,000 militia. President Abraham Lincoln defused the crisis by releasing the diplomats, though he did not issue an apology. He cautioned his Secretary of State William H. Seward, "One war at a time." The British decided that unification of the North American colonies was now a high priority, as a new strong dominion would relieve London of the need to station large British forces to defend British North America.[4]

The Grand Trunk Railway Brigade edit

Rising concerns over the security of railways in Canada while the Civil War raged in the United States led to the 1862 creation of the Grand Trunk Railway Brigade. This unit of Canadian Volunteer Militia recruited amongst railway employees had infantry and artillery companies deployed along the railway lines in Canada East and Canada West.

Confederate activity in British North America edit

Confederate operators secretly used Canada and particularly the Maritimes as a base against the North, in violation of British neutrality. The Maritimes' struggle to maintain their independence from Canada led some Maritimers to be sympathetic to the South's desire to maintain its independence from the North. For example, Halifax merchant Benjamin Wier (1805–1868) acted as Halifax agent for many of the Confederate blockade runners carrying British arms during the Civil War. In return for ship repair facilities in Halifax, the Confederates supplied him with valuable cotton for re-export to Britain, a lucrative but hazardous course for Wier which required severing his business connections with New England. Halifax's role in arms trafficking for the South was so noticeable that the Acadian Recorder in 1864 described the city's effort as a "mercenary aid to a fratricidal war, which, without outside intervention, would have long ago ended."[5] U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward complained on March 14, 1865:

Halifax has been for more than one year, and yet is, a naval station for vessels which, running the blockade, furnish supplies and munitions of war to our enemy, and it has been made a rendezvous for those piratical cruisers which come out from Liverpool and Glasgow, to destroy our commerce on the high seas, and even to carry war into the ports of the United States. Halifax is a postal and despatch station in the correspondence between the rebels at Richmond and their emissaries in Europe. Halifax merchants are known to have surreptitiously imported provisions, arms, and ammunition from our seaports, and then transshipped them to the rebels. The governor of Nova Scotia has been neutral, just, and friendly; so were the judges of the province who presided on the trial of the Chesapeake. But then it is understood that, on the other hand, merchant shippers of Halifax, and many of the people of Halifax, are willing agents and abettors of the enemies of the United States, and their hostility has proved not merely offensive but deeply injurious.[6]

Confederate Secret Service agents operating in Canada were considerable enough to be widely tolerated.[7] For example, in Toronto,

Southern agents operated freely and openly with little to no concern from local authorities who were governed by British North America’s official policy of neutrality. Indeed, Southerners enjoyed the sympathy of most of Toronto’s political, social, and business elite—although few were as enthusiastic in supporting the Confederate cause as George Taylor Denison III.[8]

Canadian banks funded their activities and Toronto, Montreal, St. Catharines, and Halifax were among the centers of well-financed Confederate networks by Confederate agents and sympathizers in these cities.[7][8][9][10][11] Several Canadian hotels across the territory, including the Queen's Hotel, Toronto and St. Louis hotel in Quebec City, acted as informal headquarters for Confederate Secret Service activities.[8][12][7]

Chesapeake edit

On 7 December 1863, while the new Union tug Chesapeake was preparing for service in the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron, 17 Canadians disguised as passengers seized it off Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Word of the takeover reached Portland on the morning of 9 December and quickly spread from there. The news prompted federal officials at northern ports along the coast to speedy action.

On 17 December, the recently captured blockade runner Ella and Annie — which had been hastily manned, armed and sent to sea — caught up with the Chesapeake at Sambro, Nova Scotia. Shortly thereafter, the Northern gunboat Dacotah arrived on the scene; and its commanding officer prevented Ella and Annie from taking the recaptured tug back to Boston, lest such action seriously undermine British–U.S. relations. Instead, to observe diplomatic protocols, he escorted Chesapeake to Halifax where he asked the colonial Admiralty court to restore it to its owner. The court ruled the Confederate attack was illegal and returned SS Chesapeake to its Union owners but the Confederate sympathizers escaped with the help of some Haligonians, creating tensions that received international attention.

CSS Tallahassee edit

On 18 August 1864, the Confederate States Ship Tallahassee under the command of John Taylor Wood sailed into Halifax harbour for supplies, coal and to make repairs to its mainmast. Wood could only stay 48 hours under neutrality laws and began loading coal at Woodside, on the Dartmouth shore. Union ships Nansemont and Huron were making their way toward Halifax when Wood slipped out of the harbor at 9 p.m. on 19 August. It is believed he departed by the seldom-used Eastern Passage between McNabs Island and the Dartmouth shore to avoid Union warships in case they had arrived. The channel was narrow and crooked with a shallow tide, so Wood hired a local pilot, Jock Flemming. All the lights were out, but the residents on the Eastern Passage mainland could see the dark hull moving through the water, successfully evading capture.[13]

St. Albans Raid edit

The most-controversial incident was the St. Albans Raid. Montreal was used as the secret base for a team of Confederates attempting to launch covert and intelligence operations from Canada against the United States. To finance their cause in October 1864, they robbed three banks in St. Albans, Vermont, killed an American citizen, and escaped with US$170,000. They were pursued across the Canada–U.S. border by Union forces, creating an international incident. The Canadians then arrested the Confederate raiders, but the judge ruled the raid was an authorized Confederate government operation, not a felony, which would have permitted extradition via the Webster–Ashburton Treaty.[14]

Many Americans falsely suspected that the Canadian government knew of the raid ahead of time. There was widespread anger when the raiders were released by a local court in Canada.[15] U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward let the British government know, "it is impossible to consider those proceedings as either legal, just or friendly towards the United States."[16]

Canadian fighters edit

 
Grave of a Canadian soldier who fought in the US Civil War, at Old St. Thomas Church, St. Thomas, Ontario

The best recent estimates are that between 33,000 and 55,000 men from British North America (BNA) served in the Union army, and a few hundred in the Confederate army. Many of them already lived in the United States and were joined by volunteers signed up in Canada by Union recruiters.[17]

Canada refused to return about 15,000 American deserters and draft dodgers.[18]

Calixa Lavallée was a French-Canadian musician and Union officer during the American Civil War who later composed the music for "O Canada", which officially became the national anthem of Canada in 1980. In 1857, he moved to the United States and lived in Rhode Island where he enlisted in the 4th Rhode Island Volunteers of the Union army during the American Civil War, attaining the rank of lieutenant.

Canadian-born Edward P. Doherty was a Union Army officer who formed and led the detachment of Union soldiers that captured and killed John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of Lincoln, in a Virginia barn on April 26, 1865, 12 days after Lincoln was fatally shot.

Canadian-born Sarah Emma Edmonds was a noted Union spy.

One of the longest-living Canadians to have fought in the American Civil War was James Beach Moore, who died on August 29, 1931.

Anderson Ruffin Abbott was a Toronto-born son of free people of color who had fled Alabama after their store was ransacked. Canada's first Black physician, he applied for a commission as an assistant surgeon in the Union Army in February 1863, but his offer was evidently not accepted. That April, he applied to be a "medical cadet" in the United States Colored Troops, but was finally accepted as a civilian surgeon under contract. He served in Washington, D.C., from June 1863 to August 1865, first at the Contraband Hospital which became Freedmen's Hospital. He then went to a hospital in Arlington, Virginia. Receiving numerous commendations and becoming popular in Washington society, Abbott was one of only 13 black surgeons to serve in the Civil War, a fact that fostered a friendly relationship between him and the president.[19] On the night of Lincoln's assassination, Abbott accompanied Elizabeth Keckley to the Petersen House and returned to his lodgings that evening. After Lincoln's death, Mary Todd Lincoln presented Abbott with the plaid shawl that Lincoln had worn to his 1861 inauguration.[20][21]

At least 29 Canadian-born men were awarded the Medal of Honor.[22]

Economic effects edit

The Civil War period was one of booming economic growth for the BNA colonies. The war in the United States created a huge market for Canada's agricultural and manufactured goods, most of which went to the Union. Maritime shipbuilders and owners prospered in the wartime trade boom.

Political effects edit

The American Civil War had decisive political effects on the BNA colonies. The tensions between the United States and Britain, which had been ignited by the war and made worse by the Fenian raids, led to concern for the security and independence of the colonies, helping to consolidate momentum for the confederation of the colonies in 1867.[23]

In this regard, the conflict also had an important effect on discussions concerning the nature of the emerging federation. Many Fathers of Confederation concluded that the secessionist war was caused by too much power being given to the states, and thus resolved to create a more centralized federation.[23] It was also believed that too much democracy was a contributing factor and the Canadian system was thus equipped with checks and balances such as the appointed Senate and powers of the British appointed Governor General. The guiding principles of the legislation which created Canada – the British North America Act – were peace, order, and good government. This was a collectivist antithesis to American individualism that became central to Canadian identity.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John Boyko, Blood and Daring: How Canada Fought the American Civil War and Forged a Nation (2013)
  2. ^ Jones, Preston. "Civil War, Culture War: French Quebec and the American War between the States" (2001)
  3. ^ Bourne (1961)
  4. ^ Desmond Morton (2009). A Military History of Canada. McClelland & Stewart. p. 85. ISBN 9781551991405.
  5. ^ Greg Marquis (January 1998). "The Ports of Halifax and Saint John and the American Civil War" (PDF). 8 (1). The Northern Mariner: 4. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Beau Cleland. Between King Cotton and Queen Victoria: Confederate Informal Diplomacy and Privatized Violence in British America During the American Civil War (Thesis). University of Calgary. p. 2.
  7. ^ a b c Peter Kross (Fall 2015). "The Confederate Spy Ring: Spreading Terror to the Union". Warfare History network.
  8. ^ a b c Kevin Plummer (May 21, 2011). "Historicist: Confederates and Conspirators". Torontoist.
  9. ^ "10 ways Canada fought the American Civil War". Maclean's. August 4, 2014.
  10. ^ Claire Hoy (2004). Canadians in the Civil War. McArthur and Company. p. 7. ISBN 1-5527-8450-9.
  11. ^ "Montreal, City of Secrets: Confederate Operations in Montreal During the American Civil War". Baraka Books.
  12. ^ Barry Sheehy, Cindy Wallace, and Vaughnette Goode-Walker (2011). Savannah, Immortal City: Volume One of the Civil War Savannah Series. Emerald Group Publishing. p. 414. ISBN 9-7819-3457-2702.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Greg Marquis. In Armagedon's Shadow: The Civil War and Canada's Maritime Provinces, (1998) McGill Queens Press, p. 233
  14. ^ Dennis K. Wilson, Justice under Pressure: The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath(1992).
  15. ^ Adam Mayers, Dixie & the Dominion: Canada, the Confederacy, and the War for the Union (2003) pp 105-16.
  16. ^ Congressional series of United States public documents. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1870. p. 71.
  17. ^ Danny R. Jenkins, "British North Americans who fought in the American Civil War, 1861–1865," (MA thesis, University of Ottawa, 1993), https://ruor.uottawa.ca/bitstream/10393/6698/1/MM89606.PDF. Note that Robin W. Winks does not make any estimates in his "The Creation of a Myth: 'Canadian' Enlistments in the Northern Armies during the American Civil War," Canadian Historical Review, 1958 39(1): 24–40.
  18. ^ John Herd Thompson and Stephen J. Randall, Canada and the United States (4th ed. 2008) p. 37
  19. ^ "University of Toronto - Great Past - Great Minds Bio". Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  20. ^ Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  22. ^ . October 26, 2009. Archived from the original on October 26, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  23. ^ a b "American Civil War" The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  24. ^ Patrick James (2010). Constitutional Politics in Canada After the Charter: Liberalism, Communitarianism, and Systemism. UBC Press. p. 55. ISBN 9780774859219.

Bibliography edit

  • Adams, Ephraim Douglass. Great Britain and the American Civil War (2 vol. 1925)
  • Bourne, Kenneth. British Preparations for War with the North, 1861-1862. The English Historical Review Vol 76 No 301 (Oct 1961) pp 600–632
  • Bovey, Wilfrid. "Confederate Agents in Canada During the American Civil War," Canadian Historical Review (1921) 2#1 pp: 46–57 online
  • Boyko, John. Blood and Daring: How Canada Fought the American Civil War and Forged a Nation (2013)
  • Careless, J.M.S. Brown of the Globe: Volume Two: Statesman of Confederation 1860-1880. (vol 2 1963) on George Brown, Toronto publisher & politician; excerpt
  • Crook, David Paul. Diplomacy during the American Civil War (1975), on Canadian diplomacy
  • Ferris, Norman B. Desperate Diplomacy: William H. Seward's Foreign Policy, 1861. (1976) 265pp., On Union diplomacy
  • Hubbard, Charles M. The Burden of Confederate Diplomacy (1998) 271pp
  • Jenkins, Brian. Britain and the War for the Union. (2 vol 1974), by a Canadian scholar
  • Jenkins, Danny R. "British North Americans who fought in the American Civil War, 1861-1865," (MA thesis, U. Of Ottawa, 1993), .
  • Jones, Howard. Abraham Lincoln and a New Birth of Freedom: the Union and Slavery in the Diplomacy of the Civil War, (1999)
  • Jones, Preston. "Civil War, Culture War: French Quebec and the American War between the States," Catholic Historical Review. 87#`1 (2001). pp 55+ online edition
  • Kazar, John D. "The Canadian View of the Confederate Raid on Saint Albans," Vermont History 1964 (1): 255–273,
  • Macdonald, Helen Grace. Canadian Public Opinion and the American Civil War (1926)
  • Marquis, Greg. Armageddon's Shadow: The Civil War and Canada's Maritime Provinces. (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1998) online
  • Mayers, Adam. Dixie & the Dominion: Canada, the Confederacy, and the War for the Union (Toronto: Dundurn, 2003) online, a standard scholarly history
  • Morton, W.L. The Critical Years: The Union of British North America, 1857-1873 (1964)
  • Owsley, Frank Lawrence. King Cotton Diplomacy: Foreign Relations of the Confederate States of America (1931)
  • Shippee, L.B. Canadian-American Relations, 1849–1874 (Yale UP, 1939)
  • Stouffer, Allen P. "Canadian-American Relations in the Shadow of the Civil War," Dalhousie Review 1977 57(2): 332-346
  • Wilson, Dennis K. Justice under Pressure: The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath (1992). 224 pp.
  • Winks Robin W. Canada and the United States: The Civil War Years (1971). onlinw, a standard scholarly history

External links edit

  • Canada Civil War Association
  • "" The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  • Franco-Americans

canada, american, civil, time, american, civil, 1861, 1865, canada, exist, federated, nation, instead, british, north, america, consisted, province, canada, parts, modern, southern, ontario, southern, quebec, separate, colonies, newfoundland, brunswick, prince. At the time of the American Civil War 1861 1865 Canada did not yet exist as a federated nation Instead British North America consisted of the Province of Canada parts of modern southern Ontario and southern Quebec and the separate colonies of Newfoundland New Brunswick Prince Edward Island Nova Scotia British Columbia and Vancouver Island as well as a crown territory administered by the Hudson s Bay Company called Rupert s Land Britain and its colonies were officially neutral for the duration of the war Despite this tensions between Britain and the United States were high due to incidents such as the Trent Affair blockade runners loaded with British arms supplies bound for the Confederacy and the Confederate Navy commissioning of the CSS Alabama from Britain 1 Canadians were largely opposed to slavery and Canada had recently become the terminus of the Underground Railroad Close economic and cultural links across the long border also encouraged Canadian sympathy towards the Union Between 33 000 and 55 000 men from British North America enlisted in the war almost all of them fighting for Union forces Some press and churches in Canada supported the secession and some others did not 2 There was talk in London in 1861 62 of mediating the war or recognizing the Confederacy Washington warned this meant war and London feared Canada would quickly be seized by the Union army 3 Contents 1 Trent Affair 2 The Grand Trunk Railway Brigade 3 Confederate activity in British North America 3 1 Chesapeake 3 2 CSS Tallahassee 3 3 St Albans Raid 4 Canadian fighters 5 Economic effects 6 Political effects 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksTrent Affair editMain article Trent Affair In November 1861 tensions escalated between Washington and London when an American warship stopped the British mail ship RMS Trent on the high seas and seized two Confederate diplomats James Mason and John Slidell London demanded their return and an apology and to signal its intention to defend its possessions sent 14 000 combat troops to Canada and the Maritimes while the Canadians planned to raise 40 000 militia President Abraham Lincoln defused the crisis by releasing the diplomats though he did not issue an apology He cautioned his Secretary of State William H Seward One war at a time The British decided that unification of the North American colonies was now a high priority as a new strong dominion would relieve London of the need to station large British forces to defend British North America 4 The Grand Trunk Railway Brigade editRising concerns over the security of railways in Canada while the Civil War raged in the United States led to the 1862 creation of the Grand Trunk Railway Brigade This unit of Canadian Volunteer Militia recruited amongst railway employees had infantry and artillery companies deployed along the railway lines in Canada East and Canada West Confederate activity in British North America editConfederate operators secretly used Canada and particularly the Maritimes as a base against the North in violation of British neutrality The Maritimes struggle to maintain their independence from Canada led some Maritimers to be sympathetic to the South s desire to maintain its independence from the North For example Halifax merchant Benjamin Wier 1805 1868 acted as Halifax agent for many of the Confederate blockade runners carrying British arms during the Civil War In return for ship repair facilities in Halifax the Confederates supplied him with valuable cotton for re export to Britain a lucrative but hazardous course for Wier which required severing his business connections with New England Halifax s role in arms trafficking for the South was so noticeable that the Acadian Recorder in 1864 described the city s effort as a mercenary aid to a fratricidal war which without outside intervention would have long ago ended 5 U S Secretary of State William H Seward complained on March 14 1865 Halifax has been for more than one year and yet is a naval station for vessels which running the blockade furnish supplies and munitions of war to our enemy and it has been made a rendezvous for those piratical cruisers which come out from Liverpool and Glasgow to destroy our commerce on the high seas and even to carry war into the ports of the United States Halifax is a postal and despatch station in the correspondence between the rebels at Richmond and their emissaries in Europe Halifax merchants are known to have surreptitiously imported provisions arms and ammunition from our seaports and then transshipped them to the rebels The governor of Nova Scotia has been neutral just and friendly so were the judges of the province who presided on the trial of the Chesapeake But then it is understood that on the other hand merchant shippers of Halifax and many of the people of Halifax are willing agents and abettors of the enemies of the United States and their hostility has proved not merely offensive but deeply injurious 6 Confederate Secret Service agents operating in Canada were considerable enough to be widely tolerated 7 For example in Toronto Southern agents operated freely and openly with little to no concern from local authorities who were governed by British North America s official policy of neutrality Indeed Southerners enjoyed the sympathy of most of Toronto s political social and business elite although few were as enthusiastic in supporting the Confederate cause as George Taylor Denison III 8 Canadian banks funded their activities and Toronto Montreal St Catharines and Halifax were among the centers of well financed Confederate networks by Confederate agents and sympathizers in these cities 7 8 9 10 11 Several Canadian hotels across the territory including the Queen s Hotel Toronto and St Louis hotel in Quebec City acted as informal headquarters for Confederate Secret Service activities 8 12 7 Chesapeake edit Main article Chesapeake Affair On 7 December 1863 while the new Union tug Chesapeake was preparing for service in the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron 17 Canadians disguised as passengers seized it off Cape Cod Massachusetts Word of the takeover reached Portland on the morning of 9 December and quickly spread from there The news prompted federal officials at northern ports along the coast to speedy action On 17 December the recently captured blockade runner Ella and Annie which had been hastily manned armed and sent to sea caught up with the Chesapeake at Sambro Nova Scotia Shortly thereafter the Northern gunboat Dacotah arrived on the scene and its commanding officer prevented Ella and Annie from taking the recaptured tug back to Boston lest such action seriously undermine British U S relations Instead to observe diplomatic protocols he escorted Chesapeake to Halifax where he asked the colonial Admiralty court to restore it to its owner The court ruled the Confederate attack was illegal and returned SS Chesapeake to its Union owners but the Confederate sympathizers escaped with the help of some Haligonians creating tensions that received international attention CSS Tallahassee edit On 18 August 1864 the Confederate States Ship Tallahassee under the command of John Taylor Wood sailed into Halifax harbour for supplies coal and to make repairs to its mainmast Wood could only stay 48 hours under neutrality laws and began loading coal at Woodside on the Dartmouth shore Union ships Nansemont and Huron were making their way toward Halifax when Wood slipped out of the harbor at 9 p m on 19 August It is believed he departed by the seldom used Eastern Passage between McNabs Island and the Dartmouth shore to avoid Union warships in case they had arrived The channel was narrow and crooked with a shallow tide so Wood hired a local pilot Jock Flemming All the lights were out but the residents on the Eastern Passage mainland could see the dark hull moving through the water successfully evading capture 13 St Albans Raid edit Main article St Albans Raid The most controversial incident was the St Albans Raid Montreal was used as the secret base for a team of Confederates attempting to launch covert and intelligence operations from Canada against the United States To finance their cause in October 1864 they robbed three banks in St Albans Vermont killed an American citizen and escaped with US 170 000 They were pursued across the Canada U S border by Union forces creating an international incident The Canadians then arrested the Confederate raiders but the judge ruled the raid was an authorized Confederate government operation not a felony which would have permitted extradition via the Webster Ashburton Treaty 14 Many Americans falsely suspected that the Canadian government knew of the raid ahead of time There was widespread anger when the raiders were released by a local court in Canada 15 U S Secretary of State William H Seward let the British government know it is impossible to consider those proceedings as either legal just or friendly towards the United States 16 Canadian fighters edit nbsp Grave of a Canadian soldier who fought in the US Civil War at Old St Thomas Church St Thomas OntarioThe best recent estimates are that between 33 000 and 55 000 men from British North America BNA served in the Union army and a few hundred in the Confederate army Many of them already lived in the United States and were joined by volunteers signed up in Canada by Union recruiters 17 Canada refused to return about 15 000 American deserters and draft dodgers 18 Calixa Lavallee was a French Canadian musician and Union officer during the American Civil War who later composed the music for O Canada which officially became the national anthem of Canada in 1980 In 1857 he moved to the United States and lived in Rhode Island where he enlisted in the 4th Rhode Island Volunteers of the Union army during the American Civil War attaining the rank of lieutenant Canadian born Edward P Doherty was a Union Army officer who formed and led the detachment of Union soldiers that captured and killed John Wilkes Booth the assassin of Lincoln in a Virginia barn on April 26 1865 12 days after Lincoln was fatally shot Canadian born Sarah Emma Edmonds was a noted Union spy One of the longest living Canadians to have fought in the American Civil War was James Beach Moore who died on August 29 1931 Anderson Ruffin Abbott was a Toronto born son of free people of color who had fled Alabama after their store was ransacked Canada s first Black physician he applied for a commission as an assistant surgeon in the Union Army in February 1863 but his offer was evidently not accepted That April he applied to be a medical cadet in the United States Colored Troops but was finally accepted as a civilian surgeon under contract He served in Washington D C from June 1863 to August 1865 first at the Contraband Hospital which became Freedmen s Hospital He then went to a hospital in Arlington Virginia Receiving numerous commendations and becoming popular in Washington society Abbott was one of only 13 black surgeons to serve in the Civil War a fact that fostered a friendly relationship between him and the president 19 On the night of Lincoln s assassination Abbott accompanied Elizabeth Keckley to the Petersen House and returned to his lodgings that evening After Lincoln s death Mary Todd Lincoln presented Abbott with the plaid shawl that Lincoln had worn to his 1861 inauguration 20 21 At least 29 Canadian born men were awarded the Medal of Honor 22 Economic effects editThe Civil War period was one of booming economic growth for the BNA colonies The war in the United States created a huge market for Canada s agricultural and manufactured goods most of which went to the Union Maritime shipbuilders and owners prospered in the wartime trade boom Political effects editThe American Civil War had decisive political effects on the BNA colonies The tensions between the United States and Britain which had been ignited by the war and made worse by the Fenian raids led to concern for the security and independence of the colonies helping to consolidate momentum for the confederation of the colonies in 1867 23 In this regard the conflict also had an important effect on discussions concerning the nature of the emerging federation Many Fathers of Confederation concluded that the secessionist war was caused by too much power being given to the states and thus resolved to create a more centralized federation 23 It was also believed that too much democracy was a contributing factor and the Canadian system was thus equipped with checks and balances such as the appointed Senate and powers of the British appointed Governor General The guiding principles of the legislation which created Canada the British North America Act were peace order and good government This was a collectivist antithesis to American individualism that became central to Canadian identity 24 See also editMilitary history of Nova Scotia United Kingdom and the American Civil War Bahamas and the American Civil War France and the American Civil War Foreign enlistment in the American Civil WarReferences edit John Boyko Blood and Daring How Canada Fought the American Civil War and Forged a Nation 2013 Jones Preston Civil War Culture War French Quebec and the American War between the States 2001 Bourne 1961 Desmond Morton 2009 A Military History of Canada McClelland amp Stewart p 85 ISBN 9781551991405 Greg Marquis January 1998 The Ports of Halifax and Saint John and the American Civil War PDF 8 1 The Northern Mariner 4 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Beau Cleland Between King Cotton and Queen Victoria Confederate Informal Diplomacy and Privatized Violence in British America During the American Civil War Thesis University of Calgary p 2 a b c Peter Kross Fall 2015 The Confederate Spy Ring Spreading Terror to the Union Warfare History network a b c Kevin Plummer May 21 2011 Historicist Confederates and Conspirators Torontoist 10 ways Canada fought the American Civil War Maclean s August 4 2014 Claire Hoy 2004 Canadians in the Civil War McArthur and Company p 7 ISBN 1 5527 8450 9 Montreal City of Secrets Confederate Operations in Montreal During the American Civil War Baraka Books Barry Sheehy Cindy Wallace and Vaughnette Goode Walker 2011 Savannah Immortal City Volume One of the Civil War Savannah Series Emerald Group Publishing p 414 ISBN 9 7819 3457 2702 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Greg Marquis In Armagedon s Shadow The Civil War and Canada s Maritime Provinces 1998 McGill Queens Press p 233 Dennis K Wilson Justice under Pressure The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath 1992 Adam Mayers Dixie amp the Dominion Canada the Confederacy and the War for the Union 2003 pp 105 16 Congressional series of United States public documents U S Government Printing Office 1870 p 71 Danny R Jenkins British North Americans who fought in the American Civil War 1861 1865 MA thesis University of Ottawa 1993 https ruor uottawa ca bitstream 10393 6698 1 MM89606 PDF Note that Robin W Winks does not make any estimates in his The Creation of a Myth Canadian Enlistments in the Northern Armies during the American Civil War Canadian Historical Review 1958 39 1 24 40 John Herd Thompson and Stephen J Randall Canada and the United States 4th ed 2008 p 37 University of Toronto Great Past Great Minds Bio Retrieved June 2 2016 Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Publications Template Anderson Ruffin Abbott Associated Medical Services Inc Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 2 2016 Canadian Medal of Honor Recipients October 26 2009 Archived from the original on October 26 2009 Retrieved June 2 2016 a b American Civil War The Canadian Encyclopedia Patrick James 2010 Constitutional Politics in Canada After the Charter Liberalism Communitarianism and Systemism UBC Press p 55 ISBN 9780774859219 Bibliography editAdams Ephraim Douglass Great Britain and the American Civil War 2 vol 1925 Bourne Kenneth British Preparations for War with the North 1861 1862 The English Historical Review Vol 76 No 301 Oct 1961 pp 600 632 Bovey Wilfrid Confederate Agents in Canada During the American Civil War Canadian Historical Review 1921 2 1 pp 46 57 online Boyko John Blood and Daring How Canada Fought the American Civil War and Forged a Nation 2013 Careless J M S Brown of the Globe Volume Two Statesman of Confederation 1860 1880 vol 2 1963 on George Brown Toronto publisher amp politician excerpt Crook David Paul Diplomacy during the American Civil War 1975 on Canadian diplomacy Ferris Norman B Desperate Diplomacy William H Seward s Foreign Policy 1861 1976 265pp On Union diplomacy Hubbard Charles M The Burden of Confederate Diplomacy 1998 271pp Jenkins Brian Britain and the War for the Union 2 vol 1974 by a Canadian scholar Jenkins Danny R British North Americans who fought in the American Civil War 1861 1865 MA thesis U Of Ottawa 1993 online edition Jones Howard Abraham Lincoln and a New Birth of Freedom the Union and Slavery in the Diplomacy of the Civil War 1999 Jones Preston Civil War Culture War French Quebec and the American War between the States Catholic Historical Review 87 1 2001 pp 55 online edition Kazar John D The Canadian View of the Confederate Raid on Saint Albans Vermont History 1964 1 255 273 Macdonald Helen Grace Canadian Public Opinion and the American Civil War 1926 Marquis Greg Armageddon s Shadow The Civil War and Canada s Maritime Provinces McGill Queen s University Press 1998 online Mayers Adam Dixie amp the Dominion Canada the Confederacy and the War for the Union Toronto Dundurn 2003 online a standard scholarly history Morton W L The Critical Years The Union of British North America 1857 1873 1964 Owsley Frank Lawrence King Cotton Diplomacy Foreign Relations of the Confederate States of America 1931 Shippee L B Canadian American Relations 1849 1874 Yale UP 1939 Stouffer Allen P Canadian American Relations in the Shadow of the Civil War Dalhousie Review 1977 57 2 332 346 Wilson Dennis K Justice under Pressure The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath 1992 224 pp Winks Robin W Canada and the United States The Civil War Years 1971 onlinw a standard scholarly historyExternal links editCanada Civil War Association American Civil War The Canadian Encyclopedia Canadians in the American Civil War Franco Americans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canada and the American Civil War amp oldid 1159337500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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