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The remarkable role of English textile workers in the US Civil War

5 min readMay 2, 2025
Lincoln with Union military officers at Antietam in 1862

In this laudable age of Black Lives Matter, history reveals that there was a time in human affairs when English textile workers took a stand in solidarity with black lives that were suffering the ravages and evils of slavery thousands of miles away — and did so at considerable cost to themselves and their families.

On January 19 1863 US President Abraham Lincoln addressed an open letter to those workers thus: ‘To the Workingmen of Manchester, England’, I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the address and resolutions which you have sent me on the eve of the new year.’

Lincoln here is referring to the decision of those very same textile workers in Manchester, England — a decision arrived at after a tempestuous meeting at the city’s Free Trade Hall in late 1862 — to continue to support the North’s blockade of the Confederacy’s Atlantic ports.

The workers at the same meeting also agreed to refuse to touch one bale of cotton picked by slaves in the the South should Lord Palmerston, Britain’s prime minister at the time, accede to the demands of English mill owners and shipping companies that he order the Royal Navy to smash the blockade by force. This in order to restore the fortunes of a British textile industry that was on its knees due to the lack of the cotton it relied on…

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John Wight
John Wight

Written by John Wight

Writing on politics, culture, sport and whatever else. Please consider taking out a subscription at https://medium.com/@johnwight1/membership

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