Why did the United States blockade the Confederacy during the Civil War
During the Civil War, Union forces established a blockade of Confederate ports designed to prevent the export of cotton and the Confederacy's smuggling of war materiel. Although somewhat porous, the blockade was an important economic policy that successfully prevented Confederate access to weapons that the industrialized North could produce for itself.
The U.S. Government successfully convinced foreign governments to view the blockade as a legitimate tool of war. It was less successful at preventing the smuggling of cotton, weapons, and other materiel from Confederate ports to transfer points in Mexico, the Bahamas, and Cuba, as this trade remained profitable for foreign merchants in those regions and elsewhere.
US blockades Confederacy 1861
U.S. Secretary of State William Henry Seward recommended adopting the blockade shortly after the Battle of Fort Sumter in April 1861 that marked the beginning of Civil War hostilities. Gideon Welles, the Navy Secretary, argued for a de facto but undeclared blockade, which would prevent foreign governments from granting the Confederacy belligerent status. President Abraham Lincoln sided with Seward and proclaimed the blockade on April 19. Lincoln extended the blockade to include North Carolina and Virginia on April 27. By July of 1861, the Union Navy had established blockades of all the major southern ports. Following the U.S. announcement of its intention to establish an official Confederate ports' blockade, foreign governments began to recognize the Confederacy as a belligerent in the Civil War. Great Britain granted belligerent status on May 13, 1861, Spain on June 17, and Brazil on August 1. Other foreign governments issued statements of neutrality.
As the Union Navy took steps to enforce the blockade, controversies arose with foreign governments over the legality of Union seizures of neutral shipping and other related practices. The most important of these was the arrest of Confederate commissioners that precipitated the Trent Affair in November of 1861, an incident that was resolved by the commissioners' release one month later. Foreign governments acknowledged the right to stop and search neutral ships in international waters but were displeased by what they saw as violations of the spirit rather than the letter of the law; Union ships typically determined which ships in Caribbean ports were preparing to run the blockade into the Confederacy, and would wait outside the territorial limits for those ships to clear port.
Britain objected to US blockade, but did little else
British officials were also concerned about the treatment of crews of seized ships and the seizure of British mail. British Minister to the United States, Baron Richard Lyons, repeatedly voiced his government’s objections to U.S. Secretary of State William Henry Seward, prompting Seward to invite Lyons to a meeting with President Lincoln. During this meeting, Lyons persuaded Lincoln to adopt British neutrality policies by promising that the British Government would continue to view the blockade as a legitimate war tool.
The blockade harmed the economies of other countries. Textile manufacturing areas in Britain and France that depended on Southern cotton entered periods of high unemployment. Simultaneously, French producers of wine, brandy, and silk also suffered when their markets in the Confederacy were cut off. Although Confederate leaders were confident that Southern economic power would compel European powers to intervene in the Civil War on behalf of the Confederacy, Britain, and France remained neutral despite their economic problems. Later in the war, developed new sources of cotton in Egypt and India.
Strong Abolitionist sentiment in Britain hindered recognition of the South
Although British Prime Minister Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston, was personally sympathetic to the Confederacy, and many other elite Britons felt similarly, strong domestic abolitionist sentiment in Britain and his cabinet prevented Palmerston from taking stronger steps toward assisting the Confederacy. Napoleon III of France was also sympathetic to the Confederacy but wanted to pursue a joint policy with Britain regarding the U.S. Civil War, and so remained neutral. Moreover, Napoleon III’s chief concern during the Civil War years was France’s intervention in Mexico.
Conclusion
As the war progressed and more territory came under Union control, the blockade became more effective but less of an international issue. However, until the capture of Fort Fisher in 1865, the Confederate Army could still obtain some supplies via blockade running ships.
- Article: The Blockade of Confederate Ports, 1861–1865
- Republished from Office of the Historian, United States Department of State