Southern Independence Association

[1] It had a membership of almost 900, including members of the House of Lords and House of Commons, clergymen, lawyers, magistrates, and merchants, prominent in all parts of the country, particularly Liverpool which had strong political and economic ties with the Confederate states.

[2] Its President was Edward Montagu-Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie, 1st Earl of Wharncliffe a railway magnate who invested in trade with the Confederacy.

It claimed that an independent Confederacy could be persuaded in time to ameliorate its slave system.

[4] The Union introduced the protectionist Morrill Tariff in 1861, whereas the Confederacy, heavily dependent on exports to the United Kingdom and on the import of manufactured goods supported free trade.

Support for the South was also based on an awareness that a victorious, rapidly industrialising Union would become a threat to the global dominance of the British Empire.