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Ursusminor has done some re-enacting, and some years back, she & I went to the Harper's Ferry Christmas re-enactment. While she did her "bit", I wandered the town and the event. Afterwards, we drove up to Antietam for the annual battlefield Luminaria - really, really cool. They put up a luminaria for each of the 20,000+ casualties of the battle, and intersperse camping re-enactors throughout the grounds. I highly recommend it, should you have the chance. But, get there early - the line starts forming a couple of hours in advance, and goes about 2 miles long.
I have heard of it and hope to get to see it. I was able to visit the battlefield for a day on a job training trip a few years back. Not really enough of a visit. I would like to take a few days to go on a tour. I have visited Gettysburg a few times so I think Shiloh is next.
Second, the Confederacy was seeking formal recognition of its' existence from Britain, France, etc.., and the economic advantages that might arise should the Union blockade now be formally interfering with European nations trading with an officially-acknowledged nation. In short, if the CSA was a real entity in Britain's eyes, and the two nations had a trading relationship, then the Union blockade would run the risk of angering Britain, and perhaps English frigates would be called upon to enforce Her Majesty's trading rights.
Carrying the conflict onto northern soil, instead of constantly being on the defensive, would make it easier for the Confederacy's representatives in London & elsewhere to make the case for formal recognition. "See? We're carrying the war to them! See what they're newspapers are saying, about settling this, about suing for peace! This is gonna end soon, the North is losing its' resolve. Lincoln won't win re-election, and the new administration will work out a settlement. And, you know how much you love our cotton, and you know how much we love your manufactured goods, so, let's make this official, shall we?"
It helps to remember that it had only been about 50 years since British troops burned Washington, DC., and less than 90 since the revolution, Yorktown, etc. - there wasn't the warm "first among allies" relationship that has existed between our two nations for nearly 100 years now. The United States was still an upstart, crude, PITA reminder of one of the Empire's most embarrassing losses - and, Lincoln, that rube born in a log cabin, self-educated lawyer from frontier Illinois, almost epitomized the caricature that England had of their "American Cousins". Remember, Jeff Foxworthy still gets laughs about redneck jokes - to Great Britain, the Empire on which the sun never sets, with centuries of history, with the bluest bloodlines - our whole country, especially Lincoln, was a redneck joke. They had little reason to love the United States, and some interest in dividing it, and taking it down a peg. If the south succeeded in seceding, well, that might be a good thing in London.
But forgetting the one factor that I think overrides everything. England had already outlawed slavery. I don't think they would have come in as long as slavery was still going to be part of a confederate economic future.