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War of 1812 – Primul Razboi Mondial
I
INTRODUCTION
War of 1812, conflict between the United States and Britain that
began in 1812 and lasted until early 1815. President James Madison
requested a declaration of war to protect American ships on the high
seas and to stop the British from impressing or seizing U.S. sailors.
U.S. ships were being stopped and searched by both Great Britain and
France, who were fighting each other in Europe. President Madison also
wanted to prevent Britain from forming alliances with Native Americans
on the American frontier. His decision was influenced by Americans in
the West and South, who hoped to expand the United States by seizing
control of both Canada and Florida. Critics called the War of 1812
“Mr. Madison’s War,†but others saw it as a “second war of
independence,†an opportunity for Americans to defend their freedom
and honor in the face of European disrespect. Neither Britain nor the
United States was particularly well prepared to fight this war, and the
conflict eventually ended in a stalemate.
II
CAUSES OF THE WAR
France and Britain, Europe’s two most powerful nations, had battled
almost continuously since 1793, and their warfare directly affected
American trade. Hostilities began during the French Revolution
(1789-1799) when England joined other European nations in an
unsuccessful attempt to restore the French monarchy, and then continued
as Britain led the efforts to stop French expansion under Napoleon I.
American presidents from Washington to Madison tried to keep the United
States impartial during these conflicts, but both France and Britain
flagrantly disregarded the rights of neutral countries.
For the Americans, the greatest irritant was Britain’s practice of
impressment, or the seizure of American seamen for service in the
British navy. The British government claimed that it only seized
subjects of the Crown who sailed under the American flag to avoid
wartime service in their own navy. In fact, the British seized not only
their own deserters, but also impressed a sizeable number of United
States citizensâ€â€estimates suggest 6000 or more.
Public outrage over the issue of impressment grew increasingly vocal
after an incident between the American naval frigate Chesapeake and a
British vessel, the Leopard. In June 1807 the Leopard approached the
Chesapeake only a few miles off the American coast and demanded to
search the ship for British deserters. The Chesapeake’s commander,
James Barron, refused, and the Leopard opened fire. A number of American
sailors were killed or wounded during the attack, and the Chesapeake
surrendered. The British then sent a party aboard and dragged four
crewmen from the vessel. After the incident, Jefferson ordered British
warships to leave American waters and demanded an end to the practice of
impressment. The British did make some apologies and restitution for the
Chesapeake-Leopard incident, but continued to claim the right to seize
American ships and inspect them for deserters.
A
Economic Losses
Although impressment aroused the most resentment, the United States
also suffered serious financial losses during these years of European
warfare. The United States had to continue commercial relations with
both France and Britain in order to remain prosperous, yet an American
ship trading with either one of the two nations could be seized by the
other. To hurt England’s economy, Napoleon had initiated the
Continental System, a series of blockades in which the French
confiscated vessels and cargoes in European ports if they had first
stopped in Britain. The British government retaliated by issuing orders
to blockade the coastlines of Napoleon’s empire and seize vessels
bound for Europe that did not first call at a British port. Neither
power had sufficient naval forces to close every major harbor, so the
blockades were mainly used to capture ships belonging to neutrals like
the United States that were rather weak militarily. Together, these
warring nations seized nearly 1500 American vessels between 1803 and
1812. Because the British dominated the seas after they defeated the
French at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, they stopped more ships than
the French.
President Thomas Jefferson initially attempted to win respect for
American neutrality by an economic boycott, a policy that banned trade
with Europe. At Jefferson’s urging the Congress of the United States
passed the Embargo Act of 1807, prohibiting virtually all U.S. commerce
with European nations. Additional measures in 1808 and 1809 also
restricted overland trade with British and Spanish possessions in Canada
and Florida. This legislation failed to stop the aggressive actions of
either France or Britain, but it did seriously harm the American
economy. Consequently, Congress replaced it in 1809 with the
Non-Intercourse Act, which forbade trade only with France and Britain.
This measure was also overturned in 1810 by Macon s Bill No. 2, which
reopened American commerce with all nations.
These trade restrictions were unpopular in the United States. Despite
the repeated loss of both ships and seamen, Americans differed widely in
their views on how to stop British harassment. British and French
aggression hurt New England more directly than any other section of the
country, but its merchants did not want to go to war with the British.
Britain was the region s most important trading partner, and the profits
from one successful commercial venture far offset the financial
hardships resulting from the seizure of a cargo-laden ship or members of
its crew.
B
The War Hawks
The strongest agitation for war came from the frontier regions of the
United States. Western and southern representatives in Congress, most
notably Henry Clay of Kentucky and John Caldwell Calhoun of South
Carolina, led a pro-war faction that became known as the War Hawks. They
believed that British officers from Canada were encouraging Native
American peoples to rebel against the United States, a charge that may
have had some foundation. For 20 years, frontiersmen had fought interior
tribes with little help from the federal government. The War Hawks now
felt they could enlist federal aid against Native Americans and their
British allies by supporting a war to stop British interference with
American trade on the seas.
In addition, the War Hawks welcomed the prospect of acquiring more
land. Americans had always wanted Canada, for possession of this vast
area would increase the number of potential western states in the Union
and give the West greater power in Congress. Southerners, too, wanted
more territory and looked longingly at Spanish-held Florida. Because
Florida depended on British protection, the United States could seize
this desirable territory in a war with Great Britain.
III
THE OPPOSING FORCES
A
American Strengths
The United States government had few military resources with which to
fight a major war. Its British opponent ranked as the world’s greatest
maritime power, but the U.S. Navy did not possess a single ship of the
line, as battleships of the day were called. In fact, the Americans had
only eight frigates and eight smaller seagoing warships. In addition,
the government had made no naval preparations along the most
strategically important of the waterways bordering Canadaâ€â€Lakes
Champlain, Ontario, and Erie.
The U.S. Navy did have the advantage of a competent officer corps,
experienced in command at sea. Its best leaders were veterans of the
successful wars of 1801 to 1805 against the Barbary Coast pirates, North
African raiders who had preyed on U.S. merchant ships in the
Mediterranean. American seamen were of high caliber, and the thorough
training they received in handling guns was far ahead of contemporary
British standards.
As hostilities loomed, Congress authorized a regular army of 35,000
men, but when the United States officially declared war in June 1812,
the actual land force was less than 10,000 and nearly half of these
soldiers were raw recruits. The existing troops were also widely
scattered in small garrisons. The government planned to supplement this
regular force with 50,000 volunteers and 100,000 militiamen, the latter
to be provided by the states. However, opposition to the war was so
strong in New England that the governors of Massachusetts and
Connecticut refused to call up their militia in response to President
Madison s request for troops.
A number of competent officers served in the army, including 71
graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, established just
ten years earlier. However, the majority of the officers on duty were
newly commissioned and lacked experience. Early in 1812, in anticipation
of hostilities, President Madison hastily appointed two major generals
and three brigadier generals to lead the preparations for war. All were
veterans of the American Revolution (1775-1783), but most had compiled
only mediocre combat records and had long since left military service.
The senior brigadier general on the staff, James Wilkinson, had faced
accusations of treason along with former vice president Aaron Burr in
1807, but was later acquitted. Wade Hampton of South Carolina, the most
competent of the new generals, had developed a contempt for Wilkinson
that eventually overshadowed his own military abilities. The three
generals who most distinguished themselves in high command during the
war, Andrew Jackson, Jacob Brown, and William Henry Harrison, all held
state militia commissions in 1812.
B
British Strength
In June 1812 British naval forces were considerably superior to the
forces of the U.S. Navy, but the British were focused on a variety of
missions elsewhere, most notably the Napoleonic Wars in Europe. As a
result, American warships enjoyed comparative freedom of action during
the rest of that year. On Lakes Erie and Ontario the British quickly
outfitted available merchant vessels with guns and gained initial
command of the waters. The British land force in Canada numbered about
7000 men, with about 1500 of these soldiers stationed in Upper Canada in
the region of the Great Lakes. The remainder of the British forces
patrolled the Maritime Provinces and the St. Lawrence Valley.
IV
FIRST PHASE OF THE WAR
The first phase of the fighting began with the declaration of war on
June 18, 1812, and continued through the winter of 1812 and 1813. During
this time, Britain was preoccupied with its engagements in Europe and
tried to end the American war by diplomacy, sending few reinforcements
to North America. As a result, the United States decided to invade
Canada, and U.S. naval vessels operated effectively to stop British
commerce to North America.
A
Attempts to Invade Canada
Soon after the war began, American leaders began to worry about the
exposed Western fort of Detroit, a strategic settlement in the Michigan
Territory. The U.S. hastily dispatched Brigadier General William Hull
with reinforcements to the fort. In July General Hull decided to cross
the Detroit River into Upper Canada. Hull s men, many of whom came from
the Ohio militia, were poorly equipped, and, except for one small
regiment, proved insubordinate and unreliable.
When Hull learned of an approaching force made up of British troops,
Canadian militia, and Native Americans, he quickly withdrew to Detroit
without fighting a battle. Major General Isaac Brock, an able and
energetic officer, led the British unit. He followed the retreating
American army with close to 1300 men, nearly half of whom were Native
Americans. Brock boldly ordered Hull to surrender Detroit, and on August
16 the American general gave up, never firing a shot. The United States
thus lost control of the entire Great Lakes region, and British troops
soon invaded northern Ohio.
In October the Americans made a second attempt to invade Canada, this
time on the Niagara frontier at the eastern end of Upper Canada. A small
force crossed the Niagara River and with great gallantry stormed the key
British position on the heights above the city of Queenston (see
Queenston Heights, Battle of). The British promptly sent in more troops
to counterattack, but the Americans received no additional support. A
New York militia officer named Stephen Van Rensselaer, who commanded the
reinforcements, could not induce his regiments to cross into Canada to
assist the advance unit. The militia, stubbornly maintaining that they
could not legally be sent out of the United States, stood on the
riverbank and watched the defeat and final surrender of their comrades.
In the same engagement British general Brock, who had used his naval
command of Lake Erie to transfer troops by water from the Detroit area
to the Niagara River, lost his life.
Major General Henry Dearborn led a third American effort to invade
Canada. This expedition also ended ingloriously in November north of
Plattsburgh, New York. Once again the militia refused to cross into
Canada in support of a small advance force, and instead marched back to
winter quarters at Plattsburgh.
B
Victories at Sea
Despite initial problems, the U.S. Navy soon won some victories at
sea, offsetting the embarrassing defeats on land. A relatively strong
American squadron under Commodore John Rodgers made a wide sweep through
the Atlantic shortly after the declaration of war. It encountered only
one enemy ship, which managed to escape, but later in the year three
forays by individual U.S. warships proved far more successful.
On August 19, 1812, the Constitution, commanded by Captain Isaac
Hull, captured the British frigate Guerrière. The Constitution disabled
the enemy ship in less than thirty minutes. In the exchange of fire, an
American sailor noticed that a British shot actually bounced off the
sturdy oak sides of the Constitution, prompting the nickname Old
Ironsides. In a late December skirmish the Constitution, this time under
the command of Captain William Bainbridge, took the British frigate Java
off the coast of Brazil. A third American victory had come in October
when the United States, under Captain Stephen Decatur, seized the
British frigate Macedonian.
Both the Constitution and the United States were heavy frigates
carrying at least 44 guns, considerably superior in firepower to the
38-gun British vessels they fought. Furthermore, in all three actions,
the American ships had a decisive advantage in the accuracy and rate of
fire of their guns. The success of the Constitution and the United
States, along with two other American victories over smaller British
warships, did much to lift the spirits of the American people.
American privateering was also successful in the early days of the war.
Privateers were privately owned American vessels that the U.S.
government commissioned to attack British commercial ships. The
privateers were usually small, fast, and maneuverable, making them very
effective against larger boats. The owners and crew members of the
privateers could split the proceeds from the sale of any captured vessel
and its cargo, so this type of authorized piracy was quite lucrative and
led to the seizure of hundreds of British merchant ships.
V
SECOND PHASE OF THE WAR
During the spring of 1813 and through the following winter, the war
entered a new phase. British naval reinforcements began to arrive and
established an effective blockade of U.S. ports along the Atlantic
seaboard. Naval control of Lake Erie passed to the United States,
however, as the British could spare only a limited number of ships from
Europe for this theater of the war. America’s naval dominance on Lake
Erie helped U.S. land forces to regain ground after additional losses
following the fall of Detroit. British supply lines were broken, and the
Americans could more easily move their own men and equipment to mount
new ground attacks.
A
Operations in the Northwest
As soon as news reached Kentucky about the surrender of Detroit,
Major General William Henry Harrison, commander of the state s militia,
began preparations for the recapture of the fort. He had the
enthusiastic support of Kentucky s population of settlers, who feared
raids by Britain’s Native American allies. During the winter of 1813,
Harrison, who became a brigadier general in the American army, pushed
north into Ohio. In January enemy forces led by British general Henry A.
Proctor devastated one wing of Harrison’s command on the Raisin River
below Detroit. Harrison rested the remainder of his force at Fort Meigs,
a post on the Maumee River in northwestern Ohio. In the spring he
defended the fort against a siege by British troops and Native Americans
commanded by Proctor. Considerable fighting and maneuvering took place
throughout the summer in the area around the Great Lakes known as the
Northwest Territory.
During the winter of 1812 and 1813, the U.S. Department of the Navy
had started building warships on Lakes Ontario and Erie, recognizing
that all land operations in the Northwest Territory depended on use of
these waterways for transportation. On Lake Erie a small fleet was under
construction at Presque Isle (now Erie), Pennsylvania. Commander Oliver
Hazard Perry arrived in the spring of 1813 and vigorously pushed
construction forward. On September 10 a British squadron based at
Amherstburg, near the mouth of the Detroit River, met Perry’s newly
completed fleet near the island of Put-in-Bay. The two fleets were
fairly matched in numbers of vessels and men, but the Americans had more
concentrated gunfire. The fiercely fought battle, in which Perry had to
abandon his damaged flagship, resulted in a complete American victory
and the capture of the entire British squadron.
The British had always considered control of the lake strategically
important, and when Britain’s General Proctor received the news that
the Americans had cut his line of supply by water, he immediately
retreated to the Niagara frontier. William Henry Harrison then seized
the advantage and ferried his army across the lake under Perry s escort.
On October 5 he overtook Proctor at the Thames River. The American
troops defeated the British largely because of an impetuous charge of
the mounted Kentucky volunteers under Colonel Richard M. Johnson. The
Native American leader Tecumseh died while fighting in the British
ranks, bringing an end to most Native American resistance in the region.
Johnson later claimed to have killed the great warrior.
In the Ontario region, General Dearborn raided York (now Toronto),
Ontario, and during the skirmish Brigadier General Zebulon Pike, one of
the army s most promising officers, was killed. The ill-disciplined
Americans went on a rampage after Pike’s death and burned several
government buildings at York. General Dearborn later secured possession
of all the forts on the Niagara frontier.
Neither the British nor the American fleets were able to establish
command of Lake Ontario, but in May the British launched a naval attack
on Sackets Harbor, New York. The assault nearly defeated the Americans,
and only the success of Brigadier General Jacob Jennings Brown of the
New York militia staved off disaster.
B
Expedition Against Montréal
As the next step in the American war strategy, Secretary of War
John Armstrong proposed an advance from both Sackets Harbor and
Plattsburgh, converging on the St. Lawrence River and Montréal. From
Sackets Harbor, Major General James Wilkinson was to move down the St.
Lawrence with a force of about 7000. Major General Wade Hampton had
orders to march from Plattsburgh with 4000 men by a route that would
enable him to join forces with Wilkinson for a combined advance on
Montréal.
Wilkinson set out on October 17, made little progress, and inspired
so little confidence among his troops that on November 11 a British
force of 800 routed his advance guard of 2000 men. Hampton heard of this
event at Châteauguay, New York, where he had retreated after
encountering another small enemy force. He marched back to Plattsburgh,
leaving Wilkinson without support. When Wilkinson learned of Hampton s
retreat, he also hastily withdrew from Canada. Each general seemed more
anxious to saddle the other with blame for failure than to defeat the
enemy.
The British, no longer threatened by the Americans on the St.
Lawrence, set out to improve their situation on the Niagara frontier. On
the night of December 18, 1813, a British column crossed the Niagara
River and made a surprise attack on the Americans at Fort Niagara,
capturing the garrison with the loss of only eight men. Later that
month, the British and their Native American allies crossed the river
again. They successfully drove back the American militia and burned the
towns of Black Rock and Buffalo, New York.
C
Action in the South
American forces also engaged in hostilities with the Creek, a Native
American people who lived in Mississippi Territory (now the state of
Alabama). On August 30, 1813, the Creek, encouraged by the British,
killed nearly 250 settlers at Fort Mims on the Alabama River (see Fort
Mims, Massacre of). This violence greatly alarmed residents of nearby
Tennessee and Georgia. The Tennessee militia, under the energetic
command of Major General Andrew Jackson, moved south against the Creek,
but shortages of food and the difficult terrain greatly hampered the
march. When reinforcements from a regular army regiment arrived at the
end of March 1814, Jackson finally cornered a large body of Native
Americans in the Horseshoe Bend of the Tallapoosa River. He destroyed
them with a ferocity that shocked many people.
D
Naval Reverses
American success at sea declined during 1813. The British navy
tightened its blockade of the eastern seaboard. The British stationed a
strong squadron in Chesapeake Bay that included several battleships, and
they also covered New York, Long Island Sound, Boston, and other ports
with smaller blockading squadrons. Each of these squadrons generally
included a ship of the line, testimony that America’s 44-gun frigates
had impressed the Royal Navy in battles during the previous year. The
British blockade inflicted severe economic losses on the United States,
and the suffering felt by all citizens helped to make "Mr. Madison s
War" increasingly unpopular, especially in New England. Nevertheless,
more and more American privateers helped the navy at sea, and the number
of British merchant vessels captured rose to approximately 400 for the
year.
Perhaps the worst blow to American morale came on June 1, 1813,
through the overconfidence of Captain James Lawrence. He commanded the
Chesapeake, the 38-gun frigate whose engagement with the British vessel
Leopard had been an early cause of the war. Lawrence took the Chesapeake
out of Boston with a poorly trained crew to attack the British frigate
Shannon, but fell victim to the superior gunnery and the remarkable ship
handling abilities of the Shannon’s captain, Sir Philip Broke.
Lawrence was mortally wounded during the battle, and as he lay dying on
the deck, he uttered the despairing cry, "Don t give up the ship!"
VI
THIRD PHASE OF THE WAR
With the downfall of Napoleon in the early spring of 1814, a third
stage of the war began. The British, now freed from war in Europe, began
to move substantial troop reinforcements westward across the Atlantic.
They planned a three-pronged offensive: vigorous land operations from
Canada against the northern U.S. frontier, attacks by sea in Chesapeake
Bay, and naval attacks along the southern coast, focusing on New
Orleans. The United States was able to respond effectively to these new
challenges. More aggressive, war-tested generals had taken command of
American armies, and the timely establishment of U.S. naval control of
Lake Champlain offset British strengths.
A
New Leaders
Secretary of War Armstrong had taken steps to prepare for the spring
campaign of 1814. The military particularly needed good leadership, and
Armstrong removed some of the aging generals and replaced them with men
of drive and proven competence. The new major generals included Andrew
Jackson in the South, Jacob Brown on the Niagara frontier, and George
Izard at Plattsburgh near the upper end of Lake Champlain. The first two
came from careers as hard-fighting militiamen, while Izard, an army
officer, had served with credit under Hampton. Other new officers had
earned their positions by merit and formed the core of a new and more
competent American military.
B
Chippewa and Lundy s Lane
The United States had already thrown away its opportunity for a
successful invasion of Canada. As Napoleon’s empire collapsed in
Europe, Britain made plans to send veteran regiments that had fought in
Spain to America. On the Niagara frontier the United States countered
with a new, more competent army. Brigadier General Winfield Scott had
begun training nearly 3500 men at the first signs of good weather.
Across the river 2800 British troops prepared for battle under Major
General Sir Phineas Riall.
Major General Brown arrived from Sackets Harbor and took command of
the American army. He crossed the Niagara River on July 3, captured Fort
Erie, and marched north against Riall. The British general, serenely
confident from previous experience with American troops, collided with
Scott s brigade near Niagara Falls at Chippewa and was soundly beaten.
Riall s astonished exclamation, "These are regulars, by God!" reflects
the improved quality of both the American troops and their leadership.
"Small as the affair was, and unimportant in military results, it gave
to the United States Army a character and pride it had never before
possessed," historian Henry Adams later wrote of the Battle of Chippewa.
Meanwhile, British reinforcements arrived. On July 25 a second
encounter, at Lundy s Lane slightly north of Chippewa, ended in a draw
with severe losses on each side. American generals Brown and Scott both
received serious wounds. The remnants of the American forces withdrew to
Fort Erie, followed with extreme caution by British forces under
Lieutenant General Gordon Drummond. The Americans immediately worked to
strengthen their fortifications and early in the morning of August 14
repulsed an enemy assault that again resulted in heavy British losses.
In September an American offensive mangled Drummond s army so badly that
he withdrew.
C
Battle of Lake Champlain
On the northern front the British gathered their forces for a
decisive effort. A British army of about 15,000 men was based near
Montréal. The force included 11,000 British veterans, commanded by the
general Sir George Prevost. The British proposed to advance toward
Albany and the Hudson Valley by the same wilderness route that Major
General John Burgoyne had attempted in 1777 during the American
Revolution (see Saratoga, Battles of). That disastrous experience had
demonstrated the need for waterborne supply, and the British built a
squadron of warships in the Richelieu River for the purpose of gaining
naval superiority on Lake Champlain.
The American forces on Lake Champlain were commanded by Captain
Thomas Macdonough. He knew that his ships were considerably inferior in
gun power to the British squadron, and that the superior British ships
would have the greatest advantage in open water. To offset this
advantage, he decided to moor his ships across the entrance to
Plattsburgh Bay, compelling the enemy to attack him at anchor.
On the morning of September 11 the British naval squadron, commanded
by Captain George Downie, sailed to Plattsburgh Bay and immediately
attacked Macdonough s anchored ships. After two hours of furious
cannonading, the heavier fire of Downie s 36-gun Confiance had silenced
all the guns on the exposed side of Macdonough s flagship, the 26-gun
Saratoga. The battle seemed to be going against the Americans until
Macdonough turned his ship around using lines that he had attached to
his anchor cables. He thus brought his untouched guns on the port side
into action. The result was decisive. British Captain Downie was killed,
and the Confiance lifted anchor and departed. The smaller British ships
surrendered.
When the naval battle began, the British forces under Sir George
Prevost made a halfhearted attack on American forces deployed on the
heights overlooking the bay. Prevost broke off the operation the moment
he realized that the American forces had defeated Downie, and the next
day he began a quick retreat into Canada. Prevost refused to engage in a
wilderness march without a waterborne supply line. Macdonough s courage
and tenacity averted the most serious British threat to the United
States during the war; the Battle of Lake Champlain was the decisive
naval engagement of the War of 1812.
D
March on Washington
During 1814 British naval strength in American waters grew, enabling
the British to undertake additional offensive operations. On August 18
the British landed 3500 troops in Maryland, and these units set out to
raid Washington, D.C. The British forces encountered little resistance.
On August 24, on the outskirts of Washington at Bladensburg, Maryland,
an American force of about 5400 men, chiefly militia, broke ranks and
fled. The only serious resistance was offered by a force of 600 sailors
and Marines under the command of Joshua Barney of the navy. They stood
fast as long as they could and inflicted the only losses the enemy
suffered.
The British marched on to Washington and burned the Capitol, the
White House, and the navy yard, including all the ships anchored there.
President Madison and other high officials fled into the countryside. On
September 13 the Americans mounted strong resistance to an attack on
Baltimore. The unsuccessful British bombardment of Fort McHenry in
Baltimore harbor inspired Francis Scott Key to write the words of the
"Star-Spangled Banner," which became the national anthem of the United
States. See also Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine.
E
Privateering
American privateers greatly expanded their operations in 1814, despite
the stronger British blockade. Their operations, which extended to the
home waters of the British Isles, had the effect of a counterblockade.
By August, according to a contemporary commentator, the Americans had
seized 825 vessels, and the value of these captures seemed to be
increasing.
VII
THE WAR COMES TO A CLOSE
The effects of America’s privateering were magnified because the
British had wearied after their mighty 22-year struggle with France.
They hoped for peace. The American people had also tired of war. In New
England popular sentiment against the war grew and turned into political
activity, especially after the British captured Castine, on the coast of
Maine, in late August and marched unopposed into Bangor. This action
caused much alarm, but the exhausted state of U.S. finances and the
economic decay caused by the British blockade offered little hope that
hostilities could end successfully for America.
General Brown at the Niagara frontier and Captain Macdonough at Lake
Champlain had brought a respite from immediate danger of invasion, but
British reinforcements continued to arrive in Canada. More than 20,000
British troops under Sir George Murray stood ready for a spring campaign
in 1815. Peace seemed the only hope of avoiding discord within the
United States, as well as defeat at the hands of the British.
A
Treaty of Ghent
England and America had tried to start peace discussions as early as
1813, but without much success. In August 1814, when British government
officials expected decisive results from their powerful concentration of
forces in Canada, they appointed commissioners to meet with the American
negotiators at Ghent (Gent) (now in Belgium).
At the outset, the main feature of the British proposals was the
creation of a neutral territory for Native Americans as a buffer between
British and American possessions in the area around the Great Lakes. The
British hoped to designate the Ohio River as the southern boundary of
this territory. The British also wanted access to navigation on the
Mississippi River and the permanent ownership of Sackets Harbor and Fort
Niagara. They demanded that the United States give up fortifications and
naval forces on the Great Lakes as well as fishing rights along the
coasts of Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Americans would not agree to any of these points. They demanded
that the British end impressment, pay compensation for the ships they
had seized, and follow international rules on the use of blockades. As
negotiations proceeded, the British government gradually reduced its
demands, eventually eliminating its proposals concerning neutral
territory and armaments on the lakes. The Americans eventually dropped
the subjects of impressment and blockades.
While the British Cabinet considered the remaining issues, news
reached Europe of the Battle of Lake Champlain and of the British
failures at Baltimore and at Fort Erie. The attitude of the American
commissioners stiffened. Negotiations lagged once more, and eventually
the British agreed to leave all unsettled points for future
negotiations. Both countries signed the peace agreement, known as the
Treaty of Ghent, on December 24, 1814. The settlement merely ended
hostilities and restored pre-war conditions, but under the circumstances
American negotiators believed they had triumphed.
B
Battle of New Orleans
News of the treaty did not reach the United States for nearly two
months, and in the meantime, the outlook from the American perspective
appeared gloomy. The British fleet, after withdrawing from Chesapeake
Bay, had proceeded to the West Indies. There it joined transports
carrying a British army of 12,000 men, all veterans of the Napoleonic
Wars, under the command of Sir Edward Pakenham. The objective of this
expedition was to capture the American port of New Orleans, at the mouth
of the Mississippi River. As soon as British intentions became clear,
the U.S. government ordered Major General Andrew Jackson to defend the
threatened city.
The British arrived off the coast, made their way through the bayous
undetected, and landed an advance party. On the morning of January 8,
1815, Pakenham launched an attack against a strongly fortified position
held by Jackson s troops south of the city. Pakenham s attacking force
consisted of more than 8000 men and included some of the best regiments
in the British army. Jackson had 5000 soldiers, mostly Tennessee and
Kentucky militiamen. In 25 minutes the British, advancing over open
ground, suffered 2000 casualties, chiefly from American artillery fire.
The British command broke off the attack and never resumed it. On the
night of January 18 the British force withdrew (see New Orleans, Battle
of).
C
Hartford Convention
On the East Coast, several weeks passed without word from the South.
The month of February 1815 began with the darkest period of apprehension
that the American people had known since the terrible winter of 1776 and
1777 during the American Revolution. Many expected to hear news of the
fall of New Orleans at any moment. Rumors circulated that the peace
negotiations at Ghent had finally broken up with no progress. Delegates
from the New England states, dissatisfied with the handling of the war,
had met at the Hartford Convention in Connecticut. This group, which was
dominated by disgruntled members of the Federalist political party, was
reported to have formulated demands that amounted to a dissolution of
the Union.
On February 4 the first break in the pessimism came with the news of
Jackson s victory at New Orleans. On February 11 the British sloop of
war Favorite entered New York City harbor under a flag of truce, and the
American messengers from the Ghent negotiations disembarked. Two days
later they handed a copy of the Treaty of Ghent to the secretary of
state. These two events ended the influence of the Hartford Convention
and the Federalists who had bitterly denounced the war.
VIII
THE RESULTS OF WAR
Almost overnight the War of 1812 became a glorious triumph. On
February 20 President Madison sent a message to Congress transmitting
the treaty of peace. He congratulated the nation on the close of a war
"waged with the success which is the natural result of the wisdom of the
legislative councils, of the patriotism of the people, of the public
spirit of the militia, and of the valor of the military and naval forces
of the country."
More realistically, the fledgling nation had the extraordinary good
fortune to escape the consequences of a war that it had badly mismanaged
from the outset. The Battle of New Orleans, fought after the two sides
had already signed the peace treaty, ironically became the war’s most
famous event. The navy enjoyed well-deserved popularity for many years
after the conflict, but the decisive results of the Battle of Lake
Champlain did not receive full recognition for another generation.
The principal gain for the United States was a renewed
self-confidence and faith in the ability of its military to defend the
nation’s freedom and honor. Although neither side came away from the
war with a clear-cut victory, the American people saw the War of 1812 as
evidence of the success of the democratic experiment. The war ushered in
a period of American history that has frequently been called “the era
of good feeling,†a time when, at least on the surface, most Americans
felt unified behind a common purpose. The War of 1812 convinced the
country that it could now fend off any foreign threats and that its
focus should be on expansion at home.
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