Introduction

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The War of 1812 was the second war between the United States and Great Britain. The United States won its independence in the first war—the American Revolution. The War of 1812 ended without a clear victory for either side. It was tragic in its loss of life, money, and property, but otherwise it was almost a comedy of cross-purposes and blunders.

The War of 1812 grew out of quarrels over several issues. But almost all of them were virtually settled before the first shot was fired. The largest share of the fighting was done by troops from the West and the South to remedy grievances that had hurt the business and seamen of New England most. But the New England states opposed the war bitterly from the beginning. At times they seemed ready to withdraw from the Union rather than fight. The most important battle of the war was fought after a peace treaty had been signed. And the treaty did not mention the grievances that had provoked the war. Rather, it left the countries where they were before the war started.

The Issue of Trade

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The war had its origin in European affairs. In the gigantic conflict between Great Britain and France, Great Britain gained control of the seas by its victory over the combined French and Spanish fleets in the Battle of Trafalgar on October 21, 1805. A few weeks later Napoleon, the French emperor, gained supremacy on land by defeating the Austrians and Russians in the winter Battle of Austerlitz. After that, neither Britain nor France could or would grapple with the other in its chosen element.

This situation led to a fierce commercial struggle in which the interests of the United States became vitally involved. Believing that the source of Britain’s strength lay in its commerce, Napoleon issued a series of decrees providing that the ports of Europe under his control should be closed to British goods. By thus depriving Britain of its chief markets, he hoped to force it to sue for peace on his terms. Napoleon’s blockade plan was called the Continental system.

The British government, in retaliation for the Continental system, issued various Orders in Council. These forbade neutral vessels to trade at any port that was closed to the British unless such vessels had first stopped at a British port and had paid duties to the British government. The actions of both France and Britain were in open violation of international law. As Thomas Jefferson said, “England seemed to have become a den of pirates, and France a den of thieves.” The British caused more trouble only because their navy was larger.

The effect of Napoleon’s Continental system and of Britain’s Orders in Council was to threaten with ruin the growing commerce of the young republic across the sea. During the preceding 15 years the shipping of the United States had multiplied almost eightfold. The country’s exports had increased 400 percent, its carrying trade had grown enormously, and the wages of its sailors had been tripled. By the policies now adopted by the warring countries, the prosperity of the United States was seriously menaced. The interference with neutral trade that resulted from this new method of making war was one of the primary causes of the war.

Impressment of American Seamen

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A second cause of the War of 1812 was the impressment of American sailors. In common with other countries at the time, Britain did not recognize the right of naturalization. Its theory of citizenship was “Once an Englishman, always an Englishman.” Least of all was it disposed to admit that British seamen, attracted by the higher wages, better food, and more kindly treatment on American vessels, could desert their ships in American harbors and enter American service under the protection of so-called naturalization papers. Accordingly, its naval commanders had strict orders to stop neutral ships and make a thorough search for deserters. The sailors they seized were forced to fight for the British navy.

This policy of impressment proved especially objectionable to the United States. Because of the difficulty of distinguishing between Englishmen and Americans, many of the impressed sailors were native-born Americans. Between 1803 and 1810, in fact, about 5,000 American citizens were officially reported as having been forced to serve on British ships. While such sailors were released when their identity was established, this was a difficult thing to prove and occurred in most instances only after the impressed men had served under the British colors for a year or two. Of the number mentioned above, only 1,361 were released.

The most intolerable instance of impressment was the unprovoked attack on the American frigate Chesapeake by the British ship Leopard on June 22, 1807. The attack was made because the American commander refused to permit his vessel to be searched for deserters. In this encounter three Americans were killed, 18 were wounded, and four men—three of them Americans—were taken on board the British ship. Four years later, a somewhat similar controversy had a different outcome. In this instance, the American frigate President forced the British sloop of war Little Belt to withdraw.

The Western Frontier

A third cause of the war was the belief—especially strong in the West—that the British had for years incited Indigenous peoples to attack American frontier settlements. The truth of this charge is now questioned. However, it seemed then to be confirmed by British guns and powder of British origin found by William Henry Harrison among the effects of the Indigenous peoples whom he defeated in 1811 at Tippecanoe and by the flight of the Indigenous leader Tecumseh to Canada after that defeat.

The Onset of War

Numerous efforts to avoid war had been made by the American government. Upon Jefferson’s recommendation Congress passed Embargo and Non-Intercourse acts. These were designed to keep American ships at home and to secure justice from the warring countries by depriving them of American goods that—so Jefferson thought—were essential for their welfare.

While the embargo did, indeed, injure British manufacturers, it proved even more harmful to American shippers and farmers. Finally, during President James Madison’s administration, an act was passed repealing the Non-Intercourse Act. It offered, in case either Britain or France should revoke its decrees against neutral commerce, to forbid trade with the other if it too did not withdraw its decrees within a given time. Shortly after the passage of this act, Napoleon notified the American minister in Paris that his decrees were revoked. This revocation, he added, was on the understanding that if Britain did not revoke its Orders in Council the United States should take action against the British. Having good reason to suspect that Napoleon had not actually withdrawn his decrees, the British refused to recall their Orders in Council. They therefore continued to interfere with American trade.

Madison, threatened with a loss of renomination, was urged to action by a group of fiery young congressmen led by Henry Clay—the War Hawks. Madison finally sent a strong message to Congress reviewing the British aggressions and recommending war. Accordingly, on June 18, 1812, by a vote of 79 to 49 in the House and of 19 to 13 in the Senate, war was declared. Almost all the votes against the bill were cast by New England Federalists. Five days later Britain revoked the Orders in Council. The British also proposed a suspension of hostilities. The United States rejected their proposal, however, and the War of 1812 was underway.

The American leaders expected to conquer Canada in short order and to dictate terms of peace in Quebec or Halifax. But the government was totally unprepared for war. The regular army was poorly drilled and officered, and New England strongly opposed the war.

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These conditions brought quick disaster to the Canadian campaign. On July 17 the British and their Indigenous allies seized Mackinac Island, on Lake Huron. On August 15 the U.S. garrison at Fort Dearborn, on the site of present-day Chicago, Illinois, abandoned the post and was ambushed by Indigenous people a few miles away. The following day General William Hull disgracefully surrendered Detroit, Michigan, and more than 1,000 soldiers to 750 British and 600 Indigenous people. On October 13 some 900 U.S. soldiers attacked Queenston Heights, on the Canadian side of the Niagara River. However, 3,000 U.S. soldiers stationed in New York refused to cross the river for the battle. The Americans were overwhelmed and were forced to surrender.

Campaigns in 1813

The next year opened no better. On January 22 an American force sent against Detroit was defeated at the Raisin River. After the battle Indigenous forces killed many of the wounded. On April 27 the Americans captured and burned York (now Toronto, Ontario). But an expedition against Montreal, Quebec, met defeat at Williamsburg on November 11.

Late in 1813, however, American fortunes improved in the west. On September 10 Master Commandant Oliver H. Perry led nine newly built vessels against a British fleet of six on Lake Erie near Put-in-Bay, north of Sandusky, Ohio. After a fierce three-hour fight the British were compelled to surrender.

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Perry promptly helped General William H. Harrison to move troops and regain Detroit on September 29. Following the British into Canada, Harrison defeated them and their Indigenous allies under Tecumseh at the Thames River on October 5. Tecumseh was killed, and the Americans remained masters of the Detroit region.

American Victories at Sea

During these dismal years the Americans were cheered by the feats of their small navy. It had only seven first-rank frigates; but these carried 44 guns instead of Britain’s standard 38, and they had thicker sides. They soon proved far superior to the ships sent against them.

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On August 19, 1812, the Constitution (or “Old Ironsides”), commanded by Captain Isaac Hull, wrecked and captured the British Guerrière in 25 minutes of action. On October 25 Stephen Decatur in the United States captured the Macedonian in a fight that cost the British 104 casualties against an American loss of 12. On October 18 the sloop Wasp captured the British brig Frolic. On December 29 the Constitution under Captain William Bainbridge shattered and captured the Java off Brazil.

Thereafter the British avoided ship-to-ship battles with frigates of superior strength. On June 1, 1813, the British Shannon met the Chesapeake under Captain James Lawrence off Boston. Each ship had 38 guns, but Lawrence’s crew was new and poorly trained. Lawrence was mortally wounded. As he was carried below he ordered, “Don’t give up the ship!” But the Americans had to surrender.

Thereafter each side won naval battles, but these did not affect the outcome of the war. A more important factor was Napoleon’s loss of his army in Russia during the winter of 1812–13. The next spring the British were free to send a few 74-gun warships to Delaware and Chesapeake bays. Gradually Britain established a firm blockade along the American Atlantic coast. Curiously, however, the British never protected their home waters against naval raiders and privateers. Losses sent insurance rates to 18 percent in the Irish Sea and 33 percent on a voyage to North America.

Campaigns in 1814

In 1814 the Americans again invaded Canada over the Niagara line. On July 5 a force of 8,000 defeated the British in the Battle of Chippewa. On July 25 a hotly contested battle took place at Lundy’s Lane. An American charge captured the enemy artillery, but in three counterattacks the British regained it. The British lost 878 killed and wounded; the Americans, 860. This was the last attempt to invade Canada.

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During the summer, the British took eastern Maine, starting with Eastport on July 11. They wanted to provide good communication between the Maritime Provinces and Montreal and Quebec. Next the British sent 10,000 men south from Montreal, supported by a small fleet on Lake Champlain. But on September 11 an American fleet under Thomas Macdonough defeated the British in the Battle of Plattsburgh Bay. The British commander, Sir George Prevost, feared to advance without his fleet and withdrew.

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In August British Major General Robert Ross landed 4,500 men in Maryland and moved against Washington, D.C. On August 24 about 6,500 U.S. militiamen faced him at Bladensburg but fled almost at the first shot. That evening the British marched into Washington and burned the Capitol, the Executive Mansion (now known as the White House), other buildings, and military stores.

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After capturing Alexandria, Virginia, the British moved against Baltimore, Maryland, but met stout resistance. A naval bombardment on September 13–14 failed to take Fort McHenry at the harbor mouth. It was during this bombardment that Francis Scott Key was inspired to write “The Star-Spangled Banner.” After General Ross was killed, the British withdrew.

The Curious End of the War

Now each side was tired of the war. Only a few War Hawks still dreamed of conquering Canada. Export trade was all but paralyzed, and, after British victories over the French, Americans saw no reason to fear further British oppression at sea. The British in turn were exhausted financially and otherwise by the Napoleonic Wars. They wanted nothing so much as peace and a chance to recover.

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In August peace discussions began at Ghent in Belgium. The representatives wasted months in futile attempts to obtain advantages. Finally they agreed upon terms that substantially restored the status of 1812, before the war began. They provided for commissions to deal with unsettled questions. The peace treaty was signed on December 24, 1814. (For the text of the Treaty of Ghent, click here.)

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The end came in time to stop a menacing development in New England. In December 1814 delegates from five states met secretly at Hartford, Connecticut. They prepared a series of demands for constitutional amendments to protect New England’s interests against the West and the South. The states might have threatened to secede from the Union if their demands were ignored, but the news of peace ended the movement. (See also Hartford Convention.)

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The news did not come in time to prevent a bloody battle at New Orleans. A British force, which landed at Lake Borgne in December, could have taken the city, but it waited for reinforcements. This gave General Andrew Jackson time to gather an army and build defensive works. When the British attacked on January 8, 1815, Jackson’s frontier riflemen, regular army men, and two battalions of black soldiers mowed them down. The British commander, General Edward Pakenham, was killed, and the survivors took to their ships. They left more than 2,200 killed, wounded, and prisoners. The American loss was 45.

The war cost the United States about $200 million. A total of 2,260 American sailors and soldiers were killed. Neither the United States nor Great Britain gained any military advantage. Indirectly the United States made some gains. In the West the British were no longer able to check the forward movement of American settlers, for their influence over the Indigenous peoples had been broken. In the South, Andrew Jackson’s defeat of Britain’s allies, the Muscogee (Creek), opened a vast area in Georgia and Alabama for settlement. His campaigns spurred the events that led to Spain’s surrender of Florida to the United States in 1819.