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Published byAgnes Webster Modified over 8 years ago
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Eliseo Lugo III
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After James Madison’s election into office in 1808, tensions between the United States and England would continue to deteriorate. Prior to 1812, the United States did everything possible to remain neutral in the War between Britain and France However, continued fighting between Britain and France had threatened American shipping. American shipping was threatened by both British and French Impressment. Americans were also angry that the British had been arming the Native- Americans in the Northwest against them. Four years later, Madison would lead the nation into the War of 1812 against Great Britain.
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Although both France and Britain threatened U.S. ships between 1805 and 1814, Americans focused their anger on the British.
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One reason was the British policy of Impressment, the practice of seizing Americans at sea and “impressing,” or drafting them into the British navy. In other words, the British were seizing American ships and forcing the sailors to work for the British.
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Americans grew even angrier after learning that officials in British Canada were supplying arms to Native Americans in support of their ongoing battle against American settlers.
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A group of young congressmen from the South and the West, known as the Warhawks, demanded war against England. These Warhawks included Henry Clay of Kentucky and John C. Calhoun of South Carolina
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Not everyone supported war against Britain. The strongest opposition to the War came from the New England states who argued that it would hurt American trade. However, by the spring of 1812, President Madison had decided to commit America to war against the British, and Congress approved the war declaration in mid-June.
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Spending cuts made by Thomas Jefferson earlier in history and a lack of popular support had left the American military with few volunteers and not very well prepared for war. At the start of the war, the nation only had 16 warships and an army of fewer than 7,000 men. In other words, the United States was in no shape militarily to fight a war against what was then the world’s strongest military. http://thetrustytory2.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/battleofqueenston.jpg
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At the start of the war, Britain, was too preoccupied with Napoleon in Europe to pay much attention to the Americans. Britain’s initial strategy was to establish a blockade of the American coast. A blockade is the action of shutting a port to prevent people or supplies from coming into an area or leaving it. This blockade was successful because by the end of the war, the British were able to close off all American ports. This blockade was possible because contrary to the 16 total warships that the United States had, the British were able to send 135 ships to form their blockade.
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In July of 1812, the United States sent troops into Canada. The Warhawks believed that Canadians would welcome the Americans as their liberators from British rule. The war campaign in Canada was a dismal failure as over 2,000 American soldiers were captured in a humiliating defeat.
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By 1814, the British had defeated Napoleon. This victory would allow the British to send many more troops to the United States. As a result, the British scored a stunning victory in August of 1814, when they brushed aside American troops and sacked Washington, D.C. The British set fire to several government buildings including the White House. Madison and other federal officers fled the city as the British burned the Capitol, the Presidential Mansion, and other public buildings. Americans were shocked when they found out that their army could not defend Washington. The British would then focus their attentions on Baltimore
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It was during the Battle of Fort McHenry in Baltimore that Francis Scott Key wrote “The Star Spangled Banner”
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The British had grown tired of fighting and peace talks began in the city of Ghent, Belgium. On December 24 th of 1814, the two sides signed the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the war. The treaty stipulated that all things were to return to the way that they were prior to the war. So…. who won ??? Ironically, news of the Treaty took several weeks to reach the United States and during that time, the United States had won a stunning victory at the Battle of New Orleans.
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The Treaty of Ghent, signed on Christmas Eve of 1814, declared an armistice, or end to the fighting. http://war1812.tripod.com/ghent.GIF
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The war had three important consequences. First, it led to the end of the Federalist party, whose members generally opposed the war. Second, it encouraged the growth of American industries to manufacture products no longer available from Britain because of the war. Third, it confirmed the status of the United States as a free and independent nation and created a great sense of Nationalism in the Nation. Nationalism is devotion to ones own country ; pride in ones own nation or ethnic group.
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