War of 1812

 

U.S. preparations (or lack thereof)

acnvbul1   Jefferson – “our constitution is a peace establishment”

acnvbul1   West Point

Enlistment went well on frontier

acnvbul1   Anti-Indian sentiment

acnvbul1   Declined within a year

Invasions of Canada

acnvbul1   General William Hull

acnvbul1   MI

acnvbul1   Ft. Dearborn surrendered

acnvbul1   Niagara Front

acnvbul1   Battle of Queenstown

acnvbul1   NY militia refused to leave the state

acnvbul1   Lake Champlain

Great Lakes

acnvbul1   Battle of Put-in-Bay

acnvbul1   Oliver Hazard Perry

acnvbul1   Noah Brown

acnvbul1   U.S.S. Lawrence

William Henry Harrison

acnvbul1   Kentucky volunteers

End of effective Indian resistance

acnvbul1   Tecumseh

acnvbul1   Prophet

acnvbul1   Battle of Tippecanoe Creek

British blockade

acnvbul1   New England trade dropped 90%

Defeat of Napoleon, 1914

acnvbul1   British occupy Washington

acnvbul1   Baltimore

       Francis Scott Key

Battle of New Orleans

    Andrew Jackson

Treaty of Ghent

    Status quo antebellum

Impact of War

   

acnvbul1   Reinforced desire to stay out of European affairs

acnvbul1   Exposed weakness in defense and transportation

acnvbul1   Madison centralized military control

acnvbul1   Congress increased army to 10,000

Economic Change

acnvbul1   Panic of 1819

acnvbul1   Manufactured goods

Death of Federalist Party

acnvbul1   Hartford Convention

acnvbul1   Dec. 15, 1814 to Jan. 5, 1815

acnvbul1   Almost secession

acnvbul1   Abolish 3/5 compromise

acnvbul1   Limit new states

acnvbul1   End naturalization

Post war nationalism

Monroe Doctrine

acnvbul1   Columbia, Mexico, Chile, and Argentina

acnvbul1   Spain

acnvbul1   Holy Alliance – France, Austria, Russia, and Prussia

acnvbul1   British approach U.S.

acnvbul1   Monroe and Adams issue doctrine