1 / 16

Madison and the War of 1812

Madison and the War of 1812. Libertyville High School. James Madison. Virginian planter Follower of Jefferson Wrote some of the Federalist Papers “Father of Constitution” Married Dolly (17 yrs younger), 1794 – she created the role of First Lady. Dolly Madison. Madison, as President.

cain
Download Presentation

Madison and the War of 1812

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Madison and the War of 1812 Libertyville High School

  2. James Madison • Virginian planter • Follower of Jefferson • Wrote some of the Federalist Papers • “Father of Constitution” • Married Dolly (17 yrs younger), 1794 – she created the role of First Lady Dolly Madison Madison, as President

  3. “Father of Constitution” & Bill of Rights • Wrote Virginia Plan • Came up with three branch government form • Wrote Bill of Rights • Wanted it part of Constitution, not separate • Wanted it to apply to states, too (14th , 15th Amendments) Madison’s notes from Constitutional convention

  4. From F to D-R • Madison very much opposed to European style government (strong Exec, army) • Leader of opposition against Hamilton’s Bank (strict interp) • Worked w/ Jefferson to organize D-R Party First US Bank, Philadelphia

  5. President Madison & the Bank • Elected in 1808 • Allowed Bank of US to expire in 1811 (20 years after founding) • During War of 1812, quickly realized how hard it was to fight war without money • 1815 – asked Congress for new bank $1 gold coin, minted 2007

  6. Madison: Sliding to War • Madison tried to avoid war w/ Britain by repealing Non-Intercourse Acts • British, French continued to harass US shipping • Madison’s conflicts with “war hawks” Political cartoon on repeal

  7. “Warhawks” • Younger D-Rs from Western, Southern states (KY, TN, OH & NW Territories) • Too young to fight in Rev. War • Desired war against Britain (insults to national pride, etc) • Most important WHs: Speaker of House Clay, John Calhoun Henry Clay John C. Calhoun

  8. War of 1812 • Madison built public support for war • But not enough money spent preparing for war (army, navy, forts, militias) • US declared war on June 12, 1812 • “Mr. Madison’s War” • “Second War of Independence”

  9. War of 1812 • Causes of War • Impressment of Americans • American Resentment Against British • British Support of Native Americans Against American Frontier • American Desire for Canada, Florida

  10. Election of 1812 • Madison challenged by a D-R, DeWitt Clinton, who switched parties, over the War of 1812 • Federalists supported Clinton • Clinton ran as anti-war in NE, pro-war in South, West • Closer election than in 1808 Madison: 128 ECV Clinton: 89 ECV Popular Vote: Madison: 50.4% Clinton: 47.6%

  11. War of 1812: Federalist Opposition • Federalists opposed to war, esp. in New England • Engaged in smuggling w/ Canada • Refused to support troops • Hartford Convention, Dec. 1814 • Minority power to nullify federal laws when deemed to be unconstitutional • Secession of New England seriously debated • End of war = end of Federalist Party

  12. Treaty of Ghent, 1815 • Exchanged POWs • Established commissions to work on disputed issues • Trade • Fishing • Rush-Bagot Agreement (1818) • Treaty Line of 1818 • All lands captured by British, US returned to previous owners • Peace! Signing of the Treaty of Ghent

  13. War of 1812: Fun Facts • Commodore Oliver Perry • Battle of Lake Erie, 1813 (saved Ohio Valley, opened Canada to invasion) • “We have met the enemy…” • Francis Scott Key & the Star Spangled Banner • Prisoner exchange late in war • British bombardment of Fort McHenry, outside Baltimore Key, from the British ship

  14. War of 1812: Fun Facts • Battle of New Orleans (Jan, 1815) • News travels slowly… • Andrew Jackson, US Commander • Battle: British are mauled • Jackson becomes national hero

  15. 1815: Turning Point in US History • Upsurge in nationalism • Upsurge in industrialization • Upsurge in western settlement • National attention focused on internal development

More Related