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War of 1812

War of 1812. A. Election of 1808. The Election. James Madison wins Two Terms 1809-1817. B. Mr. Madison as President. Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810). Replaced Non-Intercourse Act that expired in 1810 Provisions: No trade with Britain or France unless they agreed to honor neutrality

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War of 1812

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  1. War of 1812

  2. A. Election of 1808

  3. The Election • James Madison wins • Two Terms • 1809-1817

  4. B. Mr. Madison as President

  5. Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810) • Replaced Non-Intercourse Act that expired in 1810 • Provisions: • No trade with Britain or France unless they agreed to honor neutrality • The 1st to agree, the U.S. would resume trade with • Madison angry • proved the U.S. could not survive without Britain & France

  6. Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810) • Napoleon takes advantage of the new law & agrees to honor neutrality • Hopes to force a war between Britain & the U.S. • Trade resumes with France • Britain resumes attacking American ships

  7. Dealing with the Natives • Americans are expanding to the West • Indian Intercourse Act (1790): U.S. could only acquire land ceded by the Indians • Tecumseh & the Prophet were the leaders of a new Northwest Confederation of Indians in Ohio & Indiana • Began an active resistance movement with the assistance of the British British General Brock Meets with Tecumseh

  8. Battle of Tippecanoe (1811) • General William HenryHarrison is the governor ofthe Indiana Territory • Treaty of Ft. Wayne (1809):Indians signed away 3 million acres of land to the U.S. • Tecumseh & Shawnees begin a war against Harrison • 1811: Tecumseh goes to the South to recruit the Southern tribes • The Prophet fought against Harrison and was defeated and killed at Tippecanoe • This made Harrison a national hero & Tecumseh formed an alliance with the British

  9. War Hawks vs. Federalists • War Hawks – those who wanted to go to war with Britain from the D-R Party • Mainly from the West & South • Hoped to acquire more land for more expansion • End attacks coming from Native Americans • Two main War Hawks: Henry Clay (KY) John C. Calhoun (SC)

  10. War Hawks vs. Federalists • Federalists did not want to go to war • Trade with Britain benefitted them • Mainly New England merchants that were against the war • Main Federalist: Daniel Webster (NH)

  11. C. War is Declared

  12. War is Declared • President Madison asked Congress for a Declaration of War on June 1, 1812 • His Reasons: 1. British Impressment of American Soldiers & other violations of neutrality 2. Pressure from the War Hawks 3. British arming of Hostile Native Americans • Congress declared war 2 weeks later

  13. Advantages: Britain was fighting in Europe too Disadvantages: Army was ill-trained and ill-disciplined Navy had 12 ships compared to Britain’s 800 Had some really old generals No Draft = No men Financially Unprepared No tariffs = no income Regional Disagreements Fighting the British & the Native Americans American Advantages/Disadvantages

  14. Essex Junto • Extreme Federalists who believed that this was an unjust war and worked to support the British • Supplied food & money to Britain (mainly in Canada) fighting against the U.S. • New England refused to help war effort – governors would not allow militias to fight out of their states • Referred to the war as “Mr. Madison’s War”

  15. D. The War

  16. The War Itself • Lasted from 1812-1815

  17. Major Events of the War • Washington, D.C. is burned down • The Star Spangled Banner is written

  18. Meeting in Dec 1814-Jan 1815 26 delegates from MA, RI, CT, VT, NH (Federalists) Met to discuss their grievances & seek redress b/c of the war Wanted amendments added to the Constitution Limit presidents to 1 term Need 2/3 majority for embargos & war No successive presidents from the same state Some radicals brought up secession Demands made moot by the end of the war Was the death knell of the Federalists – seen as traitors The Hartford Convention

  19. E. End of the War

  20. Treaty of Ghent • Neither side was winning • U.S. had trouble fighting, British distracted by France • Met in Ghent, Belgium to discuss a peace treaty • Signed December 24, 1814 • Provisions: • The status quo was restored

  21. Battle of New Orleans • Communication was slow – no one knew the war was over • Largest battle took place after the treaty was signed

  22. Effects of the War • Nationalism • Finally identify themselves as “Americans” • Growing pride in the nation • Nation starts to become more important than the states • Economic Independence • Developed own industries • Not relying on Europe for finished products

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