the second war for independence and the upsurge of nationalism, 1812-1824
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The Second War for Independence and the Upsurge of Nationalism, 1812-1824. Chapter 12. Warhawks Push for War. June 1, 1812, after Congressional pressure, Madison asks for declaration of war against Britain - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Chapter 12
THE SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE
AND THE UPSURGE OF NATIONALISM,
1812-1824
Henry Clay (Warhawk)
June 1, 1812, after Congressional pressure, Madison asks for declaration of war against Britain
Britain repealed orders in council June 23, which would have stopped war, but neither side knew what the other was doing (note: last battle of war will have same odd twist)
War vote along party lines, but many New Englanders opposed it, most remaining federalists were in NE
Real reason for War? Madison listed Indian problems, ship
seizures, British ships in US waters Madison probably saw long term British
aim of elimination of America as trade rival, and war as only solution
WARHAWKS PUSH FOR WAR
Neither side really wanted to fight Happened due to poor
communications between the US and Great Britain Most New Englanders had seen the
Royal Navy up close and personal and realized the “nature of the beast”
The War Hawks from west of the Appalachians cared little about naval affairs, and bragged that they could take Canada easily and end the war
The United States had more or less successfully stayed out of the British/French conflicts from Washington’s second administration until 1812
The combined pressures of the new Western Congressmen and impatience with British naval policy finally tipped the balance in favor of War
MR. MADISON’S WAR
US Navy Weak by Comparison to Brits due
to Jefferson Jefferson had authorized no capital
ship construction British would blockade American
ships in harbor, outnumbered hopelessly
Constitution, Congress, Constellation, and President
Objectives Conquer Canada
Many expected Canadians to support American invasion, wrong!!
Using militia, no real American professional Army to speak of
Spring 1812 to 1814, series of unsuccessful attacks on Canada
Three times (Fort Detroit, Queenston,Heights, Lake Champlain) Americans defeated or refused to attack across border into Canada
GREAT LAKES
At war’s beginning, neither side had a significant naval force on the Great Lakes, and bringing in ships from the sea was impossible (Niagara Falls)
Both the British and American ships were built on site, which favored the Americans Could enlist shipbuilders,
while Brits shipbuilding industry was 3000 miles away
SHIPBUILDING
Napoleon defeated, British commit new troops to war in America
Lake Champlain10,000 British Troops under Gen Prevost advance south from Montreal intending to cut North in half and isolate New England (convinced many in New England opposed the war (true), would push for peace (not proven)
Prevost felt he had to control Lake Champlain first, failed due to US troop resistance at Plattsburgh and Naval squadron under (US Admiral) Thomas McDonough.
US victory on Lake Champlain caused Prevost to abandon plan return to Canada
BRITISH OFFENSIVE
Brits sail from Bermuda into Chesapeake up to Washington, DC, win huge at Bladensburg, against militia, attack the Capitol
Brit troops eat Madison’s dinner, burned the White House
Brits attack Baltimore later, fail to take Fort McHenry
WASHINGTON AND FORT MCHENRY
“[I desire] to have a flag so large that the British will have no difficulty in seeing it from a distance." - Major George Armistead
General John S. Str icker and Commodore Joshua Barney ordered two flags from Mary Pickersgi l l , a wel l -known flagmaker in Balt imore. Made of wool One was largest garrison flag ever flown Measured 30 feet high by 42 feet long Other flag, called a "storm flag," measured 17 feet by 25 feet.
Larger of the two flags had str ipes two feet wide, and stars 24 inches from point to point. At that t ime, i t was the pract ice to add one star and str ipe for each new state join ing the Union. In 1814, the United States flag had 15 stars and 15 str ipes.
30' x 42' flag was the one that Francis Scott Key saw on the morning of September 14, 1814
Late evening hours of September 13th, the final entry in the HMS Volcano's log for that day indicated the number of shel ls expended since 12 Noon: "10 [pm] heavy rain with squal ls , fur led sai ls , firing at intervals. Midnight rain. Fired 72 13- inch & 70 10- inch shel ls & 4 carcasses"
Total of 146 shel ls thrown in a twelve hour period Had the British captured Fort McHenry and sailed past the Fort,
the carcass would have been used to set Baltimore afire.
THE ATTACK ON FORT MCHENRY
O say, can you see, by the dawn's early l ight,What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the peri lous fight,O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming!And the rockets ' red glare, the bombs bursting in air,Gave proof through the night that our flag was st i l l there:O say, does that star-spangled banner yet waveO'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
On the shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep,Where the foe's haughty host in dread si lence reposes,What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep,As it fitful ly blows, half conceals, half discloses?Now it catches the gleam of the mornings' first beam,In ful l glory reflected now shines on the stream:'Tis the star-spangled banner! O long may it waveO'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
And where is that band who so vauntingly sworeThat the havoc of war and the battle's confusionA home and a country should leave us no more?Their blood has washed out their foul footsteps pollution.No refuge could save the hireling and slaveFrom the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave:And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth waveO'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
O thus be it ever, when freemen shall standBetween their loved homes and the war's desolation!Blest with victory and peace, may the heaven-rescued landPraise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nationThen conquer we must when our cause it is justAnd this be our motto: "In God is our trust."And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall waveO'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER
August - December 1814 - negotiations in Belgium between US and Britain
Final treaty - “Status Quo, Ante-Bellum” December 24, 1814
War in Europe over issue of neutral ity., trade was dead issue
Battle of New Orleans - “Andrew Jackson, superstar” January 8, 1815 (war over, but no one
in US knows it!!) Veteran British Army under Pakenham
sail up Mississippi, attacks New Orleans American Army of regulars, militia,
Jean Lafitte’s pirates shred Pakenham, kill 2000 Brits in an hour lose 13 Americans!
Jackson becomes a household name, will ascend to Presidency, aided by reputation as the hero of New Orleans, most dramatic American victory of the War (albeit fought after war was over)
TREATY OF GHENT
Name given by historians to James Monroe’s two terms in officeMonroe consciously avoided controversy trying to heal divide caused by Hartford Convention, Federalist/Republican conflicts
Feelings not as good as the phrase sounds, many serious national divisive issues still
THE “ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS”
Was the bank legal (Constitutional)in the first place? Not specifically mentioned in
Constitution Marshall (again writing unanimous
opinion) , using a “Broad” or “Loose” interpretation says “yes” under “necessary and proper” clause
Can Maryland (or any state) tax the Bank (or any Federal agency within its jurisdiction) no - Federal Government under
Constitution is supreme within its sphere, therefore not subject to state regulation
“the power to tax involves the power to destroy”
MCCULLOCH V. MARYLAND
Many Republicans dismayed (remember John Marshall was a Federalist and would remain Chief Justice for 30 years)
By 1819, Bank was out of favor (again) blamed for tight money policy leading to the Panic of 1819 Bank had contracted credit, making money scarcer Marshall’s “McCullough” decision was seen by some as
putting the Bank beyond the regulatory power of any state government (and this really irritated those who saw the bank as the private money machine of its investors, and principally responsive to Northeastern investors an d their interests)
Will fuel Andrew Jackson’s hatred of the “Rich Man’s Bank”, as he will suffer serious financial reverses as a result of the panic
IMPACT OF MCCULLOCH V. MARYLAND
Three states had been admitted as slave states since Louisiana Purchase, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama No controversy over slavery’s legality from North Missouri applies for statehood, 1819 New York Republican introduces amendment to the
proposed Missouri constitution to outlaw slavery in Missouri
By Northwest Ordinance, slavery had been prohibited in new states north of the Ohio, but that has also included territories East of the Mississippi. Missouri was west of the Mississippi and, for almost it’s entire expanse, North of the Ohio River
MISSOURI COMPROMISE
Accepted by House rejected by Senate strictly along sectional lineshot issue
Sectionalism drove the debateNorthern position
admission of another slave state would give slave states a majority of votes in the Senate (at the time there were 11 slave and 11 free states)
would set precedent for more slave states above the Ohio river latitude
Southern positionNorth conspiring to destroy the Union and end slaveryNorth pushing South to aggression to save slavery
MISSOURI COMPROMISE (CONT.)
Really several proposals lumped together under one name Admit Maine as a free state
(retaining Senate balance) Bar slavery in any new states lying
above Missouri’s southern border (latitude 36º 30')
Admit Missouri as a Slave state Still more conflict
Missouri draft constitution proposed to prohibited free blacks from entering the state
clashed with Constitutional provision that citizens of any state had same rights in all states
Henry Clay got agreement that provided Missouri would not discriminate against citizens of other states, but left issue of whether free blacks were citizens up in the air
MISSOURI COMPROMISE (CONT.)
Viewed as a Southern victory by many, but: It did seem to
acknowledge the Congressional right to regulate slavery (not in the Constitution)
Did bar slavery from a lot of the new territory of Louisiana ( remember most of the rest of the southern part of the continent was still under Spain’s control as part of Mexico in 1821)
MISSOURI ADMITTED
Few conflicts and great Secretary of State (John Quincy Adams)
Rush-Bagot treaty (1817) - greatly limited number of ships either US or Britain could maintain on the Great Lakes
British American Convention of 1818 Restored American fishing rights in the
Grand Banks of Newfoundland Defined the Canadian-American border
from Lake of the Woods to the Rockies Declared “Oregon” (a whole lot more
territory than the boundaries of the state today!!) Open to both nations’ citizens
Formalized secure northern border and access to the Pacific (remember, California still Spanish in 1818)
FOREIGN POLICY UNDER MONROE
No one sure 1812-1818 what borders of east and West Florida were
Spain claimed both, but US had incorporated part of West Florida into Louisiana, and considered the rest as part of the Mississippi Territory
1818, Andrew Jackson invades East Florida (using pretext that Indians were being allowed to raid from there and protected by Spain, and that it was also a fugitive slave haven) (both somewhat true!) Hanged two British subjects captured forts, hanged Osceola’s brother
(also called the Prophet of the Seminoles) Grossly exceeded his authority, but Monroe and Adams refuse to court
martial him as some suggested, seeing greater opportunity Adams negotiates treaty with Spain - terms
East Florida ceded to US Spain renounces claims to West Florida agreed to border with Spain (left US free to adventure in Oregon, while
agreeing that Texas was not part of Louisiana Purchase)
ADAMS-ONIS TREATY, 1819
John Quincy Adams - expansionist, believed in Manifest Destiny before the term was invented Knew Spain was concerned about US intentions regarding he rest
of North American continent west to Pacific Knew Spain was discussing with Russian Tsar using the Holy
Alliance (European, Russian dominated, alliance dedicated to supporting Christian Monarchies throughout the world from revolution) to crush ant-Spanish revolutionary spirit in South America.
Agreed with proposal by British Prime Minister Canning, that US and Brits jointly propose to any European interference in South America
MONROE DOCTRINE
Adams favored American unilateral proposal as stronger statement Wanted to seem independent from British influence Brits had made a promise not to annex any current Spanish
territory part of the agreement, but that would limit US intentions toward Texas and other Spanish holdings, a concession Adams was unwilling to make
Formally promulgated as part of State of the Union address by Monroe to Congress December 2, 1823
Written largely by Adams, whose foreign policy it reflects. It stipulates: US would abstain from any European wars unless American interests
were involved The “American Continents” are not subjects for future colonization by
any European power The US would consider any such attempt as an “unfriendly act”
MONROE DOCTRINE (CONT.)
Then Europeans scoffed at it as an
empty statement Holy Alliance, afraid of Brit
Navy, not the US, stayed out of Spanish Western hemisphere affairs
It was a claim by the US to western hemisphere supremacy
Now Has been the cornerstone of
US foreign and hemispheric policy ever since, added to by Theodore Roosevelt and referred to by practically every President since as if it were the 11th commandment
IMPACT OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE