2 Results Of 1812
July 19, 1812: First Battle of Sackets Harbor in New York. Result: American victory. July 31, 1812: Naval battle between a small American schooner, USS Julia, and two large British ships, HMS Earl of Moira and HMS Duke of Gloucester, on the St. Lawrence River in New York. The War of 1812 was the second war between the United States and Great Britain. The United States won its independence in the first war—the American Revolution. Neither country won anything important in.
The actual causes of the War of 1812 are difficult to determine, in part because much of the war-time propaganda obscured the true causes.
That being said, most historians don’t believe there was a single cause but rather a variety of causes, some of which were official while others were unofficial.
The official causes were originally listed in a message that President James Madison sent to Congress on June 1, 1812, in which he listed complaints about British behavior toward America.
According to an article by the Office of the Historian on the U.S. Department of State’s website, the true causes are varied but are evident in the treaty that ended the war, the Treaty of Ghent, which was signed in 1814:
“On Christmas Eve British and American negotiators signed the Treaty of Ghent, restoring the political boundaries on the North American continent to the status quo ante bellum, establishing a boundary commission to resolve further territorial disputes, and creating peace with Indian nations on the frontier. As the Ghent negotiations suggested, the real causes of the war of 1812, were not merely commerce and neutral rights, but also western expansion, relations with American Indians, and territorial control of North America.”
The following is a list and explanation of the possible causes of the War of 1812:
These complaints were:
Impressment of American sailors.
Continual harassment of American commerce by British warships.
British laws, known as Orders in Council, declaring blockades against American ships bound for European ports.
Attacks by Native-Americans on American frontiers believed to be instigated by British troops in Canada.
The unofficial causes were never mentioned publicly and instead have been pieced together by historians over the years.
The following is a list of the possible causes of the War of 1812:
Impressment:
Impressment is the act of forcing men into military service. Great Britain had a long history of using impressment but escalated this practice after the Napoleonic Wars began in 1803.
Between 1803 – 1812, the British Navy reportedly captured between 5,000 – 9,000 American sailors at sea and “pressed” them into their navy as a way to deal with manpower shortages (Borneman 20.)
Impressment of American seamen, illustration published in Harper’s Monthly Magazine, circa 1884
The issue of impressment caused a public outrage in America and is believed to be one of the main causes of the War of 1812.
Impressment became a popular issue in the press before it even appeared on President James Madison’s list of grievances against Britain in his June 1, 1812 message to Congress.
Yet, some historians now question how much of a factor impressement really was in the build up to the war. According to an article by John P. Deeben on the National Archives website, out of the total population of 3.9 to 7.2 million Americans, the impressment of fewer than 10,000 Americans between 1789 and 1815 was rather insignificant.
Furthermore, Americans sometimes practiced impressment themselves, such as the case with British seamen Charles Davis who was captured and forced to serve aboard the USS Constitution in 1811. (Deeben par 3.)
According to Denver Brunsman in his book The Evil Necessity, whether impressment was the cause of the War of 1812 or not, it definitely became the justification for it:
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“American historians have argued for generations about the causes of the War of 1812, from impressment and the Orders in Council to American expansionist desires and the rivalry between Republican and Federalist parties. One point is irrefutable: Impressment served as the key justification for the war once it began. On June 23, 1812, the British government repealed the Orders in Council without knowing (because of normal delays in transatlantic communication) that the United States had declared war on Britain five days earlier. Thereafter, America’s only remaining condition for peace was that Britain agree to stop impressing from American merchant ships.”
Republican politicians of the time often compared impressed American sailors to white slaves as a way to evoke strong public reactions. In fact, on November 29, 1811, the House Foreign Relations Committee report charged that Britain “enslaves our seamen.”
When the argument that British Orders in Council were infringing on American trade rights failed to ignite the public’s anger in the build up to the war, politicians began to lean even more heavily on the impressment issue.
British Orders-In-Council:
The Orders In Council in Great Britain were a series of Parliamentary Acts intended to gain control of the neutral merchant shipping trade with Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries.
When the Napoleonic Wars broke out between France and Great Britain in 1803, both sides tried to prevent neutral countries, such as the United States, from trading with the other in an attempt to deprive their opponent of supplies.
On January 7, 1807, Britain issued the following Order in Council:
“. . . it is hereby ordered, that no vessel shall be permitted to trade from one port to another, both which ports shall belong to, or be in the possession of France or her allies, or shall be so far under their control as that British vessels may not freely trade thereat; and the commanders of his majesty’s ships of war and privateers shall be, and are hereby instructed to warn every neutral vessel coming from any such port, and destined to another such port, to discontinue her voyage, and not to proceed to any such port; and any vessel, after being so warned, or any vessel coming from any such port after a reasonable time shall have been afforded for receiving information of this his majesty’s orders which shall be found proceeding to another such port, shall be captured and brought in, and together with her cargo, shall be condemned as lawful prize.”
This decree prohibited neutral ships from carrying goods between ports within Napoleon’s empire and declared that the Royal Navy would board any ship suspected of carrying goods to French ports and confiscate the contents to sell as prizes of war. The decree stated that any nation wishing to trade with closed ports must first pay transit duties.
This was followed by a second edict issued on November 11, 1807, which banned all neutral trade with any port on the European continent.
On December 17, 1807, Napoleon responded with the Milan Decree, which declared that the French navy would capture all ships trading with Great Britain or its colonies and confiscate their goods.
The British Orders In Council are considered one of the many causes of the War of 1812 and were listed on Madison’s list of grievances to Congress in 1812.
Yet some historians, such as Alan Taylor, doubt the orders in council were a factor at all in the declaration of war.
Alan Taylor argues in his book, The Civil War of 1812, that if the orders in council were the cause, there would have been an easy solution to the problem:
“Moreover, if the orders had been the sole and pressing cause for declaring war, the conflict would have been brief. On June 16, 1812, just before the Americans declared war, the British suspended the Orders in Council. They acted to improve a depressed economy in Britain and to avoid a costly war with America. Hastening the news by ship across the Atlantic to America, the British expected the Madison administration promptly to restore peace, as it would have done had the orders truly been the sole major cause of the war. But Madison and the Republican Congress fought on, citing impressed sailors and attacking Indians as enduring grievances” (Taylor 134.)
Taylor goes on to explain that politicians at first tried to use the Orders in Council as a way to drum up support for the war but the public was indifferent to the issue:
“At first, in November of 1811, the president and Congress did emphasize the British Orders in Council as a justification of war. But the complicated issues of maritime restrictions did not suffice to stir the common Americans needed to win elections, man privateers, and serve in the army. As the push for war intensified, Republicans turned up the rhetorical heat by emphasizing impressment as a primary grievance. Beginning in February, the nation’s most influential newspaper, the Aurora, devoted far more space to impressment than to the Orders in Council…Impressment also loomed large in Madison’s address of June 1, 1812, and larger still in the response by Calhoun and the House of Foreign Relations Committee” (Taylor 135.)
As the Orders in Council failed to ignite public outrage in the build up to the war, it became less of a focal point for Republican politicians and they instead started to focus their efforts on other issues like impressment.
Indian Attacks Instigated by the British in Canada:
A common complaint against the British at the time was that they were supplying Indian tribes of the Ohio Valley and the Great Lakes with weapons and were instigating Indian attacks against American settlements, according to an article on the American Battlefield Trust website:
“The British, eager to slow the United States’ rise, supported an ‘Indian State’ around the Great Lakes to check American expansion and create a buffer for British Canada. Fur trade in the region was booming, giving the British added incentive to cooperate with the Native Americans. To facilitate this, the British occasionally provided the Native tribes with arms and supplies. These small provisions were exaggerated, in turn, by indignant and worried Americans. Continued British involvement was seen as an affront to American sovereignty.”
To that avail, some politicians, such as Thomas Jefferson, argued that conquering Canada and expelling the British from the American frontier was the only way to end these Indian attacks, according to Taylor:
“To render the war popular, Jefferson advised Madison that he needed, above all, ‘to stop Indian barbarities. The conquest of Canada will do this.’” (Taylor 137.)
In reality, many historians believe the claims of Indian attacks being instigated by the British were exaggerated and were merely an excuse to conquer and annex Canada.
A scene on the frontiers as practiced by the humane British and their worthy allies, illustration by William Charles, published in Philadelphia circa 1812. This cartoon may have been prompted by the August 1812 Native American attack on Fort Dearborn and the purchase of American scalps there by British Colonel Proctor.
As Troy Bickham points out in his book, The Weight of Vengeance: The United States, The British Empire and the War of 1812, conflicts between the colonists and the American Indians, whom the British had a long-standing alliance with, were nothing new in North America and they had never been grounds for war with Britain in the past so it is unlikely they would be in 1812.
Expansionism:
American expansion into British-held Canada is considered yet another cause of the War of 1812. If America could acquire Canada, it would not only double its land mass but also banish the American Indian’s greatest allies, the British.
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Without support from the British, it would be difficult for the American Indians to attack American settlers or to stop American settlers from seizing the native’s lands in the north and the west, thus allowing for greater American expansion, according to Alastair Sweeney in his book Fire Along the Frontier: Great Battles of the War of 1812:
“For many Americans, especially those with their eyes on western property, 1812 was a war to seize and control vast tracts of land, and kick out the Indian inhabitants. As such it was a form of block busting. In this respect, the War of 1812 was astonishingly successful” (Sweeney 20.)
In addition, there were also a number of financial and strategic military reasons to expand into Canada, according to Taylor:
“Many Republican Congressmen longed to oust the British from the continent and to annex Canada…Expansionists argued that annexing Canada would compensate Americans with land for their commercial losses at sea and for the military cost of invasion. Annexation would also deprive the British fleet of a valuable source of timber. Above all, the conquest would sever the British connection to the Indians who blocked American expansion westward.” (Taylor 137.)
Yet, Taylor argues that some historians believe expansion was merely a means of waging war, not a reason for starting it:
“Historians have long debated the primary cause of the declaration of war. Early in the twentieth century, they stressed the longing of western politicians to conquer Canada…But subsequent historians discounted the strength of western interests and of the drive to seize Canada. ‘The conquest of Canada was primarily a means of waging war, not a reason for starting it,’ Reginald Horsman claims. Stressing that the three western states had only 10 of the House’s 142 members, these scholars insist that southern and Pennsylvania Republicans pushed the war and that they had no particular lust for Canada. According to this interpretation, these congressmen primarily reacted against the British meddling with American ships on the high seas. Stressing the British Orders In Council, these scholars down-play all other issues, even impressment.” (Taylor 134.)
Reginald Horsman argues, in his book The Causes of the War of 1812, that historians often quote the speeches of war hawks of the time, such as Henry Clay, Richard M. Johnson, Peter B. Porter and Felix Grundy, to support the argument that expansion was a cause of the war yet, if you examine their speeches to Congress in the build up to the war, the dominating theme of these speeches are maritime rights, particularly the right to export American produce without interference.
In addition, not everyone was on board with the idea of conquering Canada at the time. Many politicians felt that acquiring and maintaining such a large amount of land wasn’t the best idea for America because it would be too expensive and difficult to manage and might lead to the creation of more northern states which would threaten the country’s regional balance of power.
As a solution, a plan was proposed to use any newly conquered land “as a bargaining chip in a peace treaty, restoring Canada to Britain in exchange for maritime concessions.” (Taylor 139.)
This idea made the conquest of Canada even less appealing though because many wondered why the government should invest so much time, money and resources into something that they were just going to give away at the end of the war.
Congress even went so far as to vote on a plan to create a temporary provisional government in Canada until it could be returned to British rule in a peace treaty but the bill was defeated, with 16 opposed and 14 in favor.
Even though Americans were uncertain what to do with Canada, they invaded anyway. Without a clear plan in place, Canadians were unwelcoming of American troops and viewed them as invaders rather than liberators of British rule, greatly hampering the war effort there.
American Sovereignty:
In his book, The Weight of Vengeance: The United States, The British Empire and the War of 1812, Troy Bickham argues that the War of 1812 was really about America asserting its independence from Great Britain once and for all.
Bickham states that the United State’s long list of grievances against Great Britain in its declaration of war all boils down to this one single issue:
“Although each issue was important and merits individual investigation, treating them only as a checklist misses the larger subject at stake: sovereignty of the United States in a postcolonial world…Madison’s war message is a document that aims for consensus – or at least enough agreement to pass a declaration of war – and so it selects those issues on which a majority of members of Congress could agree. And those issues all speak to a single theme: equality of the United States among European nations and sovereignty over its own affairs….” (Bickham 21)
Bickham goes on to say that the war was not merely about British impressment of American sailors or the Royal Navy interfering in American trade with France but was instead about stopping Great Britain, and other European nations, from believing they could do these things in the first place:
“The government of the United States and its supporters believed that for too long Britain had directed the Anglo-American relationship, fostering deep-seated resentment for what many believed was Britain’s continuing imperial attitude. Declaring war in June of 1812 was an American attempt to redefine that relationship and turn the United States into a leading protagonist” (Bickham 21.)
Yet, other historians, such as Sweeney, don’t agree and argue that the war was about expansion, not independence:
“Some have argued that 1812 was the second American Revolutionary War. It was not. It was the first American Expansionary War. In the war of independence, France had to step in to save the colonists, a fact that severely rankled the British. But in 1812 there was no rich Oncle Louis across the seas to send his navy and regiments of troops to Yorktown. There was a rapacious new emperor named Napoleon, whose only real interests were European. In exchange for cash, and for attacking the British in North America while he invaded Russia, Bonaparte donated Florida and Louisiana to his American friends, and gave them a western destiny” (Sweeney 23.)
If American sovereignty was a cause for war, it’s not clear how much of a factor it was since it was never deemed an official cause and was never listed in Madison’s grievances against the British.
To learn more about the War of 1812, check out the following article on the Best Books About the War of 1812.
Sources:
“War of 1812-1815.” Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, United States Department of State, history.state.gov/milestones/1801-1829/war-of-1812
Bickham, Troy. The Weight of Vengeance: The United States, The British Empire and The War of 1812. Oxford University Press, 2012.
Springer, Paul J. “The Causes of the War of 1812.” Foreign Policy Research Institute, 31 March. 2017, www.fpri.org/article/2017/03/causes-war-1812/
Borneman, Walter. 1812: The War That Forged a Nation. Harper Perennial, 2004.
Taylor, Alan. The Civil War of 1812: American Citizens, British Subjects, Irish Rebels, & Indian Allies. Vintage Books, 2010.
“Two Wars for Independence.” American Battlefield Trust, www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/two-wars-independence
“The War of 1812 Could Have Been the War of Indian Independence.” Indian Country Today, 17 May. 2017, newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/archive/the-war-of-1812-could-have-been-the-war-of-indian-independence-NgDgX3JKHEaPWtiUIyMxBA/
“Entanglement in World Affairs.” The Mariner’s Museum, www.marinersmuseum.org/sites/micro/usnavy/08/08d.htm
Brunsman, Denver. The Evil Necessity: British Naval Impressment in the Eighteenth Century Atlantic World. University of Virginia Press, 2013.
Deeben, John P. “The War of 1812: Stoking the Fires.” National Archives, www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2012/summer/1812-impressment.html
Sweeney, Alastair. Fire Along the Frontier: Great Battles of the War of 1812. Dundurn Press, 2012.
Foreman, Amanda. “The British View the War of 1812 Quite Differently Than Americans Do.” Smithsonian Magazine, Smithsonian Institute, July. 2014, www.smithsonianmag.com/history/british-view-war-1812-quite-differently-americans-do-180951852/