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Rossiter Johnson - A History, of the War of 1812-15 Between the United States and Great Britain

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Rossiter Johnson A History, of the War of 1812-15 Between the United States and Great Britain
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Rossiter Johnson
A History, of the War of 1812-15 Between the United States and Great Britain
Published by Good Press 2019 EAN 4064066183950 Table of Contents - photo 1
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066183950
Table of Contents

DETAILED CONTENTS.
Table of Contents

CHAPTER I.
Causes of the War, British Feeling toward
the United States, Indian Troubles,
4.Impressment of Seamen, The Decrees and Orders in Council,
13.Declaration of War,
CHAPTER II.
The Detroit Campaign, Attitude of
Political Parties, Capture of
Michilimackinac, Engagements at the River Raisin and Maguaga,
31.Battle of Chicago,
CHAPTER III.
Fights with the Indians, Harrison's March
to Fort Wayne, Defence of Fort
Madison,
CHAPTER IV.
The Battle of Queenstown, Expedition
against Ogdensburg, Elliott captures two War-vessels,
48.Gathering of Forces on the Niagara, Battle of Queenstown,
50.Death of General Brock,
CHAPTER V.
War on the Ocean, The President and the Little Belt,
62.The President and the Belvidera, The
Constitution and the Guerriere, The
Wasp and the Frolic, The United States and the Macedonian,
76.The Constitution and the Java,
CHAPTER VI.
Minor Battles in the West, Fight at
Frenchtown,
CHAPTER VII.
War on the Lakes, Preliminary Operations,
99.Expedition against York, Capture
of Fort George, Battle of Stony
Creek,
CHAPTER VIII.
Battle of the Thames, 140Harrison's Advance, Proctor's Retreat
The
Battle, Results
of the Campaign,
CHAPTER IX.
Wilkinson's Expedition, Position of the
Troops, Descent of the St. Lawrence, 152Battle of Chrysler's
Field, Cost of the Campaign,
Capture of Fort Niagara,
CHAPTER X.
War in the South, Fight in Delaware
Bay, Burning of Havre de Grace, Georgetown, and Fredericktown,
Destruction of Hampton,
Fight at Burnt
Corn Creek, Jackson's Campaign,
Fights at Tallus-chatches, Talladega, the Hillabee Towns, Autosse,
and Econochaca,
CHAPTER XI.
Naval Battles of 1813, The
Chesapeake and the Shannon, The Argus and the Pelican,
Decatur Blockaded at New
London,
CHAPTER XII.
Privateers, Jefferson's Opinion
of them, Some of their
Captures, and some of their Battles, The Yankee's Laughable
Exploit,
CHAPTER XIII.
Peace Negotiations, Condition
of Affairs at the Opening of the Third Year, Congressional
Appropriations, 224Russian Offers of Mediation, Jackson's
Preparations,


A HISTORY OF THE WAR OF 181215.
Table of Contents



CHAPTER I.CAUSES OF THE WAR.
Table of Contents
Franklin's PredictionBritish Feeling toward the United StatesThe Unsurrendered PostsIndian TroublesImpressment of SeamenThe Decrees and Orders in CouncilDeclaration of War.
T he offender, says an Italian proverb, never forgives; and it is a singular fact that the deepest resentments and the most implacable hatreds are not those arising from a sense of injuries received, but from injuries inflicted. The victim of a deliberate wrong seldom treasures up a purpose of revenge, or demands anything more than a restoration of his rights; but the oppressor always hates those who have escaped from his oppression.
That wise old philosopher, Ben Franklin, who died within seven years after the acknowledgment of our country as a separate nation in 1783, foresaw, even then, what did not take place till more than twenty years after his death. He declared that the war which had just closed in the surrender of Cornwallis was only the war of Revolution, and that the war of Independence was yet to be fought. When, in June, 1785, George III. received John Adams as United States Minister at his court, he said: "I was the last man in the kingdom, Sir, to consent to the independence of America; but, now it is granted, I shall be the last man in the world to sanction a violation of it." If the King was sincere in this declaration, he must have hadas Lincoln said of himself when Presidentvery little influence with the Administration; for, almost from the first, there was systematic disregard of the rights of the new nation, with an evident purpose to humiliate her people and cripple their commerce.
It was hard for the British Ministry and British commanders to realize that those whom they had so lately attempted to chastise as rebels, that they might again tax them as subjects, were now, after their triumph in a long war, and by the terms of a solemn treaty, entitled to the same privileges on the ocean, and the same courtesies in diplomacy, that were accorded to the oldest nation of Europe. They knew as little of the spirit of the American people and the mighty destinies within the coming century, as of the resources of the vast continent which lay behind that thin line of civilization along the Atlantic coast.
This failure to realize, or reluctance to admit, that the people of America were no longer British subjects, and that the United States was an independent nation, was forcibly illustrated in England's disregard, for thirty years, of an important portion of the Treaty of 1783. It was there stipulated that the military posts on our western frontier should be surrendered to our Government. Yet not only did the British forces retain possession of them, but from them they supplied the Indians with arms and ammunition, and instigated savage hostilities against the American settlements. Attempts have been made to deny this, but the proof is unquestionable.
Lord Dorchester, Governor of Canada, called a council of the Indian tribes, engaged to supply them with munitions of war, encouraged them to enmity against the United States, and gave them to understand that they would have the co-operation of his Government. These facts were published in British newspapers, and when the British Minister was asked to account for them, he could give no satisfactory answer. In pursuance of this policy, when war broke out, in 1812, the English commanders not only employed Indian allies, but offered and paid a regular bounty for American scalps. It seems incredible that such things could have been done, only seventy years ago, by one of the most enlightened governments on earth. And yet in our own day we have seen the performance repeated, when the English in South Africa armed the native savages with the best English rifles, that they might make war upon the peaceful and industrious Boers of the Transvaal Republic.
But our people had a grievance, of more than twenty years' standing, which was even more serious than this. While the frontiersman was contending with British treachery and Indian ferocity, which combined to hinder the development of our inland resources, the American sailorthen the best in the world, as was proved by the result of the warwas confronted by a monstrous policy intended to check our growing commerce and recruit the English navy at our expense.
England was at this time the greatest commercial nation in the world. Her merchant ships and whalers were found on every sea, gathering and distributing the productions of every land. In herself she was but an island, not larger than one of our Statesa very beautiful and fertile island, it is true; but if her jurisdiction had not extended beyond its borders, she would have been hardly more important than Switzerland or Sweden. But in her colonies and her commerce she was powerful. And now the finest of those colonies, casting off her authority in the only successful rebellion ever waged against it, were rapidly building up a mercantile marine that threatened to rival her own. They had thousands of miles of seacoast, with innumerable fine harbors; they had behind them, not a crowded island, but a virgin continent; the construction of their government and society was such that the poorest man before the mast might not unreasonably hope some day to command a ship. With all this, they were not involved in the wars which were then distracting Europe.
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