A History, of the War of 1812-15 Between the United States and Great Britain
CONTENTS
Franklin's Prediction—British Feeling toward the United States—The Unsurrendered Posts—Indian Troubles—Impressment of Seamen—The Decrees and Orders in Council—Declaration of War.
The 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 had—as Lincoln said of himself when President—very 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.
Rossiter Johnson
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DETAILED CONTENTS.
A HISTORY OF THE WAR OF 1812-15.
CHAPTER I.—CAUSES OF THE WAR.
CHAPTER II. THE DETROIT CAMPAIGN.
CHAPTER III. FIGHTS WITH THE INDIANS.
CHAPTER IV. THE 'BATTLE OF QUEENSTOWN.
CHAPTER V. WAR ON THE OCEAN.
CHAPTER VI. MINOR BATTLES IN THE WEST.
CHAPTER VII. WAR ON THE LAKES.
CHAPTER VIII. BATTLE OF THE THAMES.
CHAPTER IX. WILKINSON'S EXPEDITION.
CHAPTER X. WAR IN THE SOUTH.
CHAPTER XI. NAVAL BATTLES OF 1813
CHAPTER XII. PRIVATEERS.
CHAPTER XIII. PEACE NEGOTIATIONS.—CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE CREEKS.
CHAPTER XIV. BROWN'S CAMPAIGN ON THE NIAGARA.
CHAPTER XV. THE SECOND INVASION OF NEW YORK.
CHAPTER XVI. OPERATIONS ALONG THE COAST.
CHAPTER XVII. THE WASHINGTON CAMPAIGN.
CHAPTER XVIII. NAVAL BATTLES OF 1814.
CHAPTER XIX. THE HARTFORD CONVENTION.
CHAPTER XX. THE CAMPAIGN ON THE GULF COAST.
CHAPTER XXI. PEACE.
INDEX