|
Guy Carleton | Jay's
Treaty | Black
Loyalists | Alexander
Mackenzie | Simon Fraser |
David Thompson |
John Graves Simcoe |
Captain George Vancouver |
The Northwest Company |
Prevost's Conciliation |
Tecumseh |
The War of 1812
| Lord Selkirk |
Newfoundland |
Constitution Act 1791
The war of 1812 was a war that the
British and the Americans were waiting for since the end
of the Revolutionary War. Tensions and confrontations
had come and gone since 1782 and war just barely avoided
at times but by 1812 the issues and passions caught up
with the politics. The war was a side show of the
Napoleonic wars raging in Europe and was declared by the
United States against Great Britain.
England had been
desperately trying to blockade France and French
controlled Europe with naval power and claimed the right
to board American ships in search of sailors of British
origin and forcibly remove them. Britain also was
attempting to prevent any trade between France and her
allies. The other main point of contention was American
complaints about British encouragement of Indian
resistance to American expansion into the Ohio and
Mississippi valleys.
On June 18, 1812
President James Madison declared war on Great
Britain. Madison was from the anti-British, pro-French
fraction that Jefferson had lead for years. The
expansion of the U.S. had taken pace quickly under
Jefferson with the purchase of the Louisiana Territory
and the belief in manifest destiny or that all of North
America would become a pat of the United States was
gaining hold in Washington. The U.S. believed that it
would be an easy adventure to defeat the merge British
forces and Canadian Militia stationed in the British
colonies. The initial attacks however were not effective
or successful and the British quickly captured Detroit.
The first Canadian
hero to emerge from this war was Sir Isaac Brook who had
become the commander in chief of the forces in Upper
Canada. He acted quickly and decisively and defeated the
American forces arrayed against him. It was not until
October 13, 1812 when Brook led a successful
counteraction at Queenston Heights and once again turned
back the Americans, that his command end when he was
shot by a sharpshooter and he died.
The second figure to
emerge for this war was Laura Secord who overheard
American soldiers discussing their plans while occupying
her house and made her way through to the British and
relayed all of the enemies plans. The result was a
British victory and the capture of almost 600 Americans
as they were attempting to capture Beaver Dam in the
Niagara area.
The war dragged on
until December of 1814, with victories for both sides,
when a peace treaty was signed and the war ended. The
news of the peace did not reach North America until 1815
after more fighting had occurred.
Canada had held off
the Americans and a the birth of a new national
consciences began to form. This was the last war between
Canada and Britain. If the Americans had successfully
invaded Canada it is unlikely that they would have given
it back to Britain after the war and that it would have
been absorbed by the U.S.. |