The Making of a Nation Program No. 37

Similar documents
President Madison s Dilemma: Protecting Sailors and Settlers

The War of 1812 Gets Under Way

Ch. 9.4 The War of 1812

Name: Date: War of 1812 Notes. 1. was elected President in President Madison wanted to stay neutral so that Americans could keep.

The War of 1812: Chapter 7, Section 2

US History, Ms. Brown Website: dph7history.weebly.com

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. War of 1812

Lesson: The War of Key Battles & the Effects of the War of Lauren Webb {a social studies life}

the War of 1812 is not just a war between Canada and the United States, Great Britain and the First Nations played a large part in the war the

New Government in Operation: The War of Level 1

The War of 1812 Webquest and Video Analysis- Key Directions: Complete the following questions using resources from the link listed below:

James Madison The War of CA 8 th Grade US History Standard 8.5.1

LESSON PLAN # 2 Key People, Places and Events. TOPIC: Locating information about important Western District people, places and events.

Vocabulary. Theatre of War Tecumseh Impressment William Henry Harrison War Hawk Elitist Paradox

Presidential Election of 1812

New Government in Operation. Level 2

The War of 1812 Parts 1-5

What are some major events leading to The War of 1812?

Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic. President Washington through President Monroe

Warm Up. 1) Complete the War of 1812 webquest that is located in Google Classroom. 2) You have 30 minutes to complete this assignment

What are some major events leading to The War of 1812?

SSUSH6: ANALYZE THE CHALLENGES FACED BY THE FIRST FIVE PRESIDENTS AND HOW THEY RESPONDED.

Facts about the War of 1812

The War of Impressment Strains Neutrality

Causes of the War. War of Frontier Pressures. The War Hawks. The American Military. Impressment 10/11/2012

The War of Causes of the War of 1812 The War Begins The Effects of the War on America

Chapter 9, Section 4 The War of 1812

The War of Grade Level: 4 6

Junior High History Chapter 16

Grade Distribution. Topographic Features. Strategic Passages 3/23/2018. Military Geography Exercise

Department of Political Science Center for Middle Eastern Studies Rutgers University

Guide to Reading. Reading Strategy Taking Notes As you read the section, re-create the diagram below and in the boxes describe each battle s outcome.

Chapter 16, Section 3 The War in the West

U.S. HISTORY PRE- REVOLUTION NAME: PERIOD: DUE DATE:

The War in Europe 5.2

THE CIVIL WAR LESSON TWO THE CONFEDERATE ARMY

Advantages for both sides. List advantages both sides had going into the War.

Guided Reading Activity 16-1

Chapter 7.3 The War Expands

Label Fort Sumter on your map

Election of Campaign a four-way split. Republicans defeat the splintered Democrat party, and the Do Nothing party who wanted to compromise

The American Civil War

THE WAR OF 1812 IN THE DARK. Smooth&Rifled

The Civil War Early Years of the War: Chapter 13, Section 2

The Civil War has Begun!

French and Indian War. The Seven Year War

Contents. Foreword by Donald E. Graves Preface Acknowledgments A Note on Terminology and Numbers

Chapter 16, Section 3

antebellumstudentsources.notebook January 30, 2016

Bell Quiz: Pages

Section 2 American Strengths and Weaknesses

The First Years of World War II

SS8H6b. Key Events of the

Struggles for Liberty

Station 1: The French Indian War Directions 1. Color the blank map labeled Map before French Indian War so it represents land ownership in North

Chapter 17. The Civil War. The Start of the Civil War. West Virginia/Virginia. Everyone thought that it would be a short & quick war

Jonathon Regan:

Dramatizing Dilemma 1: What Should President Adams Do to Protect American Ships?

Gerrymandering Elections of 1808 and 1812 Causes of War of 1812 War of 1812

As James Collins s story demonstrates, fighting in the South was vicious.

The Colonies. Boston New York Trenton/Princeton. Philadelphia Saratoga. South Carolina Yorktown X X

Students of History -

The Battle of Plattsburgh. hopes of achieving a significant victory in the two-year war between the United States and

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

The American Civil War

Table of Contents. American Revolution

Famous Women of the War Women Support the War Civil War Soldiers. Anaconda Plan. Battle of Bull Run. Battle of Antietam. Proclamation Lincoln

Directions: 1. Write vocabulary words on page Read and Summarize the major events by answering the guided questions

Chapter 16, Section 2 The War in the East

GUIDED READING CHAPTER 5: THE STRUGGLE FOR INDEPENDENCE (Page 1)

3/8/2011. Most of the world wasn t surprised when the war broke out, but some countries were better prepared than others.

The Revolutionary War

How did Military Rivalry contribute to the outbreak of war? L/O To consider how militarism led to increasing tensions between the two alliances

The Civil War Begins. The Americans, Chapter 11.1, Pages

DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS. Canadians in Battle - Dieppe

Title: : The Role of Citizens in the Defense of Baltimore during the War of Lesson Developed by: Jennifer Jones Frieman.

YEARS OF WAR. Chapters 6

Lesson 2- The Revolution Begins!

Key People. North vs. South Advantages. End of War & Grab Bag. Battles. Reconstruction

Chapter 6 War for Independence

The Civil War Webquest. Type in the following web address, feel free to look at the images and read the information

6/1/2009. On the Battlefields

Unit 1-5: Reading Guide. Canada and World War II

Chapter 6 Canada at War

World War II - Final

West Virginia. Copyright 2010 LessonSnips

U.S. HISTORY CIVIL WAR - SIMULATION TARGETS:

The British vs. The French in America

Emancipation Proclamation

Junior Ranger. Activity Book Ages Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail EXPERIENCE YOUR AMERICA

A Nation Torn Apart: The Civil War, Chapter 13

PREVIEW 12. Examining Claims in North America in 1796

Choose the letter of the best answer.

Early Defeats. -British capture all major colonial cities New York Philadelphia Boston Charleston

THE CIVIL WAR Part 2

The colonists prepared for war Colonial early warning system The Minutemen Lexington and Concord

Chapter 16, Section 1 The War Begins

REVOLUTIONARY WAR BATTLES CHROME BOOK ACTIVITY

Chapter 4: Revolutionary Pennsylvania

Transcription:

The Making of a Nation Program No. 37 James Madison Part 2 - Madison Declares War on Britain in 1812 From VOA Learning English, welcome to The Making of a Nation, our weekly program of American history for people learning English. I m Steve Ember. The United States declared war on Britain in 1812. It did so because Britain refused to stop seizing American ships that traded with France Britain's enemy in Europe. Sometimes there were also seizures of American sailors. These seizures were known as impressment. Britain finally suspended its orders against neutral trade, after a change in government. But the British acted too late. The United States had already declared war. Today, we continue the story of the War of 1812. Most of Britain's forces were battling the soldiers of Napoleon Bonaparte in Europe. Historian and Pulitzer Prize winner Alan Taylor says that, as a result, the British could send only a small force to the United States. And so the British were basically fighting the war against the United States on the defensive in Canada, while trying to raid the American coast using their advantage in the more powerful Royal Navy. For its part, the United States was far from ready to fight. The United States had not fought a war, or needed an army, for a long time. There were only 8,000 American soldiers. The soldiers who were young knew little about war. And the officers who knew about war were old enough to have led troops in 1 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

the American Revolution. President James Madison named two top generals: 62-year-old Henry Dearborn and 63-year-old Thomas Pinckney. The United States had only a few warships and gunboats with which to face the British navy the most powerful naval force in the world. Historian and professor Alan Taylor says the American people were divided about the war. A majority of them supported the Madison administration, and agreed that they tried the embargo and it failed, and that something had to be done because national honor, they felt, was at stake. And that they needed to stop the British practice of impressment. And they were also upset about the British military aid to these Indian peoples who were restricting American expansion. Alan Taylor says for those reasons, many Americans supported the war, particularly in the southern, western and mid-atlantic states. But in New England most of the people supported the opposition party, the Federalists, and they were very bitter about the war. They felt that it was really being waged for illegitimate reasons, that diplomacy could have just papered over the disagreement over impressment. And so they did their best to obstruct the war effort. They not only didn t want to contribute to the war effort, but they wanted to block it as best they could. 2 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

Church bells were rung and flags were lowered in New England when the declaration of war was announced. There was also the problem of getting enough men to serve as soldiers. Congress had approved an increase of 25,000 men. Only 5,000 agreed to serve. Members of Congress from the western states had spoken proudly of how their people would rush to fight the British. This did not happen. The first request to Kentucky for soldiers produced only 400 men. Historian Alan Taylor says that some states in the Northeast did not offer any soldiers at all, especially for invasions into Canada. And even when the governors would cooperate, as did for example, the governor of New York, the militia would often march to the border and then decide that their constitutional duty was only to defend their state and not help the United States invade another country. And so they d go on a sitdown strike once they got to the border. Nevertheless, an American general named William Hull led 2,000 men across the Canadian border. But the British general there was prepared, and the attack failed. Although Hull had the stronger force and plenty of supplies, he retreated to Detroit. He was chased by a smaller force of British soldiers and Indians. After the war, Hull was tried by a military court on charges of cowardice. The court found him guilty and ordered him shot. But president, because of Hull's service during the Revolutionary War, permitted the old soldier to live. 3 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

The next American attack was made from Fort Niagara, a military post in New York on the shore of Lake Ontario. A small group of American soldiers crossed the Niagara River and attacked the British. But some Americans from New York refused to cross the border to help against the British. They calmly watched as British soldiers shot down the attacking Americans. The third campaign was made by General Henry Dearborn. He led a state militia force from Plattsburgh, New York, to the Canadian border. He was planning to cross the border and attack Montreal. But again the soldiers refused to cross the border. Dearborn could do nothing but march them back to Plattsburgh. British forces at this time were winning victories. They captured an American fort in northern Michigan. And Indians fighting for the British captured a fort at the place now known as Chicago. Instead of marching through Canada without difficulty, the Americans found themselves trying hard to keep the British out of the state of Ohio. For a while, the small American Navy was doing better than the Army. Just two months after the war started, the United States warship Constitution forced a British ship to surrender. Several months later another American ship, the Wasp, captured the British ship Frolic. Then a frigate named the United States defeated one of Britain's most famous fighting ships, the Macedonian. The British ship was captured and brought to the United States. 4 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

There were other victories at sea. At the end of six months, the United States Navy had captured six British ships and lost only one of its own vessels. Private American trade ships had been armed with guns when the war started. They, too, were successful against the British. They captured more than 300 British trade ships. But the American successes forced Britain to bring more of its fighting ships into the war with the United States. By the middle of 1813, a year after the war started, British ships controlled the East coast. No American ship could enter or leave any port south of New England. Meanwhile, the military situation was improving for the Americans in what was then the West. William Henry Harrison, governor of the Indiana territory, formed a large force to try to capture Detroit from the British. At the same time, Captain Oliver Perry built five warships on Lake Erie. With these, and four he already had, Perry met and defeated a British naval force. Perry reported his victory to Harrison: "We have met the enemy, and they are ours." Perry's victory and Harrison's large force caused the British to withdraw from Detroit and from a British fort at Malden, in Canada. Harrison's men continued to chase the enemy. They caught them and defeated them in the battle of the Thames. Killed in this battle was the great Indian chief Tecumseh, who had been fighting for the British. 5 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

American forces made new attempts to win control of Lake Ontario and invade Canada across the Niagara River. But none of these succeeded. Late in 1813, British soldiers crossed the river and captured Fort Niagara. They also burned the town of Buffalo. By April 1814 Napoleon was forced from power in Europe. And the war between France and Britain was over. The end of the war in Europe permitted Britain to send many of its soldiers to fight against the United States. About 4,000 British soldiers landed on the Chesapeake coast, southeast of Washington. They met American forces inland at Bladensburg, a town 10 kilometers from Washington. The British soldiers broke through the American lines, and the Americans began to run away. But a group of sailors refused to retreat with their artillery. Commanded by Joshua Barney, the 400 sailors chose to stand and fight. The struggle did not last long against the 4,000 British soldiers. Barney held his position for a half-hour before enemy soldiers got behind his men and silenced their guns. Barney was wounded seriously. The British thought so much of his courage that they carried him to a hospital for their own soldiers at Bladensburg. Barney himself said the British officers treated him as a brother. Once the British troops had smashed through Barney's Navy men, nothing stood between them and Washington. 6 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013

The commanders of the British force, General Robert Ross and Admiral George Cockburn, took a group of men to the Capitol building and set fire to it. Then the two commanders went to the White House with the same intention. Before setting fire to the president's home, Cockburn took one of Madison's hats and the seat from one of Dolley Madison's chairs. The admiral found the president's table set for dinner. As a joke, he took a glass of wine and toasted the health of "President Jemmy. President Madison had fled the White House. He crossed the Potomac River and started toward his home in Virginia. He joined his wife on the road the second day. They decided to wait about 25 kilometers from Washington. When President Madison returned to the capital three days later, the British had withdrawn. They had also burned most public buildings. The British coastal force next attacked the city of Baltimore. The story of that battle, and the song it inspired, will be our story next week. I m Steve Ember, inviting you to join us again next time for The Making of a Nation American History from VOA Learning English. 7 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America July 18, 2013