War Of 1812 Essay Topics

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War of 1812 The war of 1812 was the unfinished revolution that America was fighting. It was requested by President James Madison to protect American ships and U.S. sailors from being captured by the British. The war also had other purposes such as trying to prevent the British from creating alliances with Native Americans on American Frontier. Some people called this War of 1812, “Mr. Madison’s War,” others viewed it as a “second War of Independence,” a chance for Americans to protect their rights and freedoms. Furthermore, the War Hawks, loudly demanded war as a means to retaliate against the British for the economic outbreak caused by the blockade and for the resistance for Britain’s support of expansion for the United States. Yet, there …show more content…

in the post war period. It laid out the groundwork for economic expansion in three ways: First agricultural boost after the war increased the demand for cotton and Tabaco. Second, improvements of transportation increased the demand for better roads and canals to expedite goods smoothly across the nation. Lastly was the factory system growth which was caused by the Embargo Acts and the War of 1812. The war was a benefit to the domestic factor, providing a plentiful labor support. After the war the United States grew in its manufacturing, because goods were made at home. America gains its confidence in its country’s ability to survive and prosper. America began to rely more on itself then on other countries. Also as a result of the war, Federalist power declined rapidly, and they ceased to exist on the National stage. Division between the North and South happened and this planted the seed for the Civil War. The War of 1812 also produced many heroes, in terms of future politicians. Andrew Jackson and William Henry Harrison will rise to National prominence by battling Indians and Red Coats. America grew in patriotism (Doc. 2): Francis Scott Key wrote the words to the “Star Spangled Banner” in the Battle of Baltimore in 1814. And though it would be another century before the United Sates would emerge as a world power, U.S. sovereignty in the Western hemisphere would never again be legitimately …show more content…

The war was unusual in generating political opposition and nearly unique in ending in a stalemate on the battlefield. Even though Americans pretend they had won the war- by even calling it a second war of independence- they could point to few concrete gains to sustain this theory. This war is rarely remembered because of its lack of success. The best know wars, like the Civil War, Revolution, and WW2, were all clear cut successes. The war of 1812 was a real sense of failure, and aybe this is why it attracts so little attention. There war not much to celebrate as American s in this war. This is probably because the U.S. gained none of the changes in British policy it set out to win. It failed to achieve its military objectives, and the war resulted in thousands of unnecessary deaths and needless damage to the coutry’s commerce. Great Britian was able to occupy a good portion of American territory, including burning of the capitol. The united Sates leaders never showed pride of excitement of a nation that was ‘victorious’ in war. Instead, they breathed a sigh of relief at the war’s conclusion. The US ‘won’ only in the sense that it got itself in a war with a far more powerful Britain that was distracted by a much lager conflict, amd so survived in much better shape then it otherwise would have. It was a ‘Second war of Independence’ only in that the United Sates proved that it could survive

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