The Outcomes of the War of 1812

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The Outcomes of the War of 1812

Many historians have said that the War of 1812, a war

fought between the United States and Great Britain, was

"senseless and insignificant". This statement, for the most part,

is not true. Without this war, many of the changes that were a

result of the war, would not have taken place. The War of 1812

caused many important events to occur. These events were both

direct and indirect. Although The war did not accomplish any of

the things that it started out to accomplish, it became a turning

point in American history. Most of the issues that America

started out fighting for disappeared shortly after the war, just

about the same time that the indirect effects of the war were

beginning to become noticeable. These direct effects mainly

centered around impressment and blockades, while the indirect

effects dealt mainly with the rise of Andrew Jackson, William

Henry Harrison, and the decline of the Federalists.

Following the war, the United States was at peace with

Britain. Peace gave the British no need to result in acts such as

impressm...

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