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 Army was ill prepared  Supplemented by militias  Canada  Important battle ground  British weakest there  Americans not smart = offensive  3 pronged invasion  U.S. fort captured  Looked to the navy  Skillfully handled  Better gunners  “Old Ironsides” The Constitution  Thicker sides  Heavier Firepower  Larger crews  Control of Great Lakes  Oliver Hazard Perry  Victory on lake Erie  Captured a British fleet  Infused new life into the Americans  1814  Americans grimly defending own soil  Napoleon vanquished = Isle of Elba  Americans faced it alone  Redcoats pouring into Canada  British prepare for an attack on N.Y.  Using lake-river routes  Lake Champlain waterway  Thomas Macdonough  Challenged the British = Sept. 11, 1814  Plattsburgh  Floating slaughterhouses  Snatched victory  British army forced to retreat  Saved the union from dissolution  August 1814  4,000 redcoats = Chesapeake Bay  Moving towards Washington  6,000 militiamen dispersed  Washington Burned  Set fire to most public buildings = Capital and White House  Baltimore held strong  Fort McHenry hit with cannon = Could not capture the city  Francis Scott Key  Detained American  Wrote “The Star Spangled Banner”  January 1815  Troops led by Andrew  7,000 Jackson  British launched frontal assault  2,000 killed / wounded ½ hour  U.S. victory  70 casualties  Before battle peace agreement already signed  Treaty of Ghent --- Christmas eve 1814 Treaty of Ghent Christmas Eve 1814 Armistice Restore conquered territory No mention of grievances previously fought for Virtual Draw  6,000 killed / wounded  Led to end of Federalist Party  Sectionalism / Hartford Convention  Growth of American industries = Manufacture products  Confirmed the status of the U.S. / free and independent nation  Less dependent on Europe  Canadian patriotism / nationalism  Rush Bagot Agreement = 1817  Limited naval armament on the lakes  December 15, 1814  Hartford Convention  Federalist discontent  Discuss grievances  Compensation  2/3 vote  Massachusetts called for convention  Embargo  Hartford Connecticut  New state admission  Mass, Conn, R.I. = Full delegations  N.H. and Vermont = Partial  26 men = 3 weeks  War declared  3/5 clause  President = single term  “Virginia Dynasty”  Nationalism  Most important by-product of War  Emerged as one nation  Writers to use American scenes / themes  Nationalistic Spirit  Revived Bank = 1816  School textbooks / magazines  “North American Review”  Army expanded  Capital restored  1815  Madison moves U.S. toward economic independence  Establishing a protective tariff  Manufacturing would flourish  Re-chartering the National Bank  Credit  Development of transportation  Steamboat  Erie Canal = N.Y. 1825  Madison / Clay  James Monroe --- Elected in 1816  Secretary of State  John Quincy Adams  Foreign policy = Nationalism  National interest placed ahead of regional concerns  Era of Good feeling?  Tariff, bank, land, sectionalism Over speculation in frontier lands Deflation depression / bankruptcies / bank failures Unemployment /soup kitchens “Wildcat Banks” Foreclosed mortgages  1818  Settlers in Missouri requested admission to the Union  Free State or Slave State?  1820 -1821  Missouri Compromise  Series of agreements passed  36˚30´ Line  Henry Clay  Expansion of territory  Anglo-American Convention of 1818  Fixed the U.S. border at the 49th parallel  Michigan west to the Rocky Mountains  Agreed to jointly occupy Oregon territory with British  10 years  1818  Americans believed Florida was destined to be theirs  Jackson sweeps into Florida  Seizes 2 Spanish posts  St. Marks / Pensacola  Florida Purchase Treaty 1819  “Adams-Onis Treaty”  Spain ceded Florida  U.S. abandon claims in Texas  Napoleon invaded Portugal and Spain  Did not have money to maintain overseas colonies  Napoleon defeated in 1815  Now wanted to reclaim their colonies  Russians moving into Alaska  Russo-American Treaty 1824  Establishing posts in California  1823  President Monroe = Message to Congress  European powers not to interfere in the Western     Hemisphere Do not attempt to create new colonies Do not try to over throw newly independent republics The U.S. would consider actions dangerous to peace and safety U.S. would not involve itself in European affairs  Principles known as = Monroe Doctrine  Foundation for future U.S. foreign policy