War of 1812: Facts & Related Content
Facts
Date | June 12, 1812 - December 24, 1814 |
---|---|
Location | Canada • United States |
Participants | United Kingdom • United States |
Did You Know?
- The Brirish captured Fort Mackinac in Michigan because its commander, Porter Hanks, wasn't informed that the war had begun.
- Francis Scott Key wrote the Star-Spangled Banner after an American victory and borrowed the melody from an English drinking song, "To Anacreon in Heaven".
- Americans suffered more causalties from diseases and accidents than from combat.
- "Remember the Raisin" was an American battlecry dedicated to a military loss at River Raisin.
Photos and Videos
Related Topics and References
Dig Deeper: More Articles That Discuss This Topic
Timeline
Key People
Causes and Effects
Causes
- Skirmishes with Native Americans and British soldiers on the northwestern border of the U.S.
- Export and import restrictions between the U.S. and Great Britain during the Napoleonic Wars hurt the American economy
- The practice during the Napoleonic Wars of the British Navy accosting American merchant ships and seizing alleged deserters who were actually U.S. citizens
Effects
- Britain's influence among the northwestern Indians ended, leading to unchecked American expansion into that region
- Canada remained British and eventually developed its own national identity, partly from pride over repulsing U.S. invasions
- Despite the U.S. achieving none of its objectives during the war, a surge of post-war patriotism inspired American to pursue national goals
- The arbitration clauses in the Treaty of Ghent that ended the war established methods for dealing with outstanding disagreements that could be adapted to changes in both American and British governments, sowing the seeds of the lasting Anglo-American comity
- U.S. victory in the concurrent Creek War opened a large part of the American south for settlement, leading to events that persuaded Spain to cede Florida to the U.S. in 1821
Related Quizzes and Features
Quiz
List