Cover Slide
The American
Pageant
Chapter 12
The Second War
for Independence
and the Upsurge
of Nationalism,
1812-1824
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British Sacking Washington, 1814
British Sacking Washington, 1814
Thinking that the British would attack Baltimore, the government failed to provide an adequate
defense of Washington. On August 25, 1814, after their victory at Bladensburg, the British
entered Washington unopposed, "for the barbarous purpose of destroying the city," confessed a
British officer. After setting much of the city ablaze, the British withdrew on August 26 and
President Madison returned the following day. (Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection, Brown
University Library)
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Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans, artist unknown
Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans, artist unknown
Ballou's Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion depicts the Battle of New Orleans, the
last campaign of the War of 1812. Andrew Jackson's troops--army regulars,
Tennessee and Kentucky volunteers, and two companies of African American
volunteers from New Orleans--held off the better-trained British troops in January of
1815. The battle made Andrew Jackson a national hero. (Historic New Orleans
Collection)
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Treaty of Fort Jackson imposed on Creek nation by Andrew Jackson
Treaty of Fort Jackson imposed on Creek nation by Andrew Jackson
Andrew Jackson imposed the Treaty of Fort Jackson on the Creek nation, ending the campaign
against the Red Sticks. The treaty required the Creeks to pay the costs of the war, which
Jackson estimated as the equivalent of 20 million acres. In moving the Creeks out of what is
now central Alabama, Jackson initiated the Indians' forced removal from the south. Ironically,
of the thirty-five chiefs who made their mark on the treaty, part of which is shown here, only
one was a member of the Creek nation. (National Archives)
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Map: Major Campaigns of the War of 1812
Major Campaigns of the War of 1812
The land war centered on the U.S.-Canadian border, the Chesapeake Bay, and the Louisiana and Mississippi Territories.
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Map: Trails to the West, 1840
Trails to the West, 1840
By 1840 several trails carried pioneers from Missouri and Illinois to the West.
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