Causes of the War of 1812 Blockading Some of America's Ports

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Causes of the War of 1812 Blockading Some of America's Ports Americans. Name It was clear that the United States and Britain could not avoid a war. Britain was still forcing American men to work on their ships. Britain did not want Americans to trade with France. Britain was also Causes of the War of 1812 blockading some of America's ports. In 1811, there was a short battle between American and British ships. Thirty-two British soldiers were By Cathy Pearl killed in the fight. After the United States won its freedom from Britain, the country People in America told Congress to get ready to go to war. Other grew quickly. Trade to other countries also began to grow. Ships people did not agree with that. A war would not be easy to win. would leave the United States to trade. Sometimes they wouldn't People in New England were also very worried. They thought that come back for many years. Britain would attack their ports. The American ships faced many problems when they were sailing. In the end, President Madison could not fight all of the people that Britain and France had gone to war again in 1803. America said that it wanted to go to war. In June of 1812, he asked Congress to declare was neutral, meaning that it wouldn't help either side. During the war, war on Britain. The House of Representatives and the Senate both British and French ships were too busy to trade. The American ships voted to go to war. This would be the United States' second war with took advantage of this and traded with both sides. They made a lot of Britain in less than fifty years. money and worked hard to build more ships. Many Americans were very happy with the idea of fighting the war Britain and France weren't happy that the Americans were helping with Britain. They thought that Britain still treated the United States their enemies. The two sides ignored the United States when it said it like one of its colonies. It was time to show them that the United was neutral. France and Britain began to attack the American ships. States was a strong country. Soon, hundreds of ships had been captured. Others were not as happy. The people who lived in New England Men that were on the ships were also forced to help either Britain or were the unhappiest. They were afraid for their ports. They were also France. Many of these men were American citizens. People in the afraid the United States would lose. United States were very angry. They began to call for the United States to go to war. This war would not be easy for the United States to win. The country did not have a strong Navy. The War of 1812 would not last long. President Thomas Jefferson was afraid the United States could not Time would tell how it would affect this new nation. win a war. He decided to try an embargo. An embargo is a ban on foreign trade. Americans could no longer trade with any other country. It did hurt Britain and France. But it hurt Americans more. Smugglers began to sneak goods out of the country. Soon, Jefferson said the embargo was a failure. He let Americans begin to trade with other countries except for Britain and France. After Jefferson completed his second term of presidency, James Madison became president. He hoped the crisis was over. During this time, Americans were also fighting in the west. Native Americans were fighting against white settlers who were moving toward the west. This fighting also angered Britain. Britain gave the Native Americans guns. They wanted them to fight back against the 6. What happened in 1811? Name Causes of the War of 1812 Questions 1. What two nations were fighting a war that America did not want to be a part of? Who do you think has a better chance of winning the war? Why? A. France and Spain B. Britain and France C. United States and Britain 2. What is a ban on foreign trade called? A. Blockade B. Crisis C. Embargo 3. Why were people in New England worried about a war? A. They didn't want Britain to ruin their ships. B. They didn't want to send men to fight in it. C. They thought Britain might attack their ports. 4. Who became president after Thomas Jefferson? A. George Bush B. James Madison C. George Washington 5. The United States said it was neutral in the war between Britain and France. What does neutral mean? Name Do you think the United States should have gone to war with Britain? Why or why not?.
Recommended publications
  • African Americans Have Been a Part of the Diverse Population of South Sound Since American Settlers Arrived in 1845. However
    African Americans have been a part the Frost Family Plot. “Henrietta,” of the diverse population of South domestic servant for Elisha Ferry Sound since American settlers who later became governor of arrived in 1845. However, records Washington, only appears once in regarding early African Americans Olympia’s census. Leander Bushon’s in the Olympia area are scant. The apparent business success beyond fragments of stories that survive Olympia after apprenticing in offer a window into the daily life Samuel Stork’s mercantile remains of Washington’s Capital City and to be researched. The women of environs. Most came of their own color identified as prostitutes in accord, looking for a place to improve the census disappear as abruptly as their chances for a better life. They they appear in local records. Yet worked as laborers, domestic all of their stories show the South servants, or as stewards on Puget Sound’s population is more complex Sound’s “Mosquito Fleet” steamboats. and interconnected than many early Others became business owners, histories indicate. worked as restaurateurs, barbers or bootblacks. Despite their struggles While few structures associated against discrimination, they made with their lives survive, the stories their homes here and were an connected to these sites reflect integral part of the social fabric. the diversity of experiences that This brochure will introduce you to make up African American history in some of these people. Olympia and the Pacific Northwest. Thomas Park, a brick mason by In some cases first names are used trade, was a lifelong associate of the to avoid confusion with relatives of Robert Frost Family and is buried in the same last name.
    [Show full text]
  • George W Bush Childhood Home Reconnaissance Survey.Pdf
    Intermountain Region National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior August 2015 GEORGE W. BUSH CHILDHOOD HOME Reconnaissance Survey Midland, Texas Front cover: President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush speak to the media after touring the President’s childhood home at 1421 West Ohio Avenue, Midland, Texas, on October 4, 2008. President Bush traveled to attend a Republican fundraiser in the town where he grew up. Photo: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images CONTENTS BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE — i SUMMARY OF FINDINGS — iii RECONNAISSANCE SURVEY PROCESS — v NPS CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION OF NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE — vii National Historic Landmark Criterion 2 – viii NPS Theme Studies on Presidential Sites – ix GEORGE W. BUSH: A CHILDHOOD IN MIDLAND — 1 SUITABILITY — 17 Childhood Homes of George W. Bush – 18 Adult Homes of George W. Bush – 24 Preliminary Determination of Suitability – 27 HISTORY AND DESCRIPTION OF THE GEORGE W. BUSH CHILDHOOD HOME, MIDLAND TEXAS — 29 Architectural Description – 29 Building History – 33 FEASABILITY AND NEED FOR NPS MANAGEMENT — 35 Preliminary Determination of Feasability – 37 Preliminary Determination of Need for NPS Management – 37 CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS — 39 APPENDIX: THE 41ST AND 43RD PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES OF THE UNITED STATES — 43 George H.W. Bush – 43 Barbara Pierce Bush – 44 George W. Bush – 45 Laura Welch Bush – 47 BIBLIOGRAPHY — 49 SURVEY TEAM MEMBERS — 51 George W. Bush Childhood Home Reconnaissance Survey George W. Bush’s childhood bedroom at the George W. Bush Childhood Home museum at 1421 West Ohio Avenue, Midland, Texas, 2012. The knotty-pine-paneled bedroom has been restored to appear as it did during the time that the Bush family lived in the home, from 1951 to 1955.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bush Revolution: the Remaking of America's Foreign Policy
    The Bush Revolution: The Remaking of America’s Foreign Policy Ivo H. Daalder and James M. Lindsay The Brookings Institution April 2003 George W. Bush campaigned for the presidency on the promise of a “humble” foreign policy that would avoid his predecessor’s mistake in “overcommitting our military around the world.”1 During his first seven months as president he focused his attention primarily on domestic affairs. That all changed over the succeeding twenty months. The United States waged wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. U.S. troops went to Georgia, the Philippines, and Yemen to help those governments defeat terrorist groups operating on their soil. Rather than cheering American humility, people and governments around the world denounced American arrogance. Critics complained that the motto of the United States had become oderint dum metuant—Let them hate as long as they fear. September 11 explains why foreign policy became the consuming passion of Bush’s presidency. Once commercial jetliners plowed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, it is unimaginable that foreign policy wouldn’t have become the overriding priority of any American president. Still, the terrorist attacks by themselves don’t explain why Bush chose to respond as he did. Few Americans and even fewer foreigners thought in the fall of 2001 that attacks organized by Islamic extremists seeking to restore the caliphate would culminate in a war to overthrow the secular tyrant Saddam Hussein in Iraq. Yet the path from the smoking ruins in New York City and Northern Virginia to the battle of Baghdad was not the case of a White House cynically manipulating a historic catastrophe to carry out a pre-planned agenda.
    [Show full text]
  • George Soros
    t 1 ' RECEIVED BEFORE THE INS JAN 18 A ft 11 FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION J ' OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA In the Matter of: George Soros -:- *~ :jrn 3 -'~ni FentonCommunications /T/ // 4 ..r!< MUR^fcToC > ' ..J,S World Affiurs Council of Philadelphia ^ ^ H Columbus Metropolitan Club Complaint NATIONAL LEGAL AND POLICY CENTER, a corporation organized and existing under the District of Columbia Non-profit Corporation Act and having its offices and principal place of business at 107 Park Washington Court, Falls Church, V A 22046, files this complaint with the Federal Election Commission pursuant to 2 USC § 437g. The primary purpose of the National Legal and Policy Center, a charitable and educational organization described in section S0l(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, is to foster and promote ethics in government and public life. Respondents are individuals and corporations who have apparently knowingly and willfully violated federal law, specifically the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as amended, ("the Act" and "FECA") and/or the Internal Revenue Code of the United States, and/or have apparently made illegal corporate contributions to influence a federal election. Respondents GEORGE SOROS, ^ New York, N.Y. 10106, (hereinafter "Soros") is a wealthy investor who undertook an independent expenditure campaign beginning in September 2004 explicitly aimed at defeating President Bush hi the presidential election of 2004. j FENTON COMMUNICATIONS, 132018* Street. N.W., Fifth Floor, ] Washington, D.C. 20036 is a public relations firm which handled media relations for the j Sciosmdependentexpendtiire campaign to defeat President Bush in 2004. ; WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF PHILADELPHIA, One South Broad Street, 2 Mezz, Philadelphia, PA 19107 is a non-profit 501(cX3) public charity which sponsored and promoted a speaking cngagenra^ Union League of Philadelphia on October 6, 2004.
    [Show full text]
  • An Historical Perspective of Oregon's and Portland's Political and Social
    Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 3-14-1997 An Historical Perspective of Oregon's and Portland's Political and Social Atmosphere in Relation to the Legal Justice System as it Pertained to Minorities: With Specific Reference to State Laws, City Ordinances, and Arrest and Court Records During the Period -- 1840-1895 Clarinèr Freeman Boston Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Part of the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons, and the Public Administration Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Boston, Clarinèr Freeman, "An Historical Perspective of Oregon's and Portland's Political and Social Atmosphere in Relation to the Legal Justice System as it Pertained to Minorities: With Specific Reference to State Laws, City Ordinances, and Arrest and Court Records During the Period -- 1840-1895" (1997). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 4992. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.6868 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. THESIS APPROVAL The abstract and thesis of Clariner Freeman Boston for the Master of Science in Administration of Justice were presented March 14, 1997, and accepted by the thesis committee and the department. COMMITTEE APPROVAL: Charles A. Tracy, Chair. Robert WLOckwood Darrell Millner ~ Representative of the Office of Graduate Studies DEPARTMENT APPROVAL<: _ I I .._ __ r"'liatr · nistration of Justice ******************************************************************* ACCEPTED FOR PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY BY THE LIBRARY by on 6-LL-97 ABSTRACT An abstract of the thesis of Clariner Freeman Boston for the Master of Science in Administration of Justice, presented March 14, 1997.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Quaker Classic Invitational
    2017 Quaker Classic Invitational University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA) November 18-19, 2017 Rebecca Suh, Tournament Director Andy Neumann, Judging Coordinator William Saunders, Tab Director Official Tabulation Summary Team Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Summary Π vs Chester A. Δ vs William Henry Π vs Franklin Pierce Δ vs Jimmy Carter 8 - 0 Ohio State University B Arthur Harrison W W W W CS PD Andrew Johnson W W W W 1 9 3 9 22 45 11 11 4 4 Π vs John Quincy Δ vs Grover Δ vs Herbert Hoover Π vs George Bush 7 - 1 Haverford College B Adams Cleveland L W W W CS PD Lyndon B. Johnson W W W W -4 3 2 15 16.5 31 7 8 11 2 Δ vs Dwight D. George Washington Π vs John Tyler Π vs Millard Fillmore Δ vs Zachary Taylor 6.5 - 1.5 Eisenhower University B W W W T L W CS PD W W Thomas Jefferson 4 15 5 0 -7 2 15.5 42 6 18 Δ vs Franklin D. Π vs Barack H. College of William & Π vs Bill Clinton Δ vs Andrew Johnson 6 - 2 Roosevelt Obama Mary A W L L CS PD W W W Franklin Pierce 11 -1 -9 22 38 4 16 26 Π vs Thomas Δ vs James K. Polk Π vs George Bush Δ vs Herbert Hoover 6 - 2 Brown University A Jefferson W W W W L W CS PD Zachary Taylor W L 1 5 5 1 -8 8 20.5 20 7 -2 Π vs Martin Van Δ vs Warren G.
    [Show full text]
  • Sylvester's Window 1856, Meet the Neighbors
    IT'S 1856 ... MEET THE NEIGHBORS ' 6. CLARA POTTLE SYLVESTER (Sept 24. 1832 Searsmont, ME - after May 1 917 San Diego. CA?) Clara Pottle was born and raised in Maine, near the sea. She met Edmund Sylvester in 1854, while he was on a return trip to his childhood home of Deer Isle, Maine. Clara married Edmund, and embarked on the long journey west to start a new life with him in the small frontier town he founded, called Olympia. The couple traveled by steamship from New York to the Isthmus of Panama, where they crossed by land to the Pacific Coast, boarded another ship to San Francisco, and finally arrived in Olympia on October 1 3, 1 854. It is likely they landed at Giddings new wharf which extended 300 feet from the end of Main Street. Clara and Edmund lived in temporary quarters until 1856, when the grand Italianate-style Sylvester Home was built. This home, which boasted a third story tower, overlooked a rugged, stump-filled "town square." It would be Olympia's showplace for many years. Clara made sure it was also a place that hosted events and welcomed people. The Sylvesters shared the home with their only child, May. When asked to fill out a questionaire later in her life, Clara listed her religion as "liberal." Liberal thinking with regards to women's rights, was something Clara felt strongly about. Even though her husband did not approve, Clara offered her home for the first meeting of the Woman's Club, a group considered quite radical in 1883.
    [Show full text]
  • The Law of Presidential Transitions and the 2000 Election
    The Law of Presidential Transitions and the 2000 Election Todd J. Zywicki* I. INTRODUCTION The Presidential election of 2000 raised a number of unprecedented legal and political issues. Among those were the issues raised by the Presidential Transition Act of 1963 (the “Act”), a heretofore obscure statute that took on massive importance in both the political framework of the election as well as the practical framework of George W. Bush’s efforts to effectuate a smooth presidential transition.1 Like so many other issues raised by the election fall-out, the issues raised by the Presidential Transition Act of 1963 presented legal issues of first impression and crucial political questions. Fought against the backdrop of the contentious presidential election and the legal and public relations battles that swirled around it, the issues of the Presidential Transition Act of 1963 took on profound importance. Unlike other issues raised by the election which are likely to prove unique to the 2000 election, the issues surrounding the law of presidential transitions are likely to arise again in the future, especially because the way in which the Act was implemented raises substantial concerns of future mischief. The facts surrounding the 2000 presidential election are well-known. On the night of the general election, the Republican ticket of George W. Bush and Richard Cheney claimed victory in the presidential election on the basis of a narrow victory in Florida. When combined with the other states claimed by Bush and Cheney, Florida’s electoral votes gave them 271 votes, one more than necessary to claim the White House.
    [Show full text]
  • Quaker Thought and Today
    • May 1991 Quaker Thought FRIENDS and Life OURNAL Today Selective nonviolence is not our testimony. Quakers have chosen to struggle with an ideal of absolute, radical nonviolence. • ...., .. .., Among Friends Vinton Deming_ AMoolete ldltor Melissa Kay Elliott Art DINotor ...._.......Barbara Benton .......... No Strain, No Gain Catherine Frost t's the sort of thing I try not to think about. Never. It's simply too scary ClrcM.IItlon ..... Promotion Nagendran Gulendran and upsetting, every bit as bad as driving to pick up the kids at their ................... I friend's house and suddenly realizing you don't know the right James Rice and Susan Jordhamo hoNtertal ..,._. address or even the kid's last name, only that he's in your son's class at Jeanne G. Beisel school and his name is Shawn (or Shaun) and his dad's name is Bill. So you ~ stop and find a pay phone and you call home to ask your wife for the James Neveil correct street address and all you get after four rings is your own voice on Yolunteera Jane Burgess, Anders Hansen, the answering machine telling you that your message is "very important to Emily Conlon, Catherine McCulley, Becky Young us" and "please speak clearly right after the beep"-and you hang up the .......... __.,. phone in disgust and realize you don't have another quarter and it wouldn't 1988-1991: Nancy Cocks Culleton, Barbara Dinhofer, Sam Legg (Clerk), Parry Jones, solve the problem even if you did. The situation is every bit that bad. Richard Moses (Treosurer), Harry Scott, Larry It's even as mind boggling as having
    [Show full text]
  • Jacob Lawrence Tells the Story of George Bush by Lisa Edge (/Users/Lisa-Edge) | November 7Th, 2018
    Narrative of a Pioneer: Jacob Lawrence tells the story of George Bush by Lisa Edge (/users/lisa-edge) | November 7th, 2018 Traveling from the eastern shores of the United States to the mountainous region of the Pacific Northwest is a journey that could take a handful of hours or days depending on the mode of transportation. Rewind the clock back to the mid 1800s and those making the trip faced rugged conditions and none of the modern comforts we’ve come to expect while traveling. The first transcontinental railroad wouldn’t be complete until 1869 so people who wanted to relocate traversed the land on foot or by horse and wagon. The other option was a much longer route by sea going around South America. Either way, grit and perseverance were required. One of the early pioneers to this state was George Bush, a Black man who co-founded a settlement now known as Tumwater. He’s the subject of a series of narrative paintings from artist Jacob Lawrence. The five works are on view at The Washington State Historical Museum in Tacoma in the exhibition titled “Collections Selections: Jacob Lawrence.” Click to view all images It’s a rare opportunity to see the paintings in person. Intended to be taken in from right to left, they’re a reflection Jacob Lawrence, No. 1. On a fair May morning in 1844, George Washington Bush left Clark County, Missouri, in of Bush’s migration from the Midwest to Washington state, six Conestoga wagons, 1973, casein tempera and which was then still Oregon territory.
    [Show full text]
  • George Washington Bush and the Early History of African Americans in the Pacific Northwest
    George Washington Bush and the Early History of African Americans in the Pacific Northwest By David Turnoy By 1861, due to the profitability of the cotton industry in the South, four million African American slaves toiled and suffered in fields and homes in America’s South. That was the year the Civil War began with the shelling of Fort Sumter by the Confederate Army. Slavery had existed in the North as well, but by the beginning of the war it had long since been outlawed in northern states because it was not seen to be necessary to the economy of the North. This does not mean there was no racism and prejudice in the North, as draft riots during the war directed at black soldiers in northern cities proved. What about the Pacific Northwest? Did racism and prejudice exist? President Thomas Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to explore the newly purchased Louisiana Territory in 1804, and of course this territory included the Pacific Northwest. French Emperor Napoleon had sold this vast tract of land the previous year for money to fight his wars in Europe. Of course, no concern was paid to the native peoples who already lived in this territory; the two governments bought and sold the land as if no one lived there. Soon after the journey of Lewis and Clark, mountain men began trapping in the Pacific Northwest. John Jacob Astor’s company founded the town of Astoria in Oregon as an American outpost, while Britain’s Hudson’s Bay Company founded Fort Vancouver across the Columbia River from Portland in what is today the state of Washington, thus leading to competition between Britain and the US for the Oregon Territory.
    [Show full text]
  • President George W
    PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH Age: 57 Birth date: July 6, 1946 Current Position: President of the United States Career Highlights: President of the U.S. (2001-present); Governor of Texas (1995-2001); Managing partner of the Texas Rangers baseball team (1989-94); Founder and CEO of an oil and gas exploration company (1975-89); senior advisor to his father’s presidential campaign (1988); U.S. House candidate - lost (1978); Texas Air National Guard (1968-73) Education: Yale University, B.A. (1968); Harvard University, M.B.A. (1975) Military Service: Texas Air National Guard (1968-73) Hometown: Austin, Texas Religion: Methodist Announcement: Committee launched on March 7, 1999 in Austin, Texas Spouse: Laura Welch Bush Age: 57 Birthday: November 4, 1946 in Midland, TX Career: Teacher at Longfellow Elementary School in Dallas 1968-1969; teacher at John F. Kennedy Elementary School in Houston until 1972; librarian at Houston Public Library, Kashmere Gardens Branch 1972- 1974; librarian at Dawson Elementary School until 1977. Education: BS in education, Southern Methodist University, 1968; Master of Library Science, University of Texas at Austin, 1973. Hometown: Austin, TX Religion: Methodist Family: Two children, twins Jenna and Barbara (22) 1 GEORGE W. BUSH TIMELINE 7/6/46 GEORGE WALKER BUSH: Born in New Haven, Connecticut, to George Herbert Walker Bush and Barbara Pierce Bush. He is the oldest of five children. 1948 THE BUSH FAMILY MOVES TO WEST TEXAS. The Bush family moves to West Texas to pursue the oil boom and settles in Midland. GWB admits to having no presidential aspirations early on. Instead, he says, “When I was growing up, I wanted to be Willie Mays.” 1952 PRESCOTT BUSH ELECTED TO U.S.
    [Show full text]