1812: The Navy's War
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Skeen, C. Edward. Citizen Soldiers in the War of 1812. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1999.
———. John Armstrong, Jr., 1758–1843: A Biography. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1981.
Smelser, Marshall. The Democratic Republic, 1801–1805. New York: HarperCollins, 1968.
Smith, Gene A. Thomas ap Catesby Jones: Commodore of Manifest Destiny. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2000.
Smith, Page. John Adams. 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1962.
Stabile, Donald R. The Origin of American Public Finance: Debates over Money, Debt, and Taxes in the Constitutional Era, 1776–1836. New York: Praeger, 1998.
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———. Mr. Madison’s War: Politics, Diplomacy, and Warfare in the Early American Republic, 1783–1830. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983.
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Walters, Raymond. Albert Gallatin. New York: Macmillan, 1957.
Webster, Charles K. The Congress of Vienna, 1814–1815. London: G. Bell & Sons, 1934.
———. The Foreign Policy of Castlereagh, 1812–1815: Britain and the Reconstruction of Europe. London: G. Bell & Sons, 1931.
———. The Foreign Policy of Castlereagh, 1815–1822: Britain and the European Alliance. London: G. Bell & Sons, 1925.
Weigley, Russell F. History of the United States Army. New York: Macmillan, 1967.
White, Leonard D. The Jeffersonians: A Study in Administrative History, 1801–1829. New York: Macmillan, 1956.
White, Patrick C. T. While Washington Burned: The Battle of Fort Erie. Baltimore: Nautical and Aviation Publishing, 1992.
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Winks, Robin W. The Blacks in Canada. 2nd ed. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, 1997.
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Yonge, Charles D. The Life and Administration of Robert Banks, Second Earl of Liverpool. 3 vols. London: Macmillan, 1868.
Zaslow, Morris. The Defended Border: Upper Canada in the War of 1812. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1964.
Zimmerman, James F. Impressment of American Seamen. New York: Columbia University, 1925.
Zuehlke, Mark. For Honor’s Sake: The War of 1812 and the Brokering of an Uneasy Peace. Toronto: Alfred A. Knopf Canada, 2006.
PERIODICAL ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
Bolster, W. Jeffrey. “‘To Feel Like a Man’: Black Seamen in the Northern States, 1800–1860.” Journal of American History 76 (1989–90).
Bond, Beverly W., Jr. “William Henry Harrison in the War of 1813.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 13 (1927).
Brown, Kenneth L. “Mr. Madison’s Secretary of the Navy.” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings 73 (1947).
Calderhead, William L. “Naval Innovation in Crisis: War in the Chesapeake, 1813.” American Neptune 36 (July 1976).
Carr, James A. “The Battle of New Orleans and the Treaty of Ghent.” Diplomatic History 3 (1979).
Cray, Robert E., Jr. “Explaining Defeat: The Loss of the USS Chesapeake.” Naval History (August 2007).
Dangerfield, George. “Lord Liverpool and the United States.” American Heritage 6 (1955).
Dudley, William S. “Naval Historians and the War of 1812.” Naval History 4 (Spring 1990).
Dye, Ira. “American Maritime Prisoners of War, 1812–15.” In Ships, Seafaring, and Society: Essays in Maritime History, edited by Timothy J. Runyan. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1987.
Eckert, Edward K. “Early Reform in the Navy Department.” American Neptune 33 (1973).
———. “William Jones: Mr. Madison’s Secretary of the Navy.” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 96 (1972).
Emery, George, Vice Admiral, U.S. Navy (Retired). “The Battle of Lake Erie.” In U.S. Navy: A Complete History, edited by M. Hill Goodspeed. Westport, CT: Hugh Lauter Associates, 2003.
———. “Thomas Truxtun: First Mentor of the Federal Navy.” Pull Together: Newsletter of the Naval Historical Foundation (Fall/Winter 2010–11).
Galpin, W. Freeman. “The American Grain Trade to the Spanish Peninsula, 1810–1814.” American Historical Review (October 1922).
Gates, Charles M. “The West in American Diplomacy, 1812–1815.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 26, no. 4 (March 1940).
Goodman, W. H. “The Origins of the War of 1812: A Survey of Changing Interpretations.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 28 (1941).
Golder, Frank A. “The Russian Offer of Mediation in the War of 1812.” Political Science Quarterly (1916).
Hadel, Albert K. “The Battle of Bladensburg.” Maryland History Magazine 1 (1806).
Hatzenbuehler, Ronald L. “Party Unity and the Decision for War in the House of Representatives, 1812.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 29 (1972).
———. “The War Hawks and the Question of Congressional Leadership in 1812.” Pacific Historical Review 45 (1976).
Hickey, Donald R. “American Trade Restrictions During the War of 1812.” Journal of American History 68 (1981).
———. “New England’s Defense Problem and the Genesis of the Hartford Convention.” New England Quarterly 50 (1977).
———. “The War of 1812: Still a Forgotten Conflict?” Journal of Military History 65 (July 2001).
Hitsman, J. Mackay. “Sir George Prevost’s Conduct of the Canadian War of 1812.” Canadian Historical Association (1962).
Jones, Wilbur D. “A British View of the War of 1812 and the Peace Negotiations.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 45 (1958).
Kaplan, Lawrence S. “France and Madison’s Decision for War, 1812.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review (March 1964).
Langley, Harold D. “The Negro in the Navy and Merchant Service—1798–1860.” Journal of Negro History 52 (1967).
Lohnes, Barry J. “A New Look at the British Invasion of Eastern Maine, 1814.” Maine Historical Society 15 (1975).
Mahon, John K. “British Command Decisions Relative to the Battle of New Orleans.” Louisiana History 6 (1965).
———. “British Strategy and Southern Indians, War of 1812.” Florida Historical Quarterly 44 (1966).
McClellan, Edwin N. “The Navy at the Battle of New Orleans.” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings 50 (December 1924).
McDaniel, Mary Jane. “Tec
umseh’s Visits to the Creeks.” Alabama Review 33 (1980).
McKee, Marguerite M. “Service of Supply in the War of 1812.” Quartermaster Review 6 (1927).
Merk, Frederick. “The Genesis of the Oregon Question.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 36 (1949–1950).
Mills, Dudley. “The Duke of Wellington and the Peace Negotiations at Ghent.” Canadian Historical Review 2, no. 1 (March 1921).
Muller, H. N. “A Traitorous and Diabolic Traffic: The Commerce of the Champlain-Richelieu Corridor During the War of 1812.” Vermont History 44 (1976).
Paullin, Charles Oscar. “Naval Administration Under Secretaries of the Navy Smith, Hamilton, and Jones, 1801–1814.” Proceedings of the U.S. Naval Institute 32 (1906).
Pratt, Julius W. “Fur Trade Strategy and the American Left Flank in the War of 1812.” American Historical Review 40 (1934–35).
Risjord, Norman K. “1812: Conservatives, War Hawks, and the Nation’s Honor.” William and Mary Quarterly 18 (April 1961).
———. “The Election of 1812.” In History of American Presidential Elections, 1789–1968, vol. 1, edited by Arthur M. Schlesinger and Fred L. Israel. New York: Chelsea House, 1985.
Skelton, William B. “High Army Leadership in the Era of the War of 1812: The Making and Remaking of the Officer Corps.” William and Mary Quarterly 3rd ser., 51 (April 1994).
Smelser, Marshall. “Tecumseh, Harrison and the War of 1812.” Indiana Magazine of History 65 (1969).
Stacey, Charles Perry. “An American Plan for a Canadian Campaign.” American Historical Review 46 (1941).
———. “The War of 1812 in Canadian History.” Ontario History 50 (1958). Sta
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———. “Enlisted Men in the United States Army, 1812–1815: A Preliminary Survey.” William and Mary Quarterly 57 (2000).
———. “James Madison and the Malcontents: The Political Origins of the War of 1812.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 33 (1976).
Stanley, George F. G. “The Indians in the War of 1812.” Canadian Historical Review 31 (1950).
Steely, Anthony. “Jonathan Russell, Castlereagh and Impressment.” American Historical Review (January 1952).
Taylor, G. R. “Agrarian Discontent in the Mississippi Valley Preceding the War of 1812.” Journal of Political Economy 39 (1931).
Tiegle, Joseph G., Jr. “Andrew Jackson and the Continuing Battle of New Orleans.” Journal of the Early Republic (1981).
Tyler, B. B. “Fulton’s Steam Frigate.” American Neptune (October 1946).
Valle, James E. “The Navy’s Battle Doctrine in the War of 1812.” American Neptune 44 (Summer 1984).
INDEX
Abellino (privateer)
Adams, John
Adams, John Quincy
and Ghent, negotiations at
and peace treaty
Adams, William
Addington, Henry
Adonis (Swedish brig)
Alexander (czar)
and Napoleon
Alfred (privateer)
Algeria
Allen, Henry
Allen, Howard
Allen, William H.
Alliance. See Military alliance
American Revolution
Amiens, Treaty of
Arbuthnot, James
Armistead, George
Armistice. See also Ghent, negotiations at; Peace treaty
Armstrong, John
and Canada
and Montreal
and Washington (capital)
Army, expansion of
Astor, John Jacob
Atlantic (whaler)
Aylwin, John
Backus, Electus
Bainbridge, Joseph
Bainbridge, William
and Algeria
and Decatur
and military strategy
vs. Lambert
Baker, Anthony
Ballard, Edward J.
Barclay, Robert Heriot
Barclay (whaler)
Barlow, Joel
Barnaby, Pitt
Barney, Joshua
and Baltimore
and Washington (capital)
Barrie, Robert
Barring, Alexander
Barron, James
Bastard, John
Bathurst, Henry
and Ghent, negotiations at
Bayard, James
Baynes, Edward
Beckwith, Sir Sydney
Beresford, John
Berkeley, Sir George
Bernadotte (of Sweden)
Biddle, James
vs. Dickinson
Bingham, Arthur
Black, William
Bladen, Thomas
Blakeley, Johnston
Blockade
British
Bloomfield, Joseph
Blount, Willie
Blyth, Samuel
Boerstler, Charles
Bonaparte, Joseph
Boundaries, revision of
Boyd, John
Braimer, David
Brine, Augustus
Brock, Isaac
and Canada
Broke, Philip B. V.
vs. Hull (Isaac)
Brooke, Arthur
Broom, James
Brown, Jacob
and Canada
Brown, Thomas
Brush, Henry
Budd, George
Burrows, William Ward II,
Bush, William
Bushnell, David
Byron, Richard
Cabot, George
Calhoun, John C.
Campbell, John B.
Canning, George
Cannon, underwater. See also Weapons, unconventional
Card, John
Carden, John S.
Carroll, William
Cass, Lewis
Cassin, John
Castlereagh, Robert Stewart
and Ghent, negotiations at
and Orders in Council, repeal of
and peace treaty
and prisoners of war
and United States, peaceful relationship with
Chads, Henry D.
Chandler, John
Chauncey, Isaac
and Canada
and Perry
vs. Yeo
Cheves, Langdon
Chichagov, Pavel
Christie, John
Clay, Henry
and Ghent, negotiations at
and peace treaty
Clinton, DeWitt
Cochrane, Alexander F. I.
and Baltimore
and New Orleans
and Washington (capital)
Cockburn, George
and Baltimore
and Chesapeake Bay
and Washington (capital)
Coffee, John
Collier, Sir George
Conkling, Augustus H. M.
Constitution (U.S.)
amendments to
Convoy Act
Cox, William
Crane, William
Crawford, William
Creighton, John O.
Croghan, George
Croker, John W.
Crowninshield, Benjamin William
Crysler’s Farm, Battle of
Dacres, James
Dallas, Alexander
Dallas, George M.
De Rottenburg, Francis
De Salaberry, Charles
Dearborn, Henry
and Canada
and Hull, court-martial of
Decatur, Stephen
and Algeria
and Bainbridge
and British blockade
and military strategy
surrender of
vs. Carden
vs. Oliver
and weapons, unconventional
Declaration of war
and armist
ice
and impressment
and Orders in Council, repeal of
and public opinion
Denison, Henry