Result of the War of 1812
The ending of the War of 1812
resulted in significant changes in the United States. The events of the
war had encouraged American unity, characterizing a post-war period aimed
toward building a nation. The government under President James Monroe, who
became the chief executive in 1816, undertook efforts to vastly improve
infrastructure, re-charter the National Bank, and pass legislation designed to
protect fledgling American industries from cheaper European imports that were
flooding the Northeastern port cities. Despite high unemployment and a frenzied
financial structure following the dissolution of the first National Bank, the Boston Centinel called the post-war
years the beginning of an “era of good feeling.”
The Development of National
Unity during the War of 1812
The War of 1812 demonstrated
that the United States
had the resolve and the ability as a nation to defend itself. Although grossly
unprepared at the start of the war, Americans rallied, fighting Great Britain
to a virtual stalemate position as evidenced by the terms of the Treaty of
Ghent which ended the war. The war ended with status quo ante bellum.
Although the mighty British
navy blockaded American Atlantic ports (Boston remained open until 1814), the
British suffered unprecedented losses on the Great Lakes.
The British managed to burn Washington
City in 1814, but could not take Baltimore. Significantly,
the American defense of New Orleans
under Andrew Jackson resulted in the destruction of a veteran British army
commanded by the brother-in-law of the Duke of Wellington.
American determination not
only proved that a national spirit existed, but showed Britain and Europe that the United States
was a viable power. Even in Federalist New England any lingering thoughts of
secession were eradicated.
Relations with Great Britain
after the War of 1812
Americans never stopped
buying goods imported from Britain.
During the war years, these goods were missed even though American infant
industries were in the process of manufacturing similar products such as
textiles. Import/export figures for the post-war years demonstrate that
Americans were exporting far less than they were importing in dollar amounts.
This prompted new tariffs measures designed to stabilize the imbalance.
In matters of foreign policy
during the Monroe administration, the United States aligned its goals with those of Britain, as
evidenced by the Monroe Doctrine. Additionally, British banks invested in
American enterprises and loaned money to American organizations, businesses, and
even state governments.
The Absence of Political
Parties after the War of 1812
The Republican-Democrats of Jefferson’s day absorbed many of the views of the waning
New England Federalists. Where once the followers of Jefferson
had been strict constructionists of the Constitution,
they now advocated an expanded role of government. Congressional and national
leaders like Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun advocated for the “American
System,” a national program to fund highways, canals, and other infrastructure
improvements.
These same men saw the need
for a new national bank in order to bring order to the disorganized banking
system in which over 200 banks were issuing paper currency. By 1824,
presidential candidates in the national election represented not parties but
sections of the United
States. The recognizable two-party system
would not fully re-develop until the Andrew Jackson years.
National Unity Preserved the
Nation until 1860
The greatest issue
threatening to divide the North from the South was slavery. Yet the spirit of
unity following the end of the War of 1812 might have contributed to a national
understanding that would defer the issue to future years. Historian Page Smith,
for example, suggests that this unity “paved the way” for the successful
Compromise of 1820 which kept the peace over slavery until the decade of the
1850s and was viewed, at least in New England, as a sacred “covenant.”
A Deeper Understanding of
American Unity in the Post-1814 Years
Some historians point to
tariff discrepancies as a growing source of disunity, yet others cite evidence
that tariffs were not a cause of eventual Civil War. The initial tariffs
enacted after the War of 1812 were actually opposed by New
England and Daniel Webster spoke against these measures in the
Congress. New England importers were
benefiting handsomely from the profits of imported goods.
Psychologically, the War of
1812 demonstrated that American independence was real. It legitimized all
earlier attempts to draw distinctions between Britain and a people that called
themselves “Americans.” Smith writes that the war “ratified” the revolution. In
the process, Americans reinvented their identities as a unique and separate
people, called by providential forces to create an egalitarian Utopia. This was
the most significant change brought about by the War of 1812 and the start of
the so-called era of good feeling.
Sources:
George Dangerfield, The Awakening of American Nationalism:
1815-1825 (Waveland Press, 1994)
Frederick Merk, History of the Westward Movement (Alfred
A Knopf, 1978)
John Clark Ridpath, A Popular History of the United States of America (Phillips
& Hunt, 1880)
James Schouler, History of the United States of America:
1817-1831, Era of Good Feeling (Nabu Press, 2010)
Page Smith, The Shaping of America: A People’s History
of the Young Republic, Volume Three (McGraw Hill Book Company, 1980)
October 12, 2010, Suite101, M.Streich, copyright
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