Pierre Berton's War of 1812 (61 page)

Tohill, Louis A. “Robert Dickson, Fur Trader on the Upper Mississippi,”
North Dakota Historical Quarterly
, vol. 3 (1928).

Tucker, Glenn.
Poltroons and Patriots: A Popular Account of the War of 1812
, 2 vols., vol. 1. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1954.

——Tecumseh: Vision of Glory
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Turner, Wesley B. “The Career of Isaac Brock in Canada.” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Toronto, 1961.

Upton, Emory.
The Military Policy of the United States
. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1907.

Van Deusen, John G. “Court Martial of General William Hull,”
Michigan History Magazine
, vol. 12 (1928).

——“Detroit Campaign of General William Hull,”
Michigan History Magazine
, vol. 12 (1928).

Vincent, Elizabeth. “Fort St. Joseph: A History.” Unpublished manuscript, Parks Canada, Ottawa. Walden, Keith. “Isaac Brock: Man and Myth; A Study of the Militia of the War of 1812 in Upper Canada.” M.A. thesis, Carleton University, Ottawa, 1972.

Widder, Keith R.
Reveille till Taps: Soldier Life at Fort Mackinac, 1780–1895
. N.p.: Mackinac Island State Park Commission, 1972.

Wilkinson-Latham, Robert.
British Artillery on Land and Sea, 1790–1820
. Newton Abott: David and Charles, 1973.

Wilson, Bruce. “The Enterprises of Robert Hamilton.” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Toronto, 1978.

Wilson, Samuel M. “Kentucky’s Part in the War of 1812,”
Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
, vol. 29.

Wiltse, Charles.
John C. Calhoun, Nationalist
. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1944.

Wise, S.F. and Brown, R. Craig.
Canada Views the United States: Nineteenth Century Political Attitudes
. Toronto: Macmillan, 1967.

Woodford, Frank B.
Lewis Cass, the Last Jeffersonian
. 1950. Reprinted New York: Octagon Books, 1973.

Young, James S.
The Washington Community, 1800–1828
. New York: Columbia University Press, 1966.

Zaslow, Morris and Turner, Wesley B. (eds.).
The Defended Border: Upper Canada and the War of 1812
. Toronto: Macmillan, 1964.

FLAMES
ACROSS
THE
BORDER
1813-1814

Flames Across the Border, 1813–1814

Maps
Cast of Characters

PREVIEW
        
New Brunswick Goes to War

OVERVIEW
      
The All-Canadian War

ONE
              
The Capture of Little York
                   April 26–May 2, 1813

TWO
             
Stalemate on the Niagara Peninsula
                   May 27–August 1, 1813

THREE
           
The Northwest Campaign: 1
                   
The Siege of Fort Meigs
                   April 12–May 8, 1813

FOUR
             
The Northwest Campaign: 2
                   
The Contest for Lake Erie
                   June–September, 1813

FIVE
              
The Northwest Campaign: 3
                   
Retreat on the Thames
                   September 14–October 5, 1813

SIX
               
The Assault on Montreal
                   October 4–November 12, 1813

SEVEN
            
The Niagara in Flames
November–December, 1813

EIGHT
            
Marking Time
                   January–June, 1814

NINE
             
The Struggle for the Fur Country
                   May–September, 1814

TEN
              
The Last Invasion
                   July–November, 1814

ELEVEN
          
The Burning of Washington
                   August, 1814

TWELVE
         
The Battle of Lake Champlain
                   September, 1814

THIRTEEN
       
Ghent
                   August–December, 1814

AFTERVIEW
    
The Legacy

Aftermath
Author’s Note and Acknowledgements
Notes
Select Bibliography

Maps

Drawn by Geoffrey Matthews

The Theatre of War, 1813–1814

Changing U.S. Strategy, Winter, 1813

The Capture of Little York 416–7

The Capture of Fort George

The Niagara Peninsula, 1813

The Battle of Stoney Creek

The Battle of Beaver Dams

The Northwest Frontier

The Battle of Fort Meigs

Action on Lake Erie, Summer, 1813

Presque Isle

The Battle of Lake Erie: 12:15 p.m.

The Battle of Lake Erie: 2:40 p.m.

The Battle of Lake Erie: 3:00 p.m.

Procter Withdraws

Retreat Up the Thames, September 27–October 5, 1813

The Battle of the Thames

Lake Ontario, October, 1813

Wade Hampton’s Movements, September–October, 1813

The Battle of Châteauguay: Phase 1

The Battle of Châteauguay: Phase 2

Wilkinson Moves on Montreal, October 31–November 11, 1813

The Battle of Crysler’s Farm: Phase 1

The Battle of Crysler’s Farm: Phase 2

British Infantry Tactics at Crysler’s Farm

The Niagara Frontier, December, 1813

Lake Huron, Summer, 1814

The Battle of Chippawa

The Battle of Lundy’s Lane: Phase 1

The Battle of Lundy’s Lane: Phase 2

The Siege of Fort Erie

The British March on Washington, August 19–24, 1814

Lake Champlain, 1814

Macdonough at Anchor, Plattsburgh Bay, September, 1814

The Battle of Lake Champlain

Plattsburgh, September 11, 1814

Cast of Characters

On the British-Canadian side

William Adams
, Admiralty lawyer; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

William Allan
, York merchant; Major, 3rd Regiment, York Militia.

Robert Heriot Barclay
, Commandant, British naval forces, Lake Erie, 1813.

Lord Bathurst
, Secretary for War and the Colonies.

Cecil Bisshopp
, Lieutenant-Colonel; Inspecting Field Officer of Militia, Upper Canada; led attack on Black Rock, 1813.

Shadrach Byfield
, Private, Light Company, 1st Battalion, 41st Regiment.

Viscount Castlereagh
, Foreign Secretary

George Cockburn
, Rear-Admiral; second-in-command, British fleet off American east coast.

Francis De Rottenburg
, Major-General; Commander-in-Chief and Administrator, Upper Canada, 1813, succeeding Major-General Roger Sheaffe.

Charles-Michel de Salaberry
, Lieutenant-Colonel, Canadian Voltigeurs.

Robert Dickson
, fur trader; Assistant Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Michigan Territory, 1813–15.

George Downie
, Commandant, British naval forces, Lake Champlain, 1814.

Gordon Drummond
, Lieutenant-General; Commander-in-Chief and Administrator, Upper Canada, 1814, succeeding Francis De Rottenburg.

Dominique Ducharme
, Captain, Indian Department.

Matthew Elliott
, Superintendent, Indian Department, Amherstburg.

James FitzGibbon
, Captain, 49th Regiment.

James Gambier
, Rear-Admiral; British commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

Henry Goulburn
, British politician; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

George Gleig
, Lieutenant, 85th Regiment, attack on Washington, 1814.

John Harvey
, Lieutenant-Colonel; deputy adjutant-general, British forces in Canada.

Lord Liverpool
, Prime Minister, 1812-27.

George Macdonell
, Lieutenant-Colonel, 2nd Battalion, Select Embodied Militia.

Robert McDouall
, Lieutenant-Colonel, Royal Newfoundland Regiment; aide to Sir George Prevost, 1813; commander at Michilimackinac, 1814.

William Hamilton Merritt
, Captain; commander, Provincial Dragoons.

Sir George Prevost
, Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of His Majesty’s forces in Canada, the Atlantic Colonies, and Bermuda.

Henry Procter
, Major-General; commander, Right Division, Detroit frontier, 1813.

Phineas Riall
, Major-General; commander, Right Division, Niagara frontier, 1814.

John Richardson
, gentleman volunteer, 1st Battalion, 41st Regiment.

John Beverley Robinson
, Acting Attorney General, Upper Canada.

Robert Ross
, Major-General; commander of army attacking Washington, August, 1814.

Sir Roger Hale Sheaffe
, Major-General; Commander-in-Chief and Administrator, Upper Canada, October 1812–June 1813.

John Strachan
, Anglican minister; chaplain of Fort York.

Tecumseh
, Shawnee war chief; leader of the Indian confederacy.

John Vincent
, Major-General; commander, Centre Division, Niagara frontier, 1813.

James Lucas Yeo
, Commodore; commander-in-chief, naval forces on the Great Lakes.

On the American side

John Quincy Adams
, American ambassador to Russia; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

John Armstrong
, Secretary of War, 1813–14.

James Bayard
, Senator; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

John Boyd
, Brigadier-General; succeeded Morgan Lewis as commander at Fort George, 1813; commanded at Battle of Crysler’s Farm.

Jacob Brown
, Major-General; commander on Niagara frontier, 1814, succeeding James Wilkinson.

Cyrenius Chapin
, Buffalo surgeon; commander of partisan irregulars, Niagara frontier, 1813.

Isaac Chauncey
, Commodore; commander of naval forces on the Great Lakes.

Henry Clay
, Speaker of the House; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

George Croghan
, Major, later Lieutenant-Colonel; commander at Fort Stephenson, 1813; led attack on Michilimackinac, 1814.

Henry Dearborn
, Major-General; commander of Army of the North to July, 1813.

David Bates Douglass
, 2nd-Lieutenant, artillery, Fort Erie.

Jesse Elliott
, Lieutenant; second-in-command, naval forces, Lake Erie.

Edmund Gaines
, Brigadier-General and Adjutant General; commander at Fort Erie, summer, 1814.

Albert Gallatin
, Secretary of the Treasury; commissioner at Ghent peace talks, 1814.

William Henry Harrison
, Major-General; former governor of Indiana Territory; commander of the Army of the Northwest.

Wade Hampton
, Major-General; commander of the army on Lake Champlain, 1813.

Jarvis Hanks
, drummer boy, 11th Infantry.

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