Andrew Jackson and the Miracle of New Orleans

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Andrew Jackson and the Miracle of New Orleans Page 23

by Brian Kilmeade


  _______. Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821. New York: Harper & Row, 1977.

  _______. The Battle of New Orleans. New York: Viking, 1999.

  Roosevelt, Theodore. The Naval War of 1812. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1889.

  Royall, Anne. Letters from Alabama on Various Subjects. Washington, 1830.

  Smith, Gene A. “Arsène Lacarrière Latour: Immigrant, Patiot-Historian, and Foreign Agent.” In The Human Tradition in Antebellum America, edited by Michael A. Morrison. Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, 2000.

  Smith, Harry. The Autobiography of Lieutenant-General Sir Harry Smith. Vol 1. London: John Murray, 1902.

  Smith, Z. F. The Battle of New Orleans. Louisville, KY: K. P. Morton, 1904.

  Stagg, J. C. A. Mr. Madison’s War. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983.

  Surtees, William. Twenty-Five Years in the Rifle Brigade. Edinburgh: William Blackwood, 1833.

  Tatum, Howell. “Major H. Tatum’s Journal While Acting Topographical Engineer (1814) to General Jackson, Commanding 7th Military District.” In Smith College Studies in History, vol. 7, edited by John Spencer Bassett and Sidney Bradshaw Fay. Northampton, MA: Department of History of Smith College, 1922.

  Thomson, John Lewis. Historical Sketches of the Late War, Between the United States and Great Britain. 4th ed. Philadelphia: Thomas Desilver, 1817.

  Updyke, Frank A. The Diplomacy of the War of 1812. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1915.

  Vogel, Steve. Through the Perilous Fight: Six Weeks That Saved the Nation. New York: Random House, 2013.

  Walker, Alexander. Jackson and New Orleans. New York: J. C. Derby, 1856.

  Wellington, Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, Duke of. Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda. Vol. 10. London: John Murray, 1863.

  Windship, John Cravath May. “Letters from Louisiana, 1813–1814.” Edited by Everett S. Brown. Mississippi Valley Historical Review, vol. 11, no. 4 (March 1925), pp. 570–79.

  Woodward, Thomas S. Woodward’s Reminiscences of the Creek, or Muscogee Indians. 1859. Reprint, Tuscaloosa: Alabama Book Store, 1939.

  INDEX

  Adams, John Quincy

  election of 1824 and, 223–24

  Ghent peace talks and, 59, 85–87, 136–37

  Age of Jackson, 220

  Alligator, USS, 111, 117–18

  American Revolution, 1–3

  Anaconda, HMS, 74

  Armstrong, John, 48

  appointed secretary of war, 20

  British capture of Washington and, 64, 65

  dismissal of, 66–67

  orders Jackson to disband and disarm his militia, 20–22

  army, British

  Bladensburg, fighting at, 64–65

  New Orleans, Battle of (See New Orleans, Battle of)

  Washington, capture and burning of, 64–67

  Army, U.S. See also specific militias

  Bladensburg, fighting at, 64–65

  Canadian campaign, 15–17, 27–28

  Creek War, 31–46

  defeat of Spanish/British forces at Pensacola, 81–85, 87–89

  New Orleans, Battle of (See New Orleans, Battle of)

  Baltimore, Battle of, 77–81, 93, 112–13

  Baltimore Patriot and Evening Advertiser, 80

  Barataria Bay, 67

  Baratarian privateers, 57, 67–72

  British attempt to recruit, 67–72

  first battle of New Orleans and, 152

  offer of allegiance accepted by Jackson, 134–36

  pardons received by, 225

  Bathurst, Earl, 138

  battles. See specific battles

  Bayou Bienvenue, 140, 141–43, 159, 227

  Bayou Mazant, 142, 159

  Beale, Thomas, 128

  Beale’s Rifles, 128, 152, 153

  Benton, Jesse, 29

  Benton, Thomas Hart, 20, 29, 224

  Bienville, Jean-Baptiste Le Moyn, sieur de, 55

  Bladensburg, fighting at, 64–65

  Blount, Willie, 18–19

  Boston Evening Post, 15

  Brazen, HMS, 213

  Burroughs, E. N., 194

  cajuns, 56

  Canadian campaign, 15–17, 27–28

  Carolina, USS, 160

  continuing bombardment of British by, 162–63, 166

  crew of, 160

  destruction of, 167–69

  first battle of New Orleans and, 149–50, 151

  Carroll, William, 125, 173, 216

  in duel, 29

  postwar career of, 225

  in Tennessee militia, 20

  Carron, HMS, 61, 74

  Castlereagh, Lord, 59, 60

  Cherokee Indians, 7, 31–32, 33

  Chesapeake (ship), 6–7

  Chickasaw Indians, 7, 82

  Childers, HMS, 74

  Choctaw Indians, 7, 31–32, 33, 82, 88, 127, 163

  Claiborne, William Charles Cole, 90

  as governor, 57, 63, 98, 105

  Jackson and, 98, 105, 174, 184

  Jackson warns of potential attack, 63

  Lafitte offers his services to, 72

  postwar career of, 224

  privateers and, 72, 134

  Clay, Henry, 8

  election of 1824 and, 223–24

  Ghent peace talks and, 58–60, 85–87, 137, 157

  support for Canadian invasion, 16

  Cochrane, Alexander Forrester Inglis, 91–95

  blamed for defeat at New Orleans, 227

  career of, 91–92

  crossing of Lake Borgne and landing at Bayou Bienvenue, 130–33, 139–42

  delivers troops that attack and burn Washington, 93

  Fort Bowyer surrendered to, 211–13

  ordered to end hostilities, 213

  Pakenham and, 165–66

  personal dislike of Americans of, 93–94

  postwar career of, 226

  size of force commanded by, 92–93

  value of spoils of war and motivations of, 94

  Cochrane, Charles, 93–94

  Cockburn, George, 65, 66

  Coffee, John, 173, 216

  as brigadier general, 31

  dispatched to Mobile to prevent potential British ground assault, 101–2

  first battle of New Orleans and, 152, 153

  Fort Barrancas defeat and, 88

  joins Jackson’s forces for attack on Pensacola, 82

  ordered to New Orleans, 125

  postwar career of, 225

  Tallushatchee, fighting at, 32–33

  in Tennessee militia, 20, 31, 32–33, 38

  Constitution, USS, 224–25

  Creek Indians, 7, 25, 30, 31–32. See also Creek War

  Creek War, 31–46

  Fort Mims massacre and, 30, 33

  Horseshoe Bend, Battle of, 41–45

  Talladega, fighting at, 33–35

  Tallushatchee, fighting at, 32–33

  Treaty of Fort Jackson and, 47

  Weatherford’s surrender, 45–47

  Creoles, 57

  Crockett, David, 32, 35, 41, 226

  Daquin, Jean, 127

  Davezac, Louise, 98–99

  Dearborn, Henry, 17

  Dickson, Alexander, 167

  Dubourg, William, 203, 210

  duels, Jackson’s, 28–30

  Eaton, John Henry, 223

  Embargo Act, 6

  Eustis, William, 16–17, 20

  Federalist Party, 6, 18

  Federal Republican, 80

  Florida

  acquired from Spain, 223

  Jackson’s attack on Pensacola (See Pensacola, Fl
orida)

  Fort Barrancas, 84, 88–89

  Fort Bowyer, 61–62, 73–77, 81, 211–13

  Fort McHenry, 78–81, 93

  Fort Mims massacre, 30, 33

  Fort St. Leon, 105

  Fort St. Philip, 104, 207–8

  freemen, 126, 133

  French and Indian War, 56

  Gallatin, Albert, 58–59, 85–87

  Gallatin (steamboat), 230–31

  Ghent peace talks, 58–60, 85–87, 136–38, 156–57

  Gibbs, Samuel, 171

  death of, 198, 199

  final battle of New Orleans and, 192–94, 198, 199

  missing ladders and, 192–93

  Giroud, Nicholas, 98

  Gleig, George, 93, 219

  in final battle of New Orleans, 195

  on first assault on Jackson’s line, 173

  on Lake Borgne traversal, 131

  on New Year’s Eve battle, 180

  on storms encountered in Gulf of Mexico, 107

  at Villeré plantation, 144, 148, 152, 154–55, 163

  Grand Terre Island, Louisiana, 67–68

  Great Britain

  agitation of Indian tribes by, 7

  impressment of U.S. sailors by, 6

  legitimacy of Louisiana Purchase questioned by, 13

  War of 1812 (See War of 1812)

  Hartford Convention, 87

  Havre de Grace, Maryland, 28

  Hermes, HMS, 61, 74–77

  Hermitage, 33, 217

  Horseshoe Bend, Battle of, 41–45

  Houston, Sam, 44, 225–26

  Hull, William, 16–17

  impressment, 6

  Jackson, Andrew, 19–20

  American Revolution experiences of, 1–3

  attends silver jubilee commemorating Battle of New Orleans, 229–31

  career of, 10

  Claiborne and, 98, 105, 174, 184

  Creek War and, 31–46

  death of, 232

  defeats Spanish/British forces at Pensacola, 81–85, 87–89

  desertion of troops and, 37–38

  duels of, 28–30

  earns “Old Hickory” nickname, 24

  elected major general of Tennessee militia, 10–11

  elected president (1828), 224

  election of 1824 and, 223–24

  finances of, 222

  first assembly and training of militia, 19–20

  as Florida territorial governor, 223

  health problems of, 29–31, 34, 39, 95, 124, 222

  as major general in U.S. Army, 48

  march to Nashville and disbanding of militia, 20–24, 27

  marriage of, 9–10

  in Mobile, 49–50, 60–63, 81

  mutiny halted by, 37–38

  in New Orleans (See New Orleans, Battle of; New Orleans, Louisiana)

  returns home, 217–18

  Seminoles defeated by, 223

  trek to New Orleans, 90, 96–97

  youth of, 9

  Jackson, Andrew, Jr. (adopted son), 21, 215, 222

  Jackson, Andrew, Sr. (father), 2

  Jackson, Elizabeth (mother), 2–3

  Jackson, Hugh (brother), 2

  Jackson, Lyncoya (adopted son), 33

  Jackson, Rachel Donelson, 9–10, 95–96, 215–16, 230

  Jackson, Robert (brother), 1–3

  Jefferson, Thomas, 11–12, 16

  Johnston, Angèle, 227

  Jones, Thomas ap Catesby, 111–12, 114–16, 119–22, 225

  Jugeat, Pierre, 127

  Keane, John, 140, 165, 204

  blamed for defeat at New Orleans, 227

  in final battle of New Orleans, 194, 197

  first assault on Jackson’s line and, 170–71

  first battle of New Orleans and, 147–49, 155

  postwar career of, 226

  Kentucky militia, 183–84, 184

  Key, Francis Scott, 77, 78–80

  Lafitte, Jean, 68, 171–72

  meets Jackson and offers allegiance, 134–36

  pardon received by, 225

  postwar activities of, 225

  receives British offer to join forces, 69–72

  warns Claiborne of British plans, 71–72

  Lafitte, Pierre, 68, 152, 225

  Lake Borgne, 227

  attack route through, 130–33

  fighting at, 112–22

  Lambert, John

  cease-fire requested by, 201–2

  in final battle of New Orleans, 194

  Fort Bowyer surrender and, 211–13

  postwar career of, 226

  Latour, Arsène Lacarrière, 101, 104, 105–6, 161, 176, 178, 183

  Lawrence, William, 62, 75, 77, 212–13

  Life of Andrew Jackson, Major-General in the Service of the United States, The (Reid and Eaton), 223

  Livingston, Edward, 98–100, 171–72, 215, 224

  Livingston, Louise, 215

  Lockyer, Nicholas, 109

  defeats Patterson and opens Lake Borgne for British, 113, 117–19, 120, 121

  postwar career of, 226

  relays British offer to Baratarian pirates, 68, 70

  Louisiana, USS, 129–30, 160

  continuing bombardment of British by, 162–63, 166

  drafting of crew for, 130

  first attack on Jackson’s line and, 173, 174–75

  rowed to safety, 169–70

  Louisiana militia, 104, 133, 145, 184, 185, 199, 200, 216

  Louisiana Purchase, 11–12

  Madison, James, 83

  British capture of Washington and, 65

  illness of, 28

  invasion of Canada and, 15–17

  popularity of, following War of 1812, 223

  Treaty of Ghent and, 213–14

  U.S. declaration of war and, 5

  Manrique, Don Mateo González, 82, 84, 85, 88

  Melville, Herman, 225

  Mills, Clark, 232

  Mississippi militia, 40, 184

  Mississippi River, 12–13

  Missouri River, 12–13

  Mobile, Alabama

  defeat of British at Fort Bowyer, 73–77

  Jackson in, 49–50, 60–63, 81

  Moby-Dick (Melville), 225

  Monroe, James, 64

  back-channel support for Jackson’s foray into Florida, 83–84

  Louisiana Purchase and, 11–12

  presidency of, 223

  raises money for army, 89

  as secretary of war, 67

  Montgomery, Lemuel, 44

  Morgan, David, 177

  Morrell, Robert, 139

  Mullins, Thomas, 193–94

  Napoleon Bonaparte, 11, 12, 13, 48, 226

  Narrative of the Life of David Crockett, of the State of Tennessee, A (Crockett), 226

  National Intelligencer, 66

  Navy, Royal

  Baltimore and Fort McHenry attacked by, 78–80

  blockade of American ports, 6, 7, 48

  Cochrane in command of, 91–95

  Fort Bowyer surrenders to, 211–13

  Fort St. Philip fired on by, 207–8

  in Gulf of Mexico, 107–9

  Hermes destroyed and British repelled at Fort Bowyer, 74–77

  impressment of sailors by, 6

  in Jamaica, 91–92

  Lake Borgne, fighting at, 112–22

  meeting with Baratarian pirates, 67–72

  New Orleans, Battle of (See also New Orleans, Battle of)

  at Pensacola, 61, 82, 88

  Navy, U.S.

  Carolina, 149–50, 151, 160, 162–63, 166,
167–69

  impressment of sailors by British, 6

  Lake Borgne, fighting at, 112–22

  Louisiana, 129–30, 160, 162–63, 166, 169–70, 173, 174–75

  Patterson and, 109–12

  size of, 7

  New England, 8

  Hartford Convention and, 87

  opposition to war, 6, 18

  refusal of militia to fight in Canada, 18

  New Orleans, Battle of

  American reinforcements in, 183–84

  British crossing of Lake Borgne and landfall, 130–33, 139–42

  British reinforcements, 182

  British withdrawal, 208–9

  casualties, 154–55, 180, 203–4

  Choctaws and, 127, 163

  critique of, 227–29

  defensive line built, at Rodriguez Canal, 159–62, 176–77, 184–85

  final battle, 189–205

  first assault on Jackson’s lines, 170–75

  first battle of, at Villeré plantation, 147–56

  freemen and, 126, 127

  Jackson attends silver jubilee commemorating, 229–31

  Jackson learns of British landing and plans attack, 144–46

  Jackson positions troops in anticipation of, 133

  Jackson’s failure to reinforce west bank, 186, 228

  Lake Borgne, British defeat of U.S. gunboats on, 112–22

  march from Florida to New Orleans, 90, 96–97

  New Year’s Day artillery fight, 177–80

  pirates and, 134–36, 185, 225

  reconnoitering surroundings for, 100–106, 123–24

  significance for U.S. of, 204–5

  troop arrangements for final battle, 184–85

  west bank attack plan of Pakenham, 181–83, 189–91, 199–201

  New Orleans, Louisiana. See also New Orleans, Battle of

  ceded to Spain, 56

  culture of, 53–55, 56–57

  founding and early history of, 55–56

  geography of, 55

  Jackson arrives in and meets populace of, 97–101

  Jackson returns victorious to, 209–11

  Louisiana Purchase and, 12

  martial law in, 129, 214–15

  militias/army dismissed, 216

  parade and speech by Jackson to rally and unify, 126–30

  victory celebrations in, 203

  Niles’ Weekly Register, 218–19

  Ohio River, 12–13

  Olivier de Vézin, Marie, 188, 227

  Pakenham, Edward, 112–13, 138

  arrival of, at Villeré plantation, 163

  artillery fight and, 177–80

  career of, 163–64

  Cochrane and, 165–66

  death of, 199

  destruction of USS Carolina and, 167–69

  in final battle of New Orleans, 189–91, 198–99

 

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