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Table of Contents


CHAPTER 1
The Conquest
CHAPTER 2
The Revolt of Pontiac and the American Invasion
CHAPTER 3
The Coveted Pacific Coast
CHAPTER 4
The Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812
A Relatively Peaceful Decade
The Militias of the New Provinces
The French Revolution
Canada at War with France
Tensions with the United States
The Royal Canadian Volunteers
Newfoundland Threatened
The 1802 Peace
The Battle of Trafalgar
New Tensions in America
Mobilization in Lower Canada
The British and Canadian Forces
The War of 1812
Canada's Defence Strategy
American Fiascos
New Invasions in the West
The Americans Attack Upper Canada
Laura Secord and Beaver Dams
Objective: Montreal!
The Battle of Chateauguay
The Battle of Crysler's Farm
The British Take Fort Niagara
The 1814 Invasion of Canada
The Battle for the Northwest
The Race to Build Ships
The British Defeat at Plattsburgh
The War at Sea
The Legacy of the War of 1812
CHAPTER 5
Demobilization
CHAPTER 6
The Royal Navy, Ruler of the Seas
CHAPTER 7
A Decade of Turbulence
APPENDIX A
The British Armed Forces
APPENDIX B
Daily Life of Soldiers and Officers
APPENDIX C
Uniforms and Arms
APPENDIX D
Reference

    
CHAPTER 4 The Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812

    
    
Canada at War with France ( 3 pages )

    
    
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French Canadian Reaction
    
    
    
Colonel John Nairne, La Malbaie Regiment, Lower Canada Sedentary Militia, circa 1795.
Colonel John Nairne, La Malbaie Regiment, Lower Canada Sedentary Militia, circa 1795.
(Click image to enlarge)

The situation in France was causing great concern.  The execution of Louis XVI shocked many European countries.  On February 1, 1793, Great Britain, together with several other countries, declared war on the French Republic, dragging along all of its colonies in its wake.  Canada was thus by force of circumstance at war with France.

The news of the King's death reached Quebec in the spring of 1793.  It caused much grief among French Canadians, who, noted Philippe Aubert de Gaspé in his Mémoires, "for a long time after the Conquest kept affectionate memories of their French princes."  "From that day on," he added, "I understood the horrors of the French Revolution.  Upon learning the news, a feeling of deep sadness affected all the kind souls ... and the sorrow was widespread." 55  Some French citizens who had fled to Canada confirmed the horrors committed in France.  These new rumours, added to those already circulating about invading Republicans with their guillotines, were hardly reassuring.

For the moment, however, it was the activities of one Edmond-Charles Genêt that were of the greatest interest to the British authorities in North America.  This French ambassador to the United States was the author of an appeal to Canadians entitled Les Français libres à leurs frères du Canada [From the free French to their brothers in Canada], inviting them to "awaken from their slumber," to take up arms, to call their "Indian friends" to the rescue and to "rely on the support of their cousins, the Americans and the French," 56 to fight the British.  This appeal secretly made the rounds of the towns and villages during the second half of 1793.  In spite of the attractions it may have had, in terms of fine promises from the mother country, experience had taught the French Canadians not to place too much stock in illusions.  The appeal was not the success that had been hoped for.

    
    
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  Last Updated: 2004-06-20 Top of Page Important Notices