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Canadian Military Heritage
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

    
    
The 1814 Invasion of Canada ( 4 pages )

    
    
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American Isolation
    
    
    
In the spring of 1814 President James Madison and the War Hawks received bad news.  A succession of major events had upset the whole international scene: Napoleon's great army had foundered in the Russian snows and France was overrun.  On March 31, 1814, the allied armies entered Paris, welcomed triumphantly by a people tired of the wars of the Empire.  On May 11 Napoleon abdicated and withdrew to the island of Elba.  Peace was proclaimed and the Bourbon monarchy was restored.  The Americans had thus lost their greatest ally, although there had never been any formal alliance with France, and England could now concentrate all its efforts against the United States.

The Americans therefore tried to score points as quickly as possible: to invade Canada before large numbers of reinforcements arrived.  The invasion plan was heatedly debated in the American Cabinet, though, and did not pass until June 7.  The objective was to invade Upper Canada through the Niagara Peninsula.

Before the plan could even be approved, things began to go wrong.  At the end of March General Wilkinson, hoping to improve his reputation after the fiasco of the previous autumn, crossed the border into Lower Canada, in command of approximately 2,000 men, to take a position to the south of Montreal.  When he reached Lacolle, Wilkinson met fierce resistance.  Faced with such determination, the Americans turned back over the border, with 154 dead, wounded and missing, whereas the British and Canadians suffered only 59 losses.

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