Read an Excerpt
  What So Proudly We Hailed 
 Essays on the Contemporary Meaning of the War of 1812 
 BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS 
 Copyright © 2012   THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-0-8157-2414-8 
    Chapter One 
  Introduction    Pietro S. Nivola and Peter J. Kastor  
  
  With no consensus of the two political parties, the government of the  United States decides to go to war. The war of choice is waged on the assumption  that it will be brief and decisive. There is little advance planning for how  to pay for—and prevail in—an unexpectedly protracted and complicated  military operation. Moreover, the war aims are not stable. They become  ambitious. When the main casus belli recedes, others move to the fore. An  invasion of a foreign country is attempted, and it is presumed that American  soldiers will be greeted as liberators. Nasty surprises abound. Not only does  discord grow in Congress, the executive suffers from factionalism, infighting,  and, in some bureaus, gross incompetence.  
  The war drags on. The upshot is, in reality, a stalemate—or at least an  anticlimax—even though the president declares the mission accomplished.  Historians will continue to wonder whether it was necessary and exactly  what it accomplished.  
  That scenario may sound familiar. Iraq comes to mind. America's intervention  there was controversial, unpaid for (at least through additional taxes  instead of debt), and beset by unintended developments. It slogged on much  longer than predicted. The stated goal of the expedition was to eliminate  Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, but when the existence of  those weapons could not be confirmed, U.S. troops were ordered to invade  the country anyway. Other objectives (first removing a regime, then stabilizing  its replacement) now took precedence. Yet many Iraqis did not welcome  their liberators, who were surprised by the anti-American reaction and  the tenacity of the insurgent movement that followed. It remains unclear  whether the costly U.S. effort in Iraq will have paid off.  
  But the general description in the opening sentences above is also a serviceable  characterization of an earlier armed conflict—one that took place a couple  of centuries ago and that most Americans now recall dimly, if at all: the War of  1812. Two centuries after it began, few Americans know much about the war;  indeed, its bicentennial observance has gotten more attention in Canada than  in the United States. Americans might recall that the national anthem was written  during the War of 1812, or perhaps that the British invaded and burned  much of the nation's capital, or that Andrew Jackson led American troops to  victory at New Orleans. But the causes and outcomes of the war have generally  faded from memory. In its own time, however, the War of 1812, which  followed nearly a generation of strife with foreign powers in North America,  was a momentous event. It marked the first time that the United States made  a formal declaration of war, and that dramatic step influenced the way that a  generation of Americans conceived of their country and its role in the world.  
  The War of 1812 had multiple roots, but first and foremost among them  were the commercial disputes between the United States and Great Britain.  In addition to imposing restrictions on American trade (a primary concern  of U.S. policymakers), the British government, in a practice known as  impressment, had continued to force sailors on American merchant ships  to serve on warships of the Royal Navy. In 1812, the United States took up  arms against Great Britain hoping that a military campaign on the Canadian  border would force a change in British policy. In two years of bloody, mostly  chaotic warfare, neither side triumphed. The conflict stretched far and wide,  on both land and sea. American, British, and Indian forces clashed not only  along the border with Canada but also in the Mississippi Valley, on the Gulf  Coast, and in the Mid-Atlantic states.  
  Meanwhile, the fledgling U.S. Navy sought to take the fight to the British  on the Great Lakes, the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and even the waters surrounding  the British Isles. The British responded by deploying a large fleet  to blockade the Eastern seaboard and eventually to launch the amphibious  invasions near Washington and New Orleans. It was from one of those British  ships that an American prisoner, Francis Scott Key, observed the bombardment  of Fort McHenry, which guarded Baltimore's harbor. Inspired by  the tenacity of the U.S. defenders, Key wrote the poem that became the "The  Star-Spangled Banner."  
  When the fighting came to an end in 1815, both sides were exhausted, and  it was hard to tell what, if anything, had been achieved. In time, however, it  became evident that America's place in the world had changed. Although  Britain retained its hold on Canada, the British government gradually abandoned  its most objectionable trade policies. During the war, the Indians in  the North had formed an effective alliance with the British. The fight in parts  of the South and in the West took a different turn. There, the Americans  routed the Indians and promptly took over their lands.  
  If the war had no clear winner in 1815, it nonetheless would reshape  Anglo-American relations. Britain and the United States moved past the  antagonisms that had gripped them since 1776. Meanwhile, American  domestic politics also underwent a transformation. In sum, the war's imprimatur  was significant.  
  For the bicentennial of that formative yet rather opaque episode in American  history, the Brookings Institution, in collaboration with the Center for  the Constitution at James Madison's Montpelier and with Washington University  in St. Louis, assembled a group of scholars to explore a basic question  of continuing relevance: What, from a modern perspective, did the country  learn—or perhaps not learn—from the experience of 1812–15? This book is  the fruit of our commemorative research project.  
  The book, including this introduction, has six chapters. Chapter 2, by  Pietro S. Nivola, a senior fellow at Brookings, reviews the causes and the  course of the War of 1812. The chapter pays particular attention to a curious  parallel between American politics in the early nineteenth century and those  today: the existence of a deep divide between the two major political parties  and the tendency of each side to say, in effect, "My way or the highway."  The pro-war partisans in 1812—the Republicans, as they were called in that  era—forged ahead on their own, mostly with contempt for the opposition,  the Federalists. The opposing camps were poles apart ideologically. Much  as the two major political parties do today, the parties then held "different  visions for the country." Those plain words happen to be those of House  Speaker John Boehner, spoken not long ago, but the same words would befit  just as easily the political rivals of two centuries ago.  
  Not unlike the Republican Party of 2012, for example, the Republican  Party two hundred years ago was determined to minimize the powers of the  central government, especially its ability to collect new tax revenues. Then as  now, partisan disagreements put the nation's financial stability at risk—and  with it, the maintenance of essential public goods, such as armed forces that  have the resources required to perform their assigned missions.  
  In some ways, therefore, the United States could be said to have learned  less over the long term than perhaps it should have from the ordeal of 1812–1815.   Be that as it may, the positions of the political parties were substantially  upended following the war. Difficult as it may be for many observers of our  polarized politics today to anticipate a transformative shift in the current  political alignment, it could—indeed, in time, will—happen again. Revisiting  the past circa 1812 serves as a useful reminder, even as reassurance, that  the status quo is not permanent.  
  The third chapter of the book, written by Stephen Budiansky, the author  of Perilous Fight: America's War with Britain on the High Seas, 1812–1815,  addresses the war's consequences for the U.S. military, mainly in the immediate  wake of the war but also, in a general way, over the longer haul. America  had gone to war ill-prepared and paid a price for its negligence. Battlefield  losses—6,765 casualties—were light in comparison with those in subsequent  conflicts, such as the Civil War, but the seemingly modest figure does not tell  the full story. An estimated 17,000 additional deaths resulted from disease,  exposure, and other noncombat causes, a substantial share of which could  be attributed to the fact that the campaign was badly organized. For a young  country with a small population engaged in an altercation that only lasted  two and a half years, the toll was significant. (The American casualty count in  Iraq—4,409 troops killed and 31,928 wounded—was for a war that spanned  eight years.) The harm, much of it quite unnecessary and humiliating, proved  severe enough to alter attitudes about national defense, albeit in fits and  starts. At least political resistance to a standing army and navy diminished.  
  Gradually, both services became robust institutions, but the navy got a  bigger boost from the war. For, as Budiansky shows, America's little flotilla  in 1812–15 had not only earned the public's respect with feats in several valiant  encounters with British warships but also had mounted effective raids  on British merchant shipping, thereby at least marginally tipping the scales  in an otherwise lopsided contest. To this day, the U.S. Navy owes some of its  stature to how it proved its mettle during the War of 1812.  
  Chapter 4, by Alan Taylor, a professor of history at the University of California,  Davis, addresses a cultural legacy of the war. The war is widely thought  to have roused a collective patriotic spirit and, in the end, created a sense of  nationhood. In the immediate aftermath of the war, that did appear to be  one of its effects. At the conclusion of the struggle, James Monroe assured  the Senate that "our Union has gained strength" and our nation built "character."  He was right, to a point. Symbols of the nation's identity—including,  as we have noted, verses of what was to become the country's anthem—emerged   from the lore of 1812.  
  But beneath the surface, the war years also opened regional fissures that,  in time, would cause disunity. Taylor delves into this less-noted implication.  The postwar period, commonly known as the "era of good feelings," harbored  some enduring resentments. Taylor describes what he calls the emergence  of competing nationalisms: a Southern variant and a Northern one.  The war had left states such as Virginia embittered at New England's wartime  reluctance to enter the fray and especially to dispatch troops elsewhere for  the common defense. Meanwhile, many Northerners chafed at being asked  to join a war that they deemed unjust and unnecessary and that they suspected  of serving as a pretext for achieving other aspirations, such as ousting  Indians from coveted lands, preserving or expanding slave-holding territories,  and shoring up political support for the Republicans at the expense of  the Federalists. The War of 1812, in short, may have buoyed nationalistic  sentiments for a brief while, but it then exposed fault lines that would disrupt  the process of nation building for decades to come. A lesson that citizens  today might take away from this history is quite simple: Beware of starting  wars that can ultimately divide the country, for the damaging rifts that they  create may take a long time to repair.  
  In chapter 5, two Brookings scholars, Benjamin Wittes and Ritika Singh,  take up an unexamined feature of the War of 1812: the president's unique  forbearance toward antiwar dissent, even when some of it became so vehement  as to verge on treason. In striking contrast to virtually every subsequent  commander in chief—and to John Adams, the Federalist signatory of the  punitive Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798—James Madison declined to restrict  civil liberties in wartime. The war was one of the most unpopular this country  has ever fought. Although Madison was distressed by the intense opposition,  he also was resigned to it. Unwilling or perhaps unable to repress the dissenters,  he let their resistance grow—culminating in the antiwar movement's  notorious Hartford Convention, which called not only for an immediate halt  to hostilities but also for far-reaching revisions of the Constitution.  
  Juxtaposed with what happened in later wars, Madison's remarkably  restrained exercise of executive war powers can seem eccentric. Abraham  Lincoln would suspend habeas corpus during the Civil War. Woodrow Wilson  cracked down harshly on dissidents during World War I. Franklin D,  Roosevelt authorized the "internment" of tens of thousands of American  citizens during World War II. Waging a war on terror, the administrations of  George W. Bush and Barack Obama reserved the option of detaining in military  custody anyone, including U.S. nationals, who was suspected of being an  enemy combatant. Madison took no such actions. Why?  
  To an extent, Wittes and Singh conclude, Madison may have been motivated  by pragmatic considerations. With the country already profoundly  torn by the war, attempts to suppress his opponents may have seemed, if  not infeasible, politically counterproductive. An added backlash might work  to the advantage of his nemesis, the Federalist Party, thereby imperiling an  important underlying purpose of his war policy—to rehabilitate the tenuous  credibility and reputation of republicanism. But above all, the authors argue,  the president simply held strong constitutional scruples regarding the limits  of executive power.  
  Ironically, looking back over two centuries of often imperious presidencies  in national emergencies, Madison's principled restraint during the War  of 1812 may have been ahead of its time. Surely, aspects of his civil- libertarian  style now seem closer to today's norms than, say, President Roosevelt's draconian  decision to forcibly relocate and incarcerate about 80,000 Japanese  Americans in 1942.  
  In chapter 6, the final chapter, Peter J. Kastor, a history professor at Washington  University in St. Louis, considers the ways that the unique regime that  emerged in 1789 informed the prosecution of the War of 1812. The constitutional  order that James Madison had played a leading role in framing was a  federated structure, vesting authority in a central government with separated  powers and also in sovereign states. A political system with these two-tiered  checks and balances was bound to tie the president's hands, particularly in  the regime's formative years, long before the executive's war-making capacity  evolved into the potent presidential prerogative that it is now. National  military plans, for example, were heavily dependent on the mobilization  of state militias. Uncooperative state governors or legislatures would complicate  military strategy. Throughout the war, some key state governments  brazenly boycotted the Madison administration's war plans. Others exerted  influence less directly, through Congress, where local interests were extensively  represented and where the president's requests for essential resources  were frequently frustrated. Still, Kastor argues, in certain instances "federalism"  (his preferred term for what political scientists refer to more broadly as  the Madisonian system) measured up to the task.  
  In the West, a combination of forces, some national, others local, enabled  the United States to score several battlefield successes. Territorial governance,  which placed large areas of land under direct federal control, meant that  much of the West was less subject to the errant activities of the states, making  it easier to conduct military operations there. At the same time, whereas state  and local decisions often interfered with the Madison administration's war  effort elsewhere, they aided it in parts of the West, where state governments  were especially eager to vanquish the region's Indians. The important gains  of Andrew Jackson in the Southwest, for instance, had less to do with military  maneuvers orchestrated in Washington than with the initiative of state  units like Jackson's Tennessee volunteers. A diverse assortment of local folk,  not just federal regulars, rallied to the defense of New Orleans.  
  In sum, America's decentralized government institutions encumbered the  war effort but at important junctures also met some of its challenges. In the  end, the complex federal polity that the founders had pieced together proved  resilient and endured. Citizens given to lamenting the state of present-day  American politics, featuring a government that is supposedly "gridlocked"  and "dysfunctional," would do well to recall that the nation has weathered  far greater crises in the past.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from What So Proudly We Hailed   Copyright © 2012   by THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION.   Excerpted by permission of BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.