Since I’m still in the first week of Whispers from the Shadows officially being out, I thought I’d share today a repost of something I wrote for www.RegencyReflections.com–about the War of 1812, but from the British perspective. — And stay tuned!! Tomorrow I’m announcing a week-long party for you Mary Kay fans to help a friend kick off her new business and lead into my birthday. =) For now…enjoy some tall ships!
The Chasseur, one of the most famous privateers of the War of 1812 This Baltimore captain harassed the British merchant fleet in their own waters. |
But oh, how interesting it is!
In 1811, England had been fighting France for long enough that the escalating troubles with America were little more than a nuisance at first. They sent men and ships, but for the first two years of the war, their focus remained set upon France. In North America, they were concerned largely with protecting their Canadian assets, using raids along the Chesapeake to distract American forces from their invasion northward. After Napoleon surrendered, however, everyone–both British and American–new exactly what it meant.
It was time for the fighting to get serious in America.
Privateers engaged in battle during the War of 1812 |
Not only were those in the Admiralty tired of fooling around with the upstarts, but the citizenry were beginning to fuss about the audacity the Americans demonstrated in this second fight, even sending privateers to harass the British in their own waters! They demanded that the Americans’ cities be burned and her people crushed for their impudence. Ready, I daresay, for a breath of peace, more men and ships were sent from Europe to Bermuda and then, finally, to either the Chesapeake or Canada.
But the men were weary. After months and years of suffering in the war with Napoleon, followed by months idle on the ships across the Atlantic, their hearts weren’t in it. More, the humid mid-Atlantic summer–one of the hottest recorded–caused heat-stroke left and right. More men were felled by vicious storms and intense heat for the first few months than by the sword or shells.
For many, this second war with America was but a P.S. to the first. The Revolution went wrong, they were sure, because of bad leadership decisions. Their men–the fathers of those now in charge–were killed or injured because of this. So it was their duty to put it to rights, especially when America persisted in ignoring the laws of citizenship and rights-upon-the-seas that England had held to for centuries.
It was, for many of those involved, a war no one wanted to fight. It was an afterthought to some and forgotten by many more since. A war based on little more than affronted prides.
But like any other, it was also a war with heroes and bravery and determination. And as such, it deserves to be remembered. Especially now, during its two-hundredth anniversary.
My question to you today:
During my school days it was a toss-up between the Revolutionary War and WWII and The Revolutionary War usually won out. I was quite fascinated by George Washington and wrote several papers on him. Since then though my favorite has switched to WWII and I can't get enough of it!
After reading "The Scarlet Pimpernel" by Baroness Orczy, it was definitely the French Revolution. There are so many good novels out there taking various sides – Sabatini's "Scaramouche," Hugo's "Les Mis," and Dickens' "Tale of Two Cities," besides Orczy's subsequent Pimpernel novels, and they spurred further study on my part.
There were a lot of similarities between the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution, which I studied later in college, and so that war took precedence later on. Books about it tend to be a lot more depressing, though, having largely been written by Russians and not outside sources that see the adventure and not as much the sorrow.