Timeline of the War of 1812

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Timeline of the War of 1812 is a chronology of the War of 1812, including a list of battles.

Origins

Year Day Theater Occurrence Notes
1803 May 18 prelude Britain declared war on Napoleonic France Conflict would grow out to War of the Third Coalition.
1803 Jul 4 diplomacy Louisiana Purchase Napoleon sold French Louisiana to the U.S.
Britain supported deal, hoping to keep U.S. neutral.
1804 Nov 3 prelude Quashquame's treaty with William Henry Harrison Many Sauk allied with British instead.
1805 May 22 prelude Essex Decision England's admiralty court decided seizing certain
U.S. merchant ships was legal, escalating tensions.
1805 Oct 21 prelude Battle of Trafalgar Major British victory over France
1806 Apr 18 prelude Non-importation Act U.S. embargo on importation of certain British
goods, in retaliation of the Essex Decision.
1806 Nov 21 prelude Berlin Decree Napoleon imposed trade blockade of British Isles.
1806 Dec 31 prelude Monroe-Pinkney Treaty signed. Intended to stop British impressment of U.S.
ships, but President Thomas Jefferson rejected it.
1807 Jun 22 prelude Chesapeake–Leopard affair Military and diplomatic naval incident,
nearly triggering war between Britain and the U.S.
1807 Nov 11 prelude Orders in Council Britain launched economic warfare against France,
straining relations with neutral countries.
1807 Dec 17 prelude Milan Decree Napoleon ordered seizing all ships from
neutral countries trading with the British.
1807 Dec 22 prelude Embargo Act U.S. act in retaliation against British and French
seizure and impressment of U.S. merchant ships.
1808 Apr 17 prelude Bayonne decree France began seizing all U.S. ships in French ports.
1809 Mar 1 prelude Non-Intercourse Act U.S. act lifting embargoes on all shipping,
except those bound for British and French ports.
1809 Mar 4 prelude President James Madison's inauguration.
1809 Apr 19 prelude Erskine Agreement
1809 Sep 30 prelude Treaty of Fort Wayne U.S.–Shawnee tensions lead to Tecumseh's War.
1810 Mar 23 prelude Rambouillet Decree France orders seizing all U.S. ships in French ports.
1810 May 1 prelude Macon's Bill No. 2 U.S. act intended to compel Britain and France
to stop seizing U.S. ships.
1810 Aug 5 prelude Cadore letter
1811 Feb 2 prelude Trade with the United Kingdom closed
1811 Mar 10 prelude Henry letters Fabricated letters caused diplomatic incident.
1811 May 16 prelude Little Belt affair Military and diplomatic naval incident,
nearly triggering war between Britain and the U.S.
1811 Nov 4 prelude 12th United States Congress convened.
1811 Nov 7 prelude Battle of Tippecanoe Tecumseh's confederacy defeated.
1812 Apr 4 prelude American Trade Embargo
1812 May 11 prelude UK Prime Minister Spencer Perceval assassinated. Pro-war sentiment in Britain decreased,
and efforts were made to reconcile with the U.S.
1812 Jun 1 prelude President James Madison's war message Madison requested the U.S. Congress to declare war.
1812 Jun 8 prelude Robert Jenkinson became UK Prime Minister Some measures to avert war were tried,
but they were too little, too late.
1812 Jun 16 prelude Castlereagh announced repeal of Orders in Council News reached U.S. Congress too late
to impact U.S. declaration of war on the UK.

War

Theaters

  • v
  • t
  • e
Chesapeake campaign
1813–1814
1813

1814

  • v
  • t
  • e
Gulf theater
1813–1815
  • v
  • t
  • e
Great Lakes /
Old Northwest theater
  • v
  • t
  • e
Niagara Frontier
  • v
  • t
  • e
St. Lawrence/Lake Ontario frontier
  • v
  • t
  • e
Atlantic Ocean
  • USS Essex vs HMS Alert
  • USS Constitution vs HMS Guerriere
  • Capture of HMS Frolic
  • USS United States vs HMS Macedonian
  • USS Constitution vs HMS Java
  • Sinking of HMS Peacock
  • Rappahannock River
  • Capture of USS Chesapeake
  • Capture of the Young Teazer
  • Capture of HMS Dominica
  • Capture of USS Argus
  • Capture of HMS Boxer
  • Capture of USS Frolic
  • Capture of HMS Epervier
  • Sinking of HMS Reindeer
  • Sinking of HMS Avon
  • Fayal
  • Capture of USS President
  • Capture of HMS Cyane and HMS Levant
  • Capture of HMS Penguin
  • Capture of East India Company ship Nautilus

East Coast


Great Lakes / Saint Lawrence River


West Indies / Gulf Coast


Pacific Ocean

The War of 1812 was fought in four major theaters:[a]

  1. the Atlantic Coast (including the Chesapeake campaign);
  2. the Gulf Coast;
  3. the Mississippi River; and
  4. the Canada–US border. Actions along the Canada–US border occurred in three sectors (from west to east):

There were also numerous naval battles at sea, almost all of them in the Atlantic.

In between, numerous events occurred in the areas of diplomacy, and the home fronts (internal politics) of all parties involved. For the United Kingdom in particular, the dynamics of the French invasion of Russia (June–December 1812) and the War of the Sixth Coalition against Napoleon (March 1813 – May 1814) in Europe significantly impacted the resources they had available for the War of 1812 with the United States, and their willingness to conduct peace negotiations (which would eventually be held in Ghent, August–December 1814, on territory the Sixth Coalition had just occupied from the First French Empire). For the United States, the Creek War was an important side conflict to increase their control in the South at the expense of Native American factions allied with and supplied by the British, while the Hartford Convention of the Federalist Party (December 1814 – January 1815) played a significant role in voicing strong opposition to the U.S. government's war policy.

1812

Year Day Theater Occurrence Notes
1812 Jun 18 diplomacy U.S. declaration of war on UK
1812 Jun 22 home front 1812 Baltimore riots began
1812 Jun 23 diplomacy Finalized Repeal of Orders in Council
1812 Jun 26 St. Lawrence River Occurrence at Carleton Island Four U.S. civilians captured a British sergeant and three privates of the 10th Royal Veteran Battalion on Carleton Island, the first POWs of the war.
1812 Jun 29 St. Lawrence River Brits capture schooners Sophia and Island Packet
1812 Jul 1 diplomacy United States doubled customs duties
1812 Jul 2 Great Lakes region Capture of the Cuyahoga Packet On the Detroit River, Canadian Provincial Marines under Frédérick Rolette captured U.S. merchant schooner Cuyahoga Packet, containing valuable U.S. military intelligence of William Hull (unaware that war had been declared).
1812 Jul 12–
Aug 8
Great Lakes region Hull's Detroit River campaign Failed attempt by U.S. general William Hull to invade Upper Canada across the Detroit River at Sandwich. U.S. forces did not capture Fort Amherstburg, and withdrew to Detroit at the news of British reinforcements.
1812 Jul 16 Great Lakes region Battle of River Canard
1812 Jul 17 Great Lakes region Capture of Fort Mackinac Bloodless capture of Fort Mackinac on Mackinac Island by British regulars, 200 fur traders and 400 Native warriors.
1812 Jul 17 naval USS Nautilus versus HMS Shannon (1806) The American brig Nautilus was pursued and captured by the British frigate Shannon off the coast of New Jersey.
1812 Jul 19 St. Lawrence River First Battle of Sacket's Harbor, New York Failed British naval attack on U.S. naval base Sackets Harbor.
1812 Jul 31 St. Lawrence River Julia versus Earl of Moria and Duke of Gloucester Standoff between U.S. schooner Julia and two larger British ships. Both sides retired after a three-hour exchange of fire off Elizabethtown, New York.
1812 Aug 5 Great Lakes region Battle of Brownstown Minor British victory (including 25 warriors under Tecumseh), ambushing 200 Ohio militiamen at Brownstown, Michigan Territory.
1812 Aug 8 Great Lakes region Isaac Brock embarked at Port Dover. British attempt to relieve Amherstburg, besieged by Americans.
1812 Aug 9 Great Lakes region Battle of Maguaga Minor U.S. victory in Michigan Territory, when U.S. troops tried to reopen the supply line between Frenchtown (present-day Monroe) and Detroit was ambushed by British regulars and Tecumseh's native warriors.
1812 Aug 13 naval USS Essex versus HMS Alert (1804) Battle off the Azores in which British sloop Alert surrendered to U.S. frigate Essex after an 8-minute engagement.
1812 Aug 15 Great Lakes region Battle of Fort Dearborn Massacre of U.S. soldiers and civilians carried out by Potawatomi and Menominee warriors, after Hull ordered the evacuation of Fort Dearborn (Illinois Territory, at present-day Chicago) upon learning the British had captured Fort Mackinac.
1812 Aug 15–16 Great Lakes region Siege of Detroit Significant U.S. setback. Hull surrendered Detroit (Michigan Territory) without a fight, despite having a larger force that his opponent Isaac Brock.
1812 Aug 19 naval Constitution versus HMS Guerrière After battling fewer than 3 hours c. 500 miles southeast of Newfoundland, British frigate Guerrière surrendered to U.S. frigate Constitution.
1812 Aug 19 Mississippi River The Great Louisiana hurricane struck New Orleans Both the U.S. and the British fleet damaged.
1812 Sep 3 Great Lakes region Massacre at Pigeon Roost, Indiana Territory Kickapoo warriors raided a small settlement, c. 100 miles south of present-day Indianapolis, Indiana.
1812 Sep 4–15 Great Lakes region Siege of Fort Harrison, Indiana Territory A large party of Kickapoo, Miami, Potawatomi, Shawnee and Winnebago warriors from Prophetstown, Indiana Territory attacked the U.S. fort (located on the Wabash River just north of present-day Terre Haute, Indiana) defended by about 60 U.S. soldiers under Zachary Taylor. The Natives withdrew when U.S. reinforcements arrived.
1812 Sep 5–12 Mississippi River First siege of Fort Madison Sauk and Fox warriors failed to capture a fort in Missouri Territory (present-day Fort Madison, Iowa) on the upper Mississippi River.
1812 Sep 5–12 Great Lakes region Siege of Fort Wayne Failed attempt by about 600 warriors from the Ottawa Nations to infiltrate and attack U.S. garrison at Fort Wayne at the confluence of the Maumee, St. Joseph and St. Mary Rivers in northeastern Indiana Territory.
1812 Sep 12 Great Lakes region U.S. General Harrison reinforces Fort Wayne
1812 Sep 14 Great Lakes region A. C. Muir's British expedition at Fort Wayne
1812 Sep 16 St. Lawrence River Battle of Matilda (Toussaint's Island) Failed attempt of U.S. from Ogdensburg, New York to intercept a British supply convoy of forty bateaux coming up the St. Lawrence River.
1812
1813
Sep 17–
Oct
Great Lakes region Harrison's campaign in the Northwest U.S. campaign by William Henry Harrison, tasked with reestablishing security in the Old Northwest and retaking Detroit. He built Fort Meigs in early 1813, secured his supply line, and reoccupied Detroit after the U.S. victory Lake Erie.
1812 Sep 21 St. Lawrence River Raid on Gananoque Successful raid by American troops from Sackets Harbor on the British depot at Gananoque, Upper Canada.
1812 Oct 1 Niagara Frontier First British raid at Charlotte, New York British raid seizing U.S. merchantman Lady Murray and a smaller boat, with no U.S. resistance.
1812 Oct 4 St. Lawrence River Assault on Ogdensburg Failed British amphibious attack on Ogdensburg, a supply transshipment point on the St. Lawrence River, repelled by U.S. artillery.
1812 Oct 7 Great Lakes region Winchester's U.S. army arrives near Fort Defiance
1812 Oct 9 naval U.S. Navy captures British brigs Caledonia and Detroit At Fort Erie, Upper Canada, 100 U.S. soldiers raided across the Niagara River from Buffalo and captured two Provincial Marine brigs. The Caledonia was recovered, but the Detroit ran aground and was scuttled to prevent British recapture.
1812 Oct 13 Niagara Frontier Battle of Queenston Heights Major U.S. defeat when Stephen Van Rensselaer tried to capture Queenston, Upper Canada on the west side of the Niagara River. Isaac Brock was killed in battle.
1812 Oct 18 naval Capture of HMS Frolic
1812 Oct 18 naval Wasp (1807) versus HMS Frolic (1806) Battle c. 300 miles north of Bermuda, seriously damaging both sloops. British sloop surrendered after U.S. sloop boarded it. Later that day, with both ship crews making repairs, HMS Poictiers captured Wasp and recaptured Frolic.
1812 Oct 23–
Nov 23
St. Lawrence River Skirmishes at Akwesasne and French Mills Temporary victory by New York State Militia who captured a British post at Akwesasne. British troops recaptured it and the nearby U.S. post at French Mills a month later.
1812 Oct 25 naval [USS United States vs HMS Macedonian 2-hour battle c. 500 miles west of Canary Islands; British frigate Macedonian surrendered to U.S. frigate United States, and was acquired by the U. S. Navy.
1812 Nov 5 home front James Madison reelected
1812 Nov ?? naval British blockade South Carolina and Georgia
1812 Nov 9 naval Escape of HMS Royal George
1812 Nov 10 St. Lawrence River Chauncey attacks Kingston Harbour
1812 Nov 19 Great Lakes region Destruction of Prophetstown U.S. attack ordered by Harrison on an unoccupied Indian settlement near the junction of the Tippecanoe and Wabash Rivers north of present-day Lafayette, Indiana.
1812 Nov 20 St. Lawrence River Battle of Lacolle Mills, Lower Canada Confused U.S. troops attacked each other, then were attacked by British/loyalist troops.
U.S. troops retreated to Champlain, and Henry Dearborn called off his planned invasion of Lower Canada.
1812 Nov 22 Great Lakes region Spur's Defeat At Wildcat Creek (Indiana), Native American forces supported by the British defeated the U.S.
1812 Nov 22 naval Vixen (1803) versus HMS Southampton (1757) Pursuit and capture of U.S. brig Vixen, c. 90 miles east of St. Augustine, Florida, by British frigate Southampton. Both vessels were wrecked on a shoal near Concepcíon Island on November 27; the crews were rescued and taken to Jamaica.
1812 Nov 27 Great Lakes region Americans attack Fort Erie redoubts
1812 Nov 28 Niagara Frontier Battle of Frenchman's Creek, Upper Canada U.S. raid across the Niagara River, spiking British artillery at Red House to enable a future U.S. landing, but failing to destroy a bridge over Frenchman's Creek to prevent British reinforcements.
1812 Nov 28–
Dec 1
Niagara Frontier Smyth's failed invasion of Upper Canada U.S. officer Alexander Smyth tried and failed to get his invasion force assembled to cross the Niagara River and invade Upper Canada, but cancelled the entire operation.
1812 Dec 3 home front William Eustis resigns as U.S. Secretary of War
1812 Dec 3 home front James Monroe serves as U.S. Secretary of War
1812 Dec 18 Great Lakes region Battle of the Mississinewa Part of a U.S. expedition against Delaware and Miami villages where the Mississinewa River flows into the Wabash River near present-day Marion, Indiana.
1812 Dec 26 Atlantic Coast British blockade Chesapeake and Delaware Bay
1812 Dec 29 naval Constitution versus HMS Java (1811) 2.5-hour battle off the coast of Brazil during which British 38-gun fifth-rate Java suffered such serious damage that its captain ordered it scuttled.
1812 Dec 29 home front Paul Hamilton resigns as Secretary of the Navy

1813

Year Day Theater Occurrence Notes
1813 Jan 12 home front William Jones serves as Secretary of the Navy
1813 Jan 22 Battle of Frenchtown
1813 Jan 23 River Raisin massacre
1813 Feb 5 home front John Armstrong serves as Secretary of War
1813 Feb 7 Raid on Elizabethtown
1813 Feb 16 Great Lakes region 104th Regiment of Foot (New Brunswick Fencibles) commences march from Fredericton to Upper Canada
1813 Feb 22 Battle of Ogdensburg
1813 Feb 24 Sinking of HMS Peacock
1813 Mar USS Essex rounds Cape Horn, preys on British whaling ships
1813 Mar 3 Admiral George Cockburn's squadron arrives in Lynnhaven Bay
1813 Mar 19 Sir James Lucas Yeo appointed Commander-in-chief of the Lake Squadrons
1813 Mar 27 Oliver Hazard Perry constructs Lake Erie fleet
1813 Mar 30 Mississippi River British blockade from Long Island to Mississippi
1813 Apr Atlantic Coast Commerce raids begin in Chesapeake Bay
1813 Apr 6 Atlantic Coast Lewes, Delaware bombarded by British
1813 Apr 13 Mississippi River Capture of Mobile, Alabama
1813 Apr 15 Mississippi River Americans occupy West Florida
1813 Apr 27 Battle of York
1813 May 1 Siege of Fort Meigs
1813 May 3 Raid on Havre de Grace
1813 May 5 St. Lawrence River James Lucas Yeo arrives at Quebec
1813 May 26 Atlantic Coast British blockade middle states and southern states
1813 May 27 Battle of Fort George
1813 May 27 British abandon Fort Erie
1813 May 27 John Harvey retreats to Burlington Heights[1]
1813 May 29 Atlantic Coast George Prevost and James Lucas Yeo attacked Sackets Harbor
1813 Jun 1 HMS Shannon captured USS Chesapeake
1813 Jun 3 Capture of U.S. sloops Growler and Eagle near Ile aux Noix
1813 Jun 6 Battle of Stoney Creek
1813 Jun 8 Skirmish at Forty Mile Creek
1813 Jun 9 Americans abandon Fort Erie
1813 Jun 13 British vessels repulsed at Burlington, Vermont
1813 Jun 19 Commodore Barclay's squadron appears off of Cleveland, Ohio
1813 Jun 20 USS Constellation attempts capture of blockading vessels off Hampton, Virginia
1813 Jun 22 Battle of Craney Island
1813 Jun 24 Battle of Beaver Dams
1813 Jun 25 Attack on Hampton, Virginia
1813 Jun 27 Privateer Teazer (ship) blown up in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia
1813 Jul 5 Raid on Fort Schlosser
1813 Jul 8 Final siege of Fort Madison begins, fort defeated sometime in September
1813 Jul 8 Action at Butler's Farm
1813 Jul 11 Privateers Atlas and Anaconda taken by the British at the port of Ocracoke, North Carolina
1813 Jul 26 General Henry Procter quits the siege of Fort Meigs
1813 Jul 27 Battle of Burnt Corn
1813 Jul 31 Raid on Plattsburg
1813 Jul 31 Second occupation of York
1813 Aug 2 General Henry Proctor's assault fails at Fort Stephenson
1813 Aug 4 Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry sails fleet into Lake Erie
1813 Aug 5 Dominica vs. Decatur
1813 Aug 7 U.S. schooners Hamilton and Scourge founder on Lake Ontario
1813 Aug 10 Naval engagement ships Julia and Pert captured[clarification needed]
1813 Aug 12 Capture of USS Argus
1813 Aug 30 Fort Mims massacre
1813 Sep 10 Great Lakes region Battle of Lake Erie
1813 Sep 25 Capture of HMS Boxer
1813 Sep 26 Great Lakes region William Henry Harrison lands in Canada, Detroit liberated
1813 Sep 28 Burlington Races
1813 Oct 5 Battle of the Thames
1813 Oct 26 Battle of the Chateauguay
1813 Nov 3 Battle of Tallushatchee
1813 Nov 4 diplomacy Great Britain offers the United States peace negotiations
1813 Nov 6 James Wilkinson's flotilla runs past the batteries at Fort Wellington
1813 Nov 9 Battle of Talladega
1813 Nov 10 Skirmish at Hoople's Creek
1813 Nov 11 Battle of Crysler's Farm
1813 Nov 13 Skirmish at Nanticoke
1813 Nov 15 home front Funeral of General Covington at French Mills
1813 Nov 15 James Wilkinson's army goes into winter quarters
1813 Nov 16 Atlantic Coast British extend naval blockade along U.S. coast
1813 Dec 10 Burning of Newark
1813 Dec 10 Major General David Adams burned Nuyaka
1813 Dec 15 Skirmish at Thomas McCrae's house
1813 Dec 19 Niagara Front Capture of Fort Niagara
1813 Dec 19 - 31 British destroy Lewiston, Fort Schlosser, Black Rock, and Buffalo

1813 Atlantic Coast battles

Attack upon George & Federick's towns by a detachment of boats from J. B. Warrens squadron under Rear Admiral Cockburn in April 1813

1813 Great Lakes region battles

1813 Niagara Frontier battles

1813 St. Lawrence River battles

1813 naval battles

1813 Gulf Coast battles

1814

Year Day Theater Occurrence Notes
1814 Jan 23 Battles of Emuckfaw and Enotachopo Creek
1814 Jan 24 Battle of Enotachopco
1814 Jan 27 Battle of Calebee Creek
1814 Mar 4 Battle of Longwoods
1814 Mar 27 Battle of Horseshoe Bend
1814 Mar 28 Capture of USS Essex
1814 Mar 30 Battle of Lacolle Mills (1814)
1814 Apr 11 diplomacy Napoleon abdicates French throne for the first time
1814 Apr 20 HMS Orpheus defeats USS Frolic
1814 Apr 14 diplomacy United States repeals Embargo Act and Nonimportation Act
1814 Apr 25 Atlantic Coast British extend blockade to New England
1814 Apr 29 Capture of HMS Epervier
1814 May 1 General William Clark leaves St. Louis for Prairie du Chien
1814 May 6 Raid on Fort Oswego
1814 May 14 Skirmish at Otter Creek
1814 May 18 Lieutenant Colonel Robert McDouall relieves Fort Mackinac
1814 May 29 Skirmish at Sandy Creek
1814 Jun 6 Mississippi River William Clark establishes Fort Shelby at Prairie du Chien
1814 Jun 28 Major William McKay's expedition leaves Fort Mackinac
1814 Jun 28 USS Wasp defeats HMS Reindeer
1814 Jul 3 Great Lakes region Americans capture Fort Erie
1814 Jul 5 Battle of Chippawa
1814 Jul 20 Trials at Ancaster Bloody Assize
1814 Jul 20 Mississippi River Surrender of Fort Shelby
1814 Jul 21 Battle of Rock Island Rapids
1814 Jul 21 Raid on Sault Ste. Marie
1814 Jul 22 diplomacy Treaty of Greenville US and western tribes ally against Great Britain
1814 Jul 25 Battle of Lundy's Lane
1814 Jul 26 Sinclair's squadron arrives off Mackinac Island
1814 Aug 1 Schooner Nancy warned of Fort Mackinac blockade
1814 Aug 2 Great Lakes region Siege of Fort Erie
1814 Aug 4 Battle of Mackinac Island
1814 Aug 8 Peace negotiations begin in Ghent
1814 Aug 9 diplomacy Creek people sign treaty at Fort Jackson
1814 Aug 10 Raid on Stonington
1814 Aug 12 Capture of USS Somers and USS Ohio on Lake Ontario
1814 Aug 13 Part of Sinclair's squadron arrives at Nottawasaga River
1814 Aug 14 Schooner Nancy destroyed
1814 Aug 14 Gulf Coast British occupy Pensacola
1814 Aug 15 Great Lakes region Assault on Fort Erie
1814 Aug 19 British land near Benedict, Maryland
1814 Aug 24 Battle of Bladensburg
1814 Aug 24 Burning of Washington
1814 Aug 27 British occupy Point Lookout, Maryland
1814 Aug 27 Retreating garrison destroys Fort Washington
1814 Aug 28 British capture Alexandria, Virginia
1814 Aug 28 diplomacy Nantucket declares neutrality
1814 Sep 1 Construction commences on Penetang Road
1814 Sep 1 USS Wasp (1813) sinks HMS Avon
1814 Sep 1 George Prevost moves south toward Plattsburgh
1814 Sep 3 Capture of Tigress and Scorpion
1814 Sep 4 Battle of Plattsburgh
1814 Sep 4 home front John Armstrong, Jr. resigns and James Monroe becomes Secretary of War
1814 Sep 5 Skirmish at Rock Island Rapids
1814 Sep 6 Skirmish at Beekmantown
1814 Sep 6 Battle of Credit Island
1814 Sep 8 Fort Johnson built, abandoned one month later
1814 Sep 9 Capture of Fort O'Brian
1814 Sep 11 Battle of Plattsburgh
1814 Sep 12 Battle of North Point
1814 Sep 12 Gulf Coast British repulsed at Mobile, Alabama
1814 Sep 13 Bombardment of Fort McHenry
1814 Sep 13 Francis Scott Key writes The Star-Spangled Banner
1814 Sep 14 Battle of Fort Bowyer
1814 Sep 17 Counterattack at Siege of Fort Erie
1814 Sep 26 British squadron captures USS General Armstrong
1814 Oct 19 Battle of Cook's Mills
1814 Oct 21 diplomacy United Kingdom offers peace on basis of uti possidetis
1814 Oct 26 Raid through the Thames Valley
1814 Nov 5 Americans evacuate Fort Erie
1814 Nov 6 Battle of Malcolm's Mills
1814 Nov 7 Gulf Coast Battle of Pensacola
1814 Nov 25 Gulf Coast British fleet sail from Jamaica for New Orleans
1814 Nov 27 diplomacy United Kingdom drops demands for uti possidetis
1814 Dec 14 Gulf Coast British overwhelm American gunboats on Lake Borgne
1814 Dec 15 diplomacy Hartford Convention
1814 Dec 15 home front United States adopts additional internal taxation
1814 Dec 23 Gulf Coast British land their troops below New Orleans
1814 Dec 23 Andrew Jackson surprise-attacks British
1814 Dec 24 diplomacy Treaty of Ghent signed
1814 Dec 28 home front United States rejects conscription proposal

1814 Atlantic Coast battles

1814 Great Lakes region battles

1814 Niagara Frontier battles

1814 St. Lawrence River battles

1814 Gulf Coast battles

1814 Mississippi battles

1814 naval battles

1815

Year Day Theater Occurrence Notes
1815 Jan 1 Gulf Coast Artillery duel at New Orleans A three-hour cannon duel between 4 British batteries, including heavy naval guns and a rocket battery, and 7 U.S. batteries in Andrew Jackson's line of defense. The British ceased fire when their artillery ran out of ammunition and failed to breach Jackson's ramparts.
1815 Jan 8 Gulf Coast Battle of New Orleans Most lop-sided U.S. victory of the war: British had 2037 casualties (KIA, WIA, POW), Americans around 71.[citation needed]
1815 Jan 9–
18
Gulf Coast Siege of Fort St. Philip (1815) Failed British attempt to dislodge U.S. forces at Fort St. Philip, Louisiana that would have blocked efforts to supply the British in New Orleans.
1815 Jan 15 naval Capture of USS President British warship HMS Endymion captured U.S. frigate President attempting to break out of the British blockade of New York City. The President was severely damaged, and surrendered.
1815 Jan–
Mar
Gulf Coast Cumberland Island campaign Diversionary expedition of Cochrane's Gulf Coast campaign (May 1814 – Feb 1815) to the southeastern U.S. coast. Brits under George Cockburn occupied Cumberland Island, a fort and the town of St. Marys in Jan 1815, effectively blockading Savannah, Charleston and other coastal areas. Cockburn left on March 18 after learning of the Treaty of Ghent.[citation needed]
1815 Feb 1 home front Penetanguishene Naval Yard construction begins
1815 Feb 4 diplomacy United States adopts second enemy trade law[citation needed]
1815 Feb 12 Gulf Coast Battle of Fort Bowyer Last Gulf Coast theater battle. British forces retreating from New Orleans landed on Dauphine Island and recaptured nearby Fort Bowyer, but withdrew upon news of the Treaty of Ghent.
1815 Feb 17 diplomacy United States ratifies Treaty of Ghent
1815 Feb 17 diplomacy United States rejects First Bank of the United States proposal
1815 Feb 20 naval Constitution versus HMS Cyane and HMS Levant U.S. frigate Constitution captured two British sixth-rates Cyane and Levant about 200 miles northeast of Madeira. The Levant was later recaptured by British frigate Leander.
1815 Feb 26 naval US privateer Chasseur versus HMS St Lawrence (1813) U.S. privateer Chasseur captured British schooner St. Lawrence, which was carrying news of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent to the British, in the Gulf of Mexico.
1815 Mar 1 diplomacy Napoleon escaped from Elba, triggering the Hundred Days
1815 Mar 10 diplomacy Treaty of Nicolls' Outpost (unratified)
1815 Mar 11 naval Recapture of HMS Levant (1813) British squadron under Collier recaptured British warship Levant as Constitution tried to flee with its two prizes from the harbor at Porto Playa in the Cape Verde Islands.
1815 Mar 23 naval USS Hornet versus HMS Penguin U.S. sloop Hornet captured British sloop Penguin in a battle near Tristan de Cunha.
1815 Apr 6 naval Escape from H M Dartmoor Prison
1815 May 24 Mississippi River Battle of the Sink Hole Last land battle of war, between Missouri Rangers and Sauk warriors led by Black Hawk, near Cuivre River's mouth, Missouri Territory.
1815 Jun 30 naval Peacock versus East India Company ship Nautilus Final naval engagement of the war. U.S. sloop Peacock fired on and seriously damaged East India brig Nautilus in the Straits of Sunda. British captain Boyce informed the U.S. ship commander the Treaty of Ghent had been signed on Dec 24, 1814, but the U.S. ship opened fire anyway.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Most of the information in this list has been extracted from Robert Malcomson's "Historical Dictionary of the War of 1812,"[better source needed] augmented in some cases by information from other Wikipedia articles[circular reference] and from John Mahon's "The War of 1812."[better source needed]

References

  1. ^ "HistoricPlaces.ca - HistoricPlaces.ca". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved October 6, 2019.
  2. ^ A Full and Correct Account of the Military Occurrences of the Late Wat Between Great Britain and The United States of America..1818, Volume 2 William James. p. 417
  3. ^ John Brannan, Official letters of the military and naval officers of the United States, during the war with Great Britain in the years 1812, 13, 14, & 15, Washington City: Way & Gideon, 1823, pp. 275,

Bibliography

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