I’ve just spent a few days in Muskoka, Canada attending a
conference of the Muskoka Chautauqua organization.
The theme of the weekend was the war of 1812. It has been
called the United States second war of independence by some historians. We
declared war on Great Britain to stop impressment of American merchant seamen
into the Royal navy at least that’s what we said.
We really wanted to annex portions of Canada as United
States territory and expand westward into Indian land, but when the war ended
nearly three years later it was a stalemate. Nobody won, just a lot of people
died. Sound familiar?
Britain needed able-bodied sailors at that time. They were
fighting Napoleon in France and stealing (impressing) seaman seemed easier than
recruiting them.
President Madison got congress to declare war. An action
that is a constitutional requirement for a declaration of war, but we haven’t
done that very often in the 20th or the 21st century.
Since this month is the 200th anniversary of the
war it seemed like an appropriate topic.
Richard Gwyn a Canadian author, political columnist and an
award-winning biographer was there as was John Ibbitson, Ottawa Bureau Chief,
Globe and Mail, political correspondent and also an award-winning author.
Steve Paikin a broadcast journalist, author, producer and
host of TVO’s The Agenda was an excellent moderator.
I think I was the token “yank,” but I had fun and enjoyed
the lively exchanges of who won, who didn’t win, what if and so on.
In tomorrow’s post I’ll share my opening thoughts on the war
of 1812.
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