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Case 15: COASTAL WAR: NEW ORLEANS
The extensive coastline of the United States invited naval incursions at many points. One was the Gulf Coast, with the mouth of the Mississippi River and the city of New Orleans. A new possession (1803) with a largely French-speaking population, New Orleans controlled the movement of goods from the American West. The region also offered the British some potential Native American allies in the Creeks and Chickasaw, who were fighting their own war against U.S. forces.
Pakenham ordered an assault on Jackson’s line on the morning of January 8. The veteran British soldiers marched across open ground in the face of horrendous musket and cannon fire. Some reached the American position but were pushed back. A few units broke and ran. British losses were around 1,600, Pakenham among them. The campaign was abandoned. The victory was widely celebrated in the United States, making Jackson a national hero.
Samuel Seymour’s near-contemporary print of the battle includes many details that look as if they were recorded on the spot. The view is from behind the American line.
Popular folklore has long held that frontier riflemen defeated the British at New Orleans. Many such volunteer soldiers served with Jackson’s army, but the U.S. artillery inflicted most British casualties. The Hunters of Kentucky credits the riflemen but was probably composed as song for Jackson’s unsuccessful 1824 campaign for the presidency.
Joseph S. Winter ALS to Elisha I. Winter, New Orleans, January 12, 1814 [sic: 1815]. Manuscripts Division, War of 1812 Collection.
In a letter to his brother, Joseph Winter recounted the disparity in casualties between attackers (1,500) and defenders (6 killed, 9 wounded) and tallied the numbers of British dead, wounded, and prisoners removed from the battlefield.
John Peddie ALS to William Henry Clinton, Near New Orleans, January 24, 1815 enclosing John F. Burgoyne, “Genl. Lambert’s position on the River Mississipi.” Pen and ink on paper. Manuscripts Division, War of 1812 Collection.
Peddie, a British officer, gave details of the “unfortunate expedition” and enclosed a journal and a map showing the 900 yards of open ground the attackers had to cross to reach the American position.
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