Roger H. Brown
The Republic In Peril
1812
"A fresh view of the origins of the war . . . deserves the attention of
all students of the early national period."Lawrence S. Kaplan, American
Historical Review
In a major new interpretaion of the origins of the War of 1812, Roger H. Brown
argues in this book that the United States declared war on Great Britain in order
to save the "republic experiement."
The increasingly bitter partisan struggle over domestic and foreign policy, exacerbated
by the effects of the war between Great Britain and France, grew into a corrosive
mutual distrust. Federalists doubted that the government could withstand the
strains being placed upon it, and Republicans suspected Federalists of conspiring
to institute another form of government.
Drawing on much new manuscript material, Professor Brown re-examines interpretations
of the origins of the war that focus on sectional rivalries, the influence of
"warhawk" congressmen, and the disruption of commerce. Analyzing the debate over
the war question, he discusses the motives of the various individuals and groups,
intial strategy and planning, and the role of the parties, the President, and
Congress. He offers impressive new evidence that what spurred the Madison administration
to declare war was the conviction that it must act decisively to halt the internal
crumbling of confidence in the republican system, and to demonstrate to the nation
and the world that the new republic would succeed.
Roger H. Brown has taught at Dartmouth College and Harvard University and is
Professor of History at The American University.
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