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...at the Congress of Vienna (1814–15), which were to restructure the balance of power in Europe after the defeat of Napoleon, would affect the Treaty of Ghent, signed 24 Dec. 1814, which was to end the War of 1812.
The election of Clintonian Obadiah German (1766–1842) to speaker of the state assembly. German was involved in the western canal project, and had opposed the War of 1812. It took five ballots for the Assembly to settle on German on 6 Jan. 1819. William Thompson (Anti-Clintonian), William A. Duer, Michael Ulshoeffer, and Federalist J. R. Van Rensselaer also ran. See
4: 476–77. Jacob Morton (1756–1837), led the New York Militia during the War of 1812 and was clerk of the New York City Council from 1809 to 1836.
...commander of the Royal North Carolina Regiment. He went to London after the war where he sought and obtained some compensation for his losses. He was appointed consul at Norfolk in 1790 and served until the outbreak of the war of 1812, when he was recalled to England.
“Political Changes and Challenges in the War of 1812,”
Baltimore experienced extensive rioting at the outbreak of the War of 1812. On 22 June, a crowd attacked and destroyed the printing office of the
“Political Changes and Challenges in the War of 1812,”
The United States, Great Britain, and British North America from the Revolution to the Establishment of Peace after the War of 1812
Robert Goodloe Harper (1765–1825) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina, 1795–1801. Failing reelection in 1800, he moved to Maryland, where he practiced law, served in the War of 1812 as a major general, and was a Federalist senator from Maryland and an unsuccessful Federalist vice-presidential candidate in 1816. Joseph Cox,