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                                    278 PART 3 REVOLUTION AND REPUBLICAN CULTURE, 1754%u20131800AJNep 11. Hull%u2019s invasion of Canada fails;then he loses Detroit, Aug. 16, 18122. Americans burnYork (Toronto),April 27, 18136. British invasion stopped at Plattsburghon Lake Champlain, Sept. 11, 18143. Perry defeats British,Put-in-Bay, Sept. 10, 18135. British burnWashington, D.C.,Aug. 24%u201328, 18148. Jackson defeats Muscogees,Horseshoe Bend, March 27, 18149. Jackson invades Spanish Floridato attack the British at Pensacola,Nov. 7, 181410. Jackson defeats Britishat New Orleans, Jan. 8, 18157. British siege of Baltimore,Sept. 13%u201314, 18144. Harrison defeats British,Battle of the Thames,Oct. 5, 1813U.S. states in 1812U.S. territories in 1812American movementsBritish movementsBritish blockadeAmerican victoryBritish victoryFort0 150 300 kilometers0 150 300 milesNSEWGulf of MexicoATLANTICOCEANOhio R.Lake HuronLake ErieLake MichiganMississippi R.Lake Superior LakeOntarioSt. Lawrence R.ChesapeakeBayMISSISSIPPITERRITORYGEORGIASOUTHCAROLINANORTHCAROLINATENNESSEEKENTUCKYILLINOISTERRITORYINDIANATERRITORYOHIOVIRGINIAMICHIGANTERRITORYUPPERCANADALOWERCANADAPENNSYLVANIANEWYORKN.J.CONN.MASS.DEL.MD.R.I.VT. N.H.MAINE(part of Mass.)LOUISIANASPANISH FLORIDAUNORGAN I ZEDTERR I TORYJacksonJacksonJacksonHarr si onHullDearbornPerry18141814Chrysler%u2019s FarmNov. 11, 1813MontrealQuebecBostonWashington, D.C.PensacolaNew OrleansErieLundy%u2019s LaneJuly 25, 1814New YorkPhiladelphiaBaltimoreFt. McHenryGodly WoodSept. 12, 1814Fort DearbornTippecanoeNov. 7, 1811Ft. DetroitFt. MackinacSt. LouisCharlestonSavannahamerhistoryHS11e_07_m04The War of 181240p9 x 48p9First Proof02/15/24MAP 7.4 The War of 1812Unlike the War of Independence, the War of 1812 had few large-scale military campaigns. In 1812 and 1813, most of the fighting took place along the Canadian border, as small American military forces attacked British targets with mixed success (nos. 1%u20134). The British took the offensive in 1814, launching a successful raid on Washington, but their attack on Baltimore failed, and they suffered heavy losses when they invaded the United States along Lake Champlain (nos. 5%u20137). Near the Gulf of Mexico, American forces moved from one success to another: General Andrew Jackson defeated the pro-British Muscogees at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, won a victory in Pensacola, and routed an invading British army at New Orleans (nos. 8%u201310).%u00a9 Bedford, Freeman & Worth Publishers. For review purposes only. Do not distribute. 
                                
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