Military affairs in the era of the War of 1812 were integrated into civil attitudes, republican ideology, and the political structure and exercise of foreign and domestic policy. Citizen politicians led armies during this era, and their goals, as William Henry Harrison and Andrew Jackson suggest, often reshaped national policy and the conduct of the war.
Reginald C. Stuart is Professor of History and Political Studies at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax where he teaches Canadian-American Relations and comparative Canadian-American politics. He has published numerous books, and articles and reviews in scholarly periodicals and newspapers.
Recommended. Public and undergraduate libraries.
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