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Title: A Neighbourly War
Sub-title: New Brunswick and the War of 1812
By (author): Robert L. Dallison
ISBN10-13: 0864926537 : 9780864926531
Format: Paperback
Size: 196x139x9mm
Pages: 180
Weight: .219 Kg.
Published: Goose Lane Editions - May   2012
List Price: 13.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability: In Stock   Qty Available: 3
Subjects: History of the Americas : History of other lands : Modern history to 20th century: c 1700 to c 1900 : Canada
On June 18, 1812, US President James Madison signed a declaration of war against Britain and launched an attack against the British colonies in North America in what he thought would be a quick and decisive land grab. Fearing invasion, the New Brunswick Legislative Assembly, along with the citizenry, prepared for war. When the invasion failed to materialize, neutrality ruled along the New Brunswick-Maine border and New Brunswick turned its attention elsewhere. It supported the naval battles along the coast between the Royal Navy and American privateers and the British campaigns in Upper and Lower Canada by sending reinforcements and supplies along the grand communications route. With Napoleon's defeat in Europe, Britain refocused its military on North America. In addition to sending reinforcements to the campaigns in Upper and Lower Canada, the British Army invaded Maine, seized disputed lands along the Penobscot River Valley, and redrew the map so that, for a time, much of northern Maine would become part of New Brunswick. In this revealing account, Robert Dallison examines the repercussions of the War of 1812 in New Brunswick and Maine, how a once-friendly border turned hostile, how wartime growth turned villages into towns, and how the post-war settlement of British soldiers and Black Refugees changed the composition of the province's population.
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