TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES

The Battle of New Orleans


Although the Battle of Horseshoe Bend was a principal action in the War of 1812, the Creek Wars were handled separately from the general war effort and financed by the states of Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama.
Washington officials and southeastern settlers knew the British had fueled the Creek War as a separate front against American forces and their defeat at Horseshoe Bend meant the British would have to try more traditional methods of warfare.
Jackson’s victory, however, caught the attention of American leaders, who were in desperate shape defending against British attacks in the northeastern states and were considering writing off the southern territories as a lost cause. Military leaders knew Britain’s next big assault on the continent would come from the South and they had to find a way to secure the region.
On May 31, 1814, they decided to call upon Tennessee General Andrew Jackson with an official commission as Major General in the Regular U.S. Army and placed him in command of the Department on the South. Jackson and his men made their headquarters in Mobile, Ala., which was then a port in dispute between the U.S. and Spain. The Tennessean’s had been handed the assignment of warding off any British attack and protecting the southern coast from invasion.
Jackson’s command style was hard-line and often frustrating to American officials pursuing delicate wartime diplomacy, but his leadership abilities under fire were undeniable and that appealed to America’s military command. He was a General unafraid of performing menial tasks or fighting alongside of his men in the harshest of combat. He was also well connected in the southern frontier and knew how to cultivate reliable intelligence sources in a region often torn between three nations.



In the fall of 1814, Jackson received word that the British were occupying Pensacola, Fla. and establishing a base of operations. The British force under the command of Major Edward Nicolls had been trying to enlist the services of Pirate Jean Lafitte and his associates. In addition, the British regulars were accompanied by a naval fleet under Captain W.H. Percy and threatening the gulf coast cities.
Without waiting for official word from Washington, D.C. or observing Spain’s neutrality, Jackson marched 4,100 men to the city to engage the British. On Nov. 6, he demanded the Spanish governor surrender the city unconditionally. When the Governor denied the terms, Jackson laid siege to Pensacola and put it to the torch.
His attack forced the British back into their ships and off the coast of Florida. When he hanged two British subjects he thought were spies, American and Spanish diplomats flew into a rage over the incident and Jackson almost lost his commission – not to mention his own head.
With the British out of Florida, Jackson could now focus on protecting the other gulf cities. He learned, however, the British troops were sailing for New Orleans and immediately started marching his forces towards the city in a footrace with the British.
When he arrived in New Orleans on Dec. 2, Jackson found the city unprepared to defend itself against an invasion. Intelligence sources told him the British were mustering 10-12,000 veteran regulars for an invasion. The highly trained and experienced soldiers were considered the best in the world and Jackson feared their concentration on New Orleans would overwhelm his citizen militia-filled ranks. On the march west, The Tennessean pressed many settlers into military service swelling his numbers, but leaving him with a poorly trained military force.
Jackson used his authority to declare martial law in New Orleans and began hastily building defensive fortifications at strategic locations around the city. He put out a call for all able-bodied men to join the defensive forces and would not take "no" for an answer. Along with his Kentucky and Tennessee regulars, Jackson’s army was turning into a motley mix of planters, sailors, Creoles, Free Blacks, and Cherokee.
Jackson himself took position with his men on the Chalmette Plantation at Rodriguez Canal. The canal was twenty feet wide and stretched across the plain from the river to the swamps. Jackson had his men drag the canal making it deeper and threw up a parapet behind it.
While preparing the city for attack, Andrew Jackson began forming what many thought was an unusual relationship with Pirate Jean Lafitte. The Pirate was regarded as one of the best smugglers and fighters in the gulf. He was feared by all who sailed in the region and considered notorious by merchant ship, British, Spanish, and American captains. A price was always on his head for some crime or grievance and his reputation became one of his better tools. Even when innocent of the charges pressed, his pirate’s background made him a natural suspect and an easy scapegoat.
Lafitte wasn’t virtuous by any means and, with his brother Pierre in a New Orleans jail, he saw an opportunity in the coming battle. After making some discreet inquiries, he sent a letter to Louisiana Governor William Claiborne and put forward a proposal.
Realizing Lafitte’s help could prove crucial in a tight situation, the Governor and his associates approached Gen. Jackson asking for his support in getting the men amnesty in exchange for their services - not only for Lafitte, but also for the other Pirates hiding in the swamps and bayous around the city. Jackson didn’t like the idea at first, but, with his back against the wall, he helped present the offer to then President James Monroe, who agreed with the Governor and granted the men amnesty.
Jean Lafitte and his crew immediately turned their resources towards supplying the newly enlisted soldiers with powder, rifles, and other needed dry goods. They also started building crude fortifications around Barataria Bay and helping with other fortification projects.
The British leaders were keeping up with the American activity and making daily reports to their leaders. While Jackson’s forces were beginning their defensive operations, the British were off of the coast of New Orleans preparing for a full-scale assault on the gulf city.
British General Sir Edward Packenham was in command of the invasion force. He was an experienced campaign officer and a brother-in-law to the Duke of Wellington. Packenham’s mission was to take the city of New Orleans and secure the Mississippi Valley. While American diplomats were in Belgium trying to broker peace between the two nations, Britain had made it clear to them that they questioned American claims to western Florida and the Louisiana Purchase. They implied the newly acquired territories were the result of American annexation and were not legal possessions of the United States under colonial law.
The British General held Jackson and his militia army in contempt. He considered them an undisciplined lot incapable of taking orders and devised a plan of attack based upon his judgment of the forces against him. On Dec. 14, Packenham landed his forces on Chandeleur Island at the mouth of Lake Borgne. Upon entering the lake, the British ran into six American gunboats. American naval tactics at the time had been employing a successful guerilla policy of hit and run attacks.
Faced with the British ships– the American gunboats, under command of Lieut. Thomas Catsby, were not in a position to outrun them and formed into a flotilla where they began firing on the British. In the skirmish, 980 British seaman and marines attacked the small force, but Catsby and his men made it an expensive engagement. Seventeen British soldiers were killed outright and 77 were wounded. American losses were six killed and 35 wounded. The destruction of the American gunboats were devastating, however, and gave Britain naval superiority in the gulf – leaving America with only two ships to defend against the invasion.
With the gunboats out of commission, Packenham began disembarking his soldiers. The British started preparing for the attack while Packenham’s reinforcements continued to arrive on the coastal island.
On shore, General Jackson was starting to find himself running short of needed supplies and forced to use cotton bales to build his fortifications. The British gun batteries were beginning to fire into the defensive positions on a regular basis and harassing American efforts to secure the city. Minor skirmishes with the British were becoming more and more frequent around New Orleans and the Tennessean knew the time of the battle was fast approaching.
By Jan. 7, 1815, 12,000 British regulars were prepared for the attack on the City of New Orleans and pulled into position at Rodriguez Canal to begin their assault.
General Packenham moved 1,200 troops under Col. William Thornton to attack the American works on the west bank defended by Col. David Morgan and Daniel T. Patterson’s battery. Packenham himself decided to assault Jackson’s lines and ordered General Sir Samuel Gibbs to attack on the right.
At most, American forces numbered around 5,000 men and Jackson had stretched them thinly at the defensive positions counting on the marksmanship and discipline of his regulars to compensate for the difference.
The New Orleans’ volunteers and the men Jackson had pressed into service were on his left side under the leadership of Pirate Jean Lafitte. Gen. William Carroll’s brigade of 1,414 Tennesseans defended the center and 1,327 men held the right. Kentucky General John Adair’s brigade of 325 men were held in reserve.
On Jan. 8, 1815, the British finally advanced on New Orleans. General Gibbs’ troops marched headlong into the American guns. The biggest battle of the War of 1812 was underway. Jackson’s men showed their experience and discipline remarkably well. They held their fire until the British troops were on top of them and then let loose a volley that broke their line and sent the British running in retreat.
Upon receiving reinforcements, they again marched towards the Americans and were repulsed. Gen. Packenham was incredulous at their failure to take the American line. He reformed the men once again and led the third attack himself. Through the smoke and haze of the battlefield, an American rifleman caught sight of the British General and fired. Packenham fell dead in front of his men followed by General Gibbs, who was killed soon afterwards.
British command then fell on Maj. General John Keane. His division attacked Jackson’s right line near the river, but was slaughtered by the Tennesseans and Gen. Keane severely wounded. British command structure then fell to Maj. General John Lambert, who instantly put out the order to withdraw the troops.
Unknowingly to Lambert, the British had a breakthrough on the west bank as Col. Thornton routed Morgan’s troops forcing Patterson to spike his guns. The break in the American lines allowed the British to advance up the river a mile behind Jackson’s lines. The General was in a precarious position, but Lambert’s sudden withdrawal from the field also recalled Col. Thornton and his men, who could have subjected Jackson’s rear position to a sweeping fire that would have destroyed his ranks.
Jackson’s devastating victory over General Packenham and his 12,000-man force stunned Europe, Britain, and even American military leaders. With little training, supplies, and outnumbered more than 2-1, the frontier army had adapted and defeated the most powerful military force in the world.
After the battle, a truce of two days was declared so the armies could gather and bury their dead. Artillery fire continued until the Jan. 18, but the whole British Army suddenly withdrew to a fortified position at the mouth of a bayou and then reembarked in their ships off Chandeleur Island.
The Battle of New Orleans had secured American claims in the Mississippi Valley and prevented the rich port from falling into British hands. America’s loss in the battle was 71 dead, but the British posted a loss of 2,036 men including three quarters of the battlefield command structure.
Throughout January, British troops and ships continued to harass and probe the City for a weakness that could be exploited. Without finding one, they abandoned the attack. Jackson maintained martial law in the New Orleans until peace was finally proclaimed in February.
Although historians would later call the battle needless and vain because it occurred after the Belgium Treaty, the decisive victory for America proved to be crucial. The peace agreement brokered in Ghent, Belgium had been signed two weeks before the battle, but the United States Senate had not ratified the treaty and it contained no provision for a cease-fire. In fact, the treaty specified that hostilities were not to end "until this treaty shall be ratified by both parties."
In fact, if Jackson had been defeated, the Senate would have never ratified the treaty with the British occupying New Orleans and the war would have continued.



Special thanks for this story has to go to Ranger Wanda Lee Dickey at the Chalmette Battlefield in New Orleans for her work in running down some needed facts and figures for the story.
"The Battle of New Orleans is an event where rumors and myths abound," said Dickey, and the facts have gotten somewhat confused over the years. In addition to the park and interpreters we have here, there are a few good books that detail the Battle of New Orleans and the men who fought it, especially the relationship between Jackson and the other colorful figures involved."
General Jackson and Pirate Jean Lafitte were wartime allies and didn’t maintain a relationship following the war as is often believed.
Lafitte was for the most part, he believed, a chartered privateer working in the sometimes-hostile gulf shipping lanes. Following the British attempt to recruit him for the New Orleans invasion and his letter to Governor Claiborne, Lafitte’s brother Pierre suddenly "escaped" from his jail cell. Newspaper articles of the day said no one, including the jailer, knew how he did it and no official word was ever released regarding the incident.
In any event, Jean Lafitte was regarded by most able-bodied seaman as one of the best ship’s captains afloat and a skilled leader of men. Being such, his colleagues were other privateers and "pirates". Unlike America’s Constitutional principals, Napoleonic laws and other European sea policies assumed guilt by association and could legally offer rewards for the deaths of Lafitte and other questionable privateers working the South and Central American coasts who maintained their associations. It was the charge that landed his brother in jail when he was visiting his mistress.
New Orleans or the American government never forgot Jean Lafitte’s efforts in the battle. The infamous Barataria headquarters of the Pirate and his crew was eventually made into the Jean Lafitte National Historic Park in the 1970s. Both it and the Chalmette Battlefield are included in the Park’s boundaries.
Future Tennessee Governor General William Carroll, who gave up his business to join Jackson in the War of 1812, proved to be one of the most extraordinary soldiers in the ranks. Historians of the battles largely overlooked his actions at both Horseshoe Bend and New Orleans, but his abilities and leadership were often written about in diaries and reports of the southern campaigns.
The Battle of New Orleans virtually ended British preoccupation with territorial claims in America proper. While intrigue and espionage actions were a continuous threat, Britain focused its efforts on the rich West Indies islands and its old enemies the French.
The militia armies under Jackson proved to the British and subsequently to the world that American firepower was not limited to a finite number of trained regular soldiers, but to the citizenry as well. The Tennesseans and other Southerners in the battle were experienced frontiersmen who had often lived off the land, fought Indians, and knew how to follow orders under fire. To European cultures, where private ownership of arms was virtually banned except for a chosen few, the concept of militia armies winning against a superior trained force was unbelievable.
The Battle of New Orleans would make "Old Hickory", as Jackson was known, a household word in America and eventually lead him to the White House as President. The impact of the battle and the War of 1812 is still a part of the American vocabulary.
One of the most popular mascots in American history was unknowingly created in the War of 1812. When Army food inspector Samuel Wilson of Troy, New York approved the barrels of salted meat for the troops, he would stamp them U.S. (For United States) Following British victories in the northeast where stores of food were often captured, the British soldiers would remark, "these victuals are from Uncle Sam". The sarcastic remark gradually worked itself into the American lexicon, as did the white-bearded cartoon character that went along with it. In 1961, the United States Congress officially recognized the top-hatted Uncle Sam and declared him the national symbol of America.
General Andrew Jackson’s victory at the Battle of New Orleans became a fixture in American folklore and even spawned the folk song "The Eighth of January", known by many simply as "The Battle of New Orleans". Arkansas Folk singer Jimmie Driftwood wrote the song as a way of teaching his elementary school students about the battle. Both he and Country Music singer Johnny Horton would have number one hits with it and the "Battle of New Orleans" would become a Grammy award winning song.
In addition, the battle pushed America into a new age and laid the groundwork for the nation’s westward push to the Pacific coast.