ANDREW
JACKSON AND THE MIRACLE OF NEW oRLEANS
(New
York: Random House Large Print Ed., c 2017)
BY
BRIAN KILMEADE and DON YAEGER
Review
by Hugh Murray
As
New Orleans celebrates its 300thanniversary, and the 202nd
year after Andrew Jackson saved the Crescent City from the British
invaders, this book is a welcome fresh breath of history and a portrait of
a hero who inspired his compatriots to fend off a larger force
composed of veterans who had defeated the military genius, Napoleon.
This book is even more welcome today as mobs in New Orleans have
demanded the removal of Jackson's statue from Jackson Square in the
French Quarter. Meanwhile a politically correct, Democratic mayor,
Mitch Landrieu, has already approved the removal of the General Robt.
E. Lee statue from Lee Circle and the removal of other statues of
military figures like Gen. P. T. G. Beauregard.
Just
as Mao's Cultural Revolution in China sought to destroy the history,
traditions, and memories of the past – purging libraries, temples,
schools, and universities of priceless articles; indeed closing
schools, sending pupils to the countryside to be “educated” by
the partisan peasantry, sending teachers and professors in dunce caps
to be humiliated, beaten, and sometimes killed by the thought police
of the Red Guard. The same destructive impulse occurs now in
America, and the media is as complicit here as it was in Mao's Red
Guard China. The elementary school I attended as a child was named
for the first Jew to serve in the US Senate – Judah P. Benjamin.
(A Floridian might make that claim, but Sen. David Yulee had
converted to Christianity.) Later, Benjamin also served various
posts in the Cabinet of Pres. Jefferson Davis – the first Jew in
any American Cabinet. But, as some called him “the brains of the
Confederacy,” the name of the school I attended had to be changed.
After 8th grade, I went for one year to Beauregard Junior
High, named for the commander who ordered the firing by Southern
troops on the Union held Ft. Sumter in Charleston harbor, thus
beginning what most see as the first shot in the American Civil War.
I attended Beauregard for one year, and many would assert that in
doing so I was exerting my “white privilege.” Perhaps those
critics are right, for attending that school at the same time was
another teen who would become known throughout the world, another
example of white privilege, Lee Harvey Oswald. Though the building
still exists, there is no longer a Beauregard School in New Orleans,
and his statue, at the entrance of City Park, has disappeared by
order of Mayor (or is it Mao) Landrieu.
Christopher
Columbus was revered as a great hero at the anniversary of his most
important voyage, celebrated in 1892, but by the 500th
anniversary in 1992 he was maligned as an embarrassment, a villain,
imperialist, colonialist, racist, and genocidal exemplar of white
male privilege. A man once so honored that the capital of Ohio was
named for him, as was even the American capital, Washington, District
of Columbia! To those who defend Columbus by maintaining, without
Columbus, there would be no America, the politically correct retort
is: “Precisely.” They despise Columbus BEAUSE they hate America
and all it stands for. And so too George Washington, the “father
of his country,” now dismissed as just another slave owner.
Jefferson, chief author of the Declaration of Independence, is
reviled not only as a slave owner, but as one who took sexual
advantage of one of his slaves. Madison, President during the War of
1812, another slave-driver, while Andrew Jackson, was worse – a
slave owner, and the President responsible for the “trail of
tears,” the removal of the Indians from the Southeast. Jackson
even removed the 'civilized' Indians. They were so civilized they
owned slaves. After their removal to Indian Territory (now
Oklahoma), during the American Civil War, many of the Indians chose
to fight for the Confederacy.
When
I was young the Democratic Party would have annual fund-raising
dinners named Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinners. The Democrats honored a
founder and “re-founder” of their party. Today, many Democratic
leaders are ashamed of both Jefferson and Jackson. So it is in this
period of political correctness and Red Guard destruction, that we
can all appreciate the courage of writers like Kilmeade and Yaeger in
resurrecting the heroic struggle of Andrew Jackson to save New
Orleans from the British invaders.
Kilmeade/Yaeger
describe an encounter with British occupying forces when Jackson was
a teenager. Tories informed the British of the rebel sympathies of
his aunt and her relatives. At one point, an officer ordered the
rebel youth to clean the mud from the Briton's boots. Jackson
refused. The officer drew his sword, aiming to crash it down on the
teen's head. Jackson raised his arm to deflect the blow, which cut
his hand deeply, and still got through to leave a scar on his head.
Jackson's brother and mother would soon die in events that Jackson
related to this British raid, and consequently the youth retained a
fiery hatred for the British.
Jackson
was scrappy, a young man of the new American southwest. He learned
law by clerking, but he was like Burr and Hamilton, willing to duel
for his honor. He clearly held a macho ideal. When he heard of an
Indian raid (the Red Sticks) in 1813 that wiped out over 200 settlers
at Ft. Mims, Alabama near Mobile, Jackson was determined on revenge.
He also suspected the British were supplying weapons to the Indians
in order to promote attacks upon the Americans. After Jackson and
his men decisively defeated the Red Sticks at the Battle of Horseshoe
Bend later that year, the Indian leader, William Weatherford, who was
half Creek Indian and half Scottish, came alone to Jackson and
offered his services as a defeated warrior. Jackson helped him.
When
after years of British provocations, Pres. Madison and the
Democratic-Republicans finally declared war on Britain in 1812,
Jackson was delighted and volunteered his services. Unfortunately,
the incompetent War Department generally ignored Jackson's pleas on
the need to defend New Orleans, the linchpin of the future of the
American West. During the War of 1812 the Americans attempted to
invade and conquer Canada, and failed in 1812-13, and in 1814 the
British raided the east coast, burning the American capital in
Washington and nearly capturing Baltimore. In 1814 in Belgium, peace
talks had begun, but there were clauses implying that whoever
conquered territory at the end of the war might be able to retain it.
The
British sent an expedition of thousands led by Admiral Alexander
Cochrane, and General Edward Pakenham, who had won a fine reputation
in battles against Napoleon and his allies in Spain and France, and
who was hailed as “the hero of Salamanca.” He was also a
brother-in-law to the Duke of Wellington (and Pakenham was to become
governor of New Orleans, once he had taken the city).
Kilmeade's
book includes over half dozen maps to follow the course of the
invadsion. Meanwhile, Jackson scrambled to raise a motley crew of US
regular army men, Tennessee and Kentucky Volunteers, Free People of
Color from Louisiana, Jean Lafitte and his pirates, men of New
Orleans society, and any others who might be recruited. Slaves were
inducted to dig the trenches to defend the main line at Rodriguez
Canal against possible British assault.
The
British outnumbered the Americans by at least 3 to 1. Moreover, some
of these same British troops had helped defeat the mighty Napoleon.
By contrast, the American militia had utterly failed to defend the
nation's capital in 1814, and Jackson's impromptu aggregate might run
away at the first shot. But they did not. While the statistics may
be only approximate, the Americans lost between a dozen and 300; the
British between 1,000 and 3,000, including Gen Pakenham himself. Not
only was New Orleans saved, but the British would no longer be able
to supply Indians with weapons, or promote intrigue to sever
Louisiana and the lands west of the Mississippi to a greater Spanish
empire in North America or some other anti-American schemes. America
would continue to hold the crucial port of New Orleans and new
American settlers could continue to pour across the mountains,
selling their goods down the Mississippi, and the American republic
could continue to expand and fill the continent.
The
man most responsible for this victory was Andrew Jackson. This book
reminds us of what a hero he was. And if it were so easy to defend
New Orleans, why did New Orleans fall so quickly to the Yankees
during the Civil War? Early in the Civil War Naval Line Officer
James Farragut captured New Orleans, the largest city in the
Confederacy, in April 1862. Farragut was born near Knoxville,
Tennessee, and resided in Virginia, but he chose to remain on the
side of the Americans with the outbreak of war. After the capture of
New Orleans, Yankee ships could travel up the Mississippi on longer
missions. Later Farragut would become an admiral in the US Navy.
The authors should have contrasted the determined and successful
defense of New Orleans by Jackson with the Confederacy's loss both of
its largest city and of control over the lower Mississippi to the
Union invaders.
When
New Orleans women gave icy welcomes to the occupying Yankee troops,
preferring to spit on them, New Englander Union Gen. Benjamin Butler
issued an order that such ladies were to be treated as women of the
street (as prostitutes), which caused an international outburst
concerning the oppressive Yankee regime. Butler responded with
something else to anger the Confederates. Onto the base of the
famous statue of Andrew Jackson in Jackson Square, Butler had a few
words of Jackson inscribed, modifying them only slightly. Jackson
was a slave owner, but in the conflict over nullification in the
1830s, Jackson defied Calhoun and the pro-secession theoreticians:
“The Union must and shall be preserved.” These words Butler
added that to the base of the statue, and now the Left demands the
removal of the statue from Jackson Square!
As
America now demotes, denigrates, and dismisses its real heroes, it
has begun to replace them with a new set, a set that cannot be easily
judged as politically incorrect. The Super heroes of comics and
films are no longer really “American heroes.” The movies that
tell their stories are shown, not only in America, but round the
world, and with China's huge market, the villains can no longer be
Chinese. The super heroes no longer illustrate American values, but
global values. These fictional heroes are “safe.” No one will
discover that they were once slave owners. No one will uncover that
they once said something bad about an Amerindian, or bullied a gay,
or mocked an Asian's accent, or grabbed a woman, or kissed a man, or
tweeted that the only good Martian was a dead Martian. The new super
heroes are safe and fun and can appeal to the world. But Jackson is
a real hero, a man who said and did things that will NOT appeal to
everyone, a man who had faults, a man who was flawed, a man who was
human; a hero who was a man. Yes, Jackson was a real hero, who was
able to defeat some from the greatest army of his time and save the
area west of the Mississippi and New Orleans for the great American
experiment in republican government.
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