- The War of 1812
- Treason and Disaffection
- Indigenous Peoples
- Blacks
- Women
- Civil Administration – Upper Canada
- Civil Administration – Lower Canada
- Civil Administration – New Brunswick
- Civil Administration – Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island
- Civil Administration – Prince Edward Island
- Civil Administration – Newfoundland
- Naval War – on the Lakes
- Naval War – on the Atlantic Ocean
- Land War – Upper Canada
- Land War – Lower Canada
- Loyalty
- Economic Development
- The War and its Myths
Land War – Upper Canada
Brigadier General John VINCENT’s biography outlines the military difficulties encountered in the Niagara peninsula:
“In February 1813 Prevost made Vincent brigadier general and transferred him to the Niagara frontier to replace Major-General Sir Roger Hale Sheaffe*, who was ill. Vincent took over command of about 1,900 men: many of them, he informed Prevost in May, were unenthusiastic militiamen whose ‘desertion beyond all conception continues to mark their indifference.’”
If you wish to know more about other military challenges, we invite you to explore the list of biographies.