On three striking sides to one of America’s most
insignificant victories.
The first thing that stands out about the January 1815
Battle of New Orleans is that it was entirely unnecessary. Not in the “War:
what is it good for?” sense, but quite literally unnecessary: the War of 1812
had been ended by the Treaty of
Ghent in December 1814, but the various signatories were still in the
process of ratifying the treaty and word had not reached the British troops who
were trying to take the city and with it the rest of the Louisiana Purchase
territory. So the attack continued, the
American troops led by Major General Andrew Jackson fought back, and the
U.S. won its clearest military victory of the war after that conflict had
officially ceased.
If the victory was thus officially meaningless, however, the
composition of those American forces was far more significant. I’ve written
elsewhere in this space about the uniquely multicultural,
-national, and –lingual identify of New Orleans, and the army fighting to
protect the city reflected that identity very fully: the relatively small force
(it numbered around 8000, noticeably fewer than the British forces) included
French Creole troops from New Orleans (some commanded by the former pirate Jean Lafitte), both
free African American residents of the city (colloquially
known as fmcs, “free men of color”) and slaves who had been freed
specifically to aid in the battle, and Choctaw
Native Americans, among other communities.
Moreover, one particular such community is even more
striking and unremembered in our national narratives. Since the mid-18th
century, a group of Filipino immigrants had settled in a Louisiana town
known as Manila Village, comprising what seems likely to be the oldest (and
certainly the most enduring) Asian American community. Men from the village joined Lafitte’s forces for
the battle, helping to create the truly multicultural fighting unit known
as the “Batarians.” It’s difficult for me to overstate how much would change in
our understanding of American history and community if we acknowledged at all,
much less engaged at length with, this fact: that in one of our earliest
military efforts, our forces included French Creole and Filipino Americans,
fighting side by side to defend the city and nation that were and remain their
home.
The week’s final remembering tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
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