Ohio History Journal

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WESTERN OPINION AND THE WAR OF 1812*

WESTERN OPINION AND THE WAR OF 1812*

 

 

BY JOHN F. CADY, M A.

 

I.

The determining factor in any situation is the active,

positive element involved in it. In the realm of physics,

for example, force is measured by the product of mass

and velocity, but the direction of movement is deter-

mined by the positive, active velocity, not by the passive

mass acted upon. So it is in historical and political

movements. The desires and convictions of the posi-

tive, progressive group are of far more significance

than the timid, half-hearted-predilections of a far larger

element. The dead inertia of conservatism may be con-

sidered a more or less constant quantity; the variable

determinants in the equation are the men of energy and

enterprise -- explorers, conquerors, reformers, imperi-

alists, those who have faith in their own powers, and

the courage to dare take their place on the frontiers or

vanguard of a country's enterprise. The movements

of national life are directed and guided by the active,

energetic element of its population.

This principle finds perhaps no better illustration

anywhere than in the determining influence which the

spirit of the back country had upon national policy dur-

ing the period leading up to the War of 1812. The

aggressive people on the frontiers entertained certain

 

* Last June this paper was awarded the annual prize offered by the

Ohio Society of Colonial Wars, for the best essay on early western his-

tory, by a graduate student of the University of Cincinnati. It was also

offered as a thesis for the degree of M. A. in the University of Cincinnati.

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