Steel and Fire

Headline Wednesday: Battle of New Orleans, War of 1812 drops you onto the muddy fields below New Orleans as fog lifts over the Rodriguez Canal and red-coated veterans march into a narrow killing ground. This episode traces how Andrew Jackson’s improvised army of regulars, militia, free men of color, sailors, and former smugglers turned a shallow ditch and rough earthwork into a wall that broke a veteran British assault. You will hear how the fight on the Chalmette plain unfolded hour by hour, why New Orleans and the Mississippi River mattered so much, and how a battle fought after diplomats had already signed a treaty still reshaped how a young republic saw itself. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com.
From the first warning skirmishes in the bayous to the final British withdrawal from the Gulf Coast, the episode follows the full arc of the campaign: the scramble to fortify New Orleans, the British plan for a frontal assault, the devastating impact of American artillery and rifles from behind the canal bank, and the lopsided casualty lists that echoed back across the Atlantic. Along the way, it highlights terrain, timing, and leadership decisions that staff-ride planners, students of early American warfare, and War of 1812 enthusiasts can use as a clear refresher before walking the ground or revisiting the history in print. Listen, then bring the story with you to the battlefield, the classroom, or your next discussion group.
Steel and Fire
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