<i> (male narrator)
Previously on "The Men Who
Built America: Frontiersmen.."</i> <i> Lewis and Clark
achieve the impossible..</i> <i> ...reaching the Pacific..</i> <i> ...claiming new land
for the US..</i> <i> ...and infuriating
Great Britain.</i> <i> By 1812..</i> [clamoring] <i> ...the frontier is again
a battleground..</i> [grunting] <i> ...and America's survival..</i> <i> ...is once more in peril.</i> [grunting] <i> [Zayde Wolf
singing "Born Ready"]</i> ♪ I've been
the last one standin' ♪ ♪ When all the giants fell ♪ Whoa-oa-oa whoa-oa-oa ♪ Whoa-oa-oa whoa-oa-oa ♪ I won't shiver I won't shake ♪ I'm made of stone
I don't break ♪ ♪ Staring at the pressure now ♪ I won't quit
not backing down ♪ ♪ I was born ♪ Born ready ♪ I was born ♪ Born ready ♪ Open my eyes turn me loose ♪ And you'll see why ♪ I was born ♪ Born ready ♪ [men screaming] <i> (male narrator)
Across the northern frontier</i> <i> the US is fighting
its second war in 30 years</i> <i> against Great Britain
and its Native American allies</i> <i> and it's losing.</i> [men screaming] [men screaming] [dramatic music] [screaming] [screaming] Aah! [music continues] <i> Legendary war chief, Tecumseh</i> <i> has already captured
a key American fort.</i> <i> In an unprecedented move</i> <i> the Shawnee leader
has united warriors</i> <i> from two dozen
different tribes.</i> <i> He now leads them in raids
meant to drive</i> <i> American settlers
from native lands.</i> <i> His goal,
create a pan-Indian nation</i> <i> west of the Appalachians.</i> <i> It's a mission that fills
America's leaders with fear.</i> <i> (Eisenbach)
This Pan-Indian alliance</i> <i> was a nightmare
for the American government.</i> <i> This could potentially</i> seriously would impede,
uh, the forward progress <i> of the future United States.</i> <i> And so, he had to be eliminatd</i> because this possibility
was too much for the American government
to accept. <i> (male narrator)
By 1813, Tecumseh's warriors</i> <i> dominate a large area
in the Ohio Valley</i> <i> territory that Britain
ceded to the US</i> <i> after the revolution.</i> <i> To secure the frontier</i> <i> the US government
assigns a seasoned soldier</i> <i> to confront Tecumseh..</i> <i> ...one of the few men who has
defeated him in the past</i> <i> his long-time adversary</i> <i> William Henry Harrison.</i> <i> (Amy)
The leadership
of the United States</i> believed that Tecumseh's
alliance with Britain could be a factor,
a major factor in the US
possibly losing the war. I don't know
if William Henry Harrison had a personal vendetta
against Native Americans but his military career
is defined by that. <i> He was well known as ruthless.</i> <i> And when it comes
to the War of 1812</i> he has this inherent vitriol. <i> He wanted Tecumseh dead.</i> <i> (male narrator)
As Harrison prepares
to march north</i> <i> the fight for the frontier
escalates in the south..</i> <i> ...as Britain encourages
a breakaway group</i> <i> of Creek Indians
known as the Red Sticks</i> <i> to attack settlements</i> <i> inciting fear
throughout the south.</i> [screaming] [gunshot] <i> They destroy
an American outpost</i> <i> killing 500 men,
women and children..</i> <i> ...in what becomes known</i> <i> as the Fort Mims Massacre.</i> <i> (Brands)
They decided to raise
the banner of war</i> <i> against the whites
to resist white encroachment.</i> And if they would have
taken the position that this was, uh, simply
a defense of their homeland. But to American settlers,
it represented a grave threat to the security
of the American frontier. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
With the army fighting Tecumseh
on the northern front</i> <i> President Madison
calls on the militia</i> <i> closest
to the Mississippi Territory</i> <i> to defend the south.</i> <i> In Tennessee..</i> <i> ...one commander has been
waiting for the chance</i> <i> to join the fight.</i> <i> His name..</i> <i> ...is Andrew Jackson.</i> This was a person who started life
very much at the bottom very much on his own <i> and was determined
to make something of himself.</i> And so, one way
for an ambitious young person to rise would be to go to war <i> and to win glory in war.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Jackson's the perfect man
for the job.</i> <i> He's spent a lifetime
building a reputation</i> <i> as a man who gets results.</i> <i> Ten years earlier..</i> <i> ...he was a tough
backcountry judge</i> <i> known for taking the law
into his own hands.</i> <i> (Brands)
There was one instance where</i> there was a particularly
vicious bully who was wanted for murder and no one wanted to arrest him. <i> So he decides
to take it on himself.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (Amy)
Andrew Jackson
was a loose cannon.</i> He would take bullwhips
to people. He pursued duels long after
duels were out of fashion. <i> He would come to blows
with people.</i> <i> There are countless examples</i> <i> of when he just took matters
into his own hands.</i> One of the most famous stories
of Jackson is how he gets into a bar fight gets shot in the arm, uh and just right before the doctor
is about to amputate <i> he grabs the doctor and says</i> <i> "You cut off my arm,
I'm gonna kill you."</i> There was nothing
that was gonna keep him down including an infection
from a bullet in his arm. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Now, Jackson has the greatest
opportunity of his life.</i> <i> He leads more than 2500
volunteer militiamen south</i> <i> to destroy
the Red Stick faction.</i> <i> But first, he has to find the.</i> <i> As Jackson searches
for the Red Stick warriors</i> <i> in the north,
William Henry Harrison</i> <i> and his 3000 troops</i> <i> are just a day's march from
Tecumseh's camp near Lake Erie.</i> <i> The Shawnee war chief
is planning his own revenge.</i> <i> Two years earlier</i> <i> Harrison destroyed
Tecumseh's capital</i> <i> Prophetstown.</i> <i> Now, Tecumseh meets
with his British allies</i> <i> to plan
a carefully coordinated ambush.</i> [speaking in foreign language] He says,
"If your men can hold the line our men
can take care of the rest." [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
The British will attack</i> <i> Harrison's army as they march</i> <i> and push them towards the woos</i> <i> where Tecumseh and his warrios</i> <i> will be waiting to crush them</i> <i> as they retreat.</i> <i> (Donald)
Tecumseh knows that Harrison
is leading this force.</i> <i> It's gonna be a gun fight.</i> And one of them
is not gonna survive that day. <i> (male narrator)
On October 5, 1813</i> <i> Tecumseh and his men
take their positions</i> <i> for a battle that could help
decide the outcome of the war</i> <i> and the future
of the United States itself.</i> [instrumental music] <i> On the banks
of the Thames River</i> <i> Tecumseh and 500 warriors
from half a dozen tribes</i> <i> wait to attack US forces.</i> [dramatic music] <i> Tecumseh's British allies
plan to strike</i> <i> William Henry Harrison's
troops head on</i> <i> forcing them
to retreat into the woods</i> <i> where native warriors</i> <i> will ambush them from behind.</i> [speaking in foreign language] [indistinct yelling] [gunshots in distance] <i> (male narrator)
Suddenly, the British
enter the woods..</i> <i> ...but they're not attacking.</i> [gunshot] <i> They're retreating.</i> [men screaming] The British last
less than five minutes. <i> And the Native American forces</i> <i> were outnumbered three to one.</i> Tecumseh realizes
that he has to make a stand <i> because if he retreats</i> <i> they might not be able
to build another army.</i> [shouts in foreign language] [gun firing] [men screaming] <i> (male narrator)
William Henry Harrison has
his bitter rival pinned down</i> <i> caught between
the Thames River</i> <i> and the American troops.</i> [dramatic music] [grunting] [gunshot] [grunts] [intense music] <i> (Amy)
Tecumseh's forces held</i> <i> and they held
as long as they possibly could.</i> But without the British,
it was a slaughter. [men yelling] [gunshot] <i> (male narrator)
When Tecumseh is killed
by Harrison's forces..</i> <i> ...his Native American
confederacy dies with him.</i> [shallow breathing] I can only imagine what Tecumseh
must have been feeling when he realized he'd been
abandoned by the Brits. <i> How it must have felt</i> <i> to put your trust in white man</i> <i> and then
have that trust betrayed</i> <i> and it cause your downfall.</i> The death of Tecumseh
was an incalculable loss for Native America. <i> In the wake of, of losing him</i> <i> and losing the forces
who fought with him</i> <i> the pan-tribal confederacy
failed.</i> <i> (Donald)
Shawnee people are never
as powerful and influential</i> <i> as they were under Tecumseh</i> and so, it's a situation of having to come
to the negotiating table of having to sign treaties with
the United States Government. And they do. <i> (male narrator)
After years of fighting</i> <i> the Shawnee
are finally defeated</i> <i> and Tecumseh's dream
of regaining a native homeland</i> <i> in the Ohio Valley is lost.</i> <i> For the United States</i> <i> victory
at the Battle of the Thames</i> <i> is a turning point in the war.</i> <i> They regain control
in the north.</i> <i> But 600 miles to the south</i> <i> the frontier is still in chao.</i> <i> Andrew Jackson's
leading a campaign</i> <i> to find the Red Stick warriors</i> <i> responsible
for the Fort Mims Massacre.</i> <i> His militia searches
the wilderness for weeks..</i> <i> ...and finds nothing.</i> <i> (Inskeep)
One of the wonders
of this period for Americans</i> <i> is to realize
how very different</i> <i> the American landscape
was then.</i> There were relatively few people it was mostly wilderness. <i> And into this wilderness came
an army of several thousand men</i> <i> that was very poorly supplied.</i> <i> They were having
to live off the land.</i> <i> In the end, what they did
was nearly starve.</i> <i> (male narrator)
By October, 1813</i> <i> Jackson's running out of time.</i> <i> If he can't find
the Creek Tribe</i> <i> he risks losing his volunteers
to desertion.</i> <i> But a new recruit
has just joined his militia.</i> <i> His name is Davy Crockett.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (Buddy)
Crockett became famous
as a hunter on the frontier</i> <i> over the course
of a long period of time</i> <i> of learning
how to exist in the woods.</i> He claimed to have shot,
in a seven-month period a hundred and five black bears. [gunshot] <i> When Crockett
joined the militia</i> <i> he was perfect
to chase rogue Creeks</i> then got to observe how
they moved through landscape. <i> It was something
that he, in fact, emulated.</i> <i> (male narrator)
With just six months
of formal schooling</i> <i> young Crockett's real educatin</i> <i> comes from the frontier itsel.</i> <i> (Buddy)
Crockett came
from a tradition of woodsmen</i> and he would've learned
from his father and his uncles <i> how to hunt.</i> <i> He learned how to track</i> <i> he learned how to identify sin</i> <i> scat, broken twigs.</i> [gunshot] <i> (male narrator)
Now, Crockett uses
his frontier skills</i> <i> to track the Creek Tribe
for General Jackson.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (Rinella)
It's just a harrowing
undertaking to do this.</i> <i> He wasn't carrying modern-day,
cutting-edge technology.</i> <i> So you needed to be
an expert tracker and woodsman.</i> You look
at all the sign around you and the tracks
and the markings and the trees. You look at everything as being something
that is gonna affect <i> my next decision
where the Indians might be.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
In just two weeks,
Crockett finds their village</i> <i> and the Americans
prepare for revenge.</i> <i> (male narrator)
In late 1813,
on the northern frontier</i> <i> victories by the US
diminish the threat</i> <i> posed by Britain's
Native American allies.</i> <i> But to the south</i> <i> native raids
are destroying settlements</i> <i> spreading panic
throughout what is now Alabama.</i> [crows crowing] <i> General Andrew Jackson
has been ordered</i> <i> to eliminate
the Creek Indians responsible</i> <i> for killing over 500 settlers
at Fort Mims.</i> <i> After weeks of searching,
Davy Crockett has found them..</i> <i> ...giving Jackson
all the information</i> <i> he needs to attack.</i> (Jackson)
'Split the men
into two columns.' We'll arrive here
before the sun rises. 'We'll cross the river
at the low point here and here.' (Coffee)
'Yes, sir.' Not a single one of them
makes it out. Prepare the men. (Coffee)
'Scouts!' <i> (Brands)
Jackson took the position</i> that the Indians had started
this round of war <i> by massacring whites.</i> <i> And he also believed the lesson
to be taught to them was</i> you don't massacre whites without expecting
a comparable reprisal. <i> You kill or you be killed.</i> That was the world he lived in
and that was the life he chose. <i> (male narrator)
In the early morning hours</i> <i> nine hundred Tennessee militia</i> <i> including Davy Crockett,
surround the village.</i> [dramatic music] [music continues] [gunshots] [screaming] [indistinct yelling] [grunting] [screaming] [grunting] [screaming] [grunting] [breathing heavily] [breathing heavily] [screaming] [dramatic music] [screaming] [groaning] [gunshot] <i> (male narrator)
In only minutes,
186 Creek warriors are killed.</i> <i> And women and children are
burned alive in their homes..</i> <i> ...in what comes to be known
as the Battle of Tallushatchee.</i> [dramatic music] Jackson allowed his men to engage
in the most bloody reprisal <i> to teach the Indians a lesson</i> <i> so they wouldn't do this agai.</i> And it was
as a consequence of this that people
came to recognize his ability <i> to defend the country
against its enemies.</i> [instrumental music] [screaming] Tallushatchee is called
the Battle of Tallushatchee but it was really more like
the Massacre of Tallushatchee. They burned 46 people to death. <i> (Buddy)
It was bedlam.</i> [instrumental music] As Crockett phrased it later,
"We shot them like dogs." <i> (Eisenbach)
The ruthlessness of Jackson's
war against the Creeks</i> was something that really shook,
uh, Davy Crockett and reshaped the way
he's looking, uh at America's treatment
of the Native Americans. <i> He kind of realizes
that th-there's a senselessness</i> to this slaughter and it really
changes him, uh, as a person. [instrumental music] <i> (male narrator)
After the battle</i> <i> Crockett is sickened
by the massacre..</i> <i> ...and chooses to leave
the volunteer militia.</i> [horse neighing] (Jackson)
'Morning.' 'Where are you men off to
this morning?' (Crockett)
'We're goin' home.' No. You're going to turn around
and go back to your tents. We're volunteer militia. I will not ask again. You're gonna shoot your own men? Do not test me. Fire on my command. <i> (male narrator)
After the massacre
of over 200 Native American men</i> <i> women and children</i> <i> Davy Crockett chooses to leave
the Tennessee militia..</i> Return to your camp! <i> ...but is caught by
his commander, Andrew Jackson.</i> <i> (Brands)
Jackson tried
to hold the army together.</i> And maintaining and establishing military discipline was hard. <i> Jackson would not brook</i> <i> this walking away
by the troops.</i> This is the last time
I will give you the option. [guns cocking] [dramatic music] I will not ask again. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Crockett stands down..</i> <i> ...and grudgingly
stays in camp.</i> <i> (Buddy)
Crockett had mixed emotions
about what he was doing.</i> <i> Obviously,
he was serving his country</i> and, I think, looked at it
really more as a job. It was something
that he had to do. <i> The whole idea
of killing Indian families</i> <i> whole Indian families..</i> <i> ...didn't sit well with him.</i> Colonel. [Crockett sighs] You asked to see me, sir? You're a disgrace.. ...to yourself, to your family and to your country. What I did for you
at that village.. ...I will never do that again. You're a coward. [dramatic music] When you look at this divide
between Crockett and Jackson you can kind of see, uh,
the divide that gets to the heart
of the American frontier. <i> On one hand, most Americans</i> <i> looked at the treatment
of the Native Americans</i> <i> as just another step in
the forward path of progress.</i> Davy Crockett
sees the inherent injustice of the ruthless massacring <i> o-of the Creek Indians.</i> <i> (male narrator)
When his service is over</i> <i> Crockett heads home
to Tennessee.</i> Jackson and Crockett certainly
started in similar fashions. Both were born in log cabins both came
from humble beginnings. <i> But w-what Crockett saw
in the Creek War</i> <i> with Jackson's treatment
of Indians</i> it started a rift that would really open up later
in Crockett's life. <i> (male narrator)
Jackson doesn't stop
at avenging Fort Mims.</i> <i> He launches a series of brutal
attacks on the Red Sticks..</i> [dramatic music] <i> ...killing hundreds</i> <i> and sending a powerful messag.</i> They were targets of a scorched-earth campaign. <i> There was no law of war</i> <i> that was really respected.</i> <i> (male narrator)
By early 1814</i> <i> Jackson has crushed
the Red Stick faction..</i> <i> ...and he forces
the rest of the Creek Nation</i> <i> to negotiate a treaty</i> <i> even though
they had nothing to do</i> <i> with the conflict.</i> <i> (Inskeep)
Jackson said to them</i> they must surrender millions
of acres of their own land <i> to the United States Governmet</i> <i> as a kind of compensation
for the war.</i> Jackson actually described it
as a national security measure. He said that
by taking over this land the United States would isolate
the remaining rebels. <i> But the reality was</i> that he was taking millions
of acres of real estate. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Jackson seizes major parts
of Alabama and Georgia</i> <i> nearly 22 million acres
of land.</i> <i> The United States
has now quelled</i> <i> the Native American threat
on the frontier.</i> <i> But as they begin to turn
the tide of the War of 1812</i> <i> the British devise a new plan.</i> <i> After forcing Napoleon
into exile</i> <i> they commit additional troops
to America</i> <i> invading the East Coast
in Baltimore.</i> [cannons firing] <i> (Petraeus)
During the War of 1812</i> <i> the British almost brought
the United States to its knees.</i> Ultimately,
the British sack Washington and, and burn the White House. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
After capturing
America's capital..</i> <i> ...Britain turns
to the most important port</i> <i> on the frontier..</i> <i> ...New Orleans.</i> <i> The city controls access
to the Mississippi River</i> <i> providing a highway</i> <i> to British forts in Canada.</i> The British had a huge advantage
over the United States in the War of 1812
because the British had the most powerful navy
in the world. It meant that the British
could move their troops from here, there
along the coast <i> and always beat the Americans</i> <i> to wherever they wanted to ge.</i> <i> If they captured New Orleans</i> <i> they could
go up the Mississippi</i> <i> and connect with British forces
coming down from Canada.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Knowing Britain will attack
New Orleans..</i> <i> ...the US turns
to its new war hero</i> <i> Andrew Jackson.</i> <i> (Inskeep)
Here emerged from Tennessee</i> this general
who organized an army managed to keep it together
by force of will and crushed the Creek Nation. <i> (male narrator)
Jackson's determined to win.</i> <i> He has a powerful
and personal hatred of Britain</i> <i> dating back to his childhood.</i> <i> In the fall of 1781</i> <i> Jackson was held
as a prisoner of war</i> <i> during the revolution.</i> (male #1)
'On your feet.' [grunts] [dramatic music] <i> (Brands)
As a, a young teenager</i> <i> Andrew Jackson
rode as a courier</i> <i> for the American forces
against the British</i> who eventually captured him and put him
in a prisoner-of-war camp. <i> (male narrator)
He lost two brothers
during the war.</i> <i> His mother also perished
in the conflict.</i> Jackson suspected the British of all evil things.
He detested the British. <i> If you wanted to get a rise
out of Andrew Jackson</i> <i> all you had to do was mention
Britain or the British.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Now, he has a shot at revenge</i> <i> if Jackson can lead his men</i> <i> through Louisiana's
deadly swamp lands</i> <i> and get to New Orleans
before the enemy.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
Deep in the southern frontier</i> <i> Andrew Jackson is marching
to the port of New Orleans</i> <i> to defend it against
a coming British attack.</i> <i> But while the British
have the advantage</i> <i> of traveling by sea..</i> <i> ...Jackson must get there
by land.</i> <i> And he faces
a massive obstacle..</i> <i> ...the Louisiana swamps.</i> <i> The Atchafalaya Basin</i> <i> is the biggest swamp
in the country</i> <i> covering nearly
1000 square miles.</i> <i> And Jackson has to cross it</i> <i> with 1500 men,
artillery and supplies.</i> [dramatic music] This was an era
before good roads. In fact, in that region
of the country there were hardly any roads. <i> To get several thousand troops
to New Orleans</i> <i> with all their equipment</i> was an extreme difficulty. Get that end,
get that end. <i> (Mykel)
When you're talking about going</i> through those swamps,
you're talkin' about water that gets neck deep at times gators everywhere poisonous snakes everywhere,
very aggressive. Mosquitoes have got to be
just eating them alive. <i> They got very thick clothing
on, they've got to be sweating.</i> <i> You're talking about
an absolute misery fest.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Jackson works his men
around the clock..</i> Park down here.
We gotta go. <i> ...improvising bridges to haul
a two-ton cannon</i> <i> through the bog.</i> (Jackson)
'Up, up!' [Jackson grunts] 'Hold, hold, hold, hold!' 'Bring the wood! Let's go,
let's go! You're holding up!' It doesn't have to look pretty,
just secure. - 'Let's go!'
- One, two, pull! I want one man here,
one man here, and one man there! Work the wood down! 'Keep them straight now!' (Coffee)
'One, two, pull!' <i> (male narrator)
Under Jackson's command</i> <i> they maintain a pace
of 25 miles a day.</i> <i> (Brands)
It was at this moment
that Jackson's leadership</i> became really most apparent. And up! Roll! <i> Jackson's soldiers, whatever
they thought about the British</i> <i> whatever they thought
about the Indians</i> <i> whatever they thought
about American policy</i> they would follow Andrew Jackson
to the gates of hell. (Jackson)
'Push, boys, push!' Put your backs into it! <i> (male narrator)
Finally...</i> Come on, men! <i> ...after two weeks
of grueling work..</i> <i> ...Jackson arrives
in New Orleans..</i> <i> ...knowing the British
could land any minute.</i> [grunting] [instrumental music] New Orleans was hugely
important, uh, at that time and still is, uh,
for that matter. In-in many respects,
it's the, the gateway <i> to the inland waterways
that were so critical</i> <i> to that part
of the United States.</i> <i> So retaining that port,
this great trading port</i> <i> which has access
to all of these waterways</i> <i> uh, was absolutely vital.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Jackson races
to build fortifications</i> <i> at key entry points
around the city</i> <i> to force the British to attack
him where he's strongest.</i> <i> But to do it, he needs
all the manpower he can get.</i> <i> (Inskeep)
He didn't have much of an army</i> but he assembled one from
the forces that were available ranging
from Kentucky Frontiersmen <i> to some of his own
Tennessee loyalists</i> <i> to New Orleans militia</i> <i> to an African-American
militia unit</i> to river pirates
who were engaged because they had cannon
and could fire them and even local Indians <i> all became part
of Jackson's military force.</i> And he welded them together
in an effective way. <i> (male narrator)
In all, Jackson has
about 4500 men.</i> <i> When the British finally apper</i> <i> they have 60 warships
and 15,000 men.</i> <i> The Americans are outnumbered
by more than three to one.</i> Who's willing to suffer more
for victory, men? <i> (male narrator)
General Jackson has 4500 men</i> <i> arrayed against
a British force</i> <i> outnumbering him
by more than three to one.</i> <i> His mission,
hold New Orleans at all costs.</i> <i> (Francois)
All trade
west of the Appalachians</i> flowed down the Ohio River
and into the Mississippi and out <i> through the port
of New Orleans.</i> It was
the most critical choke point for the American continent. [dramatic music] Prepare to fire! Hold! <i> (male narrator)
Jackson plans a way
to give his inferior force</i> <i> an advantage.</i> <i> He positions his men with
the Mississippi to the right</i> <i> and dense swampland
to the left..</i> <i> ...forcing the British
to charge uphill..</i> <i> ...on a narrow strip of land
without cover.</i> Hold! Fire! [guns firing] Fire! Reload! <i> (Inskeep)
From behind cotton bales</i> <i> and other obstacles..</i> ...Jackson's men,
in relative security could open fire
on charging British troops. Fire! Fire at will, men! Fire at will! Had they met the British troops
in an open battlefield <i> things would've been
completely different.</i> [gunshots] <i> But as it turned out,
the British charged</i> <i> right where
Jackson would've wanted them to</i> and they did it very badly,
and they were slaughtered. <i> (male narrator)
Over ten days
of ferocious battle..</i> [indistinct yelling] Fire! [cannons firing] <i> ...Jackson and his men</i> <i> push back
every unrelenting wave</i> <i> of British assault.</i> [gunshots] <i> Finally,
after devastating losses</i> <i> British forces withdraw.</i> <i> (Brands)
The figures were unbelievable.</i> Over 2000 British casualties. Less than a hundred
on the American side. <i> And it's at that moment
that Andrew Jackson becomes</i> <i> the great military hero
of the American people.</i> <i> Andrew Jackson
was often thought of</i> <i> as the second coming
of George Washington.</i> <i> George Washington
wins independence</i> for the United States Andrew Jackson
defends independence for the United States. <i> (male narrator)
The victory at New Orleans</i> <i> propels Jackson
to national fame..</i> <i> ...and secures his legacy
as an American hero.</i> <i> But what
American and British forces</i> <i> at New Orleans don't know</i> <i> is that before the battle begn</i> <i> the War of 1812
was already over.</i> <i> Just over three weeks earlier</i> <i> half a world away, in Belgium</i> <i> representatives of
the United States and Britain</i> <i> sign a treaty</i> <i> ending
almost three years of war</i> <i> between the two nations.</i> <i> (Walter)
There's already a peace treaty.</i> It just takes that long for news <i> to cross the Atlantic
and get to New Orleans.</i> But it really doesn't matter
to the American nation. All they know
and all they want to focus on <i> is that they have beat
the British Empire</i> and having done that,
nothing is impossible and we're now
going to look westward across the American continent
and expand. <i> (male narrator)
In the Treaty of Ghent</i> <i> Britain formally recognizes</i> <i> that the US now controls
all the native lands</i> <i> that were once part
of the Mississippi Territory.</i> <i> Alabama and Mississippi
are now open for settlement.</i> [dramatic music] <i> After his victory
at the Battle of New Orleans</i> <i> a grateful government
assigns Andrew Jackson</i> <i> the job of surveying
this new territory.</i> [music continues] <i> And he immediately senses
opportunity</i> <i> to grow one of America's
most profitable crops..</i> <i> ...cotton.</i> When Jackson went off
on military expeditions he had his eye out for land
that could also grow cotton. <i> And one of the big attractions
of the land</i> <i> in what would become
Alabama, Mississippi</i> <i> was the fact
that it was very well suited</i> <i> to growing cotton.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Over the next two years</i> <i> Jackson uses his position</i> <i> to buy vast tracts of land
at low cost</i> <i> then sell it at a profit</i> <i> to wealthy plantation owners.</i> (Jackson)
Gentlemen. [sighs] Everything we discussed.. ...is in this contract,
if you'd like to look it over. <i> (Inskeep)
What's happening here
is not just the expansion</i> <i> of the United States
in a new territory.</i> It was an opportunity for men in what is now the Deep South <i> to carve out
brand-new plantations..</i> Just sign here. <i> ...plant cotton
and make a fortune.</i> And it was perfectly timed
for men like Jackson to make a lot of money. <i> (male narrator)
The frontiersman
born in poverty</i> <i> amasses a personal fortune</i> <i> of four-and-a-half
million dollars.</i> <i> But his business dealings
have a devastating consequence</i> <i> resurrecting an institution
on the verge of collapse.</i> [dramatic music] Slavery serves the larger
interests of the planter class. <i> What it creates
is tremendous economic profit</i> <i> for planters, for farmers</i> and American business interest
in that region. <i> (Brands)
Jackson did not
consider himself</i> an evangelist for slavery. But, in fact,
his actions did give slavery <i> a new lease on life.</i> At the beginning of
the 18th century, it was unclear whether slavery
was going to remain profitable. <i> And it might not have</i> <i> had Jackson
and those who fought with him</i> <i> not opened up
vast new territories</i> to cotton culture. To the future of America. - Hm. To the future.
- Future. [glasses clinking] <i> (male narrator)
The land speculation
Jackson ignites</i> <i> has another consequence.</i> <i> In just three years,
the price of an acre</i> <i> skyrockets from $2 to 78.</i> <i> For Davy Crockett,
this betrays the promise</i> <i> of the American frontier</i> <i> one he's determined
to fight for.</i> [instrumental music] <i> In the years since his clash
with Andrew Jackson</i> <i> Davy Crockett's tried
to carve out a life for himself</i> <i> in the backwoods of Tennessee.</i> <i> But in the last decade</i> <i> he's watched
his beloved frontier</i> <i> disappear before his eyes.</i> <i> Thousands of acres
of wilderness</i> <i> that frontiersmen
have depended on for years</i> <i> have now turned
into cotton farms</i> <i> and the original settlers
are being pushed aside.</i> <i> (Buddy)
One of Crockett's main issues
was squatter's rights.</i> He felt that the squatters,
the settlers ought to be able to purchase
the land they were living on for reasonable prices. And this rubbed against the monied, landed aristocracy of the southern
plantation farmers. <i> (male narrator)
Determined to protect
the way of life he believes in</i> <i> the frontiersman who grew up
without formal education</i> <i> decides to run for Congress.</i> [dramatic music] (Crockett)
Some man comes along,
waves a piece of paper at you tells you, "You can't track
here anymore." I.. Hell, no. These land speculators
and plantation owners never set a foot in Tennessee
in their life. <i> It's our families
and our dreams</i> <i> that are being destroyed here.</i> <i> If we don't speak up, th..</i> They're just gonna keep
right on doin' it. 'Thank you very much.' [crowd applauding] Hi. Good to meet you. <i> (male narrator)
In the summer of 1827</i> <i> Davy Crockett
wins in a landslide</i> <i> with a campaign built</i> <i> on bringing the frontier fight
to Washington.</i> David Crockett looms huge in the notion of what
the American frontier was. <i> (Buddy)
He became a symbol</i> <i> of possibility, of hope</i> <i> that the common man</i> <i> could actually rise
to great heights.</i> A man with six months' education ends up
in the halls of Congress. <i> It's a uniquely American stor.</i> <i> (male narrator)
But while Crockett is entering
the House of Representatives</i> <i> his former militia commander</i> <i> has become one of the richest
and most powerful men</i> <i> in the frontier.</i> <i> And he has his sights set</i> <i> on the highest office
in the country.</i> <i> (Brands)
Jackson, as a young man,
he didn't see himself</i> <i> as a career politician
by any means.</i> But he became this national hero as a result of his victory
at the Battle of New Orleans. And people began telling him that he could be
president of the United States. <i> (male narrator)
For the first 40 years
of America's existence</i> <i> the president hailed
from either Massachusetts</i> <i> or Virginia.</i> <i> But now as more and more peope</i> <i> pour into the frontier</i> <i> Jackson believes
the country is ready</i> <i> for an unprecedented change.</i> Andrew Jackson rose to power
just at a moment when people
were becoming conscious that the revolutionary
generation was passing away <i> and a new generation was risig</i> <i> and some of those leaders
were going to come</i> <i> from a new region
that had not really existed</i> <i> at the time
of the American Revolution.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Jackson trades
on his reputation as a war hero</i> <i> and like Crockett</i> <i> paints himself
as a self-made frontiersman.</i> You just look
at the-the political competition uh, for Jackson in his day. Uh, his main competitor
was John Quincy Adams. <i> Son of the president,
he went to Harvard</i> <i> he spoke
five different languages.</i> And here's Andrew Jackson,
completely self-educated. <i> (male narrator)
Jackson's message
resonates with Americans</i> <i> across the country.</i> <i> And on December 3, 1828</i> <i> he's elected as the seventh
president of the United States.</i> Here's the man himself. [Jackson chuckles] Mr. President. <i> (Brands)
When Jackson became president
in 1829</i> he was the first president
who was called and who could be considered
the people's president. Each and every one of you men
are responsible for this victory. To you. To you, Mr. President. <i> And that was the most lasting
contribution of Jackson</i> because the presidency
from Jackson until today is preeminently
the office of the people. <i> (male narrator)
After taking office,
Jackson's first priority</i> <i> is to continue
American expansion.</i> <i> And that means more land.</i> Andrew Jackson inherited
a country in transition. This was a period in which Americans were continuing
to move west. <i> The population was almost
doubling every 20 years.</i> And he entered office with one overriding priority
above all <i> and that was
to obtain more land.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Jackson introduces a plan</i> <i> called the Indian Removal Act</i> <i> to the horror of his old rival,
Davy Crockett.</i> (Jackson)
Fellow citizens of the Senate and of the House
of Representatives 'it gives me pleasure
to announce to you..' ...that the benevolent policy in relation to the removal.. ...of the remaining Indians.. [screaming] ...beyond the white settlements by...fair exchange.. [screaming] ...is approaching
a happy consummation. [dramatic music] Jackson believed that white
Americans would never be secure from Indians as long as
the two populations mingled. <i> And so Jackson's policy
was a policy of removal.</i> People today might call it
ethnic cleansing. And, indeed, it was. The general government
kindly offers him a new home and proposes to pay
the whole expense of his removal and settlement. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
The Indian Removal Act will
force 50,000 Native Americans</i> <i> from five tribes
to leave their ancestral lands</i> <i> and settle 600 miles west,
in modern-day Oklahoma.</i> <i> (Buddy)
The Indian Removal Act
was an act</i> whose sole goal was to open up
large swaths of ground to more settlement <i> and to make
these giant tracts of land</i> <i> available to those who could
then purchase it, sell it.</i> They wouldn't have to deal
with the Indian problem anymore. [applause] <i> (male narrator)
The plan has widespread support</i> <i> but Crockett stands against i.</i> <i> And whoever wins..</i> <i> ...will help decide the future
of the American frontier.</i> [dramatic music] (Jackson)
'This government' will purchase Indian lands and give them
new expensive territory. <i> (male narrator)
President Andrew Jackson
has introduced</i> <i> the Indian Removal Act
to Congress.</i> <i> It would force Native Americans
from their homelands</i> <i> to make way
for white settlement</i> <i> and it's gaining
widespread support.</i> [applause] <i> But one man is taking a stand
against the president..</i> <i> ...Congressman Davy Crockett.</i> [indistinct chatter] Four of my counties
border Chickasaw Country. I know, personally,
many of their tribe. 'They are a proud people' who have stood as our allies
in war and in peace. Removal was taking the property
of Native Americans and putting it in the hands,
not just of US citizens but, frankly,
of Andrew Jackson supporters. <i> And when Davy Crockett stood up
on the floor of Congress</i> <i> and spoke
against the Indian Removal Act</i> Crockett put
not only his reputation but his entire political career
on the line. There is nothing
that will make me vote to force them
off their homelands. Not a political party nor any one man, no matter
how powerful he may be. [applause] <i> (Bill)
What I like best
about Davy Crockett was</i> he was able to change his mind. When he was a young man he participated
in an Indian massacre. But then he opposed
President Jackson when Jackson wanted to push
the Indian Removal Act <i> because he knew it was wrong.</i> <i> (Buddy)
Crockett didn't care that
it was Andrew Jackson's baby.</i> <i> While it was going to help
people who already had money</i> he thought it was wrong. He believed that the Indians <i> had as much right
to live freely as anyone else.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Debate about
the Indian Removal Act</i> <i> rages for five months</i> <i> both in Congress
and around the country.</i> <i> And on May 26, 1830</i> <i> it's put to a vote
in the House of Representatives</i> <i> and Crockett's efforts
fall short.</i> David Crockett
is the only member of the Tennessee delegation to vote against
the Indian Removal Act. And that was a shocking act
of, uh, defiance of the, uh, Jackson machine. Davy Crockett stood his ground. He realized he made a mistake
on that Indian massacre and he took the right position. (male #2)
'To you, Mr. President.' <i> (male narrator)
The measure passes
by only four votes</i> <i> and is signed in to law
by President Jackson</i> <i> two days later.</i> (Jackson)
'It's only beginning,
gentlemen.' <i> (male narrator)
The Indian Removal Act
goes exactly</i> <i> according to Jackson's plan</i> <i> opening large parts
of present-day Georgia</i> <i> Mississippi and Florida,
to American expansion.</i> <i> But in the coming years</i> <i> the Indian Removal Act</i> <i> will be known by another name.</i> <i> ...The Trail of Tears.</i> <i> (Brands)
The Trail of Tears
was the migration route</i> <i> from Georgia to territory
west of the Mississippi River.</i> <i> It was called
the Trail of Tears</i> because the deaths from exposure
and disease were appalling. <i> (Eisenbach)
The Indian Removal Act
is not only a major stain</i> on Jackson's legacy, it's a
major stain on American History. <i> Here was
the US Federal Government</i> getting into,
what many could call an ethnic cleansing. <i> (male narrator)
Over the next two decades</i> <i> members of the Cherokee, Creek</i> <i> Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations</i> <i> are forced to march
thousands of miles</i> <i> often at gunpoint.</i> <i> Over 16,000 die on the journe.</i> Well, my own tribe
signed a treaty in 1831 and agreed to remove
to the Indian territory. <i> Most people only think
of the Cherokee</i> <i> when they think
of the Trail of Tears</i> <i> and something like 25%</i> <i> of their people died.</i> My tribe went through
a trail of tears as did dozens of others as they were also moved
to the Indian territory. <i> So the Trail of Tears
was literally</i> <i> the extermination
of Indian nations</i> <i> and Indian peoples</i> <i> and their replacement</i> <i> by Americans
and American society.</i> In mandating the human tragedy that we call the Trail of Tears <i> Jackson, in one fell swoop,
cements his legacy</i> as a person willing to do
whatever was necessary in order to serve the interest
of white settlers. <i> (male narrator)
For President Jackson</i> <i> the legislative win
isn't enough.</i> <i> The president is out
for revenge on Davy Crockett.</i> <i> (Amy)
Andrew Jackson</i> made the political personal. <i> It was not enough for his side</i> <i> his perspective to win.</i> <i> His opponents
had to be thoroughly defeated.</i> He was
a genuinely dangerous man. <i> (male narrator)
Their fight will force Crockett
to the southwestern frontier</i> <i> changing the course
of American expansion.</i> [dramatic music] <i> President Andrew Jackson
signs the Indian Removal Act</i> <i> despite Congressman
Davy Crockett's opposition.</i> <i> Now, Crockett is up
for re-election</i> <i> and Jackson vows
to crush his rival</i> <i> by choosing a loyal supporter.</i> [knock on the door] <i> ...William Fitzgerald,
to run against him.</i> Mr. Fitzgerald, come in. Well, you don't cross
Andrew Jackson without there
being consequences. <i> I-it's characteristic
of all successful politicians</i> because they want that to be
a warning sign to anybody else <i> not to cross me in the future.</i> So Jackson has to bury Crockett. You will have my full support. It would be an honor, sir. Mr. President. [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
To ruin Crockett's
political career</i> <i> Jackson attacks his character</i> <i> launching a smear campaign
in the press..</i> <i> ...accusing him
of being a drunk..</i> <i> ...a womanizer..</i> <i> ...and a gambler.</i> <i> (Sam)
The Jackson machine
in Tennessee</i> had a tremendous amount
of political influence. <i> And when Jackson decides</i> <i> to go after
Crockett's reputation</i> it becomes front-page news
throughout the United States. [sighs] <i> (male narrator)
The attacks infuriate Crockett.</i> Davy Crockett was, in part built on his reputation
as a man of honor. He would not stand idly by
and watch as people destroy that. <i> (male narrator)
At a campaign stop
in northwest Tennessee</i> <i> Crockett confronts Fitzgerald.</i> Forget Davy Crockett. I will give you the real voice
of Tennessee in Washington. When Crockett
and Fitzgerald arrived for one of their
co-stump speeches <i> Crockett stood up
and strode toward the stage</i> and said, you know,
"If you continue "with these casting aspersions I'm going to give you
a country caning." Fitzgerald leveled a pistol
at Crockett's chest and said "Take one more step
and it'll be your last." [dramatic music] I suggest you leave. (Fitzgerald)
So in addition
to his moral flaws it would appear
that Mr. Crockett is not quite as tough
as he claims. <i> (Buddy)
The event
with William Fitzgerald</i> <i> and the pistol
was devastating to Crockett.</i> He had run part
of his campaign on his courage and here he was,
publically slinking away in front of someone. <i> It was kind of an assault
to his manhood.</i> <i> (male narrator)
After a brutal campaign</i> <i> in the fall of 1831</i> <i> some 16,000 ballots are cast</i> <i> in the election
for Tennessee's 9th District.</i> <i> In a stunning upset</i> <i> Crockett loses
by just 800 votes.</i> <i> Disgraced in Washington</i> <i> Davy Crockett returns home
to Tennessee</i> <i> with his career in ruins</i> <i> only to find his personal life
is also falling apart.</i> <i> (Buddy)
When Crockett
lost his bid for Congress</i> he sort of slug home
with his tail between his legs. He was now broke,
arriving to find out <i> that his, his wife
had also left him</i> <i> and he was living alone.</i> <i> It was a very low, low point
in his life.</i> <i> (male narrator)
In a stroke of blind luck</i> <i> Crockett's fortunes
take a turn..</i> <i> ...when a play
based on his life</i> <i> opens in New York City.</i> One of the things
that revitalized Crockett in his career
was the creation of this play <i> called "The Lion Of The West."</i> <i> ...which was clearly, uh,
a depiction of Crockett.</i> <i> At the beginning, Crockett
was sort of offended by this.</i> He felt like
he was being made fun of but as it turned out the play actually made him
an international celebrity. <i> (male narrator)
As Crockett's fame
as a frontiersman grows</i> <i> the US population explodes.</i> <i> Over the next four years</i> <i> it balloons to 17 million.</i> <i> As the old frontier
is dominated</i> <i> by cotton plantations
and settlements..</i> <i> ...pioneers looking for land
stream further west</i> <i> across modern-day Mississippi</i> <i> Alabama and Arkansas</i> <i> into a new frontier
full of opportunity</i> <i> a Mexican territory
called Texas.</i> One of the attractions of Texas to the Americans who went there when Texas was part of Mexico <i> was precisely
that it was foreign territory.</i> <i> (Brands)
It was this place
where you could go</i> <i> if things weren't going well
for you wherever you were</i> <i> because it provided
opportunity.</i> <i> Americans discovered
because land was cheap</i> <i> they would get title to land</i> <i> and then the land
would increase in value</i> and they'd eventually sell it and become wealthy
as a result of this. <i> (male narrator)
In 1835</i> <i> Crockett leaves
Tennessee behind..</i> <i> ...hoping his name can help
jump start a new life in Texas.</i> <i> But instead of opportunity..</i> <i> ...Crockett's
about to find himself</i> <i> in the middle
of an all-out war.</i> [dramatic music] <i> (male narrator)
After his reputation
is shredded by Andrew Jackson</i> <i> Davy Crockett heads west..</i> <i> ...looking for a fresh start
in Texas</i> <i> a rugged frontier territory
across the border in Mexico.</i> <i> For years,
the Mexican government</i> <i> has encouraged
foreign settlement</i> <i> to increase their population</i> <i> offering families 4000 acres
at low prices.</i> <i> (Miller)
Mexicans were encouraging
Americans and others</i> to move, uh, into Texas
and offering land. But, of course,
the stipulation was that, uh they had to abide
by the rules of Mexico. <i> And for the most part,
Americans generally lived</i> <i> relatively peacefully.</i> One of the attractions of Texas to the Americans who went there
when Texas was part of Mexico was precisely
that it was foreign territory. <i> They had bad memories,
bad debts</i> <i> there were people who were
after them in the United States</i> <i> and they went to Texas.</i> <i> (male narrator)
By 1836, 45,000 Americans
move here.</i> <i> Davy Crockett is one of them.</i> <i> Unsure what awaits him.</i> [instrumental music] <i> (Buddy)
Crockett went to Texas,
clearly, to start over.</i> <i> He'd lost his last bid
for Congress</i> and he was going to Texas
to get land and to look at possible
political opportunity. <i> (male narrator)
Jackson may have destroyed
Crockett's career in Washington</i> <i> but in Texas, he's hailed
as a frontier legend.</i> [crowd cheering] As David Crockett arrived
in the Texas outpost towns he began to notice that people
were already lining the streets waiting for his arrival. <i> People in Texas
heard that he was coming</i> <i> and would have big feasts
and parties for him.</i> [instrumental music] And you spent time, uh,
in the militia, as well? <i> (male narrator)
As Crockett begins to settle in</i> <i> he realizes Texas
is on the verge of rebellion.</i> <i> After years of loose governane</i> <i> Mexican President, Santa Anna</i> <i> suddenly imposes
new restrictions on settlers.</i> <i> Now, angry Texans</i> <i> are calling for revolution.</i> Texas was on the verge
of independence that the Texians,
as they were called were going to try to become
independent from Mexico. And there would be possibilities
of land and political opportunity. <i> (male narrator)
In response, Santa Anna
sends 500 troops</i> <i> to confiscate weapons
and quell unrest.</i> <i> When Texans refuse to give in</i> <i> he makes plans to retaliate.</i> <i> (Sam)
Santa Anna is training an army</i> <i> in San Luis Potosi
to march against Texas.</i> Santa Anna did not think that
this was a local insurgency. He was absolutely convinced
the United States was involved <i> and so that's why
the Mexican government</i> <i> was so determined
to put down this revolt.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Crockett arrives in Texas
at the same time</i> <i> as news of Santa Anna's
counter-attack.</i> <i> (Buddy)
When Crockett had gone
to Texas, it was really just</i> meant to be an extended hunting
expedition and land scout and he bumbles right into
a war for independence. <i> But a number of things
happened, uh, along the way.</i> <i> One was the appearance
of Halley's Comet.</i> <i> And when Halley's Comet</i> <i> appeared in the sky in 1836</i> some people thought
that it meant that David Crockett
was coming to Texas to fight for independence. [indistinct chatter] We could use
somebody like you, Crockett. Oh, yeah? <i> (male narrator)
To remove the stain</i> <i> on his character</i> <i> Crockett finds himself
drawn into war.</i> Hell, I'll join you boys. [cheering] Hell or Texas, right? (all)
Hell or Texas! Hell or Texas! (all)
Hell or Texas! <i> (male narrator)
What began
as a fresh start in Texas</i> <i> is now a call to arms.</i> [dramatic music] <i> As the situation in Texas
escalates</i> <i> back in Washington</i> <i> President Jackson
sees the unrest</i> <i> as a new opportunity to expan.</i> Andrew Jackson knew
that America was a young country and needed more territory. He saw in Texas enormous energy <i> timber, agricultural resources</i> a land mass that many Americans
in the future could move to and he wanted them. <i> (Brands)
Jackson believed that</i> <i> Texas ought to be part
of the United States.</i> Jackson attempted
to purchase Texas from Mexico after Mexico
became independent of Spain. <i> But Mexico
didn't wanna sell Texas.</i> <i> And so Jackson
tried to figure out</i> "How can I deal with this?" <i> (male narrator)
To avoid war with Mexico</i> <i> Jackson wants Texas</i> <i> to declare independence
on its own.</i> <i> But what he doesn't realize
is that his plan will hinge</i> <i> on the actions
of his long-time rival.</i> [dramatic music] <i> In February 1836</i> <i> two hundred and sixty men
move towards San Antonio..</i> [marching band music] <i> ...as Mexican general,
Santa Anna</i> <i> marches 4000 soldiers
toward Texas.</i> <i> The two forces will soon
clash at an old Spanish fort.</i> <i> Its name is The Alamo.</i> <i> And his stand here will make
Crockett an American icon.</i> Alright, close it up. <i> (male narrator)
Next time, on the conclusion</i> <i> of "The Men Who Built America:
Frontiersmen.."</i> [indistinct chatter] <i> ...Davy Crockett
makes a valiant last stand.</i> [screaming] <i> A new president
plots a covert war</i> <i> to gain California and Texas.</i> <i> (Walter)
Polk isn't content
to just look at Texas.</i> He's going to look broader,
beyond that. <i> Polk wants
the entire continent.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Famed explorer, John Fremont..</i> We made it! <i> ...opens the Oregon Trail.</i> <i> (Brands)
He was known
as the Great Pathfinder.</i> <i> Fremont was the one</i> <i> who made the expansion real.</i> <i> (male narrator)
His partner is legendary
frontiersman, Kit Carson.</i> Before there were
all the cliches of the west <i> there was Kit Carson.</i> <i> Brutally honest, very violent</i> <i> but lived true to code.</i> <i> His legacy in many ways is kind
of the ultimate Westerner.</i> <i> (male narrator)
Together, they start
a revolution</i> <i> on the Pacific coast..</i> Let's go! <i> (male narrator)
...battling new enemies..</i> [gunshot] <i> ...to realize a long-held drem</i> <i> a nation
stretching from sea to sea.</i> [screaming]