Commemoration of the Battle of New Orleans victory - Speech Brief
8 January 2026 00:00 UTC · The White House · White House Statement · Source · Email X Link

Commemoration of the Battle of New Orleans victory

Key points

  • American victory at New Orleans
  • British casualties over 2,000; American casualties 71

TL;DR

  • The text commemorates the Battle of New Orleans as the last major engagement in the War of 1812.
  • On January 8, 1815, Sir Edward Pakenham led about 8,000 British regulars against about 5,700 American troops under Major General Andrew Jackson.
  • American forces killed, wounded, or captured more than 2,000 British; Sir Edward Pakenham was killed; British forces retreated; American casualties numbered 71.
  • The battle secured New Orleans and the text states Andrew Jackson later ascended to the Presidency; the event is commemorated during the nation's 250th year.
Original text

Today, our Nation remembers one of the greatest American tales of might and one of the grandest displays of American resolve in the history of our country—the legendary Battle of New Orleans. As our last major engagement in the War of 1812 and our epic final struggle against the tyranny of the British empire, the Battle of New Orleans ensured the hard-fought flame of American liberty would never extinguish. Following...

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