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1-> “Think of me as you please. My chief purpose is to prevent needless bloodshed.”
2-> Claiborne shook his head. “I think you mean what you say,” he said, “but I wonder what you would have done differently if it had been your chief purpose to start a war.”
3-> To this, Keane had no answer.
4
5Early in the morning on December 23, 1814, a British invasion force landed in the Louisiana bayou. When they were eight miles downriver from the city of New Orleans, they stopped. The next day, Andrew Jackson attacked… and the rest is history.
6
7In the world of ''The Dead Skunk'' (written by Lycaon pictus, a.k.a. lockswriter), they go eight miles further and take the city. When Andrew Jackson tries to burn it down, the New Orleanians turn on him.
8
9A day later, on the other side of the Atlantic, the Treaty of Ghent is signed. The British are supposed to be leaving, but now New Orleans doesn’t want them to go.
10
11Just in case the war is about to start up again, British Prime Minister Lord Liverpool orders the Duke of Wellington and his army to America. The last of them takes ship on the very day [[DisasterDominoes Napoleon escapes from Elba.]]
12
13And then things get complicated…
14
15Can be found [[http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/showthread.php?t=194832 here]] or [[http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/showthread.php?t=270814 here]]. Not to be confused with [[Tropers/DeadSkunk Troper Dead Skunk]].
16
17----
18!! This timeline provides examples of:
19* AdiposeRex: The Prince Regent, later King George IV.
20* AppropriatedAppellation: After the American defeat by Britain, the nationalist wing of the Democratic-Republicans take to wearing cockades of a shade of purple made by mixing the colors of the American flag in the proportions found in it. One of their political opponents claims the cockade looks like a dead rose, and the nickname catches on even among the Democratic-Republicans.
21* BackToBackBadasses: José de San Martín and Bernardo O’Higgins [[spoiler:making their final stand]] at Chacabuco.
22* BatmanGambit: The "Great Scheme" of [[spoiler:Fouché and Talleyrand.]]
23* BigBadassBattleSequence: The Battle of Nancy. More than half a million men spread over a ten-mile-wide battlefield spend three weeks doing their level best to kill each other. In this world, the most reliable combat veterans are called “Nancy boys.”
24* BlackShirt: The ''fédérés'' in France. Played with in that most of them are not members of the French ruling party, the Liberals, but a (usually) allied party, the Jacobins.
25--> "Never outsource your brownshirts, people."
26* CardboardPrison: Elba, of course. As one character puts it, the Sixth Coalition “put the most dangerous man alive in a ‘prison’ with no bars, no locks and no guards but one Scotsman with no official sanction and a bad war wound!”
27* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: Subverted in the case of Talleyrand. Although he appears to have a bad case of it, everything he does is intended to strengthen France — especially turning the Coalition members against each other.
28* CruelAndUnusualDeath: "Death in the mirror," used by Morriset in Naples on his worst enemies. Imagine being hanged. Now imagine being hanged in such a way that you slowly choke to death instead of having your neck snapped. Now imagine there's a mirror hanging right in front of you, so you can watch yourself asphyxiate. You can't move your head enough to turn away. You can't even shut your eyes for the pressure behind them. All you can do is keep staring yourself in the face until everything goes black.
29* CultureChopSuey: Justified in the case of British Florida, home to many ethnic groups, including (but not limited to) Creeks, Seminoles, Hindus, Bengalis, Javanese, Balinese, Cantonese, Jews, Haitians, Provençales and escaped slaves.
30* CurbStompBattle: Merrymeeting Bay. Wellington defeats the Massachusetts militia in fifteen minutes. 42 British and Canadians are killed or wounded… and 1,128 Americans.
31* DontYouDarePityMe: Princess Charlotte Augusta, daughter of George IV and his "extremely estranged" wife, is getting a little tired of people sympathizing with her on account of her father’s public misbehavior. (And considering that in our history she died in childbirth in 1817, she's actually doing pretty well.)
32* EyepatchOfPower: William Henry Harrison gets one after losing an eye in battle.
33* FacialHorror: James Thomas Morriset, whose facial bones were shattered during a battle in Spain "and had healed… wrong."
34* FeedTheMole: Played for laughs. Honoré de Balzac and friends have a lot of fun doing this to Browne (see below). As an AH.com [[InJoke In Joke]], they pretend to be sailors on board the "Lion de la Mer." [[spoiler:Talleyrand also does this, with much more serious intent.]]
35* [[ForWantOfANail For Want of a Skunk]]: The timeline begins (and gets its name) when the British army landing in the bayou, commanded by Major General John Keane, is temporarily held up by an irate skunk. An owl swoops down on the skunk out of nowhere and kills it before it can spray. This gives Keane ideas…
36* GambitPileup: The King, the Queen, the Tories, the Radicals and the [[spoiler:French]] turn the Caroline affair into one of these.
37* HaveAGayOldTime: In-universe - after the use of [[HomeGuard Yeomanry regiments]] to suppress Queenist and radical assemblies (starting with a considerably less bloody version of the Peterloo Massacre), the meaning of the term "yeoman" evolved from "an independent farmer" to something [[BloodKnight far]] [[BlackShirt more]] [[StateSec negative]].
38* HiddenInPlainSight: Lampshaded in the case of Sir Thomas Henry Browne delivering his report to the D’Issy Commission.
39* HoistByHisOwnPetard: [[spoiler:Col. Morriset, the ''carbonari'' are here to see you. They've brought some rope. And a mirror.]]
40* UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfHanover: Their family drama becomes a major story arc.
41* IfICantHaveYou: When Jackson finds himself about to lose New Orleans, he tries to burn it down to deny it to the British. This is what turns the Louisianans against the United States.
42* ILied: How the Americans interpret Lord Liverpool's actions after the capture of New Orleans.
43* ImAHumanitarian: Italy suffers from the misfortune of going through invasion and civil war during 1816 — the "Year Without a Summer." War plus bad harvests equals famine, and where you get famine…
44* InnocuouslyImportantEpisode: Sir Thomas Henry Browne’s arrival in Paris, and his meeting with Jeannot and St.-Leger, turns out to be the beginning of the Caroline Affair/”Great Scheme” story arc.
45* IstanbulNotConstantinople: Thanks to the slightly different military fortunes of the French, [[spoiler: Antwerp, Brussels and Mainz are increasingly refered to as Anvers, Bruxelles and Mayence.]]
46* LeeroyJenkins: Blücher at the Battle of Velaine.
47* MacrossMissileMassacre: A low-tech example. During one battle, Wellington has 5,000 Congreve rockets launched at oncoming cavalry in the space of three seconds (possibly to get rid of them quickly, as they [[AwesomeButImpractical weren’t his favorite weapon]]).
48* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: The “Sword of Nemesis,” a.k.a. [[spoiler:Lord Byron]].
49* NiceJobBreakingItHero: “It” being the Treaty of Ghent.
50* NiceToTheWaiter: Princess Caroline of Brunswick (later Queen Caroline) treats her servants well, which makes her household staff harder to infiltrate. [[spoiler:But not impossible.]]
51* NightmareFuelStationAttendant: Velaine Richardson, a cookbook author who cheerfully provides a recipe for a tasty Italian holiday pork dish called “austriaco” apparently without even knowing what the word means, let alone that the dish was invented to commemorate an incident of ''mass cannibalism.''
52* TheNondescript: "Gaetan Jeannot," one of the few non-Historical Domain Characters, described as being "as undistinguished from his fellows as a cobblestone in the street."
53* NotSoOmniscientCouncilOfBickering: Officially, the Coalition armies in the war against Napoleon are commanded by Louis XVIII, who is nowhere near the battlefield. In fact, they’re commanded by three generals who meet once a day and who serve two different heads of state with opposing long-term objectives. This works about as well as you’d expect.
54* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: When the Duke of Wellington, loyal servant of the Crown, proposes a plan to force George IV to vacate the throne, you know he’s desperate for a way to prevent civil war.
55* OvertOperative: Sir Thomas Henry Browne — or, as the French call him, ''“M. Browne, l’espion anglais.”'' Luckily for him, nobody knows who he’s spying for or why. [[spoiler:Or so he thinks.]]
56* RasputinianDeath: It takes a ''lot'' of stabbing and shooting to kill Andrew Jackson.
57* RealityIsUnrealistic: The most unbelievable details in ''The Dead Skunk'' are usually the ones taken from the history we know.
58** A British officer failing to withdraw from enemy territory after the signing of a peace treaty? Well, there was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castine,_Maine#War_of_1812 Castine, Maine]].
59** A U.S. state governor in time of war preparing to make a separate peace with the enemy and cede U.S. territory? [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caleb_Strong#Second_term_and_War_of_1812 This really happened]]. In our history. [[KarmaHoudini And he wasn’t punished.]]
60** James Thomas Morriset was a real person who suffered that injury and ''lived.''
61** The Prince Regent really did write a letter to a friend in which he complained about finding [[TooMuchInformation "marks of filth in both the fore and hind part"]] of his wife on their wedding night.
62** Lampshaded in a footnote to a passage describing de Francia's strange regime in Paraguay.
63-->"I include details like this to make my own ideas seem plausible by comparison."
64* RedBaron: "The Sword of Nemesis", a mysterious but audacious Greek leader fighting against the Ottoman Empire.
65* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Caleb Strong… although his actions only make things worse.
66* RousingSpeech: John Quincy Adams gives one at Gadsby’s Tavern that secures his nomination for the presidency.
67* RoyalBrat: George IV. Physically he’s in his late fifties, but emotionally he’s a badly behaved child.
68* SanitySlippage: Castlereagh undergoes this after the Caroline affair - [[spoiler:It eventually culminates on him killing Lord Liverpool and himself.]]
69* ScarpiaUltimatum: Some of Morriset's soldiers in Naples inflict this on local women. [[spoiler:It doesn't end well.]]
70* ShoutOut: There are several, some louder than others.
71** Napoleon jokingly says his enemies call him a "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E15TheTroubleWithTribbles tin-pot dictator with delusions of godhood]]."
72** A subtle one in a passage about Choctaw chief Pushmataha, "who had long since learned that white men’s promises were [[ExactWords worth their weight in gold]]” (a [[RunningGag Running Gag]] in many of [[Creator/HarryTurtledove Harry Turtledove's]] works).
73** At one point Margaret Brougham, née Margaret Mercer Elphinstone, asks, "This man I’ve gone and married — does he really plan all these things in advance? Or does he just sit and wait for his enemies to trip over their own feet, then leap up and shout ‘[[Manga/DeathNote Exactly as planned]]!’"
74** Speaking of Henry Brougham, he makes use of [[Series/HouseOfCardsUK Francis Urquhart's famous dodge.]]
75** After the horrors of famine and occupation, pre-1850 Italian art tends to fall into one of two styles - either [[SugarBowl Neo-Pastoralism]] or ''trucescero'' (literally [[TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 "grim-dark"]]).
76* SkewedPriorities: President Berrien (a southern planter from the states-rights party) falls into this more than once during the War of 1837 as a result of him having "expanding slavery" as his primary goal in the war:
77** [[spoiler:First, with his forces already busy fighting Britain in two fronts, he organizes a filibuster expedition into Texas (which still belongs to Spain) and tries to use it to get Congress to declare war on Spain. He fails on convincing Congress, but he still tries to get his war anyway by ordering the two generals in the vicinity to take their armies to Texas. That fails too (one decides to obey Congress' orders and stay and the other rushes off to Texas with a couple of thousand cavalrymen, and gets himself killed in the process). Eventually, Berrien's involvement in the debacle is discovered and he's nearly impeached for that.]]
78** [[spoiler:Then, once the Senate has already ratified a rather favourable peace treaty, that gives Southwestern Ontario to the US, Berrien still wants to keep the war going to annex the southern territories he wants and has to be threatened with the resignation of his entire cabinet to sign the treaty.]]
79* SnowMeansDeath: The Battle of Natchez begins just as the snow starts to fall.
80* TemptingFate: Henry Brougham, of all people, succumbs to the urge.
81-->"To be honest, I'm not quite sure," he said, "but one thing I am sure of. After that performance, anything M. St-Leger has to say will surely be an anticlimax."
82-->For the rest of his life, whenever Henry Brougham showed signs of smugness or intellectual arrogance in front of his wife, she would remind him he had said that.
83%%* TyrantTakesTheHelm: Morriset in Naples.
84%%* UnwantedSpouse: Queen Caroline.
85* UndignifiedDeath: Governor George Arthur of New South Wales eventually becomes " the sole human in history whose death has been attributed to the platypus" as starvation, dehydration, and overall stress and lack of energy meant that he was unable to withstand two platypus stings and died of heart failure.
86* WhamLine: [[spoiler:“Bonaparte is dead.”]]
87* WhoWatchesTheWatchmen: Two examples.
88** The French government reins in Joseph Fouché and his [[SecretPolice secret police]] — not because they love freedom, but because they don't trust him.
89** During the Caroline affair, Lord Liverpool starts bringing troops into London to keep the “Queenites” under control… only to find out a lot of the soldiers and officers are Queenites themselves.
90* XanatosGambit: How Henry Brougham plans to resolve the Caroline affair. [[spoiler:Either King George gives up trying to get a divorce, or he is forced to abdicate in favor of his daughter, or a civil war begins that Brougham is pretty sure his side will win.]]
91* XanatosSpeedChess: Both John Coffee at Natchez and Wellington at Nancy plan their battles this way, thinking of more than one contingency in advance while being ready to make new changes to their plans at a moment’s notice.

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