From the March 26, 2012, Historical Digression blog "A tornado saves Washington during the War of 1812" by Patrick Browne.
One of the first targets of the British reinforcement in America in 1814, was the capital of the United States, Washington, D.C., partly as a form of payback for American transgressions to the capital of Upper Canada, York (now Toronto), earlier in the war. Also, the destruction of such an important city would also be a major blow to American morale.
Another factor was that these new British soldiers were veterans, having fought Napoleon all those years.
Some 5,000 British landed in Benedict, Maryland, and made short work of a larger American force at the Battle of Bladensburg, Maryland on August 24, 1814. The road to Washington was now open.
Once in D.C., they burned what is now known as the White House (after sitting down to eat a large feast that Dolley Madison and her staff had prepared for cabinet members before they were all forced to flee).
--Brock-Perry
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