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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 9, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maryland (Maryland, United States) or search for Maryland (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 13 results in 4 document sections:
[for the Richmond Dispatch.]the subjugation of Maryland.
Everything that throws light upon the purposes and plans of the Lincoln dynasty is of importance to the d not God given us the victory at Manassas.
As for the state of things in Maryland, especially in Baltimore, I refer you to the following extracts from a letter have to be careful how they speak or write.
Yet it can do no harm to say that Maryland is a subjected province, lying on the borders of the District of Columbia, in , an unarmed and non-resistant community?"
Now, let it be remembered that Maryland is yet a State in the Union.
Her Legislature or her people have taken no lega afford matter for some nice calculations on the part of Lincoln's adherents.
Maryland has a population of about 700, 0000; Virginia, about 1,800,000 I write from me te census.
Now, the question to be considered is: If a loyal State, (for such Maryland professes to be,) unarmed and at peace with the United States, cannot be kept
[for the Richmond Dispatch.]Tribute to the brave.
Among the noble band of heroes who fell at the late battle of Manassas, in defence of their honor and their liberties, none fell more gallantly than James P. Clark, a young Maryland volunteer, and a member of Captain McAllister's company of the Twenty-seventh Virginia Regiment.
He had been appointed a corporal from his company the morning of the battle to guard the regimental standard, and fell mortally wounded about 3 P. M, when our forces made the last desperate onset which decided the fate of the day. He was taken to Orange Court-House, where he died the following Thursday, far from home and kindred, but in the care of the best friends kind Providence ever raised up for the relief of a sufferer.
He was subsequently brought to this city for interment.
Although the Virginia Twenty-seventh bore a prominent part in the battle, little mention, as yet, has been made of it; but, in the official report doubtless full credit will
Marylanders
--The persecuted citizens of Maryland continue to escape to Virginia.
Many of them are marked men, whose time for arrest is only postponed for fear of making the excitement too great by a wholesale capture and imprisonment of all that are put under the ban. We yesterday conversed with Mr. P. S. O. Curry, of Fred ow, as others may come off in the same way. He brought his family with him. He represents the system of espionage established by the tyrants over the citizens of Maryland as vigilant, and the persons employed in it to be utterly heartless.
The people are plunged into the deepest effiction and humiliation, and sigh and years for t ome before long.
Ex-Governor Lowe's real estate had been said by his instructions at very great sacrifice.
There was no longer any resting place for him in Maryland, and he took refuge in Virginia.
By his unwavering, unfaltering devotion to constitutional liberty and State rights, he is forced to abandon his native land, th