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Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): chapter 261
ason, at Richmond, Va., June 8. Soldiers of the Maryland line :--I am deputed to do a most grateful duty; fext, to present to you, in behalf of the ladies of Maryland, this flag. I see, soldiers of Maryland, that youMaryland, that you are rough and ready --the highest honor of a soldier in revolutionary times. We all know who you are. We alln at home. (Applause.) I welcome you, soldiers of Maryland, upon the threshold of the second great war of ind is not a man among you who will dare to return to Maryland with that flag dishonored. Not one. I tell you f is not a man among you who will dare to return to Maryland except as a soldier in victory. Do you ask me whypatriotism — a native-born citizen of your own State of Maryland--Roger B. Taney — that man has put the judiciaeturned to Virginia I unhesitatingly reported that Maryland is with the South. I staked my word upon it as a he day when they will all be with us! The star of Maryland is among them, and the women of your State have pu
Eutaw (Alabama, United States) (search for this): chapter 261
are on a high mission. You are not the first Marylanders who have crossed the border. We had, in the days of the first Revolution, a Maryland line, whose name has passed into history without one blot upon its fair escutcheon — a Maryland line who illustrated upon every field in the South their devotion to the civil liberty of that day — a Maryland line, who, in the remote savannahs of the Carolinas, spilled their blood like water at Camden, at Guilford Court-House, at the Cowpens, and at Eutaw, where the last battle was fought, and the enemy finally surrendered. They were your ancestry. They travelled barefooted, unclothed, without blankets or tents, and but few muskets, and you came after them. But you have this peculiar distinction: You are volunteers in a double sense — you are volunteers for the war, and you are volunteers for the great cause of the South against the aggressions of the North. You are no strangers; you are our neighbors. My own home is upon the confines of<
Richmond (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 261
Doc. 239.-speech of J. M. Mason, at Richmond, Va., June 8. Soldiers of the Maryland line :--I am deputed to do a most grateful duty; first, in the name of Virginia, to give you an earnest and cordial welcome to the Old Dominion; and next, to present to you, in behalf of the ladies of Maryland, this flag. I see, soldiers of Maryland, that you are rough and ready --the highest honor of a soldier in revolutionary times. We all know who you are. We all know what brought you here, and we are all ready, as I trust you have experienced, to extend to you a soldier's welcome — the only welcome, indeed, that can be extended in times like these. Your own honored State is with us heart and soul in this great controversy. By your enterprise, your bravery, and your determined will, you have escaped from the thraldom of tyranny which envelopes that State; and you know, I know — for I have been among its people — we all know, that the same spirit which brought you here, actuates thousands w<
Baltimore, Md. (Maryland, United States) (search for this): chapter 261
d the thorough soldier. But I will not detain you longer, except to discharge the grateful duty which remains, of presenting to you in behalf of the ladies of Baltimore this beautiful banner. There it is unfurled before you for the first time. There are emblazoned the fifteen stars of the Southern States, looking prospectivelyut I believe I can say that you will bring it back without a spot of dishonor upon it. But you are not only to return that flag here — you are to take it back to Baltimore. (Cheers, and cries of We will. ) It came here in the hands of the fair lady who stands by my side, who brought it through tie camp of the enemy, with a woman's) It came here in the hands of the fair lady who stands by my side, who brought it through tie camp of the enemy, with a woman's fortitude, courage, and devotion to our cause; and you are to take it back to Baltimore, unfurl it in your streets, and challenge the applause of your citizens. (Applause.)--Richmond Dispatch, June 10.
United States (United States) (search for this): chapter 261
ons, he will write that the people of the Southern States understood and protected civil liberty, and that the misguided North either did not comprehend, or abandoned it? For what have we witnessed? The spectacle of the Chief Justice of the United States, the man who stands at the head of the principal department of the Federal Government — the man who has illustrated in his life, for more than four generations, all that adorns honor, virtue, and patriotism — a native-born citizen of your own State of Maryland--Roger B. Taney — that man has put the judicial fiat of condemnation upon the Government of the United States for its shameless abandonment of the very cornerstone of our liberties. A native Marylander, he remains at home to defend the last refuge of civil liberty against the atrocious aggressions of a remorseless tyranny. I honor him for it; the world will honor him, posterity will honor him; and there will be inscribed on his monument the highest tribute ever paid to a ma<
Camden, S. C. (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 261
es of civil liberty in behalf of the entire South. You are on a high mission. You are not the first Marylanders who have crossed the border. We had, in the days of the first Revolution, a Maryland line, whose name has passed into history without one blot upon its fair escutcheon — a Maryland line who illustrated upon every field in the South their devotion to the civil liberty of that day — a Maryland line, who, in the remote savannahs of the Carolinas, spilled their blood like water at Camden, at Guilford Court-House, at the Cowpens, and at Eutaw, where the last battle was fought, and the enemy finally surrendered. They were your ancestry. They travelled barefooted, unclothed, without blankets or tents, and but few muskets, and you came after them. But you have this peculiar distinction: You are volunteers in a double sense — you are volunteers for the war, and you are volunteers for the great cause of the South against the aggressions of the North. You are no strangers; you <
Roger B. Taney (search for this): chapter 261
e people of the Southern States understood and protected civil liberty, and that the misguided North either did not comprehend, or abandoned it? For what have we witnessed? The spectacle of the Chief Justice of the United States, the man who stands at the head of the principal department of the Federal Government — the man who has illustrated in his life, for more than four generations, all that adorns honor, virtue, and patriotism — a native-born citizen of your own State of Maryland--Roger B. Taney — that man has put the judicial fiat of condemnation upon the Government of the United States for its shameless abandonment of the very cornerstone of our liberties. A native Marylander, he remains at home to defend the last refuge of civil liberty against the atrocious aggressions of a remorseless tyranny. I honor him for it; the world will honor him, posterity will honor him; and there will be inscribed on his monument the highest tribute ever paid to a man. He has stood bravely in t<
of the Chief Justice of the United States, the man who stands at the head of the principal department of the Federal Government — the man who has illustrated in his life, for more than four generations, all that adorns honor, virtue, and patriotism — a native-born citizen of your own State of Maryland--Roger B. Taney — that man has put the judicial fiat of condemnation upon the Government of the United States for its shameless abandonment of the very cornerstone of our liberties. A native Marylander, he remains at home to defend the last refuge of civil liberty against the atrocious aggressions of a remorseless tyranny. I honor him for it; the world will honor him, posterity will honor him; and there will be inscribed on his monument the highest tribute ever paid to a man. He has stood bravely in the breach, and interposed the unspotted arm of justice between the rights of the South and the malignant usurpation of power by the North. There he still remains, a cloud by day and a pill<
J. M. Mason (search for this): chapter 261
Doc. 239.-speech of J. M. Mason, at Richmond, Va., June 8. Soldiers of the Maryland line :--I am deputed to do a most grateful duty; first, in the name of Virginia, to give you an earnest and cordial welcome to the Old Dominion; and next, to present to you, in behalf of the ladies of Maryland, this flag. I see, soldiers of Maryland, that you are rough and ready --the highest honor of a soldier in revolutionary times. We all know who you are. We all know what brought you here, and we are all ready, as I trust you have experienced, to extend to you a soldier's welcome — the only welcome, indeed, that can be extended in times like these. Your own honored State is with us heart and soul in this great controversy. By your enterprise, your bravery, and your determined will, you have escaped from the thraldom of tyranny which envelopes that State; and you know, I know — for I have been among its people — we all know, that the same spirit which brought you here, actuates thousands w<
Doc. 239.-speech of J. M. Mason, at Richmond, Va., June 8. Soldiers of the Maryland line :--I am deputed to do a most grateful duty; first, in the name of Virginia, to give you an earnest and cordial welcome to the Old Dominion; and next, to present to you, in behalf of the ladies of Maryland, this flag. I see, soldiers of Maryland, that you are rough and ready --the highest honor of a soldier in revolutionary times. We all know who you are. We all know what brought you here, and we are all ready, as I trust you have experienced, to extend to you a soldier's welcome — the only welcome, indeed, that can be extended in times like these. Your own honored State is with us heart and soul in this great controversy. By your enterprise, your bravery, and your determined will, you have escaped from the thraldom of tyranny which envelopes that State; and you know, I know — for I have been among its people — we all know, that the same spirit which brought you here, actuates thousands w<
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