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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 16, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maryland (Maryland, United States) or search for Maryland (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: April 16, 1861., [Electronic resource], Important will case. (search)
Northern troops passing through Maryland.
Do our Maryland friends intend to let the Northern hordes pass through Maryland for the subjugation of the South?
If not, It is time to act. A small body of resolute men could easily intercept the passMaryland friends intend to let the Northern hordes pass through Maryland for the subjugation of the South?
If not, It is time to act. A small body of resolute men could easily intercept the passage of the trains on the long, narrow bridges of the wide rivers North of Baltimore.
Nature has provided Maryland with ample means of defence.
Let her at once avail herself of them. Maryland for the subjugation of the South?
If not, It is time to act. A small body of resolute men could easily intercept the passage of the trains on the long, narrow bridges of the wide rivers North of Baltimore.
Nature has provided Maryland with ample means of defence.
Let her at once avail herself of them. act. A small body of resolute men could easily intercept the passage of the trains on the long, narrow bridges of the wide rivers North of Baltimore.
Nature has provided Maryland with ample means of defence.
Let her at once avail herself of them.
Prepare for war.
In view of the avalanche of armed men about to be precipitated on us from the North, the people of the various counties and neighborhoods of Virginia and Maryland, especially upon the rivers and such points as are most easy of access by an enemy, should at once proceed to adopt some organization for immediate defence.--Earth works might be cast up at assailable points, and positions taken upon the principal routes of travel to prevent a sudden incursion of one of Abraham's hordes into the very heart of the Border States.
Months ago it was stated that he intended to make Old Point and the Virginia fort he is occupying on the Potomac a base of operations against the interior of the State.
There are now eight hundred men at Old Point, and, some bright morning, if we do not keep our eyes open, we shall find five thousand Republicans in possession of our own city.
The Administration is malignant enough to attempt anything, and our only trust henceforth should be in
The Daily Dispatch: April 16, 1861., [Electronic resource], Conflagration in Hickman --
(search)twenty-seven houses burned.
The Number of troops each State is to furnish. Washington, April 15.
--The following are the quotas of troops which the respective States will be required by the Secretary of War to furnish: Maine, 7,080; New Hampshire, 7,080; Vermont, 7,080; Massachusetts, 15,060; Rhode Island, 7,080; Connecticut, 7,080; New York, 13,280; Pennsylvania, 12,500; New Jersey 3,123; Delaware, 7,080; Maryland, 3,123; Virginia 2,340; North Carolina 1,560; Tennessee, 1,560; Arkansas, 7,080; Kentucky, 3,123; Missouri, 3,123; Illinois, 4,683; Indiana, 4,683; Ohio, 10,153; Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota 780 each.
The Secretary of War accepted the services by telegraph of the 1,000 troops tendered from Rhode Island, and directed them to proceed to Washington without delay.
It is stated that the Government has no present design of instituting martial law in Washington.
Twenty thousand troops will probably be in Washington in twenty days.
The Daily Dispatch: April 16, 1861., [Electronic resource], The civil war. (search)