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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
same purpose, or that troops from Germany or England should be permitted to land at Locust Point. George William Brown, Mayor of Baltimore, who risked his life to protect the Massachusetts troops, telegraphed to the Governor of Massachusetts on April 20: Our people viewed the passage of armed troops of another State through the streets as an invasion of our soil and could not be restrained. Governor Hicks, of Maryland, an ardent Union man, said in a public speech in Baltimore on the evening oft of Barnum's Hotel. The streets were thronged with people discussing the events of the day and many citizens walked the streets with muskets or guns in their hands. Preparations for defense. The condition of Baltimore on Saturday, the 20th of April, the day succeeding the riot, reminded the old inhabitants of similar incidents on the 11th and 12th of September, 1814, many of whom had witnessed those events. The streets were thronged with armed men marching to and fro and with citizens
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.29 (search)
same purpose, or that troops from Germany or England should be permitted to land at Locust Point. George William Brown, Mayor of Baltimore, who risked his life to protect the Massachusetts troops, telegraphed to the Governor of Massachusetts on April 20: Our people viewed the passage of armed troops of another State through the streets as an invasion of our soil and could not be restrained. Governor Hicks, of Maryland, an ardent Union man, said in a public speech in Baltimore on the evening oft of Barnum's Hotel. The streets were thronged with people discussing the events of the day and many citizens walked the streets with muskets or guns in their hands. Preparations for defense. The condition of Baltimore on Saturday, the 20th of April, the day succeeding the riot, reminded the old inhabitants of similar incidents on the 11th and 12th of September, 1814, many of whom had witnessed those events. The streets were thronged with armed men marching to and fro and with citizens