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people of South Carolina were a little off their balance, and would be all right on sober second thought. A few miles out from Baltimore the Quartermaster gave us each ten rounds of ammunition. We had been singing songs. The Colonel told us he expected trouble in Baltimore, and impressed on each man not to fire until he was compelled to. The singing ceased, and we then thought we had serious business before us, and that others besides South Carolina had lost their balance. When we reached the Baltimore Depot some of the cars had gone ahead, and four companiesyoung men were in the cars unconscious of what was going on outside. We thought the people of Baltimore and Maryland were of the same Government, and if not they ought to be. (Cheers and applause.) That they had the same interest in the Government, the best ever devised; that Maryland at least was loyal. A man knocked on the cardoor and told us they were tearing up the track. Our Captain said, "Men, file out!" The order was given and we marched out. The Captain said, " March as close as you possibly can. Fire on no man unless compelled." We marched through railroad iron, bricks and other missiles. We proved ourselves brave soldiers-proved that we could wait, at least, for the word of command. We were pelted in Baltimore nineteen years ago. We lost some of our comrades, and others were disabled for life. But we went to Washington. We don't claim to be the saviors of the capital; we take no great credit for what we did; but we did the best we could, and the result is shown. The success of our march through Baltimore to-day is as indelibly fixed and will ever be as fresh as that of nineteen years ago, and our reception will remain in our hearts and minds as long as life lasts. My father had six sons, and five were at the front at the same

time. I had learned to think that if Maryland, South Carolina or Virginia was to declare independence the Government would be broken up, and that we would have no country, no home, no flag. We were not fighting for Massachusetts, for Maryland or for Virginia, but for our country-the United States (cheers and applause)-remembering the declaration of the great statesman, "Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable." This country went through four years of carnage and blood. Few families, North or South, but have mourning at their firesides; but it was not in vain, for it has established the fact that we are one people, and are an all-powerful people. (Prolonged cheers.) Our reception to-day has convinced us that the war has ended, and that there are Union men in Maryland as in Massachusetts; that we are brothers, and will be so to the end of time; that this is one great country; and that the people are marching on in amity and power, second to none on the face of the globe.' (Cheers.)

"In the evening there was a banquet at the Eutaw House, and Judge Geo. William Brown, who was Mayor of Baltimore in 1861, presided. Nearly two hundred persons were at table. After the dinner was over, Judge Brown said:

"This is the 19th of April, a day memorable in the annals of this city, and in the annals of the country. It is filled in my mind with the most painful recollections of my life, and I doubt not that many who are here present share with me those feelings. I shall make but brief allusions to the events of that day. The city authorities of Baltimore of that time have mostly passed away, and I believe I am the only one here present to-night. In justice to the living and the dead I have to say that the authorities of Baltimore faithfully endeavored to do their duty. It is not necessary for me, perhaps, to say so in this presence. (Applause.)

It was not their fault that the Massachusetts Sixth Regiment met a bloody reception in the streets of Baltimore. The visit of that regiment on both occasions has a great and important significance. What did it mean in 1861? It meant civil war; that the irrepressible conflict which Mr. Seward predicted had broken out at last, and that, as Mr. Lincoln said, a house divided against itself cannot stand. A great question then presented itself to the country. When war virtually began in Baltimore, by bloodshed on both sides, it meant that the question must be settled by force whether or not the house should stand. It took four years of war, waged with indomitable perseverance, to decide it, because the combatants on both sides were sustained by deep and honest convictions. It is not surprising, looking back coolly and calmly on the feelings of that day, that they found vent as they did. I am not here to excuse or to apologize, but to acknowledge facts. That was the significance of the first visit of the Massachusetts Sixth Regiment, in response to the call of the President of the United States. After the war there was peace. But enforced peace is not sufficient in a family of States any more than in a household. There must be among brothers respect, confidence, mutual help and forbearance, and, above everything, justice and right. After nineteen years the visit of survivors of the Sixth Massachusetts is, I hope, significant of more than peace. It is, I hope, significant of the fact that there is a true bond of union between the North and the South (applause), and that we are a family of States, all equal, all friends; and if it be, there is no one in the country who can more fervently thank God than myself that the old house still stands.' (Applause.)

"Judge Brown offered as a toast: 'The Sixth Regiment of Massachusetts: Baltimore extends to her fraternal greeting.""

INDEX.

A

Acton, regiment mustered in, 42.
Allen, E. J., dispatches addressed
to, 131.

American, The, on the Baltimore
riot of 1861, 65; account of the
Putnam Phalanx in Baltimore, 160
-167; on the reception of the Sixth
Massachusetts Regiment in Balti-
more, 167-170.

Andrew, Gov. J. A., correspondence
with Mayor Brown, 54, 55.
Arkansas, secession of, 33.

B

Baltimore, unjust prejudice against,
13, 19; supposed conspiracy in, 14,
15, 120; slaveholders in, 30; Sixth
Massachusetts Regiment in, 42-
53, 167-170; excitement on 20th
April, 60, 61, 64; defense of, 63;
apprehension of bloodshed in, 75;
armed neutrality, 77; Gen. But-
ler's entrance into, 84; Gen. Dix's
headquarters in, 100, 101; Mayor's
message to City Council, 157-159;
reception of Putnam Phalanx in,
160-166.

Banks, Gen. N. P., in command, 97;
arrests police commissioners of Bal-
timore, 98, 99; Secretary Cam-
eron's letter to, 102; General Mc-
Clellan's letter to, 102.

Bartol, Judge, imprisonment of, 94.

Belger, Major, comes to Baltimore,
73.

Bell, Presidential vote for, 25.
Black, Judge, on martial law, 93.
Blackstone on the right of imprison-

ment, 147, 149.

Bond's, Judge, errand to Lincoln,
57, 61.

Boston, slave-traffic in, 20; regiment
mustered in, 42.

Brand, Rev. William F., efforts for
emancipation, 113.

Breckinridge, Presidential vote for,
25.

Brown, Geo. Wm., meets the Massa-
chusetts Sixth in Baltimore, 48,
49; Captain Dike on, 54; corre-
spondence with Gov. Andrew, 54,
55; speech to the excited public,
56; writes to President Lincoln
about passage of troops through
Baltimore, 57, 61, 62; interview
with President Lincoln, 71-75;
General Butler's letter to, 83, 84;
petitions Congress to restore peace
to city, 99; arrest of, 102, 103,
108; correspondence with General
Dix, 104-108; parole offered to,
110, 111; anti-slavery principles
of, 113; opposed to secession, 115;
on the tendencies of the age, 117,
118; message to City Council, 157–
159; speech to the Putnam Pha-
lanx, 100-163; speech to the sur-
vivors of the Sixth Massachusetts
Regiment, 169, 170.

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Brune, Frederick W., efforts for
emancipation, 113.

Brune, John C., message to President
Lincoln, 57, 61; accompanies

Mayor' to Washington, 71; elected
to General Assembly, 79.
Bush River Bridge partially burned

to prevent ingress of troops, 58, 59
Butler, Gen., and the Eighth Massa-

chusetts Regiment, 76; at the
Relay House, 83; rumor of an
attack on his camp, 83, 84; enters
Baltimore, 84; arrests Ross Wi-
nans, 87.

Byrne, Wm., denounces the North,
38.

C

Cadwallader, General, and the writ of

habeas corpus, 88, 140.
Cameron, Simon, advice to Governor

Hicks to restrain Maryland, 40;
on the obstruction of Northern
Central bridge, 73; letter to Gen.
Banks, 102.

Carmichael, Judge, assaulted and im-
prisoned, 93.

Carr, W. C. N., speaks at States
Rights meeting, 38, 39.

Cheston, G., efforts for emancipation,
113.

Christison, Wenlock, a Quaker, owns
slaves, 21.

Clark, John, advances money for de-
fense of city, 61.

Crawford, William, Kane's letter to,
40.

Crowley, Comrade, of the Massachu-

setts Sixth, speech in Baltimore,
1880, 167.

Curtis, Benj. R., Life of, quotation

about Judge Taney, 91.
Cutter, B. L., release from arrest,
\ 109.

D

Davis, Jefferson, elected President
of the Confederacy, 32.
Davis, John W., police commissioner
of Baltimore, 35, 49; errand to
Fort McHenry, 66, 67, 68.
Davis, Judge, doubts the rumors of
conspiracy, 132, 133.

Davis, Robert W., killed, 52.

De Tocqueville, on public opinion in
America, 117.

Dike, Capt. J. H., company attacked
in Baltimore, 46; testifies as to
the conduct of Baltimore civil
authority during the riot, 53, 54.
Dimick, Col. J., releases prisoners
from Fort Warren, 108; kind
treatment of prisoners, 111.
Dix, General, headquarters in Balti-
more, 101; correspondence with
Mayor Brown, 104-108.

Dix, Miss, relates a Confederate plot,
13.

Dobbin, Geo. W., errand to Lincoln,

57, 61; accompanies the Mayor to
Washington, 71.

Douglas, S. A., Senatorial campaign,
22; Presidential vote for, 25.
Dred Scott Case, 138.

E

Evans, H. D., his code for Liberia, 31.

F

Felton, C. C., on the "Baltimore
Plot," 18.

Felton, Samuel M., on the supposed
conspiracy, 13-18, 129-133; ad-
vises Massachusetts Sixth to load
their guns, 43; engages spies, 120.
Ferrandini, Captain, suspected of
conspiracy to assassinate President
Lincoln, 122-129.

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