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Follansbee, Capt., company attacked
in Baltimore, 46, 49.
Fort McHenry, apprehended attack
on, 66, 69.

Fort Sumter, bombardment of, 32.
Franciscus, in the car with Lincoln,
133.

G

Garrett's, John W., dispatch to
Mayor Brown concerning advance
of troops to Cockeysville, 73, 74,
75.

Gatchell, Wm. H., police commis-

sioner of Baltimore, 35; release
from arrest, 109.

Giles, Judge, issues writ of habeas
corpus to Major Morris, 87.
Gill, George M., meets the Massachu-
setts Sixth, 48; counsel for John
Merryman, 87.

Goodwin, Major Horace, commands
Putnam Phalanx, 160; his appear-
ance, 163.

Greeley, Horace, on the conduct of

the Baltimore authorities, 76, 77.
Groton, regiment mustered in, 42.
Gunpowder River Bridge partially
burned, 58.

Η

Habeas corpus case, 87, 139-156.
Hall, Thomas W., release from
arrest, 109.

Hallam's Constitutional History, ex-
tract from, 151.

Halleck, Gen., in Baltimore, 101.
Harris, J. Morrison, errand to the
Capital, 63.

Harrison, Wm. G., elected to Gen-
eral Assembly, 80; released from
arrest, 108.

Hart, Capt., company attacked in
Baltimore, 46.

Herndon, Wm. H., comments on
Lincoln's senatorial campaign
speech, 23; reports of plot fur-
nished to, 122.

Hicks, T. H., Governor of Maryland,

34; proclamation of, 40; speech
before excited public, 56; writes
to Lincoln not to pass troops
through Baltimore, 57, 61; sug-
gests mediation between North
and South by Lord Lyons, 76;
convenes General Assembly, 79;
letter to E. H. Webster, 128.
Hilliard, suspected of conspiracy,
122, 123.

Hinks, Chas. D., police commis-
sioner of Baltimore, 35; released
from arrest, 99.

Hopkins, Johns, advances money for
city defense, 61.

Howard, Charles, police commis-
sioner of Baltimore, 35; appre-
hends attack on Fort McHenry,
66, 67; report on the state of city,
80, 81; release from arrest, 108.
Howard, F. K., release from arrest,
109.

Huger, General, made Colonel of
53d Regiment, 66.

Hull, Rob't, release from arrest, 109.
Hyde, Sir Nicholas, on the writ of
habeas corpus, 150.

J

Jefferson, Thomas, and writ of habeas
corpus, 141.

Johnson, Capt. B. T., arrives in

Baltimore, 64; hasty dispatch
from Marshal Kane, 69, 70.
Jones, Col. Edmund F., passage
through Baltimore, 43; on the
Massachusetts Sixth in Baltimore,
46, 47, 48, 51; letter to Marshal
Kane, 54.

Judd, N. B., with Lincoln in Phila-
delphia, 16; hears of conspiracy in
Baltimore, 128-133.

K

Kane, Marshal George P., investi-
gates supposed plot, 15; head of
Baltimore police, 35; letter to
Crawford, 40; keeps order at
Camden Station, 48; attempts to
quell Baltimore mob, 51, 53; Col.
Jones's gratitude to, 54; hasty
dispatch to Johnson, 69, 70; after
the war elected Sheriff and subse-
quently Mayor, 70; arrest of, 97;
release from arrest, 109.

Keim, Gen., arrests John Merryman,
87, 140.

Kenly, John R., supersedes Marshal

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Macgill, Dr. Charles, release from
arrest, 109.

Marshall, Chief Justice, on habeas
corpus, 153, 154.
Maryland, rumors of conspiracy in,

11, 12, 13; slavery in, 20, 30;
Lincoln's call for militia, how re-
ceived in, 33; excitement, 40, 41.
Mason, James M., sent from Vir-
ginia to negotiate with Maryland,
84.
Massachusetts, Minute Men, 11;
slavery in, 20; Eighth Regiment,
76; Sixth Regiment, 42, 167–170.
May, Henry, M. C., arrest of, 103.
McClellan, General, letter to General
Banks, 102.

McComas, Sergeant, removes ob-
struction from railway track in
Baltimore, 49.

McHenry, Ramsay, efforts for eman-
cipation, 113.

Merryman, John, arrest of, 87, 88,
154; charges against unfounded,
90.

Morfit, H. M., elected to General
Assembly, 79.

Morris, Major, refuses to obey writ
of habeas corpus, 87.

N

Negro. See Slavery.
Newport, slave-traffic in, 20.
Nicolay, George, on Lincoln's mid-
night ride, 132.

North Carolina, secession of, 33.

O'Donnell, Columbus, advances money
for city defense, 61.

P

Parker, Edward P., General Butler's
aide-de-camp, 83.

Patapsco Dragoons, arrival in Balti-
more, 64.

Pemberton, Major, leads U. S. Artil-
lery through Baltimore, 36.
Pennsylvania troops in Baltimore,
44, 53; at Cockeysville, 75.
Phillips, Wendell, on States Rights,
26.

Pickering, Captain, company opposed

in Baltimore, 46.

Pikesville, arsenal taken possession
of, 65.

Pitts, Charles H., elected to General
Assembly, 80.

Putnam Phalanx of Hartford in Bal-
timore, 160-166.

Putnam's Record of the Rebellion,
quotation from, 38.

R

Revolution, right of, 26-29.
Robinson, Dr. Alex. C., Chairman of
States Rights Convention, 38.

Robinson, General John C., on Bal-
timore in 1861, 66, 69, 81, 82, 83.

S

Sanford, plans Lincoln's midnight
ride, 131.

Sangston, L., elected to General As-
sembly, 80.

Scharf's History of Maryland quoted,

35, 37, 78, 103.

Scott, General, on the passage of
troops through Baltimore, 62, 72,
75.

Scott, T. Parkin, sympathizes with
the South, 38, 39; elected Judge
after the war, 39; elected to Gen-
eral Assembly, 79; release from
arrest, 108.

Seward, Secretary, position before
Presidential Convention, 24; boasts
of his authority, 91; sends news of
supposed conspiracy to Lincoln,
130, 134.

Slavery, compromises of Constitution
in regard to, 20-22; Geo. Wm.
Brown opposed to, 113; some good
effects of, 114.

Small, Colonel, leads Pennsylvania
regiment, 42.

South Carolina, secession of, 31.
Steuart, Dr. Richard S., efforts for
emancipation, 113.

Story, Justice, on habeas corpus, 152,
153.

Stuart, Captain, speech in Balti-
more, 163-166.

Sumner, Colonel, offers to accompany
President Lincoln to Washington,
132, 133.

Sun, The, on the offer of service by
colored people, 65, 66; on the suf-
fering of Pennsylvania troops in
Baltimore County, 76; Reception
of 6th Massachusetts Regiment in
Baltimore, 167-170.

T

Taney, Chief Justice, on negro rights,
21, 138; habeas corpus case ex
parte John Merryman, 87-93, 139–
156.

Tennessee, secession of, 33.

Thomas, Dr. J. Hanson, elected to

General Assembly, 79.

Trimble, Colonel I. R., defense of
Baltimore, 63.

Trist, N. P., news of conspiracy com-
municated to, 14.

Turner, Capt., suspected of con-
spiracy, 124-126.

U

Union Convention called, 92.

V

Virginia, secession of, 33; sends
Mason to negotiate with Mary-
land, 84.

W

Wallis, S. Teackle, legal adviser to
Baltimore police commission, 35;
speech to the excited public, 56;

accompanies the Mayor to Wash-
ington, 71; elected to the General
Assembly, 79; release from arrest,
108, 109.

Warfield, Henry M., elected to Gen-
eral Assembly, 79; release from
arrest,
108.
Warner, Major J. P., commands
Baltimore City Guards, 160.
Washburne, Mr., meets President
Lincoln at Washington Depot, 136.
Watson, Major, company attacked
in Baltimore, 45.

Webster, E. H., Gov. Hicks's letter
to, 128.

Whitefield, the Calvinist, owns
slaves, 21.

Williams, George H., counsel for
John Merryman, 87.

Winans, Ross, denounces passage of
troops through Baltimore, 37;
elected to General Assembly, 79;
arrested by Gen. Butler's order, 87.
Winder, Wm. H., release from
arrest, 109.

Wood, Fernando, tries to make New
York a free city, 31.
Wool, General, checks arbitrary
arrest, 109.

Worcester, regiment mustered in, 42.

Johns Hopkins University Studies

IN

Historical and Political Science.

HERBERT B. ADAMS, Editor.

PROSPECTUS OF FIFTH SERIES.-1887.

The Studies in Municipal Government will be continued. The following papers are ready or in preparation :

I-II. City Government of Philadelphia. By EDWARD P. Allinson, A. M. (Haverford), and BOIES PENROSE, A. B. (Harvard). January and February, 1887. Price 50 cents. 72 pp.

III. City Government of Boston. By JAMES M. BUGBEE. March, 1887. Price 25 cents. 60 pp.

IV.

V.

City Government of St. Louis. By MARSHALL S. SNOW, A. M. (Harvard);
Professor of History, Washington University. April, 1887. Price 25 cents.
40 pp.

Local Government in Canada. By JOHN GEORGE BOURINOT, Clerk of the
House of Commons of Canada. In press.

City Government of Baltimore. By JOHN C. Rose, B. L. (University of Maryland, School of Law).

City Government of Chicago. By F. H. HODDER, Ph. M. (University of Mich.); Instructor in History, Cornell University.

City Government of San Francisco. By BERNARD MOSES, Ph. D., Professor of History and Politics, University of California.

City Government of New Orleans. By HON. W. W. Howe.

City Government of New York. By SIMON STERNE and J. F. Jameson, Ph. D., Associate in History, J. H. U.

The Influence of the War of 1812 upon the Consolidation of the American Union. By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, Ph. D. and Fellow of Columbia College.

The History of American Political Economy. Studies by R. T. ELY, WOODROW WILSON, and D. R. DEWEY.

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