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Maryland in the American Civil War

During the American Civil War (1861–1865), Maryland, a slave state, was one of the border states, straddling the South and North. Despite some popular support for the cause of the Confederate States of America, Maryland did not secede during the Civil War. Governor Thomas H. Hicks, despite his early sympathies for the South, helped prevent the state from seceding.

Seal of Maryland during the war

Because the state bordered the District of Columbia and the opposing factions within the state strongly desired to sway public opinion towards their respective causes, Maryland played an important role in the war. The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) suspended the constitutional right of habeas corpus from Washington to Philadelphia. Lincoln ignored the ruling of Chief Justice Roger B. Taney in "Ex parte Merryman" decision in 1861 concerning freeing John Merryman, a prominent Southern sympathizer arrested by the military.

The first fatalities of the war happened during the Baltimore riot of 1861 on April 18–19. The single bloodiest day of combat in American military history occurred during the first major Confederate invasion of the North in the Maryland Campaign, just north above the Potomac River near Sharpsburg in Washington County, at the Battle of Antietam on September 17, 1862. The battle of Antietam, though tactically a draw, was strategically enough of a Union victory to give Lincoln the opportunity to issue, in September 1862, the Emancipation Proclamation. It did not affect Maryland. In July 1864 the Battle of Monocacy was fought near Frederick, Maryland as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Monocacy was a tactical victory for the Confederate States Army but a strategic defeat, as the one-day delay inflicted on the attacking Confederates cost rebel General Jubal Early his chance to capture the Union capital of Washington, D.C.

Across the state, some 50,000 citizens signed up for the military, with most joining the United States Army. Approximately a tenth as many enlisted to "go South" and fight for the Confederacy. Abolition of slavery in Maryland came before the end of the war, with a new third constitution voted approval in 1864 by a small majority of Radical Republican Unionists then controlling the nominally Democratic state.

The approach of War edit

Maryland's sympathies edit

 
8th Massachusetts regiment repairing railroad bridges from Annapolis to Washington.

Maryland, as a slave-holding border state, was deeply divided over the antebellum arguments over states' rights and the future of slavery in the Union.[1] Culturally, geographically and economically, Maryland found herself neither one thing nor another, a unique blend of Southern agrarianism and Northern mercantilism.[1] In the leadup to the American Civil War, it became clear that the state was bitterly divided in its sympathies. There was much less appetite for secession than elsewhere in the Southern States (South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas, Tennessee) or in the border Southern states (Kentucky and Missouri) of the Upper South,[2] but Maryland was equally unsympathetic towards the potentially abolitionist position of Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln. In the presidential election of 1860 Lincoln won just 2,294 votes out of a total of 92,421, only 2.5% of the votes cast, coming in at a distant fourth place with Southern Democrat (and later Confederate general) John C. Breckinridge winning the state.[3][4] In seven counties, Lincoln received not a single vote.[1]

The areas of Southern and Eastern Shore Maryland, especially those on the Chesapeake Bay (which neighbored Virginia), which had prospered on the tobacco trade and slave labor, were generally sympathetic to the South, while the central and western areas of the state, especially Marylanders of German origin,[5] had stronger economic ties to the North and thus were pro-Union.[6] Not all blacks in Maryland were slaves. The 1860 Federal Census[7] showed there were nearly as many free blacks (83,942) as slaves (87,189) in Maryland, although the latter were much more dominant in southern counties.

However, across the state, sympathies were mixed. Many Marylanders were simply pragmatic, recognizing that the state's long border with the Union state of Pennsylvania would be almost impossible to defend in the event of war. Maryland businessmen feared the likely loss of trade that would be caused by war and the strong possibility of a blockade of Baltimore's port by the Union Navy.[8] Other residents, and a majority of the legislature, wished to remain in the Union, but did not want to be involved in a war against their southern neighbors, and sought to prevent a military response by Lincoln to the South's secession.[9]

After John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859, many citizens began forming local militias, determined to prevent a future slave uprising.[citation needed]

Baltimore Riot of 1861 edit

 
The Baltimore Riot of April 1861
 
Governor Thomas Hicks

The first bloodshed of the Civil War occurred in Maryland. Anxious about the risk of secessionists capturing Washington, D.C., given that the capital was bordered by Virginia, and preparing for war with the South, the federal government requested armed volunteers to suppress "unlawful combinations" in the South.[10] Soldiers from Pennsylvania and Massachusetts were transported by rail to Baltimore, where they had to disembark, march through the city, and board another train to continue their journey south to Washington.[11]

As one Massachusetts regiment was transferred between stations on April 19, a mob of Marylanders sympathizing with the South, or objecting to the use of federal troops against the seceding states, attacked the train cars and blocked the route; some began throwing cobblestones and bricks at the troops, assaulting them with "shouts and stones".[12] Panicked by the situation, several soldiers fired into the mob, whether "accidentally", "in a desultory manner", or "by the command of the officers" is unclear.[12] Chaos ensued as a giant brawl began between fleeing soldiers, the violent mob, and the Baltimore police who tried to suppress the violence. Four soldiers and twelve civilians were killed in the riot.

The disorder inspired James Ryder Randall, a Marylander living in Louisiana, to write a poem which would be put to music and, in 1939, become the state song, "Maryland, My Maryland" (it remained the official state song until March 2021). The song's lyrics urged Marylanders to "spurn the Northern scum" and "burst the tyrant's chain" — in other words, to secede from the Union. Confederate States Army bands would later play the song after they crossed into Maryland territory during the Maryland Campaign in 1862.[13]

After the April 19 rioting, skirmishes continued in Baltimore for the next month. Mayor George William Brown and Maryland Governor Thomas Hicks implored President Lincoln to reroute troops around Baltimore city and through Annapolis to avoid further confrontations.[14] In a letter to President Lincoln, Mayor Brown wrote:

It is my solemn duty to inform you that it is not possible for more soldiers to pass through Baltimore unless they fight their way at every step. I therefore hope and trust and most earnestly request that no more troops be permitted or ordered by the Government to pass through the city. If they should attempt it, the responsibility for the bloodshed will not rest upon me.[14]

Hearing no immediate reply from Washington, on the evening of April 19 Governor Hicks and Mayor Brown ordered the destruction of railroad bridges leading into the city from the North, preventing further incursions by Union soldiers. The destruction was accomplished the next day.[15] One of the men involved in this destruction would be arrested for it in May without recourse to habeas corpus, leading to the ex parte Merryman ruling. For a time it looked as if Maryland was one provocation away from joining the rebels, but Lincoln moved swiftly to defuse the situation, promising that the troops were needed purely to defend Washington, not to attack the South.[16] President Lincoln also complied with the request to reroute troops to Annapolis, as the political situation in Baltimore remained highly volatile. Meanwhile, General Winfield Scott, who was in charge of military operations in Maryland indicated in correspondence with the head of Pennsylvania troops that the route through Baltimore would resume once sufficient troops were available to secure Baltimore.[17]

To secede or not to secede edit

Despite some popular support for the cause of the Confederate States of America, Maryland did not secede during the Civil War. However, a number of leading citizens, including physician and slaveholder Richard Sprigg Steuart, placed considerable pressure on Governor Hicks to summon the state Legislature to vote on secession, following Hicks to Annapolis with a number of fellow citizens:

to insist on his [Hicks] issuing his proclamation for the Legislature to convene, believing that this body (and not himself and his party) should decide the fate of our state...if the Governor and his party continued to refuse this demand that it would be necessary to depose him.[18]

Responding to pressure, on April 22 Governor Hicks finally announced that the state legislature would meet in a special session in Frederick, a strongly pro-Union town, rather than the state capital of Annapolis. The Maryland General Assembly convened in Frederick and unanimously adopted a measure stating that they would not commit the state to secession, explaining that they had "no constitutional authority to take such action,"[19] whatever their own personal feelings might have been.[20] On April 29, the Legislature voted decisively 53–13 against secession,[21][22] though they also voted not to reopen rail links with the North, and they requested that Lincoln remove Union troops from Maryland.[23] At this time the legislature seems to have wanted to avoid involvement in a war against its southern neighbors.[24]

Imposition of martial law edit

 
Cannon on Federal Hill, aimed at downtown Baltimore

On May 13, 1861, General Benjamin F. Butler entered Baltimore by rail with 1,000 Federal soldiers and, under cover of a thunderstorm, quietly took possession of Federal Hill.[8] Butler fortified his position and trained his guns upon the city, threatening its destruction.[25] Butler then sent a letter to the commander of Fort McHenry:

I have taken possession of Baltimore. My troops are on Federal Hill, which I can hold with the aid of my artillery. If I am attacked to-night, please open upon Monument Square with your mortars.[26]

Butler went on to occupy Baltimore and declared martial law, ostensibly to prevent secession, although Maryland had voted solidly (53–13) against secession two weeks earlier,[27] but more immediately to allow war to be made on the South without hindrance from the state of Maryland,[25] which had also voted to close its rail lines to Northern troops, so as to avoid involvement in a war against its southern neighbors.[28] By May 21 there was no need to send further troops.[25] After the occupation of the city, Union troops were garrisoned throughout the state. By late summer Maryland was firmly in the hands of Union soldiers. Arrests of Confederate sympathizers and those critical of Lincoln and the war soon followed, and Steuart's brother, the militia general George H. Steuart, fled to Charlottesville, Virginia, after which much of his family's property was confiscated by the Federal Government.[29] Civil authority in Baltimore was swiftly withdrawn from all those who had not been steadfastly in favor of the Federal Government's emergency measures.[30]

During this period in spring 1861, Baltimore Mayor Brown,[31] the city council, the police commissioner, and the entire Board of Police were arrested and imprisoned at Fort McHenry without charges.[3][32] One of those arrested was militia captain John Merryman, who was held without trial in defiance of a writ of habeas corpus on May 25, sparking the case of Ex parte Merryman, heard just 2 days later on May 27 and 28. In this case U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice, and native Marylander, Roger B. Taney, acting as a federal circuit court judge, ruled that the arrest of Merryman was unconstitutional without Congressional authorization, which Lincoln could not then secure:

The President, under the Constitution and laws of the United States, cannot suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, nor authorize any military officer to do so.[33]

The Merryman decision created a sensation, but its immediate impact was rather limited, as the president simply ignored the ruling.[34] Indeed, when Lincoln's dismissal of Chief Justice Taney's ruling was criticized in a September 1861 editorial by Baltimore newspaper editor Frank Key Howard (Francis Scott Key's grandson), Howard was himself arrested by order of Lincoln's Secretary of State Seward and held without trial. Howard described these events in his 1863 book Fourteen Months in American Bastiles, where he noted that he was imprisoned in Fort McHenry, the same fort where the Star Spangled Banner had been waving "o'er the land of the free" in his grandfather's song.[35] Two of the publishers selling his book were then arrested.[3] In all nine newspapers were shut down in Maryland by the federal government, and a dozen newspaper owners and editors like Howard were imprisoned without charges.[3]

On September 17, 1861, the first day of the Maryland legislature's new session, fully one third of the members of the Maryland General Assembly were arrested, due to federal concerns that the Assembly "would aid the anticipated rebel invasion and would attempt to take the state out of the Union."[36] Although previous secession votes, in spring 1861, had failed by large margins,[22] there were legitimate concerns that the war-averse Assembly would further impede the federal government's use of Maryland infrastructure to wage war on the South.

One month later in October 1861 one John Murphy asked the United States Circuit Court for the District of Columbia to issue a writ of habeas corpus for his son, then in the United States Army, on the grounds that he was underage. When the writ was delivered to General Andrew Porter Provost Marshal of the District of Columbia he had both the lawyer delivering the writ and the United States Circuit Judge, Marylander William Matthew Merrick, who issued the writ, arrested to prevent them from proceeding in the case United States ex rel. Murphy v. Porter. Merrick's fellow judges took up the case and ordered General Porter to appear before them, but Lincoln's Secretary of State Seward prevented the federal marshal from delivering the court order.[37] The court objected that this disruption of its process was unconstitutional, but noted that it was powerless to enforce its prerogatives.[38][39]

The following month in November 1861, Judge Richard Bennett Carmichael, a presiding state circuit court judge in Maryland, was imprisoned without charge for releasing, due to his concern that arrests were arbitrary and civil liberties had been violated, many of the southern sympathizers seized in his jurisdiction. The order came again from Lincoln's Secretary of State Seward. The federal troops executing Judge Carmichael's arrest beat him unconscious in his courthouse while his court was in session, before dragging him out, initiating a public controversy.[40]

In another controversial arrest that fall, and in further defiance of Chief Justice Taney's ruling, a sitting U.S. Congressman Henry May (D-Maryland) was imprisoned without charge and without recourse to habeas corpus in Fort Lafayette.[41][42] May was eventually released and returned to his seat in Congress in December 1861, and in March 1862 he introduced a bill to Congress requiring the federal government to either indict by grand jury or release all other "political prisoners" still held without habeas.[43] The provisions of May's bill were included in the March 1863 Habeas Corpus Act, in which Congress finally authorized Lincoln to suspend habeas corpus, but required actual indictments for suspected traitors.[44]

Marylanders fought both for the Union and the Confederacy edit

 
Arnold Elzey, colonel of the 1st Maryland Infantry, CSA, promoted by Confederate President Jefferson Davis to brigadier general after the First Battle of Manassas.

Although Maryland stayed as part of the Union and more Marylanders fought for the Union than for the Confederacy, Marylanders sympathetic to the secession easily crossed the Potomac River into secessionist Virginia in order to join and fight for the Confederacy. During the early summer of 1861, several thousand Marylanders crossed the Potomac to join the Confederate Army. Most of the men enlisted into regiments from Virginia or the Carolinas, but six companies of Marylanders formed at Harpers Ferry into the Maryland Battalion.[45] Among them were members of the former volunteer militia unit, the Maryland Guard Battalion, initially formed in Baltimore in 1859.[46]

Maryland Exiles, including Arnold Elzey and brigadier general George H. Steuart, would organize a "Maryland Line" in the Army of Northern Virginia which eventually consisted of one infantry regiment, one infantry battalion, two cavalry battalions and four battalions of artillery.[citation needed] Most of these volunteers tended to hail from southern and eastern counties of the state, while northern and western Maryland furnished more volunteers for the Union armies.[47]

Captain Bradley T. Johnson refused the offer of the Virginians to join a Virginia Regiment, insisting that Maryland should be represented independently in the Confederate army.[45] It was agreed that Arnold Elzey, a seasoned career officer from Maryland, would command the 1st Maryland Regiment. His executive officer was the Marylander George H. Steuart, who would later be known as "Maryland Steuart" to distinguish him from his more famous cavalry colleague J.E.B. Stuart.[45]

The 1st Maryland Infantry Regiment was officially formed on June 16, 1861, and, on June 25, two additional companies joined the regiment in Winchester.[45] Its initial term of duty was for twelve months.[48]

It has been estimated that, of the state's 1860 population of 687,000, about 4,000 Marylanders traveled south to fight for the Confederacy. While the number of Marylanders in Confederate service is often reported as 20–25,000 based on an oral statement of General Cooper to General Trimble, other contemporary reports refute this number and offer more detailed estimates in the range of 3,500 (Livermore)[49] to just under 4,700 (McKim),[50] which latter number should be further reduced given that the 2nd Maryland Infantry raised in 1862 consisted largely of the same men who had served in the 1st Maryland, which mustered out after a year.

While other men born in Maryland may have served in other Confederate formations, the same is true of units in the service of the United States. The 1860 Census reported the chief destinations of internal immigrants from Maryland as Ohio and Pennsylvania, followed by Virginia and the District of Columbia.[51]

A similar situation existed in relation to Marylanders serving in the United States Colored Troops. Indeed, on the whole there appear to have been twice as many black Marylanders serving in the U.S.C.T. as white Marylanders in the Confederate army.[52]

Overall, the Official Records of the War Department credits Maryland with 33,995 white enlistments in volunteer regiments of the United States Army and 8,718 African American enlistments in the United States Colored Troops. A further 3,925 Marylanders, not differentiated by race, served as sailors or marines.[53] One notable Maryland front line regiment was the 2nd Maryland Infantry, which saw considerable combat action in the Union IX Corps. Another was the 4th United States Colored Troops, whose Sergeant Major, Christian Fleetwood was awarded the Medal of Honor for rallying the regiment and saving its colors in the successful assault on New Market Heights.[54]

A state divided edit

Not all those who sympathised with the rebels would abandon their homes and join the Confederacy. Some, like physician Richard Sprigg Steuart, remained in Maryland, offered covert support for the South, and refused to sign an oath of loyalty to the Union.[55] Later in 1861, Baltimore resident W W Glenn described Steuart as a fugitive from the authorities:

I was spending the evening out when a footstep approached my chair from behind and a hand was laid upon me. I turned and saw Dr. R. S. Steuart. He has been concealed for more than six months. His neighbors are so bitter against him that he dare not go home, and he committed himself so decidedly on the 19th April and is known to be so decided a Southerner, that it more than likely he would be thrown into a Fort. He goes about from place to place, sometimes staying in one county, sometimes in another and then passing a few days in the city. He never shows in the day time & is cautious who sees him at any time.[56]

Civil War edit

Battle of Front Royal edit

 
Crossing the Potomac into Maryland on 6th September 1862

Because Maryland's sympathies were divided, many Marylanders would fight one another during the conflict. On May 23, 1862, at the Battle of Front Royal, the 1st Maryland Infantry, CSA was thrown into battle with their fellow Marylanders, the Union 1st Regiment Maryland Volunteer Infantry.[45] This is the only time in United States military history that two regiments of the same numerical designation and from the same state have engaged each other in battle.[57] After hours of desperate fighting the Southerners emerged victorious, despite an inferiority both of numbers and equipment.[57] When the prisoners were taken, many men recognized former friends and family. Major William Goldsborough, whose memoir The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army chronicled the story of the rebel Marylanders, wrote of the battle:

nearly all recognized old friends and acquaintances, whom they greeted cordially, and divided with them the rations which had just changed hands.[58]

Among the prisoners captured by William Goldsborough was his own brother Charles Goldsborough.[59]

On 6 September 1862 advancing Confederate soldiers entered Frederick, Maryland, the home of Colonel Bradley T. Johnson, who issued a proclamation calling upon his fellow Marylanders to join his colors. Disappointingly for the exiles, recruits did not flock to the Confederate banner. Whether this was due to local sympathy with the Union cause or the generally ragged state of the Confederate army, many of whom had no shoes, is not clear.[5] Frederick would later be extorted by Jubal Early, who threatened to burn down the city if its residents did not pay a ransom.[60] Hagerstown too would also suffer a similar fate.[61]

"Bloody Antietam" edit

 
Battle of Antietam by Kurz and Allison.
 
Confederate dead at Antietam.

One of the bloodiest battles fought in the Civil war (and one of the most significant) was the Battle of Antietam, fought on September 17, 1862, near Sharpsburg, Maryland, in which Marylanders fought with distinction for both armies.[62] The battle was the culmination of Robert E. Lee's Maryland Campaign, which aimed to take the war to the North. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, consisting of about 40,000 men, had entered Maryland following their recent victory at Second Bull Run.[63]

While Major General George B. McClellan's 87,000-man Army of the Potomac was moving to intercept Lee, a Union soldier discovered a mislaid copy of the detailed battle plans of Lee's army, on Sunday 14 September.[62] The order indicated that Lee had divided his army and dispersed portions geographically (to Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, and Hagerstown, Maryland), thus making each subject to isolation and defeat in detail - if McClellan could move quickly enough.[62] However, McClellan waited about 18 hours before deciding to take advantage of this intelligence and position his forces based on it, thus endangering a golden opportunity to defeat Lee decisively.[64]

The armies met near the town of Sharpsburg by the Antietam Creek. Losses were extremely heavy on both sides; The Union suffered 12,401 casualties with 2,108 dead. Confederate casualties were 10,318 with 1,546 dead. This represented 25% of the Federal force and 31% of the Confederate. More Americans died in battle on September 17, 1862, than on any other day in the nation's military history. The Confederate General A. P. Hill described

the most terrible slaughter that this war has yet witnessed. The broad surface of the Potomac was blue with floating bodies of our foe. But few escaped to tell the tale.[65]

Although tactically inconclusive, the Battle of Antietam is considered a strategic Union victory and an important turning point of the war, because it forced the end of Lee's invasion of the North, and it allowed President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation, taking effect on January 1, 1863. Lincoln had wished to issue his proclamation earlier, but needed a military victory in order for his proclamation not to become self-defeating. As Lincoln himself stated, five days before the battle:

What good would a proclamation from me do.... I don't want to issue a document the whole world will see must be inoperative, like the Pope's Bull against a comet.[66]

Lee's setback at the Battle of Antietam can also be seen as a turning point in that it may have dissuaded the governments of France and Great Britain from recognizing the Confederacy, doubting the South's ability to maintain and win the war.[67]

March to Gettysburg edit

 
The Confederate 2nd Maryland infantry charge Union lines at Gettysburg

In June 1863 General Lee's army again advanced north into Maryland, taking the war into Union territory for the second time. Maryland exile George H. Steuart, leading the 2nd Maryland Infantry regiment, is said to have jumped down from his horse, kissed his native soil and stood on his head in jubilation. According to one of his aides: "We loved Maryland, we felt that she was in bondage against her will, and we burned with desire to have a part in liberating her".[68] Quartermaster John Howard recalled that Steuart performed "seventeen double somersaults" all the while whistling Maryland, My Maryland.[69] Such celebrations would prove short lived, as Steuart's brigade was soon to be severely damaged at the Battle of Gettysburg (July 1–3, 1863), a turning point in the war and a reverse from which the Confederate army would never recover.

Battle of Monocacy edit

In 1864, elements of the warring armies again met in Maryland, although this time the scope and size of the battle was much smaller. The Battle of Monocacy was fought on July 9, just outside Frederick, as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. Confederate forces under Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early defeated Union troops under Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace. The battle was part of Early's raid through the Shenandoah Valley and into Maryland, attempting to divert Union forces away from Gen. Robert E. Lee's army under siege at Petersburg, Virginia. However, Wallace delayed Early for nearly a full day, buying enough time for Ulysses S. Grant to send reinforcements from the Army of the Potomac to the Washington defenses.[citation needed]

Prisoners of war edit

Thousands of Union troops were stationed in Charles County, and the Federal Government established a large, unsheltered prison camp at Point Lookout at Maryland's southern tip in St. Mary's County between the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay, where thousands of Confederates were kept, often in harsh conditions. Of the 50,000 Southern soldiers held in the army prison camp, who were housed in tents at the Point between 1863 and 1865, according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, (Maryland Park Service) nearly 4,000 died, although this death rate of 8 percent was less than half the death rate among soldiers who were still fighting in the field with their own armies.[70] The harshness of conditions at Point Lookout, and in particular whether such conditions formed part of a deliberate policy of "vindictive directives" from Washington, is a matter of some debate.[71]

The state capital Annapolis's western suburb of Parole became a camp where prisoners-of-war would await formal exchange in the early years of the war. Around 70,000 soldiers passed through Camp Parole until Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant assumed command as General-in-Chief of the Union Army in 1864, and ended the system of prisoner exchanges.[72]

Slavery and emancipation edit

Those who voted for Maryland to remain in the Union did not explicitly seek for the emancipation of Maryland's many enslaved people, or indeed those of the Confederacy. In March 1862, the Maryland Assembly passed a series of resolutions, stating that:

This war is prosecuted by the Nation with but one object, that, namely, of a restoration of the Union just as it was when the rebellion broke out. The rebellious States are to be brought back to their places in the Union, without change or diminution of their constitutional rights.[73]

In other words, the Assembly members could only agree to state that the war was being fought over the issue of secession. Because Maryland had not seceded from the United States the state was not included under the Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, which declared that all enslaved people within the Confederacy would henceforth be free. In 1864, before the end of the War, a constitutional convention outlawed slavery in Maryland.

Constitution of 1864, and the abolition of slavery edit

The issue of slavery was finally confronted by the constitution which the state adopted in 1864. The document, which replaced the Maryland Constitution of 1851, was largely advocated by Unionists who had secured control of the state, and was framed by a Convention which met at Annapolis in April 1864.[74] Article 24 of the constitution at last outlawed the practice of slavery.

One feature of the new constitution was a highly restrictive oath of allegiance which was designed to reduce the influence of Southern sympathizers, and to prevent such individuals from holding public office of any kind.[74] The new constitution emancipated the state's slaves (who had not been freed by President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation), disenfranchised southern sympathizers, and re-apportioned the General Assembly based upon white inhabitants.[citation needed] This last provision diminished the power of the small counties where the majority of the state's large former slave population lived.

The constitution was submitted to the people for ratification on October 13, 1864, and it was narrowly approved by a vote of 30,174 to 29,799 (50.31% to 49.69%) in a vote likely overshadowed by the heavy presence of Union troops in the state and the repression of Confederate sympathizers.[75] Those voting at their usual polling places were opposed to the Constitution by 29,536 to 27,541.[citation needed] However, the constitution secured ratification once the votes of Union army soldiers from Maryland were included.[75] The Marylanders serving in the Union Army were overwhelmingly in favor of the new Constitution, supporting ratification by a margin of 2,633 to 263.[75]

The new constitution came into effect on November 1, 1864, making Maryland the first Union slave state to abolish slavery since the beginning of the war. While it emancipated the state's slaves, it did not mean equality for them, in part because the franchise continued to be restricted to white males. The abolition of slavery in Maryland preceded the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution outlawing slavery throughout the United States and did not come into effect until December 6, 1865. Maryland had ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on February 3, 1865, within three days of it being submitted to the states.

Emancipation did not immediately bring citizenship for former slaves. The Maryland legislature refused to ratify both the 14th Amendment, which conferred citizenship rights on former slaves, and the 15th Amendment, which gave the vote to African Americans.[citation needed]

The right to vote was eventually extended to non-white males in the Maryland Constitution of 1867, which remains in effect today. The Constitution of 1867 overturned the registry test oath embedded in the 1864 constitution.

Assassination of President Lincoln edit

 
Marylander John Wilkes Booth assassinates President Lincoln

The issue of slavery may have been settled by the new constitution, and the legality of secession by the war, but this did not end the debate. On April 14, 1865, the actor John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. After he shot Lincoln, Booth shouted "Sic semper tyrannis" ("Thus always to tyrants").[76] Other witnesses — including Booth himself — claimed that he only yelled "Sic semper!"[77][78] Some didn't recall hearing Booth shout anything in Latin. Some witnesses said he shouted "The South is avenged!"[79]: 48  Others thought they heard him say "Revenge for the South!" or "The South shall be free!" Two said Booth yelled "I have done it!" After shooting the President, Booth galloped on his horse into Southern Maryland, where he was sheltered and helped by sympathetic residents and smuggled at night across the Potomac River into Virginia a week later.

In a letter explaining his actions, Booth wrote:

I have ever held the South was right. The very nomination of Abraham Lincoln, four years ago, spoke plainly war upon Southern rights and institutions... And looking upon African Slavery from the same stand-point held by the noble framers of our constitution, I for one, have ever considered it one of the greatest blessings (both for themselves and us,) that God has ever bestowed upon a favored nation… I have also studied hard to discover upon what grounds the right of a State to secede has been denied, when our very name, United States, and the Declaration of Independence, both provide for secession.[80]

Legacy edit

Most Marylanders fought for the Union, but after the war a number of memorials were erected in sympathy with the Lost Cause of the Confederacy, including in Baltimore a Confederate Women's Monument, and a Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument. Baltimore boasted a monument to Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson[81] until they were taken down on August 16, 2017, after the Unite the Right rally.[82] A home for retired Confederate soldiers in Pikesville, Maryland opened in 1888 and did not close until 1932. A brochure published by the home in the 1890s described it as:

a haven of rest... to which they may retire and find refuge, and, at the same time, lose none of their self-respect, nor suffer in the estimation of those whose experience in life is more fortunate.[83]

There formerly was a Confederate monument behind the courthouse in Rockville, Maryland, dedicated to "the thin grey line".[84] Easton, Maryland also has a Confederate monument.[85] Maryland has three chapters of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

War produced a legacy of bitter resentment in politics, with the Democrats being identified with "treason and rebellion", a point much pressed home by their opponents.[86] Democrats therefore re-branded themselves the "Democratic Conservative Party", and Republicans called themselves the "Union" party, in an attempt to distance themselves from their most radical elements during the war.[86]

The legacies of the debate over Lincoln's heavy-handed actions that were meant to keep Maryland within the union include measures such as arresting one third of the Maryland General Assembly, which was controversially ruled unconstitutional at the time by Maryland native Justice Roger Taney, and in the lyrics of the former Maryland state song, Maryland, My Maryland, which referred to Lincoln as a "despot," a "vandal," and, a "tyrant."

See also edit

References edit

  • Andrews, Matthew Page, History of Maryland, Doubleday, New York (1929)
  • Arnett, Robert J., et al., Maryland: A New Guide to the Old Line State The Johns Hopkins University Press (1999)
  • Davis, David Brion, Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World Retrieved January 2013
  • Curry, Denis, C., "" (2001). Retrieved August 2012
  • Gallagher, Gary W., Antietam: Essays on the 1862 Maryland Campaign, Kent State University Press (31 Dec 1992) Retrieved January 2013
  • Gillipsie, James M., Andersonvilles Of The North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners, University of North Texas Press (2011) Retrieved January 2013
  • Goldsborough, W. W., The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army, Guggenheimer Weil & Co (1900), ISBN 0-913419-00-1.
  • Harris, William C. (2011) Lincoln and the Border States: Preserving the Union. University Press of Kansas.
  • Hein, David (editor),. Religion and Politics in Maryland on the Eve of the Civil War: The Letters of W. Wilkins Davis. 1988. Rev. ed., Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2009.
  • Maryland State Archives (16 Sept. 2004).Historical Chronology Retrieved August 2012.
  • McPherson, James M. (2002). Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam, The Battle That Changed the Course of the Civil War. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513521-0.
  • Mitchell, Charles W., Maryland Voices of the Civil War. Retrieved August 2012
  • Scharf, J. Thomas (1967 (reissue of 1879 ed.)). History of Maryland From the Earliest Period to the Present Day. 3. Hatboro, PA: Tradition Press
  • Scharf, J. Thomas, History of Western Maryland: Being a History of Frederick, Montgomery, Carroll, Washington, Allegany, and Garrett Counties. (1882) Retrieved November 2012
  • Tagg, Larry, The Generals of Gettysburg, Savas Publishing (1998), ISBN 1-882810-30-9.
  • Whitman H. Ridgway. Maryland Humanities Council (2001). "". Retrieved August 2012

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Mitchell, Charles (ed.). Maryland Voices of the Civil War. p. 3.
  2. ^ Andrews, p506
  3. ^ a b c d Schoettler, Carl (November 27, 2001). "A time liberties weren't priority". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  4. ^ Andrews, p.505
  5. ^ a b Andrews, p. 539
  6. ^ Field, Ron, et al., p.33, The Confederate Army 1861–65: Missouri, Kentucky & Maryland Osprey Publishing (2008), Retrieved August 2012
  7. ^ 1860 Census Information, U.S. Census Bureau
  8. ^ a b Mitchell, p.12 Retrieved November 2012
  9. ^ . Maryland State Archives. 2005. Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved February 6, 2008.
  10. ^ Andrews, p.511
  11. ^ Andrews, p.512
  12. ^ a b Andrews, p.514
  13. ^ Scharf, J. Thomas (1967) [1879]. "History of Maryland From the Earliest Period to the Present Day". 3. Hatboro, PA: Tradition Press: 494. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ a b Andrews, p.517
  15. ^ Harris (2011) pp. 46-47
  16. ^ Andrews, p.518
  17. ^ Harris (2011) pp. 51-52. Harris states that Lincoln may or may not have been aware of this communication.
  18. ^ Mitchell, p.71
  19. ^ Scharf, p.202 Retrieved November 2012
  20. ^ Andrews, p.520
  21. ^ Mitchell, p.87
  22. ^ a b Radcliffe, George Lovic-Pierce, Governor Thomas H. Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War, The Johns Hopkins Press, Nov-Dec 1901, pp. 73-74.
  23. ^ . Maryland State Archives. 2005. Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved February 6, 2008.
  24. ^ . Maryland State Archives. 2005. Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved February 6, 2008.
  25. ^ a b c Andrews, p.521
  26. ^ Maryland Historical Society Retrieved February 2013
  27. ^ . eHistory. Civil War Articles. Ohio State University. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved October 16, 2014.
  28. ^ . Maryland State Archives. 2005. Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved February 6, 2008.
  29. ^ Brugger, Robert J., Maryland, A Middle Temperament: 1634–1980. p.280 Retrieved Feb 28 2010
  30. ^ Andrews, p.524
  31. ^ Mitchell, p.207
  32. ^ Mitchell, p.291 Retrieved November 2012
  33. ^ Andrews, p.523
  34. ^ Andrews, p.522
  35. ^ Howard, F. K. (Frank Key) (1863). Fourteen Months in American Bastiles. London: H. F. Mackintosh. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  36. ^ William C. Harris, Lincoln and the Border States: Preserving the Union (University Press of Kansas, 2011) pp.71
  37. ^ Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay, p. 28 (SIU Press, Michael Burlingame and John R. Turner Ettlinger eds. 1999).
  38. ^ 12 Stat. 762.
  39. ^ "History of the Federal Judiciary: Circuit Court of the District of Columbia: Legislative History". Federal Judicial Center. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
  40. ^ Scharf, J. Thomas. . Maryland State Archives. Archived from the original on May 19, 2008. Retrieved May 16, 2008.
  41. ^ The Bastille in America; or Democratic Absolutism. London: Robert Hardwicke, 1861, p. 12.
  42. ^ Mitchell, Charles W., ed. Maryland Voices of the Civil War. JHU Press, 2007, p. 237.
  43. ^ Jonathan White, "Abraham Lincoln and Treason in the Civil War: The Trials of John Merryman", LSU Press, 2011. p. 106
  44. ^ Jonathan White, "Abraham Lincoln and Treason in the Civil War: The Trials of John Merryman", LSU Press, 2011. p. 107
  45. ^ a b c d e "2nd Maryland Infantry, CSA". Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  46. ^ Field, Ron, et al., The Confederate Army 1861–65: Missouri, Kentucky & Maryland Osprey Publishing (2008), Retrieved March 4, 2010
  47. ^ Andrews, p.543
  48. ^ Andrews, p.544
  49. ^ Thomas Livermore, Numbers and Losses in the Civil War, Boston, 1900. See chart and explanation, p. 550
  50. ^ Randolph McKim, Numerical Strength of the Confederate Army, New York, 1912. See discussion and tabulation on pp. 62-65. Of the Trimble count, McKim states The estimate above alluded to, of 20,000 Marylanders in the Confederate service, rests apparently upon no better basis than an oral statement of General Cooper to General Trimble, in which he said he believed that the muster rolls would show that about 20,000 men in the Confederate army had given the State of Maryland as the place of their nativity. How many were citizens of Maryland when they enlisted does not appear. Obviously many natives of Maryland were doubtless in 1861 citizens of other States, and could not therefore be reckoned among the soldiers furnished by Maryland to the Confederate armies.
  51. ^ Population of the United States in 1860, G.P.O. 1864. See Introduction, p. xxxiv
  52. ^ See, e.g., C. R. Gibbs' Black, Copper, and Bright, Silver Spring, Maryland, 2002. This history of the 1st U.S.C.T., credited to the District of Columbia contains roster on pp. 228-259 listing more than 300 men born in Maryland. Similarly, Robert Beecham, in his memoir, As If It Were Glory, Lanham, Maryland, 1998, p. 166, says of the 23rd U.S.C.T. that "the 23rd was made up of men mostly from Washington and Baltimore" though the regiment was credited to the state of Virginia.
  53. ^ The War of the Rebellion, Series III, Volume 4, pp. 69-70.
  54. ^ William A. Dobak, Freedom by the Sword, Skyhorse Publishing, 2013
  55. ^ Helsel, David S., p.19, Spring Grove State Hospital Retrieved February 26, 2010
  56. ^ Mitchell, Charles W., p.285, Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26, 2010
  57. ^ a b Andrews, p.531
  58. ^ Goldsborough, J. J., p.58, The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army Retrieved May 13, 2010
  59. ^ Goldsborough, W.W., Introduction, The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army, Butternut Press, Maryland (1983)
  60. ^ Loewen, James W. (July 1, 2015). "Why do people believe myths about the Confederacy? Because our textbooks and monuments are wrong. False history marginalizes African Americans and makes us all dumber". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 10, 2016. Confederate cavalry leader Jubal Early demanded and got $300,000 from them lest he burn their town, a sum equal to at least $5,000,000 today.
  61. ^ "Hagerstown Herald and Torch Light". Western Maryland Historical Library. July 20, 1864. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  62. ^ a b c Andrews, p.541
  63. ^ Andrews, p.539
  64. ^ McPherson, p. 109.
  65. ^ Andrews, p.542
  66. ^ Davis, p.313 Retrieved January 2013
  67. ^ Gallagher, p.vii Retrieved January 2013
  68. ^ Tagg, p.273
  69. ^ Goldsborough, p.98.
  70. ^ Point Lookout History, Maryland Department of Natural Resources Retrieved August 2012
  71. ^ Gillipsie, p.179 Retrieved January 2013
  72. ^ Arnett, p.81 Retrieved January 2013
  73. ^ Andrews, p.527
  74. ^ a b Andrews, p.553
  75. ^ a b c Andrews, p.554
  76. ^ "Diary Entry of John Wilkes Booth".
  77. ^ Diary Entry of John Wilkes Booth 2010-12-29 at the Wayback Machine
  78. ^ "TimesMachine April 15, 1865 - New York Times". The New York Times.
  79. ^ Swanson, James. Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. Harper Collins, 2006. ISBN 978-0-06-051849-3
  80. ^ "The murderer of Mr. Lincoln" (PDF). The New York Times. April 21, 1865.
  81. ^ "Lee-Jackson Memorial" Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Retrieved May 2013
  82. ^ Welsh, Sean; Campbell, Colin (August 16, 2017). "Confederate monuments taken down in Baltimore overnight". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  83. ^ Maryland Historical Society Retrieved January 2013
  84. ^ www.waymarking.com Rockville Civil War Monument - Rockville, Maryland. Retrieved August 2012
  85. ^ Campbell, Colin (May 16, 2016). "As Confederate symbols come down, 'Talbot Boys' endures". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  86. ^ a b Andrews, p.563

Further reading edit

  • Baker, Jean H. The Politics of Continuity: Maryland Political Parties from 1858 to 1870 (Johns Hopkins UP, 1973) online.
  • Brugger, Robert J, et al. Maryland, a middle temperament, 1634-1980 Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988), scholarly history of the state.
  • Cannon, Jessica Ann. "Lincoln's divided backyard: Maryland in the Civil War era" (PhD dissertation, Rice University, 2010) online.
  • Crittenden, Amy Gray. "Southern sympathies: The Civil War on Maryland's eastern shore" (Thesis. Salisbury University, 1991) online.
  • Davis, James A. Maryland, My Maryland: Music and Patriotism during the American Civil War (U of Nebraska Press, 2019).
  • Duncan, Richard Ray. "The social and economic impact of the Civil War on Maryland" (PhD dissertation, The Ohio State University, 1963) (ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1963. 6306239).
  • Fields, Barbara. Slavery and Freedom on the Middle Ground: Maryland During the Nineteenth Century (Yale UP, 1987).
  • Floyd, Claudia. Maryland Women in the Civil War: Unionists, Rebels, Slaves & Spies (Arcadia Publishing, 2014).
  • González, Felipe, Guillermo Marshall, and Suresh Naidu. "Start-up nation? Slave wealth and entrepreneurship in Civil War Maryland." Journal of Economic History 77.2 (2017): 373–405. online
  • Manakee, Harold. Maryland in the Civil War (1961), broad survey.
  • Mills, Eric. Chesapeake Bay in the Civil War (1996)
  • Myers, William S. The Self Reconstruction of Maryland, 1864-1867 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1909). [1]
  • Radcliffe, George L. P. Governor Thomas H. Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1901). online
  • Schearer, Michael. "The Lincoln Administration and Freedom of the Press in Civil War Maryland." (2021) online
  • Schoeberlein, Robert W. "'A Record of Heroism': Baltimore’s Unionist Women in the Civil War" Maryland Historical Magazine 109#2 (2014), 189–201.
  • Scharf, J. Thomas. History of Baltimore City and County: From the Earliest Period to the Present Day (1881). online
  • Toomey, Daniel Carroll. The Civil War in Maryland (1983) online
  • Wagandt, Charles Lewis. The Mighty Revolution: Negro Emancipation in Maryland, 1862-1864 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1964).

Historiography and memory edit

  • Bell, Richard, et al. The Civil War in Maryland Reconsidered (LSU Press, 2021). excerpt; good place to start
  • Miller, Richard F. ed. States at War, Volume 4: A Reference Guide for Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey in the Civil War (2015) excerpt 890pp.
  • Soderberg, Susan Cooke. Lest we forget: a guide to Civil War monuments in Maryland (1995) online

Primary sources edit

  • Mitchell, Charles W., ed. Maryland Voices of the Civil War (JHU Press, 2007) excerpt.

External links edit

  • National Park Service map of Civil War sites in Maryland
  • Maryland Military Historical Society
  • American Civil War: Maryland Resources

maryland, american, civil, also, american, civil, origins, american, civil, heart, civil, heritage, area, during, american, civil, 1861, 1865, maryland, slave, state, border, states, straddling, south, north, despite, some, popular, support, cause, confederate. See also American Civil War Origins of the American Civil War and Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area During the American Civil War 1861 1865 Maryland a slave state was one of the border states straddling the South and North Despite some popular support for the cause of the Confederate States of America Maryland did not secede during the Civil War Governor Thomas H Hicks despite his early sympathies for the South helped prevent the state from seceding Seal of Maryland during the warBecause the state bordered the District of Columbia and the opposing factions within the state strongly desired to sway public opinion towards their respective causes Maryland played an important role in the war The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln 1861 1865 suspended the constitutional right of habeas corpus from Washington to Philadelphia Lincoln ignored the ruling of Chief Justice Roger B Taney in Ex parte Merryman decision in 1861 concerning freeing John Merryman a prominent Southern sympathizer arrested by the military The first fatalities of the war happened during the Baltimore riot of 1861 on April 18 19 The single bloodiest day of combat in American military history occurred during the first major Confederate invasion of the North in the Maryland Campaign just north above the Potomac River near Sharpsburg in Washington County at the Battle of Antietam on September 17 1862 The battle of Antietam though tactically a draw was strategically enough of a Union victory to give Lincoln the opportunity to issue in September 1862 the Emancipation Proclamation It did not affect Maryland In July 1864 the Battle of Monocacy was fought near Frederick Maryland as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864 Monocacy was a tactical victory for the Confederate States Army but a strategic defeat as the one day delay inflicted on the attacking Confederates cost rebel General Jubal Early his chance to capture the Union capital of Washington D C Across the state some 50 000 citizens signed up for the military with most joining the United States Army Approximately a tenth as many enlisted to go South and fight for the Confederacy Abolition of slavery in Maryland came before the end of the war with a new third constitution voted approval in 1864 by a small majority of Radical Republican Unionists then controlling the nominally Democratic state Contents 1 The approach of War 1 1 Maryland s sympathies 1 2 Baltimore Riot of 1861 1 3 To secede or not to secede 1 4 Imposition of martial law 1 5 Marylanders fought both for the Union and the Confederacy 1 6 A state divided 2 Civil War 2 1 Battle of Front Royal 2 2 Bloody Antietam 2 3 March to Gettysburg 2 4 Battle of Monocacy 3 Prisoners of war 4 Slavery and emancipation 4 1 Constitution of 1864 and the abolition of slavery 5 Assassination of President Lincoln 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Notes 10 Further reading 10 1 Historiography and memory 10 2 Primary sources 11 External linksThe approach of War editMaryland s sympathies edit nbsp 8th Massachusetts regiment repairing railroad bridges from Annapolis to Washington Maryland as a slave holding border state was deeply divided over the antebellum arguments over states rights and the future of slavery in the Union 1 Culturally geographically and economically Maryland found herself neither one thing nor another a unique blend of Southern agrarianism and Northern mercantilism 1 In the leadup to the American Civil War it became clear that the state was bitterly divided in its sympathies There was much less appetite for secession than elsewhere in the Southern States South Carolina Mississippi Florida Georgia Alabama Louisiana Texas Virginia North Carolina Arkansas Tennessee or in the border Southern states Kentucky and Missouri of the Upper South 2 but Maryland was equally unsympathetic towards the potentially abolitionist position of Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln In the presidential election of 1860 Lincoln won just 2 294 votes out of a total of 92 421 only 2 5 of the votes cast coming in at a distant fourth place with Southern Democrat and later Confederate general John C Breckinridge winning the state 3 4 In seven counties Lincoln received not a single vote 1 The areas of Southern and Eastern Shore Maryland especially those on the Chesapeake Bay which neighbored Virginia which had prospered on the tobacco trade and slave labor were generally sympathetic to the South while the central and western areas of the state especially Marylanders of German origin 5 had stronger economic ties to the North and thus were pro Union 6 Not all blacks in Maryland were slaves The 1860 Federal Census 7 showed there were nearly as many free blacks 83 942 as slaves 87 189 in Maryland although the latter were much more dominant in southern counties However across the state sympathies were mixed Many Marylanders were simply pragmatic recognizing that the state s long border with the Union state of Pennsylvania would be almost impossible to defend in the event of war Maryland businessmen feared the likely loss of trade that would be caused by war and the strong possibility of a blockade of Baltimore s port by the Union Navy 8 Other residents and a majority of the legislature wished to remain in the Union but did not want to be involved in a war against their southern neighbors and sought to prevent a military response by Lincoln to the South s secession 9 After John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859 many citizens began forming local militias determined to prevent a future slave uprising citation needed Baltimore Riot of 1861 edit Main article Baltimore riot of 1861 nbsp The Baltimore Riot of April 1861 nbsp Governor Thomas HicksThe first bloodshed of the Civil War occurred in Maryland Anxious about the risk of secessionists capturing Washington D C given that the capital was bordered by Virginia and preparing for war with the South the federal government requested armed volunteers to suppress unlawful combinations in the South 10 Soldiers from Pennsylvania and Massachusetts were transported by rail to Baltimore where they had to disembark march through the city and board another train to continue their journey south to Washington 11 As one Massachusetts regiment was transferred between stations on April 19 a mob of Marylanders sympathizing with the South or objecting to the use of federal troops against the seceding states attacked the train cars and blocked the route some began throwing cobblestones and bricks at the troops assaulting them with shouts and stones 12 Panicked by the situation several soldiers fired into the mob whether accidentally in a desultory manner or by the command of the officers is unclear 12 Chaos ensued as a giant brawl began between fleeing soldiers the violent mob and the Baltimore police who tried to suppress the violence Four soldiers and twelve civilians were killed in the riot The disorder inspired James Ryder Randall a Marylander living in Louisiana to write a poem which would be put to music and in 1939 become the state song Maryland My Maryland it remained the official state song until March 2021 The song s lyrics urged Marylanders to spurn the Northern scum and burst the tyrant s chain in other words to secede from the Union Confederate States Army bands would later play the song after they crossed into Maryland territory during the Maryland Campaign in 1862 13 After the April 19 rioting skirmishes continued in Baltimore for the next month Mayor George William Brown and Maryland Governor Thomas Hicks implored President Lincoln to reroute troops around Baltimore city and through Annapolis to avoid further confrontations 14 In a letter to President Lincoln Mayor Brown wrote It is my solemn duty to inform you that it is not possible for more soldiers to pass through Baltimore unless they fight their way at every step I therefore hope and trust and most earnestly request that no more troops be permitted or ordered by the Government to pass through the city If they should attempt it the responsibility for the bloodshed will not rest upon me 14 Hearing no immediate reply from Washington on the evening of April 19 Governor Hicks and Mayor Brown ordered the destruction of railroad bridges leading into the city from the North preventing further incursions by Union soldiers The destruction was accomplished the next day 15 One of the men involved in this destruction would be arrested for it in May without recourse to habeas corpus leading to the ex parte Merryman ruling For a time it looked as if Maryland was one provocation away from joining the rebels but Lincoln moved swiftly to defuse the situation promising that the troops were needed purely to defend Washington not to attack the South 16 President Lincoln also complied with the request to reroute troops to Annapolis as the political situation in Baltimore remained highly volatile Meanwhile General Winfield Scott who was in charge of military operations in Maryland indicated in correspondence with the head of Pennsylvania troops that the route through Baltimore would resume once sufficient troops were available to secure Baltimore 17 To secede or not to secede edit Despite some popular support for the cause of the Confederate States of America Maryland did not secede during the Civil War However a number of leading citizens including physician and slaveholder Richard Sprigg Steuart placed considerable pressure on Governor Hicks to summon the state Legislature to vote on secession following Hicks to Annapolis with a number of fellow citizens to insist on his Hicks issuing his proclamation for the Legislature to convene believing that this body and not himself and his party should decide the fate of our state if the Governor and his party continued to refuse this demand that it would be necessary to depose him 18 Responding to pressure on April 22 Governor Hicks finally announced that the state legislature would meet in a special session in Frederick a strongly pro Union town rather than the state capital of Annapolis The Maryland General Assembly convened in Frederick and unanimously adopted a measure stating that they would not commit the state to secession explaining that they had no constitutional authority to take such action 19 whatever their own personal feelings might have been 20 On April 29 the Legislature voted decisively 53 13 against secession 21 22 though they also voted not to reopen rail links with the North and they requested that Lincoln remove Union troops from Maryland 23 At this time the legislature seems to have wanted to avoid involvement in a war against its southern neighbors 24 Imposition of martial law edit nbsp Cannon on Federal Hill aimed at downtown BaltimoreOn May 13 1861 General Benjamin F Butler entered Baltimore by rail with 1 000 Federal soldiers and under cover of a thunderstorm quietly took possession of Federal Hill 8 Butler fortified his position and trained his guns upon the city threatening its destruction 25 Butler then sent a letter to the commander of Fort McHenry I have taken possession of Baltimore My troops are on Federal Hill which I can hold with the aid of my artillery If I am attacked to night please open upon Monument Square with your mortars 26 Butler went on to occupy Baltimore and declared martial law ostensibly to prevent secession although Maryland had voted solidly 53 13 against secession two weeks earlier 27 but more immediately to allow war to be made on the South without hindrance from the state of Maryland 25 which had also voted to close its rail lines to Northern troops so as to avoid involvement in a war against its southern neighbors 28 By May 21 there was no need to send further troops 25 After the occupation of the city Union troops were garrisoned throughout the state By late summer Maryland was firmly in the hands of Union soldiers Arrests of Confederate sympathizers and those critical of Lincoln and the war soon followed and Steuart s brother the militia general George H Steuart fled to Charlottesville Virginia after which much of his family s property was confiscated by the Federal Government 29 Civil authority in Baltimore was swiftly withdrawn from all those who had not been steadfastly in favor of the Federal Government s emergency measures 30 During this period in spring 1861 Baltimore Mayor Brown 31 the city council the police commissioner and the entire Board of Police were arrested and imprisoned at Fort McHenry without charges 3 32 One of those arrested was militia captain John Merryman who was held without trial in defiance of a writ of habeas corpus on May 25 sparking the case of Ex parte Merryman heard just 2 days later on May 27 and 28 In this case U S Supreme Court Chief Justice and native Marylander Roger B Taney acting as a federal circuit court judge ruled that the arrest of Merryman was unconstitutional without Congressional authorization which Lincoln could not then secure The President under the Constitution and laws of the United States cannot suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus nor authorize any military officer to do so 33 The Merryman decision created a sensation but its immediate impact was rather limited as the president simply ignored the ruling 34 Indeed when Lincoln s dismissal of Chief Justice Taney s ruling was criticized in a September 1861 editorial by Baltimore newspaper editor Frank Key Howard Francis Scott Key s grandson Howard was himself arrested by order of Lincoln s Secretary of State Seward and held without trial Howard described these events in his 1863 book Fourteen Months in American Bastiles where he noted that he was imprisoned in Fort McHenry the same fort where the Star Spangled Banner had been waving o er the land of the free in his grandfather s song 35 Two of the publishers selling his book were then arrested 3 In all nine newspapers were shut down in Maryland by the federal government and a dozen newspaper owners and editors like Howard were imprisoned without charges 3 On September 17 1861 the first day of the Maryland legislature s new session fully one third of the members of the Maryland General Assembly were arrested due to federal concerns that the Assembly would aid the anticipated rebel invasion and would attempt to take the state out of the Union 36 Although previous secession votes in spring 1861 had failed by large margins 22 there were legitimate concerns that the war averse Assembly would further impede the federal government s use of Maryland infrastructure to wage war on the South One month later in October 1861 one John Murphy asked the United States Circuit Court for the District of Columbia to issue a writ of habeas corpus for his son then in the United States Army on the grounds that he was underage When the writ was delivered to General Andrew Porter Provost Marshal of the District of Columbia he had both the lawyer delivering the writ and the United States Circuit Judge Marylander William Matthew Merrick who issued the writ arrested to prevent them from proceeding in the case United States ex rel Murphy v Porter Merrick s fellow judges took up the case and ordered General Porter to appear before them but Lincoln s Secretary of State Seward prevented the federal marshal from delivering the court order 37 The court objected that this disruption of its process was unconstitutional but noted that it was powerless to enforce its prerogatives 38 39 The following month in November 1861 Judge Richard Bennett Carmichael a presiding state circuit court judge in Maryland was imprisoned without charge for releasing due to his concern that arrests were arbitrary and civil liberties had been violated many of the southern sympathizers seized in his jurisdiction The order came again from Lincoln s Secretary of State Seward The federal troops executing Judge Carmichael s arrest beat him unconscious in his courthouse while his court was in session before dragging him out initiating a public controversy 40 In another controversial arrest that fall and in further defiance of Chief Justice Taney s ruling a sitting U S Congressman Henry May D Maryland was imprisoned without charge and without recourse to habeas corpus in Fort Lafayette 41 42 May was eventually released and returned to his seat in Congress in December 1861 and in March 1862 he introduced a bill to Congress requiring the federal government to either indict by grand jury or release all other political prisoners still held without habeas 43 The provisions of May s bill were included in the March 1863 Habeas Corpus Act in which Congress finally authorized Lincoln to suspend habeas corpus but required actual indictments for suspected traitors 44 Marylanders fought both for the Union and the Confederacy edit Main article 2nd Maryland Infantry Regiment Union Main article Maryland Line CSA nbsp Arnold Elzey colonel of the 1st Maryland Infantry CSA promoted by Confederate President Jefferson Davis to brigadier general after the First Battle of Manassas Although Maryland stayed as part of the Union and more Marylanders fought for the Union than for the Confederacy Marylanders sympathetic to the secession easily crossed the Potomac River into secessionist Virginia in order to join and fight for the Confederacy During the early summer of 1861 several thousand Marylanders crossed the Potomac to join the Confederate Army Most of the men enlisted into regiments from Virginia or the Carolinas but six companies of Marylanders formed at Harpers Ferry into the Maryland Battalion 45 Among them were members of the former volunteer militia unit the Maryland Guard Battalion initially formed in Baltimore in 1859 46 Maryland Exiles including Arnold Elzey and brigadier general George H Steuart would organize a Maryland Line in the Army of Northern Virginia which eventually consisted of one infantry regiment one infantry battalion two cavalry battalions and four battalions of artillery citation needed Most of these volunteers tended to hail from southern and eastern counties of the state while northern and western Maryland furnished more volunteers for the Union armies 47 Captain Bradley T Johnson refused the offer of the Virginians to join a Virginia Regiment insisting that Maryland should be represented independently in the Confederate army 45 It was agreed that Arnold Elzey a seasoned career officer from Maryland would command the 1st Maryland Regiment His executive officer was the Marylander George H Steuart who would later be known as Maryland Steuart to distinguish him from his more famous cavalry colleague J E B Stuart 45 The 1st Maryland Infantry Regiment was officially formed on June 16 1861 and on June 25 two additional companies joined the regiment in Winchester 45 Its initial term of duty was for twelve months 48 It has been estimated that of the state s 1860 population of 687 000 about 4 000 Marylanders traveled south to fight for the Confederacy While the number of Marylanders in Confederate service is often reported as 20 25 000 based on an oral statement of General Cooper to General Trimble other contemporary reports refute this number and offer more detailed estimates in the range of 3 500 Livermore 49 to just under 4 700 McKim 50 which latter number should be further reduced given that the 2nd Maryland Infantry raised in 1862 consisted largely of the same men who had served in the 1st Maryland which mustered out after a year While other men born in Maryland may have served in other Confederate formations the same is true of units in the service of the United States The 1860 Census reported the chief destinations of internal immigrants from Maryland as Ohio and Pennsylvania followed by Virginia and the District of Columbia 51 A similar situation existed in relation to Marylanders serving in the United States Colored Troops Indeed on the whole there appear to have been twice as many black Marylanders serving in the U S C T as white Marylanders in the Confederate army 52 Overall the Official Records of the War Department credits Maryland with 33 995 white enlistments in volunteer regiments of the United States Army and 8 718 African American enlistments in the United States Colored Troops A further 3 925 Marylanders not differentiated by race served as sailors or marines 53 One notable Maryland front line regiment was the 2nd Maryland Infantry which saw considerable combat action in the Union IX Corps Another was the 4th United States Colored Troops whose Sergeant Major Christian Fleetwood was awarded the Medal of Honor for rallying the regiment and saving its colors in the successful assault on New Market Heights 54 A state divided edit Not all those who sympathised with the rebels would abandon their homes and join the Confederacy Some like physician Richard Sprigg Steuart remained in Maryland offered covert support for the South and refused to sign an oath of loyalty to the Union 55 Later in 1861 Baltimore resident W W Glenn described Steuart as a fugitive from the authorities I was spending the evening out when a footstep approached my chair from behind and a hand was laid upon me I turned and saw Dr R S Steuart He has been concealed for more than six months His neighbors are so bitter against him that he dare not go home and he committed himself so decidedly on the 19th April and is known to be so decided a Southerner that it more than likely he would be thrown into a Fort He goes about from place to place sometimes staying in one county sometimes in another and then passing a few days in the city He never shows in the day time amp is cautious who sees him at any time 56 Civil War editSee also Eastern Theater of the American Civil War and Maryland campaign Battle of Front Royal edit nbsp Crossing the Potomac into Maryland on 6th September 1862Main article Battle of Front Royal Because Maryland s sympathies were divided many Marylanders would fight one another during the conflict On May 23 1862 at the Battle of Front Royal the 1st Maryland Infantry CSA was thrown into battle with their fellow Marylanders the Union 1st Regiment Maryland Volunteer Infantry 45 This is the only time in United States military history that two regiments of the same numerical designation and from the same state have engaged each other in battle 57 After hours of desperate fighting the Southerners emerged victorious despite an inferiority both of numbers and equipment 57 When the prisoners were taken many men recognized former friends and family Major William Goldsborough whose memoir The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army chronicled the story of the rebel Marylanders wrote of the battle nearly all recognized old friends and acquaintances whom they greeted cordially and divided with them the rations which had just changed hands 58 Among the prisoners captured by William Goldsborough was his own brother Charles Goldsborough 59 On 6 September 1862 advancing Confederate soldiers entered Frederick Maryland the home of Colonel Bradley T Johnson who issued a proclamation calling upon his fellow Marylanders to join his colors Disappointingly for the exiles recruits did not flock to the Confederate banner Whether this was due to local sympathy with the Union cause or the generally ragged state of the Confederate army many of whom had no shoes is not clear 5 Frederick would later be extorted by Jubal Early who threatened to burn down the city if its residents did not pay a ransom 60 Hagerstown too would also suffer a similar fate 61 Bloody Antietam edit Main article Battle of Antietam nbsp Battle of Antietam by Kurz and Allison nbsp Confederate dead at Antietam One of the bloodiest battles fought in the Civil war and one of the most significant was the Battle of Antietam fought on September 17 1862 near Sharpsburg Maryland in which Marylanders fought with distinction for both armies 62 The battle was the culmination of Robert E Lee s Maryland Campaign which aimed to take the war to the North Lee s Army of Northern Virginia consisting of about 40 000 men had entered Maryland following their recent victory at Second Bull Run 63 While Major General George B McClellan s 87 000 man Army of the Potomac was moving to intercept Lee a Union soldier discovered a mislaid copy of the detailed battle plans of Lee s army on Sunday 14 September 62 The order indicated that Lee had divided his army and dispersed portions geographically to Harpers Ferry West Virginia and Hagerstown Maryland thus making each subject to isolation and defeat in detail if McClellan could move quickly enough 62 However McClellan waited about 18 hours before deciding to take advantage of this intelligence and position his forces based on it thus endangering a golden opportunity to defeat Lee decisively 64 The armies met near the town of Sharpsburg by the Antietam Creek Losses were extremely heavy on both sides The Union suffered 12 401 casualties with 2 108 dead Confederate casualties were 10 318 with 1 546 dead This represented 25 of the Federal force and 31 of the Confederate More Americans died in battle on September 17 1862 than on any other day in the nation s military history The Confederate General A P Hill described the most terrible slaughter that this war has yet witnessed The broad surface of the Potomac was blue with floating bodies of our foe But few escaped to tell the tale 65 Although tactically inconclusive the Battle of Antietam is considered a strategic Union victory and an important turning point of the war because it forced the end of Lee s invasion of the North and it allowed President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation taking effect on January 1 1863 Lincoln had wished to issue his proclamation earlier but needed a military victory in order for his proclamation not to become self defeating As Lincoln himself stated five days before the battle What good would a proclamation from me do I don t want to issue a document the whole world will see must be inoperative like the Pope s Bull against a comet 66 Lee s setback at the Battle of Antietam can also be seen as a turning point in that it may have dissuaded the governments of France and Great Britain from recognizing the Confederacy doubting the South s ability to maintain and win the war 67 March to Gettysburg edit nbsp The Confederate 2nd Maryland infantry charge Union lines at GettysburgIn June 1863 General Lee s army again advanced north into Maryland taking the war into Union territory for the second time Maryland exile George H Steuart leading the 2nd Maryland Infantry regiment is said to have jumped down from his horse kissed his native soil and stood on his head in jubilation According to one of his aides We loved Maryland we felt that she was in bondage against her will and we burned with desire to have a part in liberating her 68 Quartermaster John Howard recalled that Steuart performed seventeen double somersaults all the while whistling Maryland My Maryland 69 Such celebrations would prove short lived as Steuart s brigade was soon to be severely damaged at the Battle of Gettysburg July 1 3 1863 a turning point in the war and a reverse from which the Confederate army would never recover Battle of Monocacy edit In 1864 elements of the warring armies again met in Maryland although this time the scope and size of the battle was much smaller The Battle of Monocacy was fought on July 9 just outside Frederick as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864 Confederate forces under Lt Gen Jubal A Early defeated Union troops under Maj Gen Lew Wallace The battle was part of Early s raid through the Shenandoah Valley and into Maryland attempting to divert Union forces away from Gen Robert E Lee s army under siege at Petersburg Virginia However Wallace delayed Early for nearly a full day buying enough time for Ulysses S Grant to send reinforcements from the Army of the Potomac to the Washington defenses citation needed Prisoners of war editThousands of Union troops were stationed in Charles County and the Federal Government established a large unsheltered prison camp at Point Lookout at Maryland s southern tip in St Mary s County between the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay where thousands of Confederates were kept often in harsh conditions Of the 50 000 Southern soldiers held in the army prison camp who were housed in tents at the Point between 1863 and 1865 according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Maryland Park Service nearly 4 000 died although this death rate of 8 percent was less than half the death rate among soldiers who were still fighting in the field with their own armies 70 The harshness of conditions at Point Lookout and in particular whether such conditions formed part of a deliberate policy of vindictive directives from Washington is a matter of some debate 71 The state capital Annapolis s western suburb of Parole became a camp where prisoners of war would await formal exchange in the early years of the war Around 70 000 soldiers passed through Camp Parole until Lt Gen Ulysses S Grant assumed command as General in Chief of the Union Army in 1864 and ended the system of prisoner exchanges 72 Slavery and emancipation editFurther information History of slavery in Maryland Those who voted for Maryland to remain in the Union did not explicitly seek for the emancipation of Maryland s many enslaved people or indeed those of the Confederacy In March 1862 the Maryland Assembly passed a series of resolutions stating that This war is prosecuted by the Nation with but one object that namely of a restoration of the Union just as it was when the rebellion broke out The rebellious States are to be brought back to their places in the Union without change or diminution of their constitutional rights 73 In other words the Assembly members could only agree to state that the war was being fought over the issue of secession Because Maryland had not seceded from the United States the state was not included under the Emancipation Proclamation of January 1 1863 which declared that all enslaved people within the Confederacy would henceforth be free In 1864 before the end of the War a constitutional convention outlawed slavery in Maryland Constitution of 1864 and the abolition of slavery edit The issue of slavery was finally confronted by the constitution which the state adopted in 1864 The document which replaced the Maryland Constitution of 1851 was largely advocated by Unionists who had secured control of the state and was framed by a Convention which met at Annapolis in April 1864 74 Article 24 of the constitution at last outlawed the practice of slavery One feature of the new constitution was a highly restrictive oath of allegiance which was designed to reduce the influence of Southern sympathizers and to prevent such individuals from holding public office of any kind 74 The new constitution emancipated the state s slaves who had not been freed by President Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation disenfranchised southern sympathizers and re apportioned the General Assembly based upon white inhabitants citation needed This last provision diminished the power of the small counties where the majority of the state s large former slave population lived The constitution was submitted to the people for ratification on October 13 1864 and it was narrowly approved by a vote of 30 174 to 29 799 50 31 to 49 69 in a vote likely overshadowed by the heavy presence of Union troops in the state and the repression of Confederate sympathizers 75 Those voting at their usual polling places were opposed to the Constitution by 29 536 to 27 541 citation needed However the constitution secured ratification once the votes of Union army soldiers from Maryland were included 75 The Marylanders serving in the Union Army were overwhelmingly in favor of the new Constitution supporting ratification by a margin of 2 633 to 263 75 The new constitution came into effect on November 1 1864 making Maryland the first Union slave state to abolish slavery since the beginning of the war While it emancipated the state s slaves it did not mean equality for them in part because the franchise continued to be restricted to white males The abolition of slavery in Maryland preceded the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution outlawing slavery throughout the United States and did not come into effect until December 6 1865 Maryland had ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on February 3 1865 within three days of it being submitted to the states Emancipation did not immediately bring citizenship for former slaves The Maryland legislature refused to ratify both the 14th Amendment which conferred citizenship rights on former slaves and the 15th Amendment which gave the vote to African Americans citation needed The right to vote was eventually extended to non white males in the Maryland Constitution of 1867 which remains in effect today The Constitution of 1867 overturned the registry test oath embedded in the 1864 constitution Assassination of President Lincoln edit nbsp Marylander John Wilkes Booth assassinates President LincolnThe issue of slavery may have been settled by the new constitution and the legality of secession by the war but this did not end the debate On April 14 1865 the actor John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Abraham Lincoln at Ford s Theatre in Washington D C After he shot Lincoln Booth shouted Sic semper tyrannis Thus always to tyrants 76 Other witnesses including Booth himself claimed that he only yelled Sic semper 77 78 Some didn t recall hearing Booth shout anything in Latin Some witnesses said he shouted The South is avenged 79 48 Others thought they heard him say Revenge for the South or The South shall be free Two said Booth yelled I have done it After shooting the President Booth galloped on his horse into Southern Maryland where he was sheltered and helped by sympathetic residents and smuggled at night across the Potomac River into Virginia a week later In a letter explaining his actions Booth wrote I have ever held the South was right The very nomination of Abraham Lincoln four years ago spoke plainly war upon Southern rights and institutions And looking upon African Slavery from the same stand point held by the noble framers of our constitution I for one have ever considered it one of the greatest blessings both for themselves and us that God has ever bestowed upon a favored nation I have also studied hard to discover upon what grounds the right of a State to secede has been denied when our very name United States and the Declaration of Independence both provide for secession 80 Legacy editMost Marylanders fought for the Union but after the war a number of memorials were erected in sympathy with the Lost Cause of the Confederacy including in Baltimore a Confederate Women s Monument and a Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument Baltimore boasted a monument to Robert E Lee and Stonewall Jackson 81 until they were taken down on August 16 2017 after the Unite the Right rally 82 A home for retired Confederate soldiers in Pikesville Maryland opened in 1888 and did not close until 1932 A brochure published by the home in the 1890s described it as a haven of rest to which they may retire and find refuge and at the same time lose none of their self respect nor suffer in the estimation of those whose experience in life is more fortunate 83 There formerly was a Confederate monument behind the courthouse in Rockville Maryland dedicated to the thin grey line 84 Easton Maryland also has a Confederate monument 85 Maryland has three chapters of the Sons of Confederate Veterans War produced a legacy of bitter resentment in politics with the Democrats being identified with treason and rebellion a point much pressed home by their opponents 86 Democrats therefore re branded themselves the Democratic Conservative Party and Republicans called themselves the Union party in an attempt to distance themselves from their most radical elements during the war 86 The legacies of the debate over Lincoln s heavy handed actions that were meant to keep Maryland within the union include measures such as arresting one third of the Maryland General Assembly which was controversially ruled unconstitutional at the time by Maryland native Justice Roger Taney and in the lyrics of the former Maryland state song Maryland My Maryland which referred to Lincoln as a despot a vandal and a tyrant See also edit nbsp American Civil War portalHistory of slavery in Maryland History of the Maryland Militia in the Civil War List of Maryland Union Civil War units List of Maryland Confederate Civil War units Maryland Line CSA References editAndrews Matthew Page History of Maryland Doubleday New York 1929 Arnett Robert J et al Maryland A New Guide to the Old Line State The Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 Davis David Brion Inhuman Bondage The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World Retrieved January 2013 Curry Denis C Native Maryland 9000 B C 1600 A D 2001 Retrieved August 2012 Gallagher Gary W Antietam Essays on the 1862 Maryland Campaign Kent State University Press 31 Dec 1992 Retrieved January 2013 Gillipsie James M Andersonvilles Of The North The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners University of North Texas Press 2011 Retrieved January 2013 Goldsborough W W The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army Guggenheimer Weil amp Co 1900 ISBN 0 913419 00 1 Harris William C 2011 Lincoln and the Border States Preserving the Union University Press of Kansas Hein David editor Religion and Politics in Maryland on the Eve of the Civil War The Letters of W Wilkins Davis 1988 Rev ed Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock 2009 Maryland State Archives 16 Sept 2004 Historical Chronology Retrieved August 2012 McPherson James M 2002 Crossroads of Freedom Antietam The Battle That Changed the Course of the Civil War New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513521 0 Mitchell Charles W Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved August 2012 Scharf J Thomas 1967 reissue of 1879 ed History of Maryland From the Earliest Period to the Present Day 3 Hatboro PA Tradition Press Scharf J Thomas History of Western Maryland Being a History of Frederick Montgomery Carroll Washington Allegany and Garrett Counties 1882 Retrieved November 2012 Tagg Larry The Generals of Gettysburg Savas Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 882810 30 9 Whitman H Ridgway Maryland Humanities Council 2001 Maryland in the Nineteenth Century Retrieved August 2012Notes edit a b c Mitchell Charles ed Maryland Voices of the Civil War p 3 Andrews p506 a b c d Schoettler Carl November 27 2001 A time liberties weren t priority The Baltimore Sun Retrieved August 16 2017 Andrews p 505 a b Andrews p 539 Field Ron et al p 33 The Confederate Army 1861 65 Missouri Kentucky amp Maryland Osprey Publishing 2008 Retrieved August 2012 1860 Census Information U S Census Bureau a b Mitchell p 12 Retrieved November 2012 Teaching American History in Maryland Documents for the Classroom Arrest of the Maryland Legislature 1861 Maryland State Archives 2005 Archived from the original on January 11 2008 Retrieved February 6 2008 Andrews p 511 Andrews p 512 a b Andrews p 514 Scharf J Thomas 1967 1879 History of Maryland From the Earliest Period to the Present Day 3 Hatboro PA Tradition Press 494 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Andrews p 517 Harris 2011 pp 46 47 Andrews p 518 Harris 2011 pp 51 52 Harris states that Lincoln may or may not have been aware of this communication Mitchell p 71 Scharf p 202 Retrieved November 2012 Andrews p 520 Mitchell p 87 a b Radcliffe George Lovic Pierce Governor Thomas H Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War The Johns Hopkins Press Nov Dec 1901 pp 73 74 Teaching American History in Maryland Documents for the Classroom Arrest of the Maryland Legislature 1861 Maryland State Archives 2005 Archived from the original on January 11 2008 Retrieved February 6 2008 Teaching American History in Maryland Documents for the Classroom Arrest of the Maryland Legislature 1861 Maryland State Archives 2005 Archived from the original on January 11 2008 Retrieved February 6 2008 a b c Andrews p 521 Maryland Historical Society Retrieved February 2013 States Which Seceded eHistory Civil War Articles Ohio State University Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 16 2014 Teaching American History in Maryland Documents for the Classroom Arrest of the Maryland Legislature 1861 Maryland State Archives 2005 Archived from the original on January 11 2008 Retrieved February 6 2008 Brugger Robert J Maryland A Middle Temperament 1634 1980 p 280 Retrieved Feb 28 2010 Andrews p 524 Mitchell p 207 Mitchell p 291 Retrieved November 2012 Andrews p 523 Andrews p 522 Howard F K Frank Key 1863 Fourteen Months in American Bastiles London H F Mackintosh Retrieved August 18 2014 William C Harris Lincoln and the Border States Preserving the Union University Press of Kansas 2011 pp 71 Inside Lincoln s White House The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay p 28 SIU Press Michael Burlingame and John R Turner Ettlinger eds 1999 12 Stat 762 History of the Federal Judiciary Circuit Court of the District of Columbia Legislative History Federal Judicial Center Retrieved July 12 2011 Scharf J Thomas Suspension of Civil Liberties in Maryland Maryland State Archives Archived from the original on May 19 2008 Retrieved May 16 2008 The Bastille in America or Democratic Absolutism London Robert Hardwicke 1861 p 12 Mitchell Charles W ed Maryland Voices of the Civil War JHU Press 2007 p 237 Jonathan White Abraham Lincoln and Treason in the Civil War The Trials of John Merryman LSU Press 2011 p 106 Jonathan White Abraham Lincoln and Treason in the Civil War The Trials of John Merryman LSU Press 2011 p 107 a b c d e 2nd Maryland Infantry CSA Retrieved August 16 2017 Field Ron et al The Confederate Army 1861 65 Missouri Kentucky amp Maryland Osprey Publishing 2008 Retrieved March 4 2010 Andrews p 543 Andrews p 544 Thomas Livermore Numbers and Losses in the Civil War Boston 1900 See chart and explanation p 550 Randolph McKim Numerical Strength of the Confederate Army New York 1912 See discussion and tabulation on pp 62 65 Of the Trimble count McKim states The estimate above alluded to of 20 000 Marylanders in the Confederate service rests apparently upon no better basis than an oral statement of General Cooper to General Trimble in which he said he believed that the muster rolls would show that about 20 000 men in the Confederate army had given the State of Maryland as the place of their nativity How many were citizens of Maryland when they enlisted does not appear Obviously many natives of Maryland were doubtless in 1861 citizens of other States and could not therefore be reckoned among the soldiers furnished by Maryland to the Confederate armies Population of the United States in 1860 G P O 1864 See Introduction p xxxiv See e g C R Gibbs Black Copper and Bright Silver Spring Maryland 2002 This history of the 1st U S C T credited to the District of Columbia contains roster on pp 228 259 listing more than 300 men born in Maryland Similarly Robert Beecham in his memoir As If It Were Glory Lanham Maryland 1998 p 166 says of the 23rd U S C T that the 23rd was made up of men mostly from Washington and Baltimore though the regiment was credited to the state of Virginia The War of the Rebellion Series III Volume 4 pp 69 70 William A Dobak Freedom by the Sword Skyhorse Publishing 2013 Helsel David S p 19 Spring Grove State Hospital Retrieved February 26 2010 Mitchell Charles W p 285 Maryland Voices of the Civil War Retrieved February 26 2010 a b Andrews p 531 Goldsborough J J p 58 The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army Retrieved May 13 2010 Goldsborough W W Introduction The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army Butternut Press Maryland 1983 Loewen James W July 1 2015 Why do people believe myths about the Confederacy Because our textbooks and monuments are wrong False history marginalizes African Americans and makes us all dumber The Washington Post Retrieved March 10 2016 Confederate cavalry leader Jubal Early demanded and got 300 000 from them lest he burn their town a sum equal to at least 5 000 000 today Hagerstown Herald and Torch Light Western Maryland Historical Library July 20 1864 Retrieved January 1 2014 a b c Andrews p 541 Andrews p 539 McPherson p 109 Andrews p 542 Davis p 313 Retrieved January 2013 Gallagher p vii Retrieved January 2013 Tagg p 273 Goldsborough p 98 Point Lookout History Maryland Department of Natural Resources Retrieved August 2012 Gillipsie p 179 Retrieved January 2013 Arnett p 81 Retrieved January 2013 Andrews p 527 a b Andrews p 553 a b c Andrews p 554 Diary Entry of John Wilkes Booth Diary Entry of John Wilkes Booth Archived 2010 12 29 at the Wayback Machine TimesMachine April 15 1865 New York Times The New York Times Swanson James Manhunt The 12 Day Chase for Lincoln s Killer Harper Collins 2006 ISBN 978 0 06 051849 3 The murderer of Mr Lincoln PDF The New York Times April 21 1865 Lee Jackson Memorial Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Retrieved May 2013 Welsh Sean Campbell Colin August 16 2017 Confederate monuments taken down in Baltimore overnight The Baltimore Sun Retrieved August 16 2017 Maryland Historical Society Retrieved January 2013 www waymarking com Rockville Civil War Monument Rockville Maryland Retrieved August 2012 Campbell Colin May 16 2016 As Confederate symbols come down Talbot Boys endures The Baltimore Sun Retrieved March 1 2017 a b Andrews p 563Further reading editBaker Jean H The Politics of Continuity Maryland Political Parties from 1858 to 1870 Johns Hopkins UP 1973 online Brugger Robert J et al Maryland a middle temperament 1634 1980 Johns Hopkins University Press 1988 scholarly history of the state Cannon Jessica Ann Lincoln s divided backyard Maryland in the Civil War era PhD dissertation Rice University 2010 online Crittenden Amy Gray Southern sympathies The Civil War on Maryland s eastern shore Thesis Salisbury University 1991 online Davis James A Maryland My Maryland Music and Patriotism during the American Civil War U of Nebraska Press 2019 Duncan Richard Ray The social and economic impact of the Civil War on Maryland PhD dissertation The Ohio State University 1963 ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1963 6306239 Fields Barbara Slavery and Freedom on the Middle Ground Maryland During the Nineteenth Century Yale UP 1987 Floyd Claudia Maryland Women in the Civil War Unionists Rebels Slaves amp Spies Arcadia Publishing 2014 Gonzalez Felipe Guillermo Marshall and Suresh Naidu Start up nation Slave wealth and entrepreneurship in Civil War Maryland Journal of Economic History 77 2 2017 373 405 online Manakee Harold Maryland in the Civil War 1961 broad survey Mills Eric Chesapeake Bay in the Civil War 1996 Myers William S The Self Reconstruction of Maryland 1864 1867 Johns Hopkins University Press 1909 1 Radcliffe George L P Governor Thomas H Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War Johns Hopkins University Press 1901 online Schearer Michael The Lincoln Administration and Freedom of the Press in Civil War Maryland 2021 online Schoeberlein Robert W A Record of Heroism Baltimore s Unionist Women in the Civil War Maryland Historical Magazine 109 2 2014 189 201 Scharf J Thomas History of Baltimore City and County From the Earliest Period to the Present Day 1881 online Toomey Daniel Carroll The Civil War in Maryland 1983 online Wagandt Charles Lewis The Mighty Revolution Negro Emancipation in Maryland 1862 1864 Johns Hopkins University Press 1964 Historiography and memory edit Bell Richard et al The Civil War in Maryland Reconsidered LSU Press 2021 excerpt good place to start Miller Richard F ed States at War Volume 4 A Reference Guide for Delaware Maryland and New Jersey in the Civil War 2015 excerpt 890pp Soderberg Susan Cooke Lest we forget a guide to Civil War monuments in Maryland 1995 onlinePrimary sources edit Mitchell Charles W ed Maryland Voices of the Civil War JHU Press 2007 excerpt External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maryland in the American Civil War National Park Service map of Civil War sites in Maryland Maryland Military Historical Society American Civil War Maryland Resources Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maryland in the American Civil War amp oldid 1182686272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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