Posted on 04/25/2021 7:24:18 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
TIMES OFFICE, Wednesday, 10 o'clock A.M.
A special correspondent from Washington to the TIMES arrived at our office at 3 1/2 o'clock this morning, bringing news from the Capital up to yesterday (Tuesday) morning, 7 1/2 o'clock, at which hour he left that city. Our messenger came through Baltimore, where he spent an hour or two, and by private conveyance to Havre de Grace, Maryland, and the aid of a fisherman's skiff to cross the Susquehannah, he reached Perryville, on the east bank of that stream, in time to take the evening train for Philadelphia. We are enabled, through this means, to lay before our readers a good deal of valuable and highly interesting intelligence.
Baltimore was crowded with people from the country, and there was much excitement, but no violence. Martial law prevails; suspected strangers are overhauled; the military throng the streets in small squads; the armories are filled with soldiers; the Maryland colors and the flag of the Southern Confederacy totally exclude the Stars and Stripes, and on every hand the strictest vigilance is exercised to guard against a surprise from any quarter, as well as to intercept bearers of dispatches for the Government.
During the hour and a half spent there by our correspondent, he was unable to hear anything confirming the statement of the Baltimore American, that Gov. Hicks would to-day lead Maryland troops to drive out the Seventh (New-York) Regiment and Gen. Butler's Massachusetts men, who had landed at Annapolis. Our correspondent says:
The New-York Seventh arrived safely at Annapolis on Monday morning, on board their steamer, and were joined there by Gen. BUTLER with his Massachusetts men, who came around from Perrysville on the Susquehannah River, having seized the railroad steam ferry-boat Maryland at that place for transportation purposes.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
First session: November 21, 2015. Last date to add: Sometime in the future.
Reading: Self-assigned. Recommendations made and welcomed.
Posting history, in reverse order
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Link to previous New York Times thread
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Our editors decry Pres. Lincoln's attempts to negotiate with Baltimore's "neutral" Mayor Brown and Lincoln's subsequent order to reroute Union troops around Baltimore, to avoid further bloodshed.
The editors say Lincoln should have been more direct & blunt, ordering Brown to make Union troops' passage through Baltimore safe.
In Lincoln's defense, we might notice that soon after, Maryland's legislature voted more than 4 to 1 against secession, and that vote might have been quite different had Lincoln been more "coercive" with Brown.
This is also perhaps the place to post a favorite Lost Causer fake-quote from Lincoln:
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