INDEX.
A
Acton, regiment mustered in, [42].
Allen, E. J., dispatches addressed to, [131].
American, The, on the Baltimore riot of 1861, [65];
account of the Putnam Phalanx in Baltimore, [160]-167;
on the reception of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment in Baltimore, [167]-170.
Andrew, Gov. J. A., correspondence with Mayor Brown, [54], [55].
Arkansas, secession of, [33].
B
Baltimore, unjust prejudice against, [13], [19];
supposed conspiracy in, [14], [15], [120];
slaveholders in, [30];
Sixth Massachusetts Regiment in, [42]-53, [167]-170;
excitement on 20th April, [60], [61], [64];
defense of, [63];
apprehension of bloodshed in, [75];
armed neutrality, [77];
Gen. Butler's entrance into, [84];
Gen. Dix's headquarters in, [100], [101];
Mayor's message to City Council, [157]-159;
reception of Putnam Phalanx in, [160]-166.
Banks, Gen. N. P., in command, [97];
arrests police commissioners of Baltimore, [98], [99];
Secretary Cameron's letter to, [102];
General McClellan's letter to, [102].
Bartol, Judge, imprisonment of, [94].
Belger, Major, comes to Baltimore, [73].
Bell, Presidential vote for, [25].
Black, Judge, on martial law, [93].
Blackstone on the right of imprisonment, [147], [149].
Bond's, Judge, errand to Lincoln, [57], [61].
Boston, slave-traffic in, [20];
regiment mustered in, [42].
Brand, Rev. William F., efforts for emancipation, [113].
Breckinridge, Presidential vote for, [25].
Brown, Geo. Wm., meets the Massachusetts Sixth in Baltimore, [48], [49];
Captain Dike on, [54];
correspondence with Gov. Andrew, [54], [55];
speech to the excited public, [56];
writes to President Lincoln about passage of troops through Baltimore, [57], [61], [62];
interview with President Lincoln, [71]-75;
General Butler's letter to, [83], [84];
petitions Congress to restore peace to city, [99];
arrest of, [102], [103], [108];
correspondence with General Dix, [104]-108;
parole offered to, [110], [111];
anti-slavery principles of, [113];
opposed to secession, [115];
on the tendencies of the age, [117], [118];
message to City Council, [157]-159;
speech to the Putnam Phalanx, [160]-163;
speech to the survivors of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, [169], [170].
Brown, John, reverence for in the North, [21].
Brune, Frederick W., efforts for emancipation, [113].
Brune, John C., message to President Lincoln, [57], [61];
accompanies Mayor to Washington, [71];
elected to General Assembly, [79].
Bush River Bridge partially burned to prevent ingress of troops, [58], [59].
Butler, Gen., and the Eighth Massachusetts Regiment, [76];
at the Relay House, [83];
rumor of an attack on his camp, [83], [84];
enters Baltimore, [84];
arrests Ross Winans, [87].
Byrne, Wm., denounces the North, [38].
C
Cadwallader, General, and the writ of habeas corpus, [88], [140].
Cameron, Simon, advice to Governor Hicks to restrain Maryland, [40];
on the obstruction of Northern Central bridge, [73];
letter to Gen. Banks, [102].
Carmichael, Judge, assaulted and imprisoned, [93].
Carr, W. C. N., speaks at States Rights meeting, [38], [39].
Cheston, G., efforts for emancipation, [113].
Christison, Wenlock, a Quaker, owns slaves, [21].
Clark, John, advances money for defense of city, [61].
Crawford, William, Kane's letter to, [40].
Crowley, Comrade, of the Massachusetts Sixth, speech in Baltimore, 1880, [167].
Curtis, Benj. R., Life of, quotation about Judge Taney, [91].
Cutter, B. L., release from arrest, [109].
D
Davis, Jefferson, elected President of the Confederacy, [32].
Davis, John W., police commissioner of Baltimore, [35], [49];
errand to Fort McHenry, [66], [67], [68].
Davis, Judge, doubts the rumors of conspiracy, [132], [133].
Davis, Robert W., killed, [52].
De Tocqueville, on public opinion in America, [117].
Dike, Capt. J. H., company attacked in Baltimore, [46];
testifies as to the conduct of Baltimore civil authority during the riot, [53], [54].
Dimick, Col. J., releases prisoners from Fort Warren, [108];
kind treatment of prisoners, [111].
Dix, General, headquarters in Baltimore, [101];
correspondence with Mayor Brown, [104]-108.
Dix, Miss, relates a Confederate plot, [13].
Dobbin, Geo. W., errand to Lincoln, [57], [61];
accompanies the Mayor to Washington, [71].
Douglas, S. A., Senatorial campaign, [22];
Presidential vote for, [25].
Dred Scott Case, [138].
E