Martin, Luther, his use of the word "compact" as applied to the Constitution, [138].
Maryland, instructions to her delegates to the Constitutional Convention, [92];
her ratification of the Federal Constitution, [108];
refused to be bound by the Articles of Confederation, [126];
first to be invaded, [330];
warning to all the slaveholding States, [330];
views of Governor Hicks, [330];
a commissioner from Mississippi, [330];
declarations of Governor Hicks, [331];
Baltimore resists the passage of troops, [332];
efforts of the police and Governor, [332];
letter of President Lincoln, [332];
visit of the Mayor of Baltimore, [332];
his report, [332];
Legislature appoints commissioners to the Confederate Government, [333];
also to Washington, [333];
reply of President Davis, [333];
Baltimore occupied by United States troops, [333];
the city disarmed, [334];
authorities arrested and imprisoned, [334];
arrest of members of the Legislature, [336];
imprisonment, [336];
Governor Hicks's final message, [336];
her story sad to the last degree, [337];
how relieved, [337];
the Maryland line of the Revolution, [337];
tender ministrations of her daughters to the wounded, [337].
Mason, George, views on the coercion of a State, [177].
Mason and Slidell, Messrs., sent as Commissioners to Europe, [469];
seized on their passage by Captain Wilkes, United States Navy, [469];
their treatment and restoration, [470].
Massachusetts, threats of a dissolution of the Union in 1844-'45, [76];
instructions to her delegates to the Constitutional Convention, [92];
tenacious of her State independence, [107];
action on the ratification of the Federal Constitution, [107];
her terms of ratification, [139];
her use of the word "compact," as applied to the Constitution, [139];
use of the word "sovereign," as applied to the State, [143];
on the reserved powers of the States, [146];
resolutions of her Legislature express perhaps too decided a doctrine of nullification, [190];
terms of cession of land for forts and navy-yard to the United States, [209].
McClellan, Major-General George B., commands force in Western Virginia, [338];
commands enemy's forces at Rich Mountain and Laurel Hill, [338].
McDowell, General, moves to attack General Beauregard, [344].
Medicines, declared by the enemy contraband of war, [310];
substitutes sought from the forest, [310].
Memminger, C. G., Secretary of the Treasury under the Provisional Constitution, [242].
Michigan, action of her Senators relative to the Peace Congress, [248], [249];
the "bloodletting" letter, [249].