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Inventory for MSA SC 5339-261



MSA SC 5339-261 contains 28 unit(s). Showing results 1 to 15.

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12
MSA SC 5339-261-1
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Maryland State Papers

Note: Gov. and Council letterbook not searched; it may have additional information

Series A Done. Updated 8/18

Scharf Collection Done

MSA SC 5339-261-2
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Jane McWilliams's Chronology
MSA SC 5339-261-3
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Background sources on the War of 1812 in Maryland

MSA Biography of Levin Winder

Cassell, Frank A. “Slaves of the Chesapeake Bay Area and the War of 1812.” The Journal of Negro History 57, no. 2 (Apr., 1972), 144-155.

George, Christopher T. “Mirage of Freedom.” Maryland Historical Magazine 91, no. 4 (Winter, 1996), 426-450.

MSA SC 5339-261-4
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
A Subaltern in America: Comprising his Narrative of the Campaigns of the British Army at Baltimore, Washington, &c..., 1833.

Notes:
General gist: the British army was perfect, the US sucked, we stomped the Americans whenever we wanted to, and we would have taken Baltimore if somehow we'd figured out a way to get past McHenry (well, yeah...). Also, this guy got paid by the comma.

p. 46: rumors in the ranks that DC's going to get burned in revenge.

p. 78: DC gets it.

p. 103: as the army sails up the Bay: "Baltimore, Annapolis, and other towns, were all within our reach; we confidently anticipated that each would, in its turn, receive a visit."

p. 106-108: description of sailing past AN: "Besides its two great cities of Annapolis and Baltimore, it [MD] can boast of several towns and villages of different sizes;...very many...have been planted along the water's edge...Numerous watch-towers, forts, signal stations, and places of arms, occupied the high grounds; whilst nearer the beach, guard rooms for the accommodation of cavalry patrols, open batteries for the cover of guns, with all the other edifices which a people invaded are apt to throw up, extended in a regular chain, from one extremity of the State to the other. Of these we were enabled, by keeping close in shore, to obtain a distinct view. We saw horsemen mount at every station, as we approached it, and gallop with all haste towards the interior. Beacon after beacon burst into a blaze; guns were fired from every tower; and telegraphic communication carried on without intermission [in 1814? probably not]. Then, again, as we drew near to a town, or village, every house was seen to pour forth its inhabitants; while carts, waggons, and carriages of all descriptions hastened off, loaded...with people and effects. In Annapolis, in particular, confusion and alarm appeared to prevail to an extraordinary excess. Being the capital of the State, and exposed, in a remarkable degree, to insult, its inmates doubtless anticipated nothing else than a hostile visitation; and truly, if to destroy a neat, clean town, surrounded on all sides by elegant villas, had been our object, no task could have been more easily performed. We passed it by, however, unharmed; not, perhaps, quite satisfied that so fine a prize should be permitted to escape, but hugging ourselves in the idea that another, and no less valuable one, was before us.

p. 166-167: Sailing back down the Bay from Baltimore: "In the course of to-day's passage we passed, as we have done before, within gunshot of Annapolis, and of the villages, and hamlets in its vicinity. Almost the same spectacle which had previously arrested our attention rose to attract it now. Again the beacons were set on fire--again signal-guns were fired, horsemen mounted, and telegraphic communications were carried on at every station; whilst the provincial capital, with all the inhabited places near it, again sent forth crowds of men, women, an children, flying in manifest confusion into the interior...though I am sure that the peaceful inhabitants would have suffered no wrong at our hands, I am equally sure, that there was nothing in the shape of public property, or public works, which we did not regard as furnishing a legitimate source of plunder and outrage."


MSA SC 5339-261-5
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Clotworthy Birnie Papers

MSA SC 5918-1-1 Done

MSA SC 705: contains film of letters in sc5918-1-1; farm diary contains no references to the war; no War of 1812 relevant information anywhere besides sc5918-1-1

MSA SC 5339-261-6
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Maryland Gazette

Annapolis-related items abstracted by MSA SC 705, 1813-1815

Md. Gazette via AOMOL

Notes, 1812-1814

MSA SC 5339-261-7
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Maryland Historical Society, War of 1812 Collection

MS. 1846 Not yet searched

MSA SC 5339-261-8
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Sands Collection

MSA SC 732: No War of 1812 material

MSA SC 5339-261-9
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Baltz Collection

MSA SC 5224:
War of 1812 material in SC 5524-B5, 1/45/14/37; most relates to the war in PG; some newspaper extracts.

MSA SC 5339-261-10
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Other info:

1813 AN House of Delegates contested election:
Annapolis's two House seats were won by Republicans, but the House voided the elections because Federal troops illegally participated in the election: "They were drawn up in military array at the fort, and were told by the officer that if any of them intended to vote for...the Federal ticket..., they must step out of line, for that no man who intended so to vote should leave the garrison, and that the soldier who did not vote for...the democratic ticket would be forsworn by breaking his allegiance to the United States or the President thereof."
House Journal, 1813, p. 58.


MSA SC 5339-261-11
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Diary, 1812-1814

Writer unknown; he lived at Springfield, southern AA (1st Election District). Possibly Joseph Court?

MSA SC 210-1-3.

Notes on War of 1812 related entries

Notes re: diary writer, 2012.

Notes, 2011.

Tobacco brought to Pig Point Warehouse, 1812-1814. MSA S1106.

Slaves freed by Joseph Court.

Deeds, Joseph Court, AA, 1774-1815.

MSA SC 5339-261-12
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Other Special Collections

Stuart A. Goldman Collection of Commodore John Rogers Letters, MSA SC 2110
Collection Description: Letters to Commander John Rogers during the War of 1812 concerning the defense of Baltimore.
Storage: 00/11/08/31

Mary Margaret Revell Goodwin Collection, MSA SC 5825-1-1
February 28, 1815
Description: Typescript report from the acting Secretary of State, James Monroe, transmitted to U.S. Senate by President James Madison Report dated 12 days after the U.S. Senate's approval of the Treaty of Ghent, ending the War of 1812
Mentioned is "the sale of negroes taken from the United States, by the British forces since the present war"
Medium: original typescript
Storage Location: 00/22/10/04

May Albright Seitz Collection of Hoffman Family Material, MSA SC 5767
Flintlock pistol (16 ¼” in length) with ‘Harpers Ferry 1807’ stamped on side which May A. Seitz claimed was the property of William D. Hoffman who was a soldier in the War of 1812. MSA SC5767-1-14
Storage Location: RB/01/07/

Solid silver snuff box, heart shaped, used by William D. Hoffman during his service in the War of 1812.
MSA SC 5767-1-36

Papers of Samuel Smith, MSA SC 2171
Correspondence, letterbooks, political and military papers of Samuel Smith (1752-1839), son John Spear (1790-1866), brother Robert Smith (1757-1842) and others. Samuel Smith- U.S. Congress, defense of Baltimore in War of 1812, Baltimore mayor.
M 5989 - M 5994


MSA SC 5339-261-13
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Rivinus Collection

MSA SC 634

Letters of the Maxcey family

MSA SC 5339-261-14
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Maryland Republican

Democratic paper in Annapolis. Considerably more vehement in everything than the Gazette. Less useful as a news source, but it gives a nice sense of the political atmosphere. Basically, everything was the Federalists' fault, especially the governor.

Notes 1813-1814 completed

MSA SC 5339-261-15
Dates
Medium
StorageContact the Department of Special Collections for location.
Description
Governor and Council Letterbook

http://aomol.msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc4800/sc4872/003167/html/m3167-0662.html

12

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