March

February Twenty-Eighth

The war began, the war went on—this politicians’ conspiracy, this slaveholders’ rebellion, as it was variously called by those who sought its source, now in the disappointed ambition of the Southern leaders, now in the desperate determination of a slaveholding oligarchy to perpetuate their power, and to secure forever their proprietorship in their “human chattels.” On this theory the mass of the Southern people were but puppets in the hands of political wirepullers, or blind followers of hectoring “patricians.” To those who know the Southern people nothing can be more absurd; to those who know their personal independence, to those who know the deep interest which they have always taken in politics, the keen intelligence with which they have always followed the questions of the day.

Basil L. Gildersleeve

February Twenty-Ninth

THE LAND WHERE WE WERE DREAMING

Fair were our nation’s visions, and as grandAs ever floated out of fancy-land;Children were we in simple faith,But god-like children, whom nor death,Nor threat of danger drove from honor’s path—In the land where we were dreaming!········A figure came among us as we slept—At first he knelt, then slowly rose and wept;Then gathering up a thousand spears,He swept across the fields of Mars,Then bowed farewell, and walked behind the stars,From the land where we were dreaming!········As wakes the soldier when the alarum calls—As wakes the mother when her infant falls—As starts the traveler when aroundHis sleepy couch the fire-bells sound—So woke our nation with a single bound—In the land where we were dreaming!Daniel Bedinger Lucas

I hear the bluebird’s quaint soliloquy,—A hesitating note upon the breeze,Blown faintly from the tops of distant trees,As though he were not sure that Spring is nigh,But fed his hopes with bursts of melody.I would I had a spirit-harp to seizeThe bolder tenor of his rhapsodiesWhen apple-blossoms swing against the sky.On every dark or blust’ring wintry dayThat airy harp the bluebird’s lilt should play;And as I held my sighs and paused to hear,The wand’ring message, with its full-fed cheerAnd ripe contentment, to my life should bringThe essence and fruition of the Spring.Danske Dandridge

March First

In the deep heart of every forest treeThe blood is all aglee,And there’s a look about the leafless bowersAs if they dreamed of flowers.Henry Timrod

March Second

At a garden party in Washington not long ago a Justice of the Supreme Court said in response to some question I put: “It would take the pen of a Zola to describe reconstruction in Louisiana. It is so dark a chapter in our national history. I do not like to think of it. A Zola might base a great novel on that life and death struggle between politicians and races in the land of cotton and sugar plantations, the swamps and bayous of the mighty Mississippi, where the Carpet-Bag Government had a standing army, of blacks, chiefly, and a navy of warships going up and down waterways.”

Myrta Lockett Avary

Reconstruction Act put into effect in Louisiana, 1866

Texas declares itself independent, 1836

March Third

Women, the most refined, the noblest and best cultured in the land, left their homes, took up their residences adjacent to hospitals and became Florence Nightingales, daughters of the Red Cross, for all who needed care or comfort. It is reproachfully said by alien writers that the Southern women are more “unreconstructed rebels” than the men. It is certainly true that they did as much as the men in winning the battles, and they are now foremost in building monuments and preserving the records of immortal deeds.

J. L. M. Curry

First general convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Nashville, 1895

March Fourth

Stephens’ bodily infirmity did not sour his temper. On the contrary, it developed his capacity for human sympathy and strengthened his desire to help others to reach the happiness he seemed unable to secure for himself. After prosperity came to him, his works of philanthropy were constant and countless. He was lavish of hospitality and gave to all who asked such pity and sympathy as only a tried and travailing spirit could feel.

Louis Pendleton

Alexander H. Stephens dies, 1883

March Fifth

From childhood I have nursed a faithIn bluebirds’ songs and winds of Spring;They tell me after frost and deathThere comes a time of blossoming;And after snow and cutting sleet,The cold, stern mood of Nature yieldsTo tender warmth, when bare pink feetOf children press her greening fields.James Maurice Thompson

March Sixth

It is the spirit of the Alamo that moved above the Texas soldiers as they charged like demigods through a thousand battlefields, and it is the spirit of the Alamo that whispers from their graves held in every State of the Union, ennobling their dust, their soil, that was crimson with their blood.

Henry W. Grady

Fall of the Alamo, 1836

March Seventh

The opening of the University of Virginia was an event of prime importance for the higher education in the whole country, and really marks a new era. In the South this university completely dominated the situation down to the war and for some time afterwards, being the model for most that was best in the colleges everywhere, setting the standards to which they aspired, and being the source of constant stimulus and inspiration.

Charles F. Smith(University of Wisconsin)

University of Virginia opened, 1825

March Eighth

BROOKE’S “VIRGINIA,” THE FIRST OF IRONCLADS; 10 GUNS VERSUS 268

... TheVirginia, that iron diadem of the South, whose thunders in Hampton Roads consumed theCumberland, overcame theCongress, put to flight the Federal Navy, and achieved a victory, the novelty and grandeur of which convulsed the maritime nations of the world.

Charles Colcock Jones, Jr.

Confederate Tribute to the Commander and Men of theCumberland: “No ship was ever better handled, or more bravely fought.”

Virginius Newton, C. S. N.

On Boarding theCongress:

Confusion, death, and pitiable suffering reigned supreme; and the horrors of war quenched the passion and enmity of months.

Virginius Newton, C. S. N.

Confederate Tribute to the Commanders of theMinnesota,St. Lawrence, andRoanoke, which vessels ran aground in flight from the terribleVirginia:

I take occasion to say that their character as officers of skill, experience, and bravery was well established at the time, and suffered no diminution then or thereafter.

Virginius Newton, C. S. N.

Battle between the “Virginia” (“Merrimac”) and Federal men-of-war, 1862

March Ninth

BROOKE

The men who manned theMonitormade a grand fight, and her commander upheld the best traditions of the American navy; but history must bear witness to the fact that, if not overmatched or defeated, she at least withdrew to shallow water, where theVirginiacould not follow her; and later, under the guns of Ft. Monroe, she declined the subsequent battle challenges of the refittedVirginia.

All honor to Capt. Worden and theVirginia-inspiredinvention of the Swede; but “America’s glory for Americans.” Let all Americans honor the name of JOHN MERCER BROOKE, the inventor and designer of the first armored war vessel of the world.—Ed.

Battle between the “Virginia” and the “Monitor,” 1862

March Tenth

AN AFTERTHOUGHT

“Say, Judge, ain’t you the same man that told us before the war that we could whip the Yankees with pop-guns?”

“Yes,” replied the stump-orator, with great presence of mind, “and we could, but, confound ’em, they wouldn’t fight us that way.”

March Eleventh

TWO VIEWS OF VIRGINIA

(The latter is taken from a witty parody on the original poem. Presented to a Virginia girl, it was indignantly tossed into the wastebasket. Later, however, she copied it and sent it around for the amusement of many—in the family!)

I. The days are never quite so longAs in Virginia;Nor quite so filled with happy songAs in Virginia;And when my time has come to dieJust take me back and let me lieClose where the James goes rolling by,Down in Virginia.II. Nowhere such storms obscure the sunAs in Virginia;Nowhere so slow the railroads run,As in Virginia;And when my time has come to goJust take me there, because, you know,I’ll longer live, I’ll die so slow,Down in Virginia.

March Twelfth

A HUMOROUS VIEW OF “THE HUB”

For the native Bostonian there are three paths to glory. If his name be Quincy or Adams, nothing more is expected of him. His blue blood carries him through life with glory, and straight to heaven when he dies. Failing in the happy accident of birth, the candidate for Beacon Hill honors must write a book. This is easy. The man who can breathe Boston air and not write a book is either a fool or a phenomenon. One course remains to him should he miss fame in these lines. He must be a reformer.

Sherwood Bonner(In Letters to Dixie)

March Thirteenth

FIRST ENGLISH LITERATURE OF THE NEW WORLD

Your gracious acceptance of the first fruits of my travels ... hath actuated both Will and Power to the finishing of this Peece: ... We had hoped, ere many years had turned about, to have presented you with a rich and wel-peopled Kingdom; from whence now, with my selfe, I onely bring this Composure, ... bred in the New-World, of the rudeness whereof it cannot but participate; especially having Warres and Tumults to bring it to light in stead of the Muses....

Your Majesties most humble ServantGeorge Sandys

From Dedication of Ovids’sMetamorphoses, “English by George Sandys” at Henrico College, Virginia, 1621-1625. “Imprinted at London, 1626.”

George Sandys born at Bishopsthorpe, England, 1577

March Fourteenth

Content to miss the prize of fame,If he some true heart’s praise can claim,He lives in his own world of rhyme,The great world’s ways forsaking;Cares not Parnassian heights to climb,But valley bypaths taking,Where even the daises in the sod,Like stars, show him the living God.Charles W. Hubner(The Minor Poet)

Thomas Hart Benton born, 1782

March Fifteenth

Abhorrence of debt, public and private; dislike of banks, and love of hard money—love of justice and love of country, were ruling passions with Jackson; and of these he gave constant evidence in all the situations of his life.

Thomas Hart Benton

Andrew Jackson born, 1767

Battle of Guilford Courthouse, 1871

Through Mr. Justice Campbell of the Supreme Court, Secretary Seward promises the Confederate Commissioners that Fort Sumter would be speedily evacuated, 1861

March Sixteenth

The great mind of Madison was one of the first to entertain distinctly the noble conception of two kinds of government, operating at one and the same time, upon the same individuals, harmonious with each other, but each supreme in its own sphere. Such is the fundamental conception of our partly Federal, partly National Government, which appears throughout the Virginia plan, as well as in the Constitution which grew out of it.

John Fiske(Massachusetts)

James Madison born, 1751

March Seventeenth

“THE GALLANT PELHAM”—Robert E. Lee

Just as the Spring came laughing through the strife,With all its gorgeous cheer;In the bright April of historic life,Fell the great cannoneer....We gazed and gazed upon that beauteous face,While round the lips and eyes,Couched in their marble slumber, flashed the graceOf a divine surprise.James Ryder Randall

Lieutenant-Colonel John Pelham killed at Kelly’s Ford, Va., 1863

Roger Brooke Taney born, 1777

March Eighteenth

John C. Calhoun, an honest man, the noblest work of God.

Andrew Jackson

He had the basis, the indispensable basis, of all high character, and that was unspotted integrity—unimpeached honor and character. If he had aspirations, they were high and honorable and noble. There was nothing grovelling or low, or meanly selfish that came near the head or the heart of Mr. Calhoun.

Daniel Webster(Massachusetts)

John Caldwell Calhoun born, 1782

March Nineteenth

Into the woods my Master went,Clean forspent, forspent.Into the woods my Master came,Forspent with love and shame.But the olives they were not blind to Him,The little gray leaves were kind to Him:The thorn-tree had a mind to HimWhen into the woods He came.Sidney Lanier(A Ballad of Trees and the Master)

March Twentieth

Out of the woods my Master went,And He was well content.Out of the woods my Master came,Content with death and shame.When Death and Shame would woo Him last,From under the trees they drew Him last:’Twas on a tree they slew Him—last,When out of the woods He came.Sidney Lanier(A Ballad of Trees and the Master)

March Twenty-First

Those who dominated were intelligent, masterful, patriotic, loving home, kindred, state and country, dispensing a prodigal hospitality, limited only by the respectability and behavior of guests. Among girls, refinement, culture, modesty, purity and a becoming behavior were the characteristic traits; among boys, courtesy, courage, chivalry, respect to age, devotion to the weaker sex, scorning meanness, regarding dishonor and cowardice as ineffaceable stains.

J. L. M.Curry(The Old South)

General Joseph E. Johnston dies, 1891

March Twenty-Second

Father Tabb’s discernment was clear and touched by the purest fragrance of the muses. To Shelley, Coleridge, and Keats he was devoted. Poe he regarded as without a peer in modern literature, and was his uncompromising, inflexible champion.

Henry E. Shepherd

John Banister Tabb born, 1845

March Twenty-Third

Come, Texas! send forth your brave Rangers,The heroes of battles untold—Accustomed to trials and dangers,Come stand by your rights as of old;The deeds of your chivalrous daringAre writ on the Alamo’s wall,A record which ruin is sparing—Come forth to your country’s loud call!V. E. W. Vernon

Texas ratifies the Confederate Constitution, 1861

March Twenty-Fourth

Adams, Giddings, and other Congressmen issued a public address, in March, 1843, declaring that the annexation of Texas would be “so injurious to the interests of the Northern States as not only inevitably to result in a dissolution of the Union, but fully to justify it.”

Henry A. White

March Twenty-Fifth

Nor had Calvert planted English institutions in Maryland simply as he found them. He went back to a better time for freedom of action, and looked forward to a better time for freedom of thought. While as yet there was no spot in Christendom where religious belief was free, and when even the Commons of England had openly declared against toleration, he founded a community wherein no man was to be molested for his faith.

William Hand Browne

Landing of the Maryland colonists, St. Clement’s Island, 1634

March Twenty-Sixth

Dear God! what segment of the earthCan match the region of our birth!Though ice-beleaguered, rill on rill,Though scorched to deserts, hill on hill—It is our native country still.Our native country, what a soundTo make heart, brain, and blood rebound!James Ryder Randall

March Twenty-Seventh

Jamestown and St. Mary’s are both within the segment of a circle of comparatively small radius whose center is at the mouth of the Chesapeake. In this strategic region, the Jamestown experiment succeeded, after Raleigh’s head had fallen on the block; the Revolution was fired by the eloquence of Patrick Henry, and was consummated at Yorktown; the War of 1812 was settled by the victories of North Point and McHenry; the crisis of the Civil War occurred; and seven Presidents of the United States were born.

Allen S. Will

Calvert’s Colony lands at St. Mary’s, 1634

March Twenty-Eighth

Nor less resplendent is the lightOf him, old South Carolina’s star,Whose fiery soul was made by GodTo blaze amid the storms of war....Orion T. Dozier

Wade Hampton born, 1818

March Twenty-Ninth

A great event of this [Tyler’s] administration was the Ashburton Treaty. This settled our northeast boundary for 200 miles and warded off the long impending war with England. In most histories the whole credit for this treaty is given to Daniel Webster. Of course this great man should not be robbed of any of his well-earned laurels; but the President is entitled to a share of the honor. Webster himself said: “It proceeded from step to step under the President’s own immediate eye and correction.” Moreover, it may be added that at one stage in the proceedings Lord Ashburton was about to give up and return to England; but President Tyler by his courtesy and suavity, conciliated him and induced him to go on with the negotiation.

J. Lesslie Hall

John Tyler born, 1790

March Thirtieth

In discussing the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, Senator Hale warned Senator Toombs that the North would fight. The Georgian answered: “I believe nobody ever doubted that any portion of the United States would fight on a proper occasion.... There are courageous and honest men enough in both sections to fight. There is no question of courage involved. The people of both sections of the Union have illustrated their courage on too many battlefields to be questioned. They have shown their fighting qualities shoulder to shoulder whenever their country has called upon them; but that they may never come in contact with each other in a fratricidal war should be the ardent wish and earnest desire of every true man and honest patriot.”

Pleasant A. Stovall

Texas readmitted to the Union, 1870

March Thirty-First

CALHOUN’S NATIONALISM

At the peace of 1815 the Government was $120,000,000 in debt; its revenues were small; its credit not great, and the effort to raise money by direct taxation brought it in conflict with the States.... Mr. Calhoun came forward and devised a tariff, which not only gave large revenues to the Government, but gave great protection to manufacturers. Mr. Calhoun received unmeasured abuse for his pains from the North, where the interests were then navigation, and Daniel Webster was the great apostle of free trade.... Under Mr. Calhoun’s tariff the New England manufacturers prospered rapidly.... Success stimulated cupidity, and the “black tariff” of 1828 marked the growth of abuse.... It was then that Mr. Calhoun again stepped forth. He stated that the South had cheerfully paid the enormous burden of duties on imports when Northern manufactures were young and the Government weak; the manufacturers had become rich, and the Government strong—so strong that State rights were being merged into its overshadowing power; he therefore demanded a recognition of State rights, and an amelioration of those burdens that the South had so long borne.

Thomas Prentice Kettell(New York)

John C. Calhoun dies, 1850

The birds that sing in the leafy Spring,With the light of love on each glancing wing,Have lessons to last you the whole year through;For what is “Coo! coo! te weet tu whu!”But, properly rendered, “The wit to woo!”A wit that brings worship and wisdom too!Coo! coo! te weet tu whu—The wit to woo—te weet tu whu!The verb “to love,” in the tongue of the dove,Heard noon and night in the cedar grove,Is very soon taught where the heart is true:For the wit to woo, and the wisdom too,Lie in the one sweet syllable, “Coo!”But echo me well, and you learn to woo—Coo! coo! te weet tu whu—The wit to woo—te weet tu whu!William Gilmore Simms

April First

Hidden no longerIn moss-covered ledges,Starring the wayside,Under the hedges,Violet, Pimpernel,Flashing with dew,Daisy and AsphodelBlossom anew.Down in the bosky dellsEverywhere,Faintly their fairy bellsChime in the air.Thanks to the sunshine!Thanks to the showers!They come again, bloom again,Beautiful flowers!Theophilus Hunter Hill(Author of the first book published under copyright of the Confederate Government)

Battle of Five Forks, Virginia, 1865

April Second

At the critical moment A. P. Hill was always strongest. No wonder that both Lee and Jackson, when in the delirium of their last moments on earth, stood again to battle, and saw the fiery form of A. P. Hill leading his columns on.

Henry Kyd Douglas

A. P. Hill killed in front of Petersburg, 1865

Albert Pike dies, 1891

April Third

THE SOUTHERN MAGNOLIA

French blood stained with glory the Lilies,While centuries marched to their grave;And over bold Scot and gay IrishThe Thistle and Shamrock yet wave:Ours, ours be the noble Magnolia,That only on Southern soil grows,The Symbol of life everlasting:—Dear to us as to England the Rose.Albert Pike(“Born in Boston; but an adopted and devoted son of Dixie”)

April Fourth

We are His witnesses; out of the dimDark region of Death we have risen with Him.Back from our sepulchre rolleth the stone,And Spring, the bright Angel, sits smiling thereon.John B. Tabb(“Easter Flowers”)

April Fifth

We are His witnesses. See, where He layThe snow that late bound us is folded away;And April, fair Magdalen, weeping anon,Stands flooded with light of the new-risen Sun!John B. Tabb(“Easter Flowers”)

April Sixth

His character was lofty and pure, his presence and demeanor dignified and courteous, with the simplicity of a child; and he at once inspired the respect and gained the confidence of cultivated gentlemen and rugged frontiersmen.

General Richard Taylor

Albert Sidney Johnston killed at Shiloh, 1862

April Seventh

History tears down statues and monuments to attributes and deeds, unless those attributes have been devoted to some noble end, and those deeds done in a righteous cause.

Col. Charles Marshall

April Eighth

“GLORY STANDS BESIDE OUR GRIEF”

Because they fought in perfect faith, believingThe cause they fought for was the just, the true;And had small hope of glittering gain receiving,While following, with standard high in view,Where led their single-hearted, dauntless chief:Therefore doth Glory stand beside our grief!Victoria Elizabeth Gittings

Louisiana admitted to the Union, 1812

Telegram from Secretary Seward confirming promise (March 15) as to Sumter, 1861

April Ninth

An angel’s heart, an angel’s mouth,Not Homer’s, could alone for meHymn forth the great Confederate South,Virginia first, then Lee.Oh, realm of tears! But let her bearThis blazon to the end of time:No nation rose so white and fair,None fell so pure of crime.P. S. Worsley(England)

[From lines written on the fly-leaf of a translation of the Iliad, presented to General Lee by the Oxford scholar in 1866]

Surrender of Lee at Appomattox, 1865

April Tenth

Furl that Banner, for ’tis weary;Round its staff ’tis drooping dreary;Furl it, fold it, it is best;For there’s not a man to wave it,And there’s not a sword to save it,And there’s not one left to lave itIn the blood which heroes gave it;And its foes now scorn and brave it;Furl it, hide it, let it rest!Furl that Banner! True, ’tis gory,Yet ’tis wreathed around with glory,And ’twill live in song and story,Though its folds are in the dust:For its fame on brightest pages,Penned by poets and by sages,Shall go sounding down the ages,—Furl its folds though now we must.Abraham J. Ryan(The Conquered Banner)

Lee issues farewell address to his army, 1865

Leonidas Polk born, 1806

April Eleventh

Man is so constituted—the immutable laws of our being are such—that to stifle the sentiment and extinguish the hallowed memories of a people is to destroy their manhood.

General John B. Gordon

We had, I was satisfied, sacred principles to maintain and rights to defend for which we were in duty bound to do our best, even if we perished in the endeavor.

General Robert E. Lee

We must forevermore consecrate in our hearts our old battle flag of the Southern Cross—not now as a political symbol, but as the consecrated emblem of an heroic epoch. The people that forgets its heroic dead is already dying at the heart, and we believe we shall be truer and better citizens of the United States if we are true to our past.

Randolph H. McKim

April Twelfth

From this time a clear-cut issue was formulated and presented to the States and the people. The “firing upon the flag of the nation” was made the immediate pretext for aggressive measures against the Lower South.As so heralded, it served to inflame the hearts of thousands who, it seems, had not noticed or who had forgotten, as it is forgotten to-day, that this was not the first firing upon the Stars and Stripes. The flag had been fired upon from the coast of South Carolina as early as January 9, 1861, for the same reason as that which provoked attack upon it on April 12.

[From introduction to “The Battle of Baltimore,”The Sun, April 9, 1911.]

Fort Sumter fired on by Beauregard, 1861

North Carolina instructs her delegates to the Continental Congress to declare for independence, 1776

Henry Clay born, 1777

April Thirteenth

The history of the world presents no parallel to the manner in which he wrote himself upon his own age, and subsequent ages, with his pen. He was no teacher like Plato; he was not a professional litterateur like Voltaire; he was not a mere maker of books like Carlyle; and yet he put his stamp indelibly upon the minds and hearts of English-speaking people during his own day and for all time to come.

Thomas E. Watson

Thomas Jefferson born, 1743

April Fourteenth

The fact is, the boys around here want watching, or they’ll take something. A few days ago I heard they surrounded two of our best citizens because they were named Fort and Sumter. Most of them are so hot that they fairly siz when you pour water on them, and that’s the way they make up their military companies here now—when a man applies to join the volunteers they sprinkle him, and if he sizzes they take him, and if he don’t they don’t!

Major Charles H. Smith(Bill Arp)

April Fifteenth

There was but one exception to the general grief too remarkable to be passed over in silence. Among the extreme Radicals in Congress, Mr. Lincoln’s determined clemency and liberality towards the Southern people had made an impression so unfavorable that, though they were shocked at his murder, they did not, among themselves, conceal gratification that he was no longer in their way.

Nicholay and Hay(Life of Lincoln)

FORESHADOWING RECONSTRUCTION

The Union League of America was organized in Cleveland, Ohio, during the war by friends of Thaddeus Stevens, the Radical leader of Congress. Its prime object was the confiscation of the property of the South. The chief obstacle to this program was Abraham Lincoln. Hence the first work of the League was to form a conspiracy against Lincoln and prevent his renomination for a second term.

E. W. R. Ewing

Abraham Lincoln dies, 1865

Federal Government issues a call for 75,000 volunteers, 1861

April Sixteenth

I have only to say that the militia will not be furnished to the powers at Washington for any such use or purpose as they have in view. Your object is to subjugate the Southern States, and a requisition made upon me for such an object—an object, in my judgment, not within the purview of the constitution or the act of 1795—will not be complied with. You have chosen to inaugurate civil war, and having done so, we will meet it in a spirit as determined as the administration has exhibited towards the South.

Governor Letcher(Virginia)

April Seventeenth

The scene [in the Virginia State Convention] is described as both solemn and affecting. One delegate, while speaking against the ordinance, broke down in incoherent sobs; another, who voted for it, wept like a child. The sentiment of the people had run ahead of their leaders.

S. C. Mitchell

It may be safely asserted that but for the adoption by the Federal Government of the policy of coercion towards the Cotton States, Virginia would not have seceded.... She simply in the hour of danger and sacrifice held faithful to the principles which she had ofttimes declared and which have ever found sturdy defenders in every part of the Republic.

Beverley B. Munford

Virginia secedes, 1861

April Eighteenth

Tennessee will not furnish a single man for coercion, but 50,000 if necessary for the defense of our rights or those of our Southern brothers.

Governor Harris(Tennessee)

I say emphatically that Kentucky will furnish no troops for the wicked purpose of subduing her sister States.

Governor Magoffin(Kentucky)

April Nineteenth

Hark to an exiled son’s appeal,Maryland!My mother State! to thee I kneel,Maryland!For life and death, for woe and weal,Thy peerless chivalry reveal,And gird thy beauteous limbs with steel,Maryland! My Maryland!Thou wilt not cower in the dust,Maryland!Thy beaming sword shall never rust,Maryland!Remember Carroll’s sacred trust,Remember Howard’s warlike thrust,—And all thy slumberers with the just,Maryland! My Maryland!James Ryder Randall

Citizens of Baltimore, objecting to coercion of the seceded States, oppose the passing of the Sixth Massachusetts, their action resulting in the first bloodshed of the War, 1861

April Twentieth

The tempting prize offered Lee in the shape of supreme command of the Army of the Union did not swerve him from his integrity for an instant. It was currently reported at the time that Gen. Winfield Scott implored him, “For God’s sake, don’t resign!” Every argument that power, luxury, limitless resources, and the untrammeled control of the situation could devise was brought to bear upon him.

Henry E. Shepherd

Robert E. Lee resigns his commission in the United States Army, 1861

April Twenty-First

From the date of its settlement, Maryland became the Land of Sanctuary—the only spot in the known world where the persecuted of all lands were at liberty to worship God according to the dictates of their own hearts. Freedom of conscience was offered by Lord Baltimore to the oppressed of the Old World, thus carrying into effect the original motive of Sir George Calvert’s colonization scheme when seeking a charter from King Charles I.

Hester Dorsey Richardson

Passage of the “Act Concerning Religion” by the Maryland Assembly, 1649, endorsing the principles of religious toleration promulgated by Cecilius Calvert in 1634

Independence of Texas established at San Jacinto, 1836

April Twenty-Second

The dusk of the South is tenderAs the touch of a soft, soft hand;It comes between splendor and splendor,The sweetest of service to render,And gathers the cares of the land.Above it the soft sky blushesAnd pales like an April rose;Within it the South wind hushes,And the Jessamine’s heart outgushes,And earth like an emerald glows.John P. Sjolander

Capture of Plymouth, N. C., by Gen. R. D. Hoke, 1864

April Twenty-Third

In seeds of laurel in the earthThe blossom of your fame is blown;And somewhere, waiting for its birth,The shaft is in the stone!Henry Timrod

Randall writes “My Maryland” at Pointe Coupee, La., 1861

Father Ryan dies, 1886

April Twenty-Fourth

Apropos of this last, let me confess, Mr. President—before the praise of New England has died on my lips—that I believe the best product of her present life is the procession of 17,000 Vermont Democrats that for twenty-two years, undiminished by death, unrecruited by birth or conversion, have marched over their rugged hills, cast their Democratic ballots, and gone back home to pray for their unregenerate neighbors, and awoke to read the record of 26,000 Republican majority! May the God of the helpless and heroic help them!

Henry W. Grady

Henry W. Grady born, 1851

April Twenty-Fifth

Her lot may be hard, her skies may darken;To Dixie’s voice we’ll ever hearken;Look away, away, away down South in Dixie.The coward may shirk, the wretch go whining,But we’ll be true till the sun stops shining,Look away, away, away down South in Dixie.Chorus:I wish I was in Dixie;Away, away;In Dixie’s land I’ll take my stand,And live and die in Dixie.Away, away,Away down South in Dixie.Marie Louise Eve

April Twenty-Sixth

Homes without the means of support were no longer homes. With barns and mills and implements for tilling the soil all gone, with cattle, sheep, and every animal that furnished food to the helpless inmates carried off, they were dismal abodes of hunger, of hopelessness, and of almost measureless woe.

General John B. Gordon

Joseph E. Johnston surrenders at Greensboro, N. C., 1865

April Twenty-Seventh

The twilight hours, like birds, flew by,As lightly and as free;Ten thousand stars were in the sky,Ten thousand in the sea;For every wave, with dimpled face,That leaped into the air,Had caught a star in its embraceAnd held it trembling there.Amelia B. Welby

April Twenty-Eighth

Too much roseate nonsense has been indulged about life on the plantation or in the city in the ante-bellum days. Neither the planter nor the factor nor the lawyer led a life of idle ease and pleasure; they were workers, whose energy built up the State; they lived often rather in rude profusion than in luxury.

Pierce Butler

James Monroe born, 1758

April Twenty-Ninth

Error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.

Thomas Jefferson

April Thirtieth

To Jefferson’s initiative and farsightedness we owe it that we secured without bloodshed, for a trifling sum of money, a territory which doubled our republic, assured its expansion to the Gulf of Mexico and to the Pacific, and thus lifted us, by a stroke of genius, into a world power of the first class.

Thomas E. Watson

Jefferson acquires the Louisiana territory from France, 1803

Washington inaugurated first President of the United States, 1789


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