. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . ^. JAMES RYDER RANDALLTHE AUTHOR OF MY MARYLAND, AT TWENTY-TWO In 1801. just as he looked when he wrote his famous battle-cry. My Maryland, James Ryder Randall, the youth-ful poet, faces the reader. Randall was born in Baltimore the first day of 1839. His early schooling was underJoseph H. Clark, a former teacher of Edgar Allan Poe. At Georgetown College In- was the smallest boy thathad ever been received as a student After becoming known as the poet of the college, h


. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . ^. JAMES RYDER RANDALLTHE AUTHOR OF MY MARYLAND, AT TWENTY-TWO In 1801. just as he looked when he wrote his famous battle-cry. My Maryland, James Ryder Randall, the youth-ful poet, faces the reader. Randall was born in Baltimore the first day of 1839. His early schooling was underJoseph H. Clark, a former teacher of Edgar Allan Poe. At Georgetown College In- was the smallest boy thathad ever been received as a student After becoming known as the poet of the college, he traveled extensively inthe West Indies and South America, landing in 1858 in New Orleans on his return. Then he accepted the chairof English literature at Poydras College, a flourishing Creole institution at Pointe Coupee. Louisiana. He wasStill teaching there when he learned through the New Orleans Delta of the attack on the Sixth Massachusettsin Baltimore on April 19, 1861. That night he wrote the verses that ran like wildfire through the South and numberless times in the North. The remainder of his days w


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