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| Federal Hill in Baltimore, 1861 |
Baltimore Mayor George William Brown recalled waiting on the platform to shake President-elect
Abraham Lincoln’s hand to welcome him to the city during his inaugural journey.
Little did he know Lincoln had abandoned the car in Harrisburg and secretly
made his way to the capital city under cover of darkness.
He took it as a personal insult, as did the citizens of
Baltimore. The implication that there was a plot to kill Lincoln in their city
made the townspeople feel like criminals put under a magnifying glass.
Because Lincoln snuck into the town after dark, it left a
bitter taste in their mouths, similar to his sending troops through the heart
of the city without alerting them.
If “Old Abe” had just come into town and shaken hands as
planned, Brown was sure everything would have worked out okay. If the army had
informed city officials about the troop movements, proper precautions could
have been taken to ensure their safety.
The “real problem” was the government’s lack of
communication.
The day before the Pratt Street Riot, on April 18, two
companies of United States Artillery commanded by Major Pemberton and four
militia companies arrived on the North Central Railroad. They disembarked from
their cars at Bolton Station in North Baltimore shortly after 2 p.m.


