282 MARQUE, LETTERS OF. 



MARQUE, LETTERS OF. I. Proclamation 

 granting, 137; form of, 137; instructions to 

 privateers, 138. 



MARQUET, Madame SABINI. XII. Obituary, 

 650. 



MARRYAT, WILLIAM W., astronomer. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 592. 



MARS. V. Polar compression, 524 ; " op- 

 position," 524; redness of light, 524; appear- 

 ances, 524, 525 ; climate, 525 ; probably habi- 

 table, 526. 



MARSH, Rev. FREDERICK, Congregationalist 

 clergyman. XIII. Obituary of, 561. 



MARSH, JOHN. VIII. Birth, 450; death, 

 450 ; pursuits, 451. 



MARSH, SAMUEL. XIV. Decease of, 629. 



MARSHALL, Re?. GEORGE, D. D. XII. Obit- 

 uary, 616. 



MARSHALL, HUMPHREY. XII. Birth, death, 

 495 ; career, 495. 



MARSHALL, Judge THOMAS A. XL Obituary 

 of, 573. 



MARSHALL, THOMAS W. XIV. Decease of, 

 661. 



MARTIAL LAW. I. Denned, 438 ; questions 

 arising under it, 439 ; proclaimed at Baltimore 

 by General Butler, 439 ; proclamation, 439 ; 

 General Banks proclaims martial law at Bal- 

 timore, 440; appoints a provost marshal, 440; 

 action of the police commissioners, 440 ; in- 

 structions to Marshal Kenly, 440; Fremont 

 proclaims martial law in St. Louis, 441 ; ap- 

 points a provost-marshal, 441 ; Jefferson Davis 

 proclaims martial law in East Tennessee, 441 ; 

 provost-marshal appointed, 441 ; his orders, 441. 



III. Case of Joseph Griffin, 606 ; opinion of 

 the Supreme Court of Indiana, 606 ; facts of 

 the case, 606 ; conditions under which martial 

 law is exercised, 607. 



Declared by Fremont in St. Louis, 491 ; do. 

 by General Halleck, 496. 



MARTIN, ARNOLD. XII. Obituary, 617. 



MARTIN, Rey. GEORGE W. XII. Obituary, 

 619. 



MARTIN, JOHN, an Irish politician. XV. 

 Biographical sketch of, 470. 



MARTINETTE, PHILIP. XII. Obituary, 645. 



MARTINSBURG, Ya. I. Its situation, 442; 

 skirmish at, 442 ; details, 442. 



MARVIN, E. P. XIV. Decease of, 634. 



MARVIN, WILLIAM. V. Appointed Provi- 

 sional Governor of Florida, 359 ; proclamations, 

 360; message, 362; dispatch to President 



MARYLAND. 



Johnson, 363 ; chosen Senator, 363 ; relieved 

 by Governor Walker, 363 ; on the condition 

 of affairs in Florida, 364. 



MARYLAND. I. Sends commissioners to 

 Washington and to Montgomery, 141 ; reply 

 of President Davis to, 141 ; arrest of members 

 of the Legislature of, 360 ; its boundaries, 442 ; 

 population, 442; influences acting upon the 

 people, 442; reply of the Governor to the 

 commissioners from Mississippi, 442 ; efforts 

 of opposite parties, 443 ; address of the Gov- 

 ernor to the people, 443 ; the action proposed, 

 444; State Convention, 444; its action, 444; 

 proclamation of the Governor, April 18, 444; 

 call of the Legislature, 445 ; message of the 

 Governor, 445 ; action of the Legislature, 446 ; 

 report of the commissioners to wait on Presi- 

 dent Lincoln, 446 ; reply of the Governor rela- 

 tive to burning bridges, 446 ; Legislature ad- 

 journs, 447 ; destruction of railroad and canal 

 property, 447 ; elections, 447 ; another session 

 of the Legislature, 447 ; its action, 448 ; views 

 of President Lincoln on the arrests in Mary- 

 land, 448 ; final message of the Governor, 448 ; 

 protests against the invasion of Maryland by 

 Virginia troops, 449. 



II. Population, 559 ; Legislature, 559 ; ap- 

 propriation to families of Massachusetts sol- 

 diers killed at Baltimore, 559 ; message of the 

 Governor on the position of Maryland, 560; 

 resolutions of the Legislature, 560; effect of 

 emancipation in the District of Columbia, 560 ; 

 effect of Maryland and Kentucky on the South- 

 ern side, 561 ; reception of General Lee's army, 

 561 ; political sympathies of Maryland, 561 ; 

 contribution of soldiers, 561, 



III. Important events, 609 ; invasion of the 

 State, 609 ; martial law declared by General 

 Schenck, 609 ; movements of the Confederates, 

 609 ; finances, 610 ; schools, 610 ; imports and 

 exports at Baltimore, 610 ; arrests of citizens 

 during July, 610-612 ; number of arrests, 

 612; interference with a funeral, 612; sup- 

 pression of the Republican and Argus, 613 ; 

 suppression of the Maryland Club, 613; do. 

 Germania, 613 ; do. Allston Association 613 ; 

 seizure of arms in the houses of citizens, 613 ; 

 Fourth of July, 614 ; assaults on enrolling of- 

 ficers, 614 ; enlistment of colored troops, 614 ; 

 official opinion of Judge-Advocate' Holt, 614 ; 

 order of the War Department appointing re- 

 cruiting-stations, 615 ; the question of emanci- 

 pation, 615 ; proceedings of the State Central 



