FRED_121122_069
Existing comment:
Capital for a Summer:
Foiling Maryland Secession
The building in front of you, Kemp Hall, was the capitol of Maryland during the spring and summer of 1861, as the state came perilously close to leaving the Union. Because secession would have placed the U.S. capital, Washington, D.C., between the Confederate states of Maryland and Virginia. President Abraham Lincoln could not let it happen.
Two weeks after the Confederate capture of Fort Sumter, South Carolina, Maryland Gov. Thomas H. Hicks called the General Assembly into special session here in Frederick, a strongly Unionist city in debate secession. The state capital, Annapolis, was seething with resentment over the recent Federal occupation of that city.
Both the Senate and the House of Delegates began the session on April 26, 1861, in the former Frederick County Courthouse building located two blocks west of here. The next day, the senators and delegates moved here to Kemp Hall, a larger meeting space that belonged to the German Reformed Church.
As early as June 20, under Lincoln's suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, Federal troops began arresting suspected pro-secession legislators, starting with Delegate Ross Winans of Baltimore, who was stopped on his way home from the session here. He, like several other lawmakers, was confined briefly under Lincoln's orders.
The legislature continued to meet here at Kemp Hall throughout the summer. Finally, lacking a quorum -- primarily because of the arrest of so many secession-leaning senators and delegates -- it adjourned in September without ever considering a secession bill.
Proposed user comment: