Dear Jenny Masur I should very much like to exchange views and information with you. In collecting information on the refugees I have started to comb through RN ships' logs to ascertain just where they were when they picked up the groups of refugees identified in musters, but frequently there is no exactitude in the references. In addition, addresses or place-names found in American documents don't always tally with known places, either modern or contemporary. My reference to going along the Patuxent arises from a collaboration with Dr Stanley Quick (on the Eastern Shore -- you might care to contact him on (410) 778-0924, as in addition I believe his house on Fairlee Creek was part of the later Railroad), and by the time of our visit there will probably be more definition as to some of the points of departure in the Patuxent. And my attention is grabbed by your reference to Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum in Calvert Co -- can you tell me more? Is there anything on a website? Dr Quick will be our point of contact generally while in Maryland, and we will be staying with him and his wife for the second half of our visit. Best wishes John Weiss ----- Original Message ----- From: <[log in to unmask]> To: <[log in to unmask]> Sent: Thursday, September 02, 2004 3:08 PM Subject: Re: Corps of Colonial Marines, War of 1812 > I am very interested in meeting or at least talking to you. I work for the > National Park Service's National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom > Program. I am anxious to identify sites associated with African Americans > who sought freedom from enslavement (by going to the British) during the > War of 1812. So far I only know of a site associated with Jefferson > Patterson Park and Museum in Calvert Co. My phone number is 202-690-5166. I > am based in National Capital Parks-East in Anacostia which manages Fort > Washington and Piscataway Park among other sites in Prince George's County, > MD. > To subscribe, change options, or unsubscribe, please see the instructions at http://listlva.lib.va.us/archives/va-hist.html