Baltimore Belles & Rebels #3 Monument Wreath for
Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson by Becky Collis
Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson Post Shippen (1842-1926)
Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson, a prominent member of
Baltimore society, showed her rebellion in Union Maryland by forming the Brown Veil Club, supporters of the Confederacy.
When war began
she lived with her parents Arinthea Darby Parker and James Macon Nicholson in
the Mount Vernon Place neighborhood at 209 West Monument Street with a view of Baltimore's Washington Monument.
Maryland Historical Society
The Brown Veil Club or Monument Street Girls
Standing: Henrietta Penniman Carrington, Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson;
Seated: Sophia Sargeant, Alice Wright, Rebecca Gordon, and Ida Winn
The Monument Street Girls sewed clothing for
rebel soldiers and sang in a glee club where they popularized James Ryder Randall’s
poem, “Maryland! My Maryland” set to the tune of “Tannenbaum-O Tannenbaum.” The women staged a small Confederate demonstration
after the Southern victory at the Battle of Manassas in July, 1861, marching to
Baltimore’s Washington Monument in their West Monument Street neighborhood.
"The despot’s heel is on thy shore,
Maryland!
His torch is at thy temple door,
Maryland!
Avenge the patriotic gore
That flecked the streets of Baltimore,
And be the battle queen of yore,
Maryland! My Maryland!"
In her 1904 account of the club's activities Rebecca recalled they asked men associated with the poem to publish it as a song but
they refused, worried about Union retaliation. Rebecca decided to do it
herself. Although a Southern sympathizer father James was opposed to Secession inspiring her accurate idea that she could get away with treason. "My father is a Union man, and if I am put in prison,
he will take me out."
Emancipation Celebration Parade on Monument Street by
Baltimore's African-American community
John Eager Howard Post (1840 -1876)
A year after the war ended Rebecca married Confederate Captain John Post of the First Maryland Cavalry. In the
ten years they were married they had six children but only one son survived to
adulthood. Her husband died at 36 at their home on West Monument
Street.
Dr. Edward Shippen (1827-1895)
Rebecca's second husband was Union veteran Edward Shippen (1827-1895), a
Philadelphia surgeon who served with several Pennsylvania regiments and as
superintendent of a hospital at the Capitol building in Washington. They
married in 1878 and had a son the following year. Rebecca lived well into the 20th century, dying in 1926.
Monument Wreath by Denniele Bohannon

This squarish wreath has become associated with