Quarterly Bulletin FMrnrnz-s-msm f^^sl %,S [ yiL Jffe; r^x ^^ Bomhardmmt of Fort M'Henry, Baltimore.; WOODCUT IN THE AMERICAN NAVAL AND PATRIOTIC SONGSTER published at Baltimore, Maryland, 1831 Bainbridge, Lawrence, Etc., Etc., by****, Baltimore, Wm. Wooddy, printer, 1831. The picture is unsigned but the name of Horton appears on the frontispiece and one other woodcut in the book, indicating that the same artist did all of the illustrations.1 There is a bound volume in the Library labelled American Ballads. It consists of about seventy pamphlet songsters sold by R. Swift; No. 360 Market Street, Philadelphia. The cover of each pamphlet lists the names of the songs it contains, and a few of them are dated, the dates from 1824-1829. One of the songsters printed the Star-Spangled Banner with the extra verse 1 This engraver is mentioned by Stauffer as engraving portraits and views from 1830-1835 for Philadelphia and Baltimore publishers. He probably came from Providence, R. I., for he was engraving for Providence book publishers as early as 1823, when he engraved ten copper plates illustrating a "Complete System of Stenography," by J. Dodge (according to Mande Fielding's Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors, and Engravers). 33