Friends of Beanes went to Francis Scott Key, a lawyer in Georgetown, (and later in Frederick, Maryland), for help to obtain the release of the elderly doctor. Key got permission from President James Madison, who also sent John Stuart Skinner the U.S. Prisoner Exchange Agent for the region, to do so.
As General Stricker’s 3rd Brigade was retreating from the Battle of North Point during the evening of September 12, 1814, British naval ships out on the Patapsco River were moving into position for an attack on Fort McHenry. ... Dr. William Beanes. ... Lawyer Francis Scott Key, an acquaintance of Beanes, went to Octogon House in Washington ...
Genealogy for William Bean (1814 - d.) family tree on Geni, with over 225 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives. People Projects Discussions Surnames
Dr. William Beanes and the War of 1812 During the War of 1812, the governor of Maryland was worried the British would attack the capitol and burn the state records, so he entrusted the records to Dr. William Beanes, in what was then one of the main cities of Maryland, Upper Marlborough, in St. Georges County.
Son of George Bean & Mary Milner Married Sarah Beanland, 25 Jul 1842, Bedford, Cathedral, Yorks, England
Safely returned to Upper Marlboro, Beanes died in 1828. He is buried in a nondescript grave on a hill on the corner of Elm Street and Governor Oden Bowie Drive in Upper Marlboro.May 14, 2012
Dr. William Beanes, a prominent Upper Marlboro physician and a friend of Key, organized opposition to the renegade British troops. After Beanes's men captured some of the pillaging British troops, he and several other Americans were arrested and taken prisoner by the British.Mar 3, 2011
On September 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key pens a poem which is later set to music and in 1931 becomes America's national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The poem, originally titled “The Defence of Fort M'Henry,” was written after Key witnessed the Maryland fort being bombarded by the British during the War of 1812.
Under a flag of truce, Key went to the British flagship anchored in Maryland's Chesapeake Bay. Although the British agreed to release Beanes, they detained Key because he overheard their plans to attack Baltimore's Fort McHenry.
William Beanes (January 24, 1749 – October 12, 1828) was an American physician who was involved in the events surrounding the writing of the national anthem of the United States.
From Hospitality to Hostage. Three weeks earlier, as the British were marching towards Washington City, Beanes had hosted General Ross, Admiral Cockburn, and other British officers at his house in Upper Marlboro. The elderly Beanes was a prominent local physician whom the British believed was sympathetic to them.Sep 11, 2020
Myth #1: Francis Scott Key was held prisoner aboard a British ship during the bombardment of Baltimore. Correction: Key was aboard his own American truce ship during the battle. ... Key's mission was a success. During their talks, and then upon the release of the doctor, Key and Beanes were moved from the H.M.S.Sep 14, 2016
The battle was not over the flag; the British were trying to take Baltimore, one of America's great ports. ... There were about 28 American casualties. Bodies of the dead were not used to hold up the flag pole — a 42 by 30 foot flag has to be on a well-anchored pole, not held up by a few dead bodies stacked around it.Jul 3, 2016
James Weldon JohnsonJ. Rosamond JohnsonLift Every Voice and Sing/ComposersOften referred to as "The Black National Anthem," Lift Every Voice and Sing was a hymn written as a poem by NAACP leader James Weldon Johnson in 1900.
The American national anthem too is a part of the public domain. The lyrics to “The Star Spangled Banner” originate from a poem, “Defence of Fort M'Henry,” written by Francis Scott Key in 1814.Jul 6, 2021
Although “The Star-Spangled Banner” and all of its verses were immediately famous, Key's overt racism prevented it from becoming the national anthem while he was alive, Morley wrote. ... In the early 20th Century, all but the first verse were cut — not for their racism, but for their anti-British bent.Oct 18, 2020
Although Francis Scott Key penned the words in 1814 during the War of 1812, the melody is actually much older. ... It's based off an 18th-century British pub song called "To Anacreon in Heaven." That's right: a song to be sung whilst drunk.May 14, 2014
Three weeks earlier, as the British were marching towards Washington City, Beanes had hosted General Ross, Admiral Cockburn, and other British officers at his house in Upper Marlboro. The elderly Beanes was a prominent local physician whom the British believed was sympathetic to them.
The next day, off the Patuxent river, Skinner and Key sighted HMS ROYAL OAK, and learned that Dr. Beanes was aboard Admiral Cochrane’s command ship, the HMS TONNANT.