Frederick N. Rasmussen

Back Story

Maryland's black troops from the Great War paraded home in style

November 16, 2008

Some 400,000 African-Americans answered their country's call during World War I and served in the Army's segregated units.

    Recent columns

  • They all liked Ike, and claimed credit for the slogan

    November 9, 2008

    Our faithful Chestertown correspondent and longtime friend, Douglas R. Price, who in his younger days was a member of Dwight D. Eisenhower's White House staff, sent me a letter the other day explaining the history of "I Like Ike," which became his former boss' 1952 campaign song.

  • When Wilson beat Hughes, Baltimore blinked

    November 2, 2008

    If you thought the presidential elections of 2000 and 2004 were cliffhangers, how about the election of 1916 that faced off incumbent Woodrow Wilson, the Democratic candidate, against the Republican Party's nominee, Charles Evans Hughes, former associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • They're not writing campaign songs like these any more

    October 26, 2008

    There is nothing musical that has a shorter shelf life than the custom-written presidential campaign song, unless it's one the anointed party candidate has copped from the popular music world and adopted as his campaign theme without altering lyrics.

  • Gold coin and Rodgers Forge stories return

    October 19, 2008

    Weeks later, and I'm still getting mail and phone calls about columns I wrote in September and August.

  • A pioneer in teaching Russian to high schoolers

    October 12, 2008

    Earlier this week, I wrote about the death of Joseph Glus, 84, a longtime Charles Village resident who was hired as the first Russian-language teacher by Baltimore County's public schools in 1959.

  • Jervis Langdon: the man behind the railroad

    October 5, 2008

    Why is it that most biographies of railroad presidents and business tycoons fall flatter than a Michael Phelps diner pancake?

  • Gold comes out of the cellar and into the lore

    September 28, 2008

    My column several weeks ago chronicling the Depression-era story of two Baltimore youths, Theodore Jones, 16, and Henry Grob, 15, who turned up 3,558 gold coins in the dirt cellar of an Eden Street tenement, brought some interesting responses.

  • A platterful of fond Connolly's memories

    July 27, 2008

    Even though Connolly's Pier 5 Pratt Street seafood house served up its last crab cake platter in 1991, Baltimoreans near and far still fondly recall the old, no-frills restaurant and wish that such a place still existed.

Frederick N. Rasmussen

Frederick N. Rasmussen

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Kenneth N. Harris Sr.
Coverage of the fatal shooting of former Baltimore City councilman Kenneth N. Harris Sr., 45, during an apparent robbery outside a jazz club and the subsequent arrests.
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Fatal Bel Air Bypass crash | Md. police spying
Fatal medevac crash | CEG sold for $4.7B

A roundup of crimes reported in Baltimore City and Baltimore County


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