Then followed the Morning Star Club of the East, with a banner bearing the picture of Senator Revels greeting the Goddess of Liberty on the steps of the capitol - the members wore a neat uniform of blue shirts and black pants, Good Intent Club, Caulkers' and Live Oak Association, carrying the mallets and other instruments of the caulkers' trade, they had a full rigged ship drawn by four horses, the vessel be-ing some twenty feet long and fully manned and beautifully decorated. They were followed by the Brickmakers' Association, with a drum corps, the men dressed in salmon colored shirts, black caps and pants, and carried as a motto, "We are in favor of the single mould principle." Then came the Third Ward Good Will Club, dressed in white shirts and blue trimmings, carrying axes, flags, &c, the Northerner's Look Club, in white shirts and blue and gilt trimmings, carrying axes, clubs, flags, and a large tri- colored ball in a wagon, with the motto "Time from '62 to '70 roll good, roll on – keep the ball rolling."

Following these came the Sailors' Beneficial Association dressed as sailors with oars regalia &c, the Seventh Maryland Band, the Fifth Ward Wilson Club with a banner containing a portrait of the late George A Hackett, and a car representing the Temple of Liberty, with a real colored goddess on the top – on one side a portrait of Lincoln with the words "Our Liberator" on the other a portrait of Grant with the words "The Peacemakers." Sumner and Wilson Club composed of boys in white and blue cambric, chariots of girls in bright colors and wearing wreaths and waving flags. Then came the Order of Good Samaritans composed of Mount Lebanon Lodge Western Chapel Lodge Harmonic Lodge and an open barouche containing the Past Grand Masters of the Order, all in full regalia.

Then came a printing press in a wagon which struck off as it went along a handbill headed "The New Vote Isaac Myers Editor". It contained the Fifteenth Amendment, an advertisement of the Freedmen's Savings Bank and a pledge that every colored vote in Maryland would be cast for the radical ticket. A wagon containing a tin factory and a number of vehicles containing school children and a wagon with a number of colored men labeled "Lumber Inspectors of the Second Ward". As the last named car passed along one of the "inspectors" would hold op a strip of wood and call out its length and quality whilst his "clerk" seemed busily engaged in "chalking it down".

The second division came next, under the marshalship of John C Jordan and headed by Briscoe's Juvenile Cornet Band. The division was composed of the sixth ward C C Fulton Club Seventh Ward Club the Sixth Ward Lovals with banner bearing the motto "Soldiers in War should be Citizens in Peace" the Colored Butchcrs Association in uniform Fairmount Keystone Club, Sixth Ward Fredman's Club, with monument bearing on its four sides portraits of Lincoln Stevens Stanton and Henry W1nter Davis, the Samuel M Evans Club with banner bearing Mr Evans' likeness, and the motto "Owen Lovejoy's Martyr to Liberty and Justice" the men were dressed in white shirts and black pants, Ninth Ward Association, with banner bearing the likeness of Wm Lloyd Garrison and the words "The Voice of the Liberator has at Last been heard," Ninth Ward Invincibles Tenth Ward Wide Awakes, with brass band, Young Men's Christian Association of the tenth ward, Fishermen of Gallilee of the tenth ward with the little Gallileans in furniture wagons, John Brown Club the Torchlight Club Haymakers' BaseBall Club the Eubolt American Club No 2,Tenth Ward Republican Association, in blue shirts and black pants the Colfax Club in white shirts, trimmed with blue, Hookstown Sons of temperance, Zebedee Club of South Baltimore, in blue shirts, King Hezekiah's Pasture, United Order of N Knights of Samaritan.