On March 13, 1749, Eva Catherine Schley, daughter of John Thomas Schley, who built the first house in Frederick, was born. It is thought that this child was the first to be born in Fredericktown. On March 13, 1845, John W. Baughman purchased The Citizen newspaper, which remained in his family well into the 20th Century. On March 13, 1872, Walter Osborn, an elderly and destitute man, died in a small stream in the northwest section of Frederick County. Seven years later Daniel Smith, who was seen in possession of some of Osborn's clothing, was arrested, tried and found not guilty of the murder of Osborn. On March 13, 1898, Professor Joseph H. Apple, president of the Women's College of Frederick, preached the sermon at Trinity Chapel of the Evangelical Reformed Church, after which the Rev. Eugene L. McLean was selected as the pastor of a second Reformed Church in Frederick. It became known as Grace Reformed Church. On March 13, 1948, The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad station at the southeast corner of East All Saints Street and South Market Street in Frederick , from which President Lincoln addressed Fredericktonians on October 4, 1862, was closed. Passenger service was moved to a refurbished station on South Carroll Street. The building now houses the City of Frederick's Community Action Agency. On March 13, 2001, The Frederick News-Post was sold to a single branch of the Delaplaine family. The newspaper, which was started in 1883 by William T. Delaplaine, had been owned by George B. Delaplaine, Jr., and his sister Frances Delaplaine Randall and their children. The Randall family purchased the newspapers from The Great Southern Printing and Manufacturing Company, Inc., and formed The Randall Family LLC. No purchase price was announced. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury [email protected]