Swanson, N. H. (1945). The perilous fight, being a little known and much abused chapter of our national history in our second war of independence and a true narrative of the battle of Godly wood and the attack on Fort McHenry, more suitably described as the battle of Baltimore ... to which is added some notice of the circumstances attending the writing of the Star spangled banner ... recounted mainly from contemporary records. Farrar and Rinehart.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationSwanson, Neil Harmon. The Perilous Fight, Being a Little Known and Much Abused Chapter of Our National History in Our Second War of Independence and a True Narrative of the Battle of Godly Wood and the Attack on Fort McHenry, More Suitably Described as the Battle of Baltimore ... to Which Is Added Some Notice of the Circumstances Attending the Writing of the Star Spangled Banner ... Recounted Mainly from Contemporary Records. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1945.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationSwanson, Neil Harmon. The Perilous Fight, Being a Little Known and Much Abused Chapter of Our National History in Our Second War of Independence and a True Narrative of the Battle of Godly Wood and the Attack on Fort McHenry, More Suitably Described as the Battle of Baltimore ... to Which Is Added Some Notice of the Circumstances Attending the Writing of the Star Spangled Banner ... Recounted Mainly from Contemporary Records. Farrar and Rinehart, 1945.