After a voyage where you were seasick much of the time due to rough weather, you finally arrive in the
Luckily, you were warned before the voyage by a knowledgeable fellow traveler not to bathe in seawater which causes red eyes which many inspectors mistake to indicate trachoma (Brugger 1988). The ship berths at the B&O immigrant pier at Locust Point, and you are allowed to enter the terminal. Over the next several hours you are interviewed and issued papers by immigration inspectors, your baggage is poked and prodded, and you are finally able to leave.
Sources: Forgotten Doors: The Other Ports of Entry to the United States, ed. M. Mark Stolarik (Philadelphia: Balch Institute Press, 1988); Immigrating to the Port of Baltimore,
http://www.clis2.umd.edu/~mddlmddl/791/communities/html/pob.html; "Immigration Era, Part I: Port of Pleasant Landings," Baltimore historical Society,
http://www.historicbaltimore.org/program/immigration.htm; William Connery, Point of Entry: Baltimore, the Other Ellis Island,
http://www.baltimoremd.com/charm/pointofentry.html.
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