On July 21, 1817, Captain Benjamin C. Howard鈥檚听First Mechanical Volunteers听formed up early in town and marched six miles to the North Point battleground. Accompanying them were wagons conveying the monument blocks to be assembled and dedicated on site that day. The monument鈥檚 construction was directed by Lt. Thomas Towson, a stone mason听鈥渨ho aimed at simplicity and neatness.鈥 With a final application of whitewash it was dedicated to honor Private Aquila Randall a member who was killed in a skirmish just before the Battle of North Point, September 12, 1814. The company was joined by other 5thMaryland Regiment officers at the monument while Captain Howard delivered a modest appropriate address:
鈥溾.I can picture to myself the sensation of those who in far distant days will contemplate this monument鈥nd the melancholy event which has caused our assemblage at this spot鈥his monument which we are now erecting, will stand as a solemn expression of the feeling of us all鈥ut I regret that the spot, which is made classic by the effusion of blood, the sport where the long line stood un-appalled by the system and advances of an experienced and disciplined foe, has been suffered to remain unnoticed. It is here where her citizens stood arrayed soldier鈥檚 garb, that honors to a soldier鈥檚 memory should have been paid. To mark the spot be then our care.鈥︹
The inscriptions on the monument read: