In this task, you're given a question, along with three passages, 1, 2, and 3. Your job is to determine which passage can be used to answer the question by searching for further information using terms from the passage. Indicate your choice as 1, 2, or 3.
Q: Question: Does the city where Morgan Jr. was born have more than 200,000 residents? Passage 1:Robinson played for the Bermuda Under-19s in the 1995 International Youth Tournament in the Netherlands, making three appearances. The following year he played a minor match for the Bermuda Board President's XI against the touring New Zealanders. He made his full debut for Bermuda in a List A match against Guyana in the 1998–99 Red Stripe Bowl, scoring 3 runs before he was dismissed by Ramnaresh Sarwan, with Guyana winning the match by 152 runs. His next appearance for the team came in the 2002 ICC Americas Championship when he made a sole appearance against the United States. In February 2008, the Bermuda were invited to take part in the 2008 Stanford 20/20, whose matches held official Twenty20 status, with him making a single appearance in a first round defeat to Guyana. He next played for Bermuda in a series of minor matches in 2011.
 Passage 2:Born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana as an only child, he was raised on his grandfather's farm which influenced his affinity for nature and the rural life of Louisiana. His father influenced his decision to become an artist. Elemore Morgan Sr., a full-time photographer, had also worked and farmed with Louisiana architect A. Hays Town. At Louisiana State University and studied art under the tutelage of Caroline Durieux, Ralston Crawford and David LeDoux. For two years he served in the U.S. Air Force as a supply officer during the Korean War. With the help of the GI Bill, Morgan studied art at The Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art at the University of Oxford in England. In 1957 he returned to Louisiana began working in Lafayette with longtime friend and architect Neil Nehrbass. He served as an associate professor from 1965 to 1998 at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (then named the University of Southwestern Louisiana).
 Passage 3:The neighborhood is just west of the Federal Hill community and commercial district connected by West Hamburg Street, which is along South Charles and Light Streets, and the famous hill itself, which was the site of a celebratory picnic in 1788 after a parade of the various guilds, organizations and military units of old "Baltimore Town" to commemorate the ratification by Maryland of the new Federal Constitution, and later fortified with earthen embankments and large cannons of artillery by Northern troops of the Union Army a month after, during the Civil War to keep a close watch on and control on the Southern-sympathizing citizens of the City who had erupted in April 1861, in a riot attacking passing Massachusetts and Pennsylvania troops from the President Street Station on the east side from Philadelphia and the North, on their way to the nearby (a few blocks away with the Washington tracks running right by the Church) Camden Street Station of the famous Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to defend the National Capital of Washington from the newly seceded Virginians and Confederates.

A:
2