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{{Infobox Former Country
|conventional_long_name = Province of Maryland
|common_name = Maryland
|continent = North America
|country = United States
|status = Colony
|empire = United Kingdom
|government_type = Constitutional monarchy
|event_start = Charter granted
|year_start = 1632
|event_end = [[United States Declaration of Independence|Independence]]
|year_end = 1776
|date_end =
|p1 =
|s1 = Maryland
|flag_s1 = Flag of Maryland.svg
|image_flag =
|image_coat =
|image_map = Marycolony.png
|image_map_caption = A map of the Province of Maryland.
|capital = Annapolis
|common_languages = [[English language|English]]
|currency = Pound sterling
|representative1 = [[Cæcilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore|Lord Baltimore, 2nd]]
|year_representative1 = 1632-1675
|representative2 = [[Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore|Lord Baltimore, 6th]]
|year_representative2 = 1751-1776
|title_representative = Royally Chartered Proprietor
|deputy1 = Leonard Calvert
|year_deputy1 = 1634-1647
|deputy2 = Robert Eden
|year_deputy2 = 1769-1776
|title_deputy = Proprietary Governor
|legislature = [[Maryland General Assembly]]
}}


*[[Lee Archer]] (born 1972), English former professional footballer
The '''Province of Maryland''' was an [[England|English]] colony in [[North America]] that existed from 1632 until 1776, when it joined the other twelve of the [[Thirteen colonies]] in establishing the [[United States]] and became the [[U.S. state]] of [[Maryland]].
*[[Lee Archer (pilot)]]
__TOC__
*[[John Lee Archer]]
The Province began as a [[proprietary colony]] of the British [[Baron Baltimore|Lords Baltimore]], who wished to create a haven for English [[Roman Catholic|Catholics]] in the new world. Although Maryland was an early pioneer of religious toleration in the British colonies, religious strife between [[Anglicans]], [[Puritans]], Catholics, and [[Quakers]] was common in the early years, and Puritan rebels briefly seized control of the Province. In the year following the [[Glorious Revolution]], [[John Coode (Governor of Maryland)|John Coode]] led a Protestant rebellion that expelled Lord Baltimore from power in Maryland. Coode's government was unpopular and both [[William III]] and Coode himself wished to install a crown-appointed governor. This man ended up being [[Lionel Copley]] who governed Maryland until his death in 1694 and was replaced by Francis Nicholson.<ref>Events that Changed America Through the Seventeenth Century
By John E. Findling, Frank W. Thackeray, pp. 133-134.</ref> It was restored to the family when [[Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore]], swore publicly that he was a Protestant.


{{hndis|Archer, Lee}}
Despite early competition with the colony of [[Virginia]] to its south, the Province of Maryland developed along very similar lines to Virginia. Its early settlements and populations centers tended to cluster around the rivers and other waterways that empty into the [[Chesapeake Bay]]. Like Virginia, Maryland's economy quickly became centered around the farming of [[tobacco]] for sale in Europe. The need for cheap labor to help with the growth of tobacco, and later with the mixed farming economy that developed when tobacco prices collapsed, led to a rapid expansion of [[indentured servitude]] and, later, forcible immigration and [[American slavery|enslavement of Africans]].

In the latter colonial period, the southern and eastern portions of the Province continued in their tobacco economy, but as the revolution approached, northern and central Maryland increasingly became centers of wheat production. This helped drive the expansion of interior farming towns like [[Frederick, Maryland|Frederick]] and Maryland's major port city of [[Baltimore, Maryland|Baltimore]]. The Province of Maryland was an active participant in the events leading up to the [[American revolution]], and echoed events in [[New England]] by establishing [[committee of correspondence|committees of correspondence]] and hosting its own [[Chestertown Tea Party|tea party]] similar to the one that took place in [[Boston tea party|Boston]].

==Charter==
[[Charles I of England]] granted the charter for [[Maryland]], a [[proprietary colony]] of about twelve million acres (49,000 km²), to [[Cæcilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore|Cæcilius Calvert]] (Cecil), 2nd [[Baron Baltimore]] in the [[Peerage of Ireland]], on [[June 20]], [[1632]]. Some historians view this grant as a form of compensation for Calvert's father's having been stripped of his title of [[Secretary of State]] upon announcing his [[Roman Catholicism]] in 1625. The charter had originally been granted to Calvert's father, [[George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore]], but the 1st Baron Baltimore died before it could be executed, so it was granted to his son in his place.<ref name=sparky>{{cite book
| last =Sparks
| first =Jared
| title =The Library of American Biography: George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore
| publisher =Charles C. Little and James Brown
| date =1846
| location =Boston
| pages =16-
| url =http://books.google.com/books?id=RBsNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PR3&dq=Leonard+Calvert#PPA16,M1
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = }}</ref> The new colony was named after [[Henrietta Maria]], the Queen Consort.<ref>[http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/mdmanual/01glance/html/name.html Maryland State Manual]</ref> Lords Baltimore were the only Catholics or members of the [[Irish House of Lords]] in the history of the [[British Empire]] to have or obtain a proprietary colony; all other such nobles were Protestant and were endowed with an English, Scottish, British or UK peerage title.

Colonial Maryland was larger than the present-day state of Maryland. The original charter granted the Calverts an imprecisely defined territory north of Virginia and south of the 40th parallel, comprising perhaps as much as 12 million acres (49,000 km²).<ref> Alan Taylor, ''American Colonies'' (New York: Viking, 2001), p.136; John Mack Faragher, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America'' (New York: Facts on File, 1990), p.254.</ref> Maryland lost some of its putative original territory to [[Pennsylvania]] in the 1760s when, after [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] granted that colony a tract that overlapped the Maryland grant, the [[Mason-Dixon Line]] was drawn to resolve the boundary dispute between the two colonies. Maryland also ceded some territory to create the new [[District of Columbia]] after the [[American Revolution]].

Maryland's foundational charter created a state ruled by the ''[[Palatine lord]],'' Lord Baltimore. As ruler, Lord Baltimore owned directly all of the land granted in the charter. He possessed absolute authority over his domain. Settlers were required to swear allegiance to him rather than to the [[King of England]]. The charter created an aristocracy of ''[[lord of the manor|lords of the manor]]'', who bought 6,000 acres (24 km²) from Baltimore and held greater legal and social privileges than the common settlers.!!!

==Early settlement==

[[Image:Large Broadside on the Maryland Toleration Act.jpg|thumb|400px|right|The Maryland Toleration Act]]
Colonial Maryland was a southern colony.
Lord Baltimore (the younger) was a convert to Catholicism. This was a severe stigma for a nobleman in 17th century [[England]], where Roman Catholics were considered enemies of the crown and traitors to their country. In Maryland, Baltimore sought to create a haven for British Catholics and to demonstrate that Catholics and Protestants could live together harmoniously, even issuing the [[Maryland Toleration Act|Act Concerning Religion]] in matters of religion. Like other aristocratic proprietors, he also hoped to turn a profit on the new colony.

The Calvert family recruited Catholic aristocrats and Protestant settlers for Maryland, luring them with generous land grants and a policy of religious toleration. Of the 200 or so initial settlers who traveled to Maryland on the ships ''Ark'' and ''Dove,'' the majority were Protestant. In fact, Protestants remained in the majority throughout the history of colonial Maryland.

The ''Ark'' and the ''Dove'' landed at [[St. Clement's Island]] on [[March 25]], [[1634]]. The new settlers were led by Lord Baltimore's younger brother [[Leonard Calvert]], whom Baltimore had delegated to serve as governor of the new colony. The 150 or so surviving immigrants purchased land from the [[Yaocomico]] Indians and founded [[St. Mary's City]].

In 1642, Maryland declared war on the [[Susquehannock]]s. The Susquehannock with the help of [[New Sweden]] defeated Maryland in 1644. The Susquehannocks remaining in an inactive state of war with Maryland until a peace treaty was concluded in 1652.

==Maryland and the English Civil War==
In [[1654]], after the [[Third English Civil War]] (1649-1651), [[Parliamentary]] ([[Protestant]]) forces assumed control of Maryland and Governor [[William Stone]] went into exile in the [[Colony of Virginia]]. Stone returned the following spring at the head of a [[Cavalier]] (Catholic) force and marched on [[Annapolis]].

In what is known as the Battle of the Severn ([[March 25]], [[1655]]), Stone was defeated and taken prisoner. Stone was replaced as Governor by [[Josias Fendall]] (ca. 1628-1687).

==Later colonial period and the plantation economy==
In 1672, Lord Baltimore declared Maryland included the settlement of Whorekills on the west shore of the Delaware Bay, an area under the jurisdiction of the [[Province of New York]]. A force was dispatched which attacked and captured this settlement. New York could not immediately respond because New York was soon recaptured by the Dutch. Maryland feared the Dutch would use their [[Iroquois]] allies to recapture the settlement. This settlement was resorted to the Province of New York when New York was recaptured from the Dutch in November, 1674.

In the 17th century, most Marylanders lived in rough conditions on small family farms. While they raised a variety of fruits, vegetables, grains, and livestock, the cash crop was [[tobacco]], which soon came to dominate the provincial economy. Tobacco was sometimes used as money, and the colonial legislature was obliged to pass a law requiring tobacco planters to raise a certain amount of corn as well, in order to ensure that the colonists would not go hungry.

Like its larger neighbor, Virginia, Maryland developed into a [[plantation]] colony by the 18th century. By 1755, about 40% of Maryland's population was black.<ref>John Mack Faragher, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America'' (New York: Facts on File, 1990), p.257</ref> Maryland planters also made extensive use of [[indentured servants]] and [[penal labor]]. An extensive system of rivers facilitated the movement of produce from inland plantations to the Atlantic coast for export. [[Baltimore]] was the second-most important port in the eighteenth-century South, after [[Charleston, South Carolina]].

==Maryland and the Coming of the American Revolution==
Tobacco was one of the leading cash crops in this colony. [[Maryland]] declared independence from [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]] in 1776, with [[Samuel Chase]], [[William Paca]], [[Thomas Stone]], and [[Charles Carroll of Carrollton]] signing the [[Declaration of Independence (United States)|Declaration of Independence]] for the colony. In the 1776-77 debates over the [[Articles of Confederation]], Maryland delegates led the party that insisted that states with western land claims cede them to the Confederation government, and in 1781, Maryland became the last state to ratify the Articles of Confederation. It accepted the [[United States Constitution]] more readily, ratifying it on [[April 28]], [[1788]].

==See also==
*[[List of colonial governors of Maryland]]

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
{{wikisource|Charter of Maryland}}
*[http://www.publicbookshelf.com/public_html/Our_Country_Vol_1/colonialh_ig.html Colonial history of Maryland]

{{13colonies}}

[[Category:History of Maryland]]
[[Category:Thirteen Colonies|Maryland]]
[[Category:British North America|Maryland, Province of]]

[[fr:Province du Maryland]]
[[pl:Prowincja Maryland]]
[[ro:Provincia Maryland]]
[[vi:Tỉnh Maryland]]

Revision as of 18:01, 10 October 2008

Lee Archer may refer to: