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Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore

Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (8 August 1605 – 30 November 1675) was an English politician, peer and lawyer who was the first proprietor of Maryland. Born in Kent in 1605, he inherited the proprietorship after the death of his father, George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, for whom it had been intended. Calvert proceeded to establish and manage the Province of Maryland as a proprietary colony for English Catholics from his English country house of Kiplin Hall in North Yorkshire.

The Lord Baltimore
Line engraving of Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore
Governor of Newfoundland (Avalon)
In office
1629–1632
MonarchCharles I
Proprietor of the Maryland colony
In office
1632–1675
Personal details
Born(1605-08-08)8 August 1605
Kent, England[1]
Died30 November 1675(1675-11-30) (aged 70)
Middlesex, England
SpouseAnne Arundell
Children9, including The 3rd Baron Baltimore
Parent(s)George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore
Anne Mynne
Alma materTrinity College, Oxford
OccupationLawyer
Politician

As a Catholic, he continued his father's legacy by promoting religious tolerance in the colony. He also was involved in the establishment of the Newfoundland Colony and the Province of Avalon. Maryland quickly became a haven for English Catholics in the Americas, particularly due to rising religious persecution in England. Governing Maryland's affairs for forty-four years, Calvert died in England in 1675. After his death, the Protestant Revolution of 1689 overturned Catholic control of the colony and established Protestant supremacy.

Early life and education Edit

Calvert was born on 8 August 1605 in Kent, England, to George Calvert, a young English lawyer and assistant to Lord Cecil (1563–1612), Secretary of State to King James I, and was christened "Cecilius" in honour of his father's employer.[2][3] His mother, his father's wife, was Anne Mynne (or Mayne),[4] and he was the first of several sons. At the time, his father was under pressure to conform, and all ten children were baptised into the Church of England.[5]

Calvert entered Trinity College, Oxford, in 1621. His mother died the following year.[5] In 1625, his father, George Calvert, was created the first Baron Baltimore, of Baltimore, County Longford, in the peerage of Ireland, which did not give him a seat in the English House of Lords.[4] He formally converted to Roman Catholicism the same year, and it is likely that his children followed him; at least his sons did.[citation needed]

In 1628, Cecil Calvert accompanied his father, along with most of his siblings and his stepmother, to the newly settled Colony of Newfoundland. The colony failed due to disease, extreme cold and attacks by the French, and the family returned to England.[citation needed]

Cecil Calvert succeeded as the second Baron Baltimore upon his father's death in April 1632. On 8 August 1633, the new Lord Baltimore was called to the bar as a barrister from Gray's Inn.[4]

Settlement of the Maryland colony Edit

Maryland Charter Edit

Lord Baltimore, as Cecil now was, received a Charter from King Charles I for the new colony of Maryland, to be named for the Queen Consort, Henrietta Maria (wife of King Charles I). This was shortly after the death, in April 1632, of his father, George who had long sought the charter to found a colony in the mid-Atlantic area to serve as a refuge for English Roman Catholics. The original grant would have included the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay as far south as the Potomac River and the entirety of the eastern shore (later known as the Delmarva peninsula).[citation needed]

When the Crown realised that settlers from Virginia had already crossed the bay to begin settling the southern tip of their eastern shore, the grant was revised to include the eastern shore only as far south as a line drawn east from the mouth of the Potomac River (including the future State of Delaware). Once that alteration was made, the final charter was confirmed on 20 June 1632. This charter would be heavily contested by the 2nd Lord Baltimore's heirs and the Penn family in the Penn–Calvert Boundary Dispute.[citation needed]

Baltimore's fee for the Charter, which was legally a rental of the land from the King, was one-fifth of all gold and silver found and the delivery of two Native American arrows to the royal castle at Windsor every Easter.[6] The Charter established Maryland as a palatinate, giving Baltimore and his descendants rights nearly equal to those of an independent state, including the rights to wage war, collect taxes and establish a colonial nobility.[7] In questions of interpretation of rights, the Charter would be interpreted in favour of the proprietor.[8]

Supporters in England of the Virginia colony opposed the Charter, as they had little interest in having a competing colony to the north.[9] Rather than going to the colony himself, Baltimore stayed behind in England to deal with the political threat and sent his next younger brother Leonard in his stead. He never travelled to Maryland.[9]

While the expedition was being prepared, Baltimore was busy in England defending the 1632 Charter from former members of the Virginia Company. They were trying to regain their original Charter, including the entirety of the new Maryland colony, which had previously been included within the domains described as a part of Virginia.[10] They had informally tried to thwart the founding of another colony for years, but their first formal complaint was lodged with the "Lords of Foreign Plantations" (Lords of Trade and Plantations) in July 1633.[10] The complaint claimed that Maryland had not truly been unsettled, as stated in its charter, because William Claiborne had previously run a trading station on Kent Island in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay off the eastern shore.[10] It also claimed that the Charter was so broad as to constitute a violation of the liberties of the colony's subjects. At this point, there were few Marylanders yet in residence.[11]

Ark and Dove Edit

 
Modern reconstruction of Dove, one of the two ships that carried settlers to plant Lord Baltimore's first settlement in Maryland in 1634.

The first expedition consisted of two ships that had formerly belonged to Baltimore's father George, Ark and Dove.[12] They departed from Gravesend in Kent with 128 settlers on board. They were chased and forced to return by the British Royal Navy so that the settlers would take an oath of allegiance to the King as required by law. They then sailed in October 1632 for the Isle of Wight to pick up more settlers.[12] There, two Jesuit priests (including Father Andrew White) and nearly 200 more settlers boarded before the ships set out across the Atlantic Ocean.[13]

Baltimore sent detailed instructions for the governance of the colony. He directed his brother to seek information about those who had tried to thwart the colony and to contact William Claiborne to determine his intentions for the trading station on Kent Island.[14] He also emphasised the importance of religious toleration among the colonists, who numbered nearly equally Catholic and Protestant.[14]

 
Leonard Calvert, Lord Baltimore's younger brother and the first governor of the Maryland colony.

With these last instructions, the expedition crossed the Atlantic and sailed through Cape Charles (headland) and Cape Henry into the large harbour and lower bay called Hampton Roads at the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay and the mouth of the James River. After meeting with the Virginians at their colony and capital of Jamestown, they continued up the Bay to the Potomac River, then further upstream and landed on 25 March 1634 at Blakistone Island (later called St. Clement's Island). There they erected a cross and celebrated their first Mass with Father White. Several days later, they returned downstream and founded the first settlement at St. Mary's City (in the future St. Mary's County), on 27 March 1634, on land purchased from the native Yaocomico tribe, a branch of the Piscataway Indians.[15]

From England, Baltimore tried to manage the political relations with the Crown and other parts of government. Claiborne, the trader on Kent Island, resisted the new settlement and conducted some naval skirmishes against it.[16]

Calvert attempted to stay closely involved in the governance of the colony, though he never visited it. During his long tenure, he governed through deputies: the first was his younger brother Leonard Calvert (1606–1647),[17] and the last was his only son Charles.

Crisis before and during the English Civil War Edit

The enterprise took place in the context of serious unrest in England. In 1629, King Charles I had dissolved Parliament and governed for the next eleven years without consultation from any representative body.[9] William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, and his Star Chamber campaigned against both Puritans and Catholics.[9] As a result, the Puritans and Separatists began to emigrate to New England in Plymouth Colony and Massachusetts Bay Colony. Catholics began to see Maryland as a possible English-speaking place of refuge.[9]

Lord Baltimore, a Catholic, struggled to maintain possession of Maryland during the English Civil War by trying to convince Parliament of his loyalty; he appointed a Protestant, William Stone, as his governor. It is accepted he did this exclusively to maintain possession of the colony during the civil war, as his loyalties were with King Charles.[citation needed]

Religious toleration Edit

 
Maryland Toleration Act, passed in 1649.

In 21 April 1649, Maryland passed the Maryland Toleration Act, also known as the "Act Concerning Religion", mandating religious tolerance[18] for Trinitarian Christians only (those who profess faith in the "Holy Trinity" – Father, Son and Holy Spirit, excluding Nontrinitarian faiths). Passed on 21 September 1649 by the General Assembly of the Maryland colony, it was the first law establishing religious tolerance in the British North American colonies. The Calvert family sought enactment of the law to protect Catholic settlers and Nonconformist Protestants who did not conform to the established Church of England.[citation needed] However, this act was repealed a few years shortly after its passage.[19]

Baltimore's colony in Newfoundland Edit

Lord Baltimore's family also had title to Ferryland and the Province of Avalon in Newfoundland. George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore administered the colony between 1629 and 1632, when he left for the Colony of Virginia and later visited the northern reaches along the Chesapeake Bay (which included the future Maryland). In 1637, however, Sir David Kirke acquired a charter giving Cecil the title to the entire island of Newfoundland, superseding the charter granted to his father George. The 2nd Lord Baltimore fought against the new Charter. Although, in 1661, he gained official recognition of the old Charter of Avalon, he never attempted to retake the Avalon colony. Sir George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, cited the huge expense of fighting the French privateer de la Rade as one of the reasons for abandoning the Colony of Avalon in 1629.[20][21][22]

Marriage and family Edit

 
Cecil's son and heir, Charles, 3rd Baron Baltimore.

He married Anne Arundell, Reichsgräfin von Wardour, daughter of Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour,[23] in 1627 or 1628. They had nine children. Of the nine, only three, including Charles, 3rd Baron Baltimore, survived to adulthood. Later, her name became the inspiration for the naming of one of the earliest counties to be "erected" (founded), namely Anne Arundel County, Maryland.[1] Anne's father built Hook Manor, a country house near Semley, Wiltshire for her in 1637 and gave the house (which still stands) to the couple in 1639.[24]

Cecil, 2nd Lord Baltimore, died in Middlesex, England, on 30 November 1675.[1] He was succeeded by his son and heir, Charles.

Death and burial Edit

He died in England on 30 November 1675, aged 70 years. Parish records state that he is buried at St. Giles-in-the-Fields Church, London, UK,[25] though the exact location of his grave is unknown.[26]

A plaque commemorating Cecil Calvert was placed in St. Giles's in 1996 by the Governor of Maryland. However, genealogists for Kiplin Hall state, "A number of the early Calverts were buried at St Giles in the Fields, Charing Cross Road, London. We cannot yet be certain whether Cecil is one of them."[27] This is possibly due to poor record keeping of Catholic burials[28] or numerous outbreaks of disease that overwhelmed burial staff and led to confusion in parish registers.[29]

Legacy and honours Edit

Maryland Edit

 
In 1904, the arms were adopted as the official state Flag of Maryland. It is the only US state flag to be based on British and Irish heraldry.[30][31]
 
The 2nd Baron Baltimore is portrayed on the 1934 Maryland Tercentenary half dollar, designed by Hans Schuler

Numerous place names honour the Barons Baltimore, including the counties of Baltimore, Calvert, Cecil, Charles, and Frederick.

Cities which include variations of the Calvert and Lord Baltimore's name

Street names

A 1908 statue of Cecil, Lord Baltimore, for which Francis X. Bushman served as sculptor's model,[32] stands on the steps at the west entrance of the Circuit Courthouse of Baltimore City (built 1896–1900 – renamed the Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. Courthouse in the 1980s) facing Saint Paul Street and a small Court Plaza with a fountain. It is the site of annual "Maryland Day" (25 March) ceremonies which continue inside the elaborate lobby and ceremonial courtrooms.

Harford County is named for Henry Harford, the illegitimate son of Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore. Although precluded by his birth status from inheriting the peerage, he inherited the Lord Proprietorship, only to lose it later during the American Revolution.

The Flag of Maryland uses the arms of the Cecil's along with the Calvert (father's family) black and gold paly (6 vertical bars), with a bend dexter counterchanged, and the Crossland (mother's family) red and white bottony (tre-foiled) counterchanged cross. The flag first flew on 11 October 1880, in Baltimore by the newly reorganised Maryland National Guard (state militia) at a parade marking the 150th anniversary of the founding of Baltimore Town (1729–1730). It also flew on 25 October 1888, at Gettysburg Battlefield for ceremonies dedicating monuments to the Maryland regiments of the Army of the Potomac and of the Confederate States Army. During the Civil War, the black and gold chevrons were used as a symbol on uniforms and flags by the Northern (Union) Maryland soldiers and units and the bottony cross from the Crosslands by the Southern (Confederate) regiments from Maryland. The later reunification of the two squares of the colonial seal and proprietary family's coat-of-arms in the increased use of a "Maryland Flag" in the late 19th and early 20th centuries symbolised the post-war reconciliation of the two sides of the bitterly divided border state. Officially, it was adopted as the State flag in 1904.[33]

The Great Seal of Maryland, which was stolen in 1645, was replaced by a similar seal by Cecil. The seal features the Calvert arms and motto, which is still used in the Government of Maryland.

Newfoundland Edit

  • On the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland is the settlement of Calvert
  • Baltimore School is in nearby Ferryland.

Coat of arms Edit

 
The Arms of the Barons Baltimore which were granted to the 2nd Baron. The arms were designed by the College of Arms in London.

The black and gold quarters were the arms of the Calverts themselves, while the red and silver were for the Crosslands, the family of the 1st Baron's mother, Alice.[33]

Shield:

  • Quarterly, 1st and 4th Paly of six Or and Sable a bend counterchanged (Calvert),
  • 2nd and 3rd Quarterly Argent and Gules over all a cross bottony counterchanged (Crosslands).

Crest: Out of a ducal coronet 2 pennants flying, the dexter Or, the sinister Sable

Supporters: Two leopards guardant Proper

Motto: (Italian), Fatti maschii, parole femine, meaning, "Manly deeds, womanly words."

The coat was the inspiration for the naming of the Baltimore oriole bird, whose orange and black feathers resembled Lord Baltimore's coat of arms. The bird in turn inspired the name of the Baltimore Orioles baseball team.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Archives of Maryland (Biographical Series) Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore (1605–1675) Retrieved February 2011
  2. ^ Browne, p. 4
  3. ^ Fiske, John (1897), Old Virginia and Her Neighbors, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, p. 255
  4. ^ a b c Richardson, Douglas (2005). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, p. 169. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company; ISBN 0-8063-1759-0.
  5. ^ a b Krugler, John D. (2004). English and Catholic: the Lords Baltimore in the Seventeenth Century. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; ISBN 0-8018-7963-9, p. 32.
  6. ^ Browne, pp. 35–36
  7. ^ Browne, p. 36
  8. ^ Browne, p. 37
  9. ^ a b c d e Browne, p. 39
  10. ^ a b c Browne, p. 43
  11. ^ Browne, pp. 43–44
  12. ^ a b Browne, Page 40
  13. ^ Browne, p. 45
  14. ^ a b Browne, pp. 46–57
  15. ^ Browne, pp. 59–62
  16. ^ Browne, pp. 62–64
  17. ^ "Leonard Calvert MSA SC 3520-198". Maryland State Archives. 7 March 2003.
  18. ^ Finkelman, Paul, ed. (2006). Encyclopedia of American civil liberties. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-94342-6. OCLC 67346353.
  19. ^ "American colonies - The Carolinas and Georgia | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  20. ^ "The Colony of Avalon Shares Stories of Canada from Before the Country We Now Know Existed".
  21. ^ "The Effects of War on Early Settlement".
  22. ^ "Sir George Calvert and the Colony of Avalon".
  23. ^ Worthington, David (15 April 2016). British and Irish Experiences and Impressions of Central Europe, c.1560–1688. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-17215-4.
  24. ^ Historic England. "Hook Manor (1146052)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  25. ^ St Giles-in-the-Fields Church Website Section: Global Connections Retrieved September 2013
  26. ^ "Md. memorial to Calvert in England fulfills request made 35 years ago" Baltimore Sun 11 May 1996
  27. ^ [1] 22 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine Note for: Cecil Calvert - 2nd Baron Baltimore, 8 August 1605 - 30 November 1675 Kiplin Hall Website Retrieved July 2015
  28. ^ [2] National Archives UK retrieved July 2015
  29. ^ Harding, Vanessa (1993). "Burial of the plague dead in early modern London" (Centre for Metropolitan History Working Papers Series, No. 1, 1993).
  30. ^ Several versions to represent the Colony and the State had been used since the grant to the Second Lord Baltimore. For more information see: Flag of Maryland.
  31. ^ State of Maryland (Chapter 48, Acts of 1904, effective 9 March 1904)
  32. ^ State to mark 362nd birthday at statue steeped in local lore Lord Baltimore's likeness based on Hollywood actorBaltimore Sun 22 March 1996
  33. ^ a b Maryland Manual Online: A Guide to Maryland Government, Maryland State Archives, 30 October 2012. Maryland at a Glance: State Symbols.

Sources Edit

  • Browne, William Hand (1890). George Calvert and Cecilius Calvert: Barons Baltimore of Baltimore. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Company.
  • Krugler, John D. (2004). English and Catholic: The Lords Baltimore in the 17th Century. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-7963-9

External links Edit

  • Calvert Family Tree (accessed 10 July 2013)
Government offices
Preceded by Governor of Newfoundland
1629–1632
Succeeded by
New title Proprietor of Maryland
1632–1675
Succeeded by
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by Baron Baltimore
1632–1675
Succeeded by

cecil, calvert, baron, baltimore, august, 1605, november, 1675, english, politician, peer, lawyer, first, proprietor, maryland, born, kent, 1605, inherited, proprietorship, after, death, father, george, calvert, baron, baltimore, whom, been, intended, calvert,. Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore 8 August 1605 30 November 1675 was an English politician peer and lawyer who was the first proprietor of Maryland Born in Kent in 1605 he inherited the proprietorship after the death of his father George Calvert 1st Baron Baltimore for whom it had been intended Calvert proceeded to establish and manage the Province of Maryland as a proprietary colony for English Catholics from his English country house of Kiplin Hall in North Yorkshire The Right HonourableThe Lord BaltimoreLine engraving of Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron BaltimoreGovernor of Newfoundland Avalon In office 1629 1632MonarchCharles IProprietor of the Maryland colonyIn office 1632 1675Personal detailsBorn 1605 08 08 8 August 1605Kent England 1 Died30 November 1675 1675 11 30 aged 70 Middlesex EnglandSpouseAnne ArundellChildren9 including The 3rd Baron BaltimoreParent s George Calvert 1st Baron BaltimoreAnne MynneAlma materTrinity College OxfordOccupationLawyerPoliticianAs a Catholic he continued his father s legacy by promoting religious tolerance in the colony He also was involved in the establishment of the Newfoundland Colony and the Province of Avalon Maryland quickly became a haven for English Catholics in the Americas particularly due to rising religious persecution in England Governing Maryland s affairs for forty four years Calvert died in England in 1675 After his death the Protestant Revolution of 1689 overturned Catholic control of the colony and established Protestant supremacy Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Settlement of the Maryland colony 2 1 Maryland Charter 2 2 Ark and Dove 3 Crisis before and during the English Civil War 4 Religious toleration 5 Baltimore s colony in Newfoundland 6 Marriage and family 7 Death and burial 8 Legacy and honours 8 1 Maryland 8 2 Newfoundland 9 Coat of arms 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksEarly life and education EditCalvert was born on 8 August 1605 in Kent England to George Calvert a young English lawyer and assistant to Lord Cecil 1563 1612 Secretary of State to King James I and was christened Cecilius in honour of his father s employer 2 3 His mother his father s wife was Anne Mynne or Mayne 4 and he was the first of several sons At the time his father was under pressure to conform and all ten children were baptised into the Church of England 5 Calvert entered Trinity College Oxford in 1621 His mother died the following year 5 In 1625 his father George Calvert was created the first Baron Baltimore of Baltimore County Longford in the peerage of Ireland which did not give him a seat in the English House of Lords 4 He formally converted to Roman Catholicism the same year and it is likely that his children followed him at least his sons did citation needed In 1628 Cecil Calvert accompanied his father along with most of his siblings and his stepmother to the newly settled Colony of Newfoundland The colony failed due to disease extreme cold and attacks by the French and the family returned to England citation needed Cecil Calvert succeeded as the second Baron Baltimore upon his father s death in April 1632 On 8 August 1633 the new Lord Baltimore was called to the bar as a barrister from Gray s Inn 4 Settlement of the Maryland colony EditMaryland Charter Edit Lord Baltimore as Cecil now was received a Charter from King Charles I for the new colony of Maryland to be named for the Queen Consort Henrietta Maria wife of King Charles I This was shortly after the death in April 1632 of his father George who had long sought the charter to found a colony in the mid Atlantic area to serve as a refuge for English Roman Catholics The original grant would have included the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay as far south as the Potomac River and the entirety of the eastern shore later known as the Delmarva peninsula citation needed When the Crown realised that settlers from Virginia had already crossed the bay to begin settling the southern tip of their eastern shore the grant was revised to include the eastern shore only as far south as a line drawn east from the mouth of the Potomac River including the future State of Delaware Once that alteration was made the final charter was confirmed on 20 June 1632 This charter would be heavily contested by the 2nd Lord Baltimore s heirs and the Penn family in the Penn Calvert Boundary Dispute citation needed Baltimore s fee for the Charter which was legally a rental of the land from the King was one fifth of all gold and silver found and the delivery of two Native American arrows to the royal castle at Windsor every Easter 6 The Charter established Maryland as a palatinate giving Baltimore and his descendants rights nearly equal to those of an independent state including the rights to wage war collect taxes and establish a colonial nobility 7 In questions of interpretation of rights the Charter would be interpreted in favour of the proprietor 8 Supporters in England of the Virginia colony opposed the Charter as they had little interest in having a competing colony to the north 9 Rather than going to the colony himself Baltimore stayed behind in England to deal with the political threat and sent his next younger brother Leonard in his stead He never travelled to Maryland 9 While the expedition was being prepared Baltimore was busy in England defending the 1632 Charter from former members of the Virginia Company They were trying to regain their original Charter including the entirety of the new Maryland colony which had previously been included within the domains described as a part of Virginia 10 They had informally tried to thwart the founding of another colony for years but their first formal complaint was lodged with the Lords of Foreign Plantations Lords of Trade and Plantations in July 1633 10 The complaint claimed that Maryland had not truly been unsettled as stated in its charter because William Claiborne had previously run a trading station on Kent Island in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay off the eastern shore 10 It also claimed that the Charter was so broad as to constitute a violation of the liberties of the colony s subjects At this point there were few Marylanders yet in residence 11 Ark and Dove Edit nbsp Modern reconstruction of Dove one of the two ships that carried settlers to plant Lord Baltimore s first settlement in Maryland in 1634 The first expedition consisted of two ships that had formerly belonged to Baltimore s father George Ark and Dove 12 They departed from Gravesend in Kent with 128 settlers on board They were chased and forced to return by the British Royal Navy so that the settlers would take an oath of allegiance to the King as required by law They then sailed in October 1632 for the Isle of Wight to pick up more settlers 12 There two Jesuit priests including Father Andrew White and nearly 200 more settlers boarded before the ships set out across the Atlantic Ocean 13 Baltimore sent detailed instructions for the governance of the colony He directed his brother to seek information about those who had tried to thwart the colony and to contact William Claiborne to determine his intentions for the trading station on Kent Island 14 He also emphasised the importance of religious toleration among the colonists who numbered nearly equally Catholic and Protestant 14 nbsp Leonard Calvert Lord Baltimore s younger brother and the first governor of the Maryland colony With these last instructions the expedition crossed the Atlantic and sailed through Cape Charles headland and Cape Henry into the large harbour and lower bay called Hampton Roads at the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay and the mouth of the James River After meeting with the Virginians at their colony and capital of Jamestown they continued up the Bay to the Potomac River then further upstream and landed on 25 March 1634 at Blakistone Island later called St Clement s Island There they erected a cross and celebrated their first Mass with Father White Several days later they returned downstream and founded the first settlement at St Mary s City in the future St Mary s County on 27 March 1634 on land purchased from the native Yaocomico tribe a branch of the Piscataway Indians 15 From England Baltimore tried to manage the political relations with the Crown and other parts of government Claiborne the trader on Kent Island resisted the new settlement and conducted some naval skirmishes against it 16 Calvert attempted to stay closely involved in the governance of the colony though he never visited it During his long tenure he governed through deputies the first was his younger brother Leonard Calvert 1606 1647 17 and the last was his only son Charles Crisis before and during the English Civil War EditMain article Battle of the Severn The enterprise took place in the context of serious unrest in England In 1629 King Charles I had dissolved Parliament and governed for the next eleven years without consultation from any representative body 9 William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury and his Star Chamber campaigned against both Puritans and Catholics 9 As a result the Puritans and Separatists began to emigrate to New England in Plymouth Colony and Massachusetts Bay Colony Catholics began to see Maryland as a possible English speaking place of refuge 9 Lord Baltimore a Catholic struggled to maintain possession of Maryland during the English Civil War by trying to convince Parliament of his loyalty he appointed a Protestant William Stone as his governor It is accepted he did this exclusively to maintain possession of the colony during the civil war as his loyalties were with King Charles citation needed Religious toleration Edit nbsp Maryland Toleration Act passed in 1649 In 21 April 1649 Maryland passed the Maryland Toleration Act also known as the Act Concerning Religion mandating religious tolerance 18 for Trinitarian Christians only those who profess faith in the Holy Trinity Father Son and Holy Spirit excluding Nontrinitarian faiths Passed on 21 September 1649 by the General Assembly of the Maryland colony it was the first law establishing religious tolerance in the British North American colonies The Calvert family sought enactment of the law to protect Catholic settlers and Nonconformist Protestants who did not conform to the established Church of England citation needed However this act was repealed a few years shortly after its passage 19 Baltimore s colony in Newfoundland EditLord Baltimore s family also had title to Ferryland and the Province of Avalon in Newfoundland George Calvert 1st Baron Baltimore administered the colony between 1629 and 1632 when he left for the Colony of Virginia and later visited the northern reaches along the Chesapeake Bay which included the future Maryland In 1637 however Sir David Kirke acquired a charter giving Cecil the title to the entire island of Newfoundland superseding the charter granted to his father George The 2nd Lord Baltimore fought against the new Charter Although in 1661 he gained official recognition of the old Charter of Avalon he never attempted to retake the Avalon colony Sir George Calvert Lord Baltimore cited the huge expense of fighting the French privateer de la Rade as one of the reasons for abandoning the Colony of Avalon in 1629 20 21 22 Marriage and family Edit nbsp Cecil s son and heir Charles 3rd Baron Baltimore He married Anne Arundell Reichsgrafin von Wardour daughter of Thomas Arundell 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour 23 in 1627 or 1628 They had nine children Of the nine only three including Charles 3rd Baron Baltimore survived to adulthood Later her name became the inspiration for the naming of one of the earliest counties to be erected founded namely Anne Arundel County Maryland 1 Anne s father built Hook Manor a country house near Semley Wiltshire for her in 1637 and gave the house which still stands to the couple in 1639 24 Cecil 2nd Lord Baltimore died in Middlesex England on 30 November 1675 1 He was succeeded by his son and heir Charles Death and burial EditHe died in England on 30 November 1675 aged 70 years Parish records state that he is buried at St Giles in the Fields Church London UK 25 though the exact location of his grave is unknown 26 A plaque commemorating Cecil Calvert was placed in St Giles s in 1996 by the Governor of Maryland However genealogists for Kiplin Hall state A number of the early Calverts were buried at St Giles in the Fields Charing Cross Road London We cannot yet be certain whether Cecil is one of them 27 This is possibly due to poor record keeping of Catholic burials 28 or numerous outbreaks of disease that overwhelmed burial staff and led to confusion in parish registers 29 Legacy and honours EditMaryland Edit nbsp In 1904 the arms were adopted as the official state Flag of Maryland It is the only US state flag to be based on British and Irish heraldry 30 31 nbsp The 2nd Baron Baltimore is portrayed on the 1934 Maryland Tercentenary half dollar designed by Hans SchulerNumerous place names honour the Barons Baltimore including the counties of Baltimore Calvert Cecil Charles and Frederick Cities which include variations of the Calvert and Lord Baltimore s name City of Baltimore Leonardtown St Leonard Calvert Cliffs Anne Arundel County Anne Arundel s original spelling of her name is preserved in the name of the county s heritage organisation Ann Arundell County Historical Society 3 Street names Cecil Avenue Calvert Street Charles Street in Baltimore Calvert Street in Brooklyn neighbourhood of South Baltimore Calvert Street in Washington Baltimore Avenue in Ocean City Maryland Baltimore Street in Cumberland Maryland Baltimore Street in La Plata Maryland Baltimore Annapolis Boulevard Maryland Route 648 Baltimore Washington Parkway Lord Baltimore Drive in Owings Maryland Lord Cecil Drive in Owings MarylandA 1908 statue of Cecil Lord Baltimore for which Francis X Bushman served as sculptor s model 32 stands on the steps at the west entrance of the Circuit Courthouse of Baltimore City built 1896 1900 renamed the Clarence M Mitchell Jr Courthouse in the 1980s facing Saint Paul Street and a small Court Plaza with a fountain It is the site of annual Maryland Day 25 March ceremonies which continue inside the elaborate lobby and ceremonial courtrooms Harford County is named for Henry Harford the illegitimate son of Frederick Calvert 6th Baron Baltimore Although precluded by his birth status from inheriting the peerage he inherited the Lord Proprietorship only to lose it later during the American Revolution The Flag of Maryland uses the arms of the Cecil s along with the Calvert father s family black and gold paly 6 vertical bars with a bend dexter counterchanged and the Crossland mother s family red and white bottony tre foiled counterchanged cross The flag first flew on 11 October 1880 in Baltimore by the newly reorganised Maryland National Guard state militia at a parade marking the 150th anniversary of the founding of Baltimore Town 1729 1730 It also flew on 25 October 1888 at Gettysburg Battlefield for ceremonies dedicating monuments to the Maryland regiments of the Army of the Potomac and of the Confederate States Army During the Civil War the black and gold chevrons were used as a symbol on uniforms and flags by the Northern Union Maryland soldiers and units and the bottony cross from the Crosslands by the Southern Confederate regiments from Maryland The later reunification of the two squares of the colonial seal and proprietary family s coat of arms in the increased use of a Maryland Flag in the late 19th and early 20th centuries symbolised the post war reconciliation of the two sides of the bitterly divided border state Officially it was adopted as the State flag in 1904 33 The Great Seal of Maryland which was stolen in 1645 was replaced by a similar seal by Cecil The seal features the Calvert arms and motto which is still used in the Government of Maryland Newfoundland Edit On the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland is the settlement of Calvert Baltimore School is in nearby Ferryland Coat of arms Edit nbsp The Arms of the Barons Baltimore which were granted to the 2nd Baron The arms were designed by the College of Arms in London The black and gold quarters were the arms of the Calverts themselves while the red and silver were for the Crosslands the family of the 1st Baron s mother Alice 33 Shield Quarterly 1st and 4th Paly of six Or and Sable a bend counterchanged Calvert 2nd and 3rd Quarterly Argent and Gules over all a cross bottony counterchanged Crosslands Crest Out of a ducal coronet 2 pennants flying the dexter Or the sinister SableSupporters Two leopards guardant ProperMotto Italian Fatti maschii parole femine meaning Manly deeds womanly words The coat was the inspiration for the naming of the Baltimore oriole bird whose orange and black feathers resembled Lord Baltimore s coat of arms The bird in turn inspired the name of the Baltimore Orioles baseball team See also EditBaron Baltimore Colonial families of Maryland List of colonial governors of Maryland Province of Maryland Lord Baltimore pennyReferences Edit a b c Archives of Maryland Biographical Series Cecilius Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore 1605 1675 Retrieved February 2011 Browne p 4 Fiske John 1897 Old Virginia and Her Neighbors Boston Houghton Mifflin p 255 a b c Richardson Douglas 2005 Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families p 169 Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company ISBN 0 8063 1759 0 a b Krugler John D 2004 English and Catholic the Lords Baltimore in the Seventeenth Century Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 7963 9 p 32 Browne pp 35 36 Browne p 36 Browne p 37 a b c d e Browne p 39 a b c Browne p 43 Browne pp 43 44 a b Browne Page 40 Browne p 45 a b Browne pp 46 57 Browne pp 59 62 Browne pp 62 64 Leonard Calvert MSA SC 3520 198 Maryland State Archives 7 March 2003 Finkelman Paul ed 2006 Encyclopedia of American civil liberties New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 94342 6 OCLC 67346353 American colonies The Carolinas and Georgia Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 8 January 2023 The Colony of Avalon Shares Stories of Canada from Before the Country We Now Know Existed The Effects of War on Early Settlement Sir George Calvert and the Colony of Avalon Worthington David 15 April 2016 British and Irish Experiences and Impressions of Central Europe c 1560 1688 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 17215 4 Historic England Hook Manor 1146052 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 7 January 2020 St Giles in the Fields Church Website Section Global Connections Retrieved September 2013 Md memorial to Calvert in England fulfills request made 35 years ago Baltimore Sun 11 May 1996 1 Archived 22 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine Note for Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore 8 August 1605 30 November 1675 Kiplin Hall Website Retrieved July 2015 2 National Archives UK retrieved July 2015 Harding Vanessa 1993 Burial of the plague dead in early modern London Centre for Metropolitan History Working Papers Series No 1 1993 Several versions to represent the Colony and the State had been used since the grant to the Second Lord Baltimore For more information see Flag of Maryland State of Maryland Chapter 48 Acts of 1904 effective 9 March 1904 State to mark 362nd birthday at statue steeped in local lore Lord Baltimore s likeness based on Hollywood actorBaltimore Sun 22 March 1996 a b Maryland Manual Online A Guide to Maryland Government Maryland State Archives 30 October 2012 Maryland at a Glance State Symbols Sources EditBrowne William Hand 1890 George Calvert and Cecilius Calvert Barons Baltimore of Baltimore New York Dodd Mead and Company Krugler John D 2004 English and Catholic The Lords Baltimore in the 17th Century Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 7963 9External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclopaedia article about Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore Calvert Family Tree accessed 10 July 2013 Government officesPreceded byGeorge Calvert Governor of Newfoundland1629 1632 Succeeded byWilliam HillNew title Proprietor of Maryland1632 1675 Succeeded byThe 3rd Lord BaltimorePeerage of IrelandPreceded byGeorge Calvert Baron Baltimore1632 1675 Succeeded byCharles Calvert Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore amp oldid 1177391888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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