USA > Maryland > The Day-star of American freedom, or, The birth and early growth of toleration, in the province of Maryland : with a sketch of the colonization upon the Chesapeake and its trobutaries, preceding the removal of the government from St. Mary's to Annapolis > Part 15
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ASSEMBLY of 1648, 143 and 144. Names of the Burgesses, 144. Their Protest, 141.
ASSEMBLY of 1649, 41-59. Names of the Burgesses, 180 and 185. Their faith, 186-137, and 207-253. The Toleration Act, 54-67. Bill of Charges, 49 and 133. Act relating to the recovery of the Province, 131.
ASSEMBLY of 1650, 131-132. Names of the Burgesses, 132. Their Faith, 148. Declaratory Act, 131. Act of Recog- nition, 14S. Declaration of the Pro- testant members, 71, 72.
ASSEMBLY of 1659, 83. Report of the commissioners to the Indians, 87. Report of the committee of Secrecy, 88. Their accusation against Colonel Darnall, and the other Roman Catho- lic Deputy Governors, 89. See also Protestant Revolution.
AUGUSTA CAROLINA, the Name of St. Mary's County, 47.
B.
BALTIMORE, barons of, 102-170; George, 163-64; Cecilius, 161-168; Charles the First, 169 ; Benedict Leonard, 170; Charles the Second, 170; Frederick, 170 ; their descendants at Mount Airy, 170.
BALTIMORE bird, 121.
BALTIMORE City, its site, probably, with- in the territory of the Piscataways, 111.
BALTIMORE county erected, 105. Settle- ment upon Bohemia River, 80. Bohe- mia Manor within the original limits, 106. Earliest Courts of the County probably held upon the Eastern Shore, 106. The first foot-prints of civiliza- tion upon the Western Shore, 106. Identity of Palmer's Island with Watson's, 107. Clayborne's early trading-post, 107. Spesutia Island, 107 and 269. Augustin Herman#107. 1 His treaty with the Susquehannocks, | BOHEMIAN emigrants, 50 and 55.
B.
within the supposed territory of the Piscataways, 111. The Dorseys, 267. BALTIMORE, Lady Jane, wife of the Hon. Henry Sewall, 169; subsequently of Lord Charles Baltimore, 169; a sup- posed descendant of the Lowes, of Denby, 266; and the mother of the Hon. Maj. Nicholas Sevall, of Matta- pany-Sewall, 73 and 261.
BANKS, Thomas, 2:5. Extract from his will of 1684, 235. Catholic ap- plied to the faith of the English Church, 235.
BANKS, Capt. Richard, a Inw-giver of 1649, 135. Ilis faith, 236. His en- gagement to redeem from captivity, the child of Thos. Allen, 235. Notice of his life, 233-236. His marriage to the widow of Mr. Secretary Hatton's brother, 233.
BATTLE between the Roman Catholics and the Puritans, 177-179; the Gover- nor wounded, 177 ; a surrender, and a court-martial, 177. Skirmish be- tween Capt. Cornwallis and Colonel Clayborne's Lieutenant, 211. Attack of Cood upon the State House, in 1059, 91 and 97. Surrender cf Col. Digges, 97. Siege of Mattapany- House, 93. Surrender of Col. Darn- all, 99.
BEALES, their arrival, 83; one of the largest families of Maryland, 63; Col. Ninian Beale, 88.
BEARINGS. See Armorial Bearings.
BED-CHAMBERS, 120 ; much attention paid to the furniture, 120. See also Mrs. Fenwick's will, 215.
BENNETT, Gov. Richard, his posterity, 69.
BENNETT, Richard, the largest land- holder of the province, 69. Prefix of Squire, 69. His tombstone at Ben- nett's Point, 63. His ancestry, 60.
BILL of charges, at the Assembly of 1649, 40, and 130. Per-diemn of the Burgesses, 40.
BISHOPRIC of Md., original seal of, 266. See Armorial Bearings, and Armorial Seals.
BLOOD of Aboriginal Chiefs represented, 103.
BLOOD, the best Roman Catholic, de- rived by the Lloy Is, and other dly- tinguished Protestant families, from the Neales, 150. Ser also Nealea.
263. Labadlyists, S1. Col. Nathaniel BOUNDARIES :- The Northern boundary Live, 107. Site of Baltimore clty i of Maryland included the site of
0
276
INDEX.
B.
Philadelphia, 167; the Eastern, the Swedish settlements upon the Dela- ware, 167. Early boundaries of the counties, 106. Cecil, 106. Baltimore, 106. Anne Arundel, 106. Contest between Anne Arundel and Calvert, 107. Original boundary line, 106. Major's choice, 107.
BOWIES of Prince George's, 83. The governor's ancestry probably Scotch, 53. Their arrival, 83. Their rela- tionship to the family of Wm. Bur- gess, the early Deputy-Governor, 261. BRADNOX, Capt. Thomas, a freeman, in the Assembly of 1643, 220. High sheriff of Kent, 124. The friend of Mr. Secretary Hatton, 125. Note to him from Mr. Hatton, introducing John De Conrey, 201. Could not write, 125. Tried for cattle-stealing, 124.
BRASHAERS, 84. Their arrival, 84. Ori- ginally from France, but directly from Va., S4. Their posterity, 84.
BRASHAER, Doct., of New Market, his ancestry, 84.
BRENTS, their arrival, 268. Their faith, 268. Blood of aboriginal chiefs, 108. Capt. Giles Brent's books, 216. Spirit of a Protestant Vandal, 216. Drents of Charles county, 159. Their sup- posed relationship to the Piles, 199. Relationship to the Fenwicks, 218.
BRENTS of Louisiana, supposed descend- ants of the Hon. John Pile, 189.
BRENT, Robt. James, late attorney- general, his ancestry, 159 and 218. BRETTON, Willlam, a law-giver of 1649, 185. His faith, 226-297. Notice of his life, 224-223. His gift of a church lot, 227. His cuttle-mark, 226. Fleur- de-lis, 227. Poverty of his children, 226. Application of ever-immaculate to the Virgin Mother, 22S.
BROCK, Rev. Father, his arrival, 159.
BROOKE, Hon. Robert, founder of the little colony upon the Patuxent, 74. Persons introduced by him, 74-75. Ancestor of the present Chief Justice of the United States, 75. President of the Provincial Council, 76. Ances- tor of the Brookes of Brooke-Grove, 75. Manor of De la Brooke, 75.
BROOKES, of Brooke-Grove, their ances- try, 15.
BROOKES, of Prince George's county, descendants, many of them, of the Hon. Robt. Brooke, 75.
BROOKES, of De la Brooke. See Hon. Rolt. Brocke.
B.
BROWNE, Richard, a law-giver of 1619, 185. Notice of his life, 229-230. His faith and identity involved in doubt, 229-230.
BURGESSES of 1649, 1649, and 1650 :- Their names, faith, &c. See Assem- bly. The democratic element, 42. A distinct branch of the Assembly in 1649, 140.
BURGESS, Hon. Wm., a leading colonist, upon South River, 72. His armorial bearings, 72. Founder of London, 73. A Deputy-Governor, 73. His epitaph, 73. Large number of emi- grants introduced by him, 261. His Posterity, 261.
BURGESSES, of South River, 71-74, and 261. Their armorial bearings, 72. Ancestry of the Burgesses of West- phalia, and of the Sewalls, the Da- vises, and the Bowies, 261.
BURGESSES, of Westphalia. See Hon. Win. Burgess, and Burgesses of South River
C.
CADGERS, a, very early Anglo-Catholic family of St. George's, 146. Their Devises, 146-147.
CALVERT County, erection of, 104. Boun- dary line between Calvert and Anne Arundel, 107. Controversy, 106. Major's choice, 107. Settlement of Robr. Brooke, anterior to the erection of Calvert, 74. The Claggetty, 99 and 266. The Smiths, of St. Leonard's Creek, OS. The Taneys, 90 and 265. A Protestant County in 1659, 92. "Men of Note" opposed to the Pro- testant Revolution, 92. The Patux- ents, 111.
CALVERT, Leonard, the chief of the ori- ginal Pilgrims, 171. The first Gover- nor of the Province, S7. His death, 42, and 173. Toleration, under his Administration, 36-38. Sketch of his life and character, 171-174. His faith, 174.
CALVERTS. See Barons of Baltimore, and Armorial Bearings. See also Coin, and Armorial Seals. Family seats in England and in Maryland, 163, 169, and 170. Arms upon the , Great Seal, 163. See also Leonard Calvert.
CALVERTON, Manor of, 196. Intended for the dwelling.place of six abori- ginal nations, 190.
277
INDEX.
C.
CANVASS-BACK duck, 121.
CARROLL, Charles, of Carrollton, arrival of his ancestry, 202.
CARROLL, Henry J., children of, suppos- ed descendants of the Hon. John Pile, 1S9.
CASES :- Case of Lord Baltimore and the Penns, 167; of Capt. Banks, 234; of Captain Bradnox, 124; of Robert Clarke, 197; of Colonel Clayborne (appeal to the Crown), 166-163; of Edward Commins, the Protestant Vandal, 216; of John Cowman, the wizard, 125; of Father Fitzhierbert, 55-62; of Doct. Gerrard, 33 and 147; of Robt. Holt, 153; of Martin Kirk and others, 216; of Lieut. Lewis, 31; of Doct. Lumbrozo, the Jew, 65-67 ; of Overzee vs. Cornwallis, 155; of the Puturent Indians, 233 ; of Wal- ter Peake, 251; of John P'ile, 183 ; of the Piscataway Indians, 151-152; of Col. Price, 184; of Richard Smith, 92-93 ; of Gov. Stone, 175; of Michael Taney, 92 and 104; of Thornborough vs. Neal, 244; of Thos. Tunnell, 234 ; of Capt. Vaughan, 191; and of Parson Wilkinson, 153.
CATHOLIC, the word. applied, upon the early provincial Records, to the Eng- lish Church, 32, and 235.
CATTLE-STEALING, 124. Case of Captain Bradnox, 124.
CACSIN, Hon. John M. S., his ancestry, 81. See also Causins.
CAUSINS, of Causin's Manor, 54. Their arrival, 84. Name of the emigrant, 246. Marriage of his widow to the Hon. Robt. Clarke, 199. A trustee for the Roman Catholic Missionaries, 246.
CECIL County, erected, 105. Its early boundary, 106. Bohemia Manor, 105. See also Baltimore County, and Augustine Herman ; and the Pearces, the Thompsons, and the Hermans.
CECILIUS, the proprietary, sketch of his life and character, 162-170. A law- giver of 1049, 134. His faith, 26.
CHAIRS, 119. Their great scarcity, 119. Made of iron, 119; covered with leather, 119.
CHAMBERS, Hon. E. F., his ancestry, arrival of, vol.
CHAPELS, early provincial, 82-84, 159, and 225. The first chapel, a wigcam, 130, St. Mary's Chape!, a token of the concord between the Anglican and the Roman Catholic, 81. St. Ig-
C.
natius's Chapel, founded by a Roman Catholic law-giver of 1640, 225-223. CHARLES, the Second, of England, pro- clamation in favor of, 250-257.
CHARLES the First, and Charles the Second, of Maryland. See Barons of Baltimore.
CHARLES County, upon the Patuxent, erected in 1650, 73. See also Robt. Brooke, and Calvert County. Char- les County upon the Potomac, 104. Large number of Estates, with the Roman Catholic mark, 150, and 250- 251. Brents of Charles County, 192. See also the Causins, the Greens, the Piles, and the Stones. Also the In- dins. Part of Prince George's carved out of Charles, 106. Charles- ton, in Charles, in 1659, 105. The place of Taney's imprisonment, 105. Charleston, the first seat of Prince George's county, 11S.
CHARLESTON, 113. Its early foundation, 11S. Its site, 113. The original sent of Prince George's County, 118. The place of Michael Taney's and Rich. Smith's imprisonment, 105. In Char- les County, during the year 1689, 105. CHARTERS, American Colonial, their his- torical relation to the one given to Lord Baltimore, 27-23.
CHARTERS, early, of the English Crown, 27-31. The light they shed upon the " Charter given to the proprietary, 27- $1.
CHARTER for Maryland, a compact be- tween a member of the English and a disciple of the Roman Church, 26.
CHARTER for Virgina, taken away before the date of Lord Baltimore's, 163.
CHASES, their arrival, 202.
CHESAPEAKES, their dwelling-place, 109. Number of their warriors, 109. Ruled by the Powhatans, 105. See also Indians.
CHEW, Prof. Saml., his Anglo- Catholic ancestry, 266.
CHOPTASKS, 111. Descendants of the Kuskararcoaks, 111. See also In- dians.
CHOPricox3 desire to put themselves under the proprietary's protection, 196.
CHRISTSSON, Winlock ; and other minig- ters, in the Society of Friends, 79. Bequest of Doct. Sharpe, 73. See also Quakera.
CHRISTIANITY, 15-20.
Cucneu, meaning of, upon the provin-
278
INDEX.
c.
cial records, when used by itself, 232.
CHURCH HOLY, definition of. See Holy Church, and Words.
CIDAR, a favorite drink, 120.
CLAGGETT, Capt. Thomas, ancestor of the first, Anglo-Catholic Bishop of Maryland, 99. A Protestant, 92; but opposed to the Revolution of 1650, 92 and 99.
CLAGGETT, Doct., of Leesburg, his early Anglo-Catholic ancestry, 266.
CLAGGETTS, their arrival, 256. Posi- tion of the emigrant, upon the Revo- lution of 1659, 92. Arms of his family, 266. Impaled upon the seal of a bishopric, 200; but previously confirmed in the visitations, 268. Col. Edward Claggett, and Sir Thomas Adams, 200. Ancestor of the first Anglican bishop of MI., 266. Pos- terity of Capt. Claggett, 266.
CLAIM of the Roman Catholics, 128-161. CLARKE, Hon. Robt., a law-giver of 1649, 133. Surveyor-general of the province, 193. His faith, 137. Pos- terity, 193-199. Ilis sufferings during the ascendency of the Puritans, 197. Steward of the manor of Calverton, 196. Copy-hold tenante, 196.
CLAYBORNE, Col. Wm., his settlement upon Kent Island, 48. The first within the limits of Md., 46. His con- test with Lord Baltimore, 166. His claim, 166-103. His settlement upon Watson's' Island, TS. The first upon the Western shore, and within the ori- ginal limits of Baltimore County, 107. Supposed settlement upon Sharp's Island, 73. Settlement upon Poplar. Island, 75. A cousin of Cof. Clay- borne, 7S.
COFFEE, Its great scarcity, 120.
CoIN, proprietary's, 119.
COMEGYS, the family of, their arrival, S ..
COMMANDER, office of, 191. Its greate dignity, 192. Power given to an early commander, to select his councillors, 192.
COMPACT between an Anglo-Catholic king and a Roman Catholic prince, 24. Fidelity of the latter, 83.
CoxconDar, 25-31.
CONFEDERACY., Sce Indians.
CINVER, Philip, a law-giver of 1610, 135. H , faith, 221, and 2336. Commander of the county of Kent, 221. Sketch of his life and character, 220-223. ' s posterity, 222-223.
c.
CONTEE, John, of Java, his ancestry, S4. CONTEES, of Prince George's County, S4.
Connected with the family of Gov. Seymour, 84. Residence at Barn- staple, $4. John Contee, of Java, 34. CONVICTS, 117.
COODE, Jolin, a leader, in the Revolu- tion of 1639, 9S.
COPLEY, Rev Father, 159 and 159. Gift from Governor Green, 152. Gift from Thos. Hebden, 246.
CORNWALLIS, Capt. Thomas, one of the noblest spirits in the band of the ori- ginal emigrants, 209. The patron of Cuthbert Fenwick, 200. His estates, with the R. C. prefix, 250. His manor- house, 209. Ifis skirmish with Col. Clayborne's Lieutenant, 211.
COSTUME, glimpse of a provincial gen- tleman's, about 1650, 123. Of a lady's, at the same period, 215-216.
COUNA-WEZA, the Piscataway Indian, tried, convicted, and executed, 151. COUNCILLORS of the Commander, 192. Their office analogous. to that of the privy councillors, 192.
COUNCILLORS, privy, 116 .__ The early germ of a nobility, 116.
COUNTIES erected, between 1640 and 1689, 102-105.
COURTS :- 1. The Provincial Court was analogous to the Court of King's Bench, 116; and the original of the present Court of Appeals, 116. The lord proprietary and the privy coun- cillors sat upon its bench, 116. 2. The County Court, 116. Its early original, 212. Jurisdiction of its judges, 116. The judges taken from the gentlemen, 116. 3. Court-baron and Court-leet, 115. See also Manors. Also Freeholders, and Suitors.
Cox, James, the speaker of the Assem- bly, in 1650, To. A Puritan, 70. A signer of the Protestant Declaration, 70.
CURRENCY, 118-119. Peake, 112 and 119. Roanoke, 112 and 113. The coin of the lord proprietary, 119. Specimens, 119. English and Euro- pean coin, 118. Tobacco, the com- mon currency, 119. Its value, 119.
CUTHBERT, the prelate, and saint, 213. His corpse, 213. Ilis shrine, 213. St. Cuthbert's cross, 213.
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279
INDEX.
D.
DARNALL, Col. Henry, Deputy Governor, in 1639, 96. Overthrow of the Go- Vernment, S7-100. His narrative, 96-100. Arrival at London, 100.
DARNALLS, their arrival, and faith, 267. Kiusmen of Lord Baltimore, 267. Col. Henry Darnall, 87-100, and 267. Place of his tombstone, 207. Early family seats, 267.
DAVISES, of Mount Hope, their ancestry, 261, and 266. Their arrival, 261. DECLARATION, Protestant, 71-72.
DE COURCY, John, introduced by the Hon. Thos. Hatton, 201. Note of in- troduction to Capt. Bradnox, 201.
DE CocROY, Hon. Henry, 113-114. His letter to Lord Baltimore, 56-57. The Signer of an Address to the Crown, 95. An Opponent of the Protestant Revolution, 94. A master of the whole Aboriginal diplomacy, 95. His diplomatic services, 113. His faith, 95, and 115. A cavalier, 115. Inte- resting character of our negotiations with the Iroquois, 113.
DE COURCYS, of Cheston, probably from Ireland, 83. Their claim to the old Anglo-Norman barony, 95, and 114. High social rank, at the period of their arrival, 201 and 114.
DE COURCYS, of My-Lord's-Gift, 114.
DE LA BROOKE, the Manor of, 75. Upon the Pathxeut, 75. The seat of a little colony, 75. Held by the Brookes, 75.
DELAWARES, 112. St. Tammany, their great chief, 112. Ozenies, and other tribes of Maryland, representatives of the same race, 112. Honors paid to St. Tammany, 112. St. Tammiany Societies, 112. May celebrations, 112. Hall of St. Tummany, 112.
DIGGES, Col., a Deputy Governor, in 1650, 96-100. Attack upon the State House, 97. Surrender, 97.
DINIORSAS, arrival of, 79.
DINIOSSA, Governor Alexander, 79.
DINNER-KNIVES, their scarcity, 120. DORCHESTER County, erected. 105.
Dousers, arrival of, 267. Will of Col. . FAMILIES, provincial : - The Callgers,
Dorsey, 261. Supposed ancestor of a ! Chief Justice of Md., 267.
Duss, their early arrival, 202. One. of the prominent families of Kent, 201. Now represented, in the male line, by a gentleman of Pa., 202. :
Deren settlement upon the Delaware,
73. Refugees in Maryland, TJ. Gov. Alexander Diniossa, 79. The families
D.
of Comegys, and Lockerman, 85. Claim of the Dutch, 167.
DU VALLE, Judge of the U. S. Supreme Court, his ancestry, St.
DU VALLES, their arrival, St.
E.
EAGLE, 122. EDEN, Gov. Robt., 170.
EDMONSTONS, their arrival, S3. Their posterity, 83.
ELTONHEADS, of Eltonhead, 215. Their relationship to the Fenwicks, of Fen- wick Manor, 209 and 215. Their arms, 217. A Privy Councillor of Md., 215. A Master of the English High Court of Chancery, 213.
ELTONHEAD, the Hon. Wenn., a Privy Councillor, 215. A Roman Catholic, 178. Shot in cold blood by the Puri- tans, 173 and 216. The entity of Martin Kirke, 216.
ELTONHEAD, Elward, a Master of the English High Court of Chancery, 215. Relationship to the Eltonheads, of Eltonhead, 215.
ENGLISH Emigrants, 31, and 201-263.
ERA of Roman Catholic toleration, 251. Spirit which distinguishes it, 274-259. ESTATES, large number of, with the Pre- fix of S!, 25). Naines of many tracts, 250-251. Names of the ori- ginal Roman Catholic proprietors, 250-231.
EVANS, Col. W'in., a Roman Catholic, 227 and 219. Ilis cattle-mark, 22%. The guardian of Mr. John Maunsell's son, 210. The gui-father of Mary Mannsell, 24. Fleur-de-lis, 221.
EVER- IMMACULATE, the application of, to the Blessed Virgin, nyon the Provin- cial Records, as early as 1001, 225.
F.
FALCHION, 123.
146; the Davises, 261 and 200; the Eltonheads, 215; the Formans, 70 and 264 : the Lachlans, 53; the Mar- shalls, 146; the family of Nichols, To; the Sinths, of St. Leonard's Creek, 20 ; the Smyths, of Trumpington, 92; tr Spabling, 215; the West4, 205; the Wickliffe4, 146; and the Willuers, 263. See also Arrivals.
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280
INDEX.
F.
FEATHER, worn by the early cavaliers of the Province, 123.
FENWICK, Cuthbert, one of the Pilgrims of 1634, 207 ; and a law-giver of 1619, 135. Sketch of his life, 207-215. His faith, 213-214. The leading member of the Lower House, in 1649,
212. The attorney of Captain Cornwallis, in the Assembly, 210. Plundered by Ingle, 210. A large pos- terity, 217. Representatives at the Bar, in the Army, in the Senate, in the Priesthood, and in the Hierarchy, 207 and 217-219.
FENWICKS, of Fenwick Manor, 217.
FENWICK, Ignatius, his ancestry, 218.
FENWICK, Athanasius, his ancestry, 213. FENWICK, James, his ancestry, 218.
FENWICK, the Reverend John, his ances- try, 218; uncle of the Bishop of Ciu - cinnati, 218.
FENWICK, Rev. Enoch, his ancestry, 213; President of Georgetown Col- lege, 218.
FENWICK, Rev. Prof. George, his ances- try, 213; brother of the Bishop of Boston, 218.
FENWICK, Rt: Rev. Benedict, Bishop of Boston, his ancestry, 218.
FENWICK, Rt. Rev. Edward, Bishop of Cincinnati, 216.
FENWICKS, of Cole's Creek, 217.
FENWICKS, of Cherry-Fiells, 217.
FENWICKS, of Pomonkey, 217.
FENWICKS, of Kentucky, 217.
FENWICKS, of the South, 217.
FENWICK, Mrs. Jane, the wife of Cuth- bert Fenwick, 214. Her will, 215- 216. Articles of a lady's dress, in 1660,215.
FERRIES, 122. Early ones erected by the Government, and kept by the most respectable colonists, 122.
FERRKT, Rev. Father, 153.
FEUDAL polity, 115.
FiGs, 121.
FINGER-RINGS, much worn by the early gentry of Maryland, 124; frequently given in their wills, 124.
Fisuten, Rev. Father, 159. FITZHERBERT, Father, his case, 54-62.
FONDNESS for law-suits, mingled with a veneration for judicial authority, a characteristic of our ancestry, 154. FORSS, 12). Our ancestors dined with .. out them, 120. Their late introduc- tion into general society, 120.
FORMANS, of Clover-fields, and of Rose- 11:11, 30 and 261.
F.
FORMS, much used by our early fore- fathers, 119.
FORTS :- 1. Fort Kent, 44. 2. Fort Cray- ford, 44. 3. St. Inigo's, 153. 4. Si - quehannah Fort, 269. 5. St. Mary's Fort, 32. 6. Fort Horn, its site, 177. Supposed battle-field between the Roman Catholics and Puritans in 1653, 177.
Fox, the chief of the Quakers, 76. Preaches, in the Province, 76. Pow- erful effects, 77.
FREDERICK County carved out of Prince George's, 106. Erected in 1749, 106. The Brashaers, 84. The Darcalls, 267. The Davises, 261 and 266. The Goldsboroughs, 263. The Lowes, 266. The Richardsons, 77 and 82. The Shipleys, S2. The Taneys, 205. The Tylers, 265-266.
FREEHOLDERS, 117.
FRENCH emigrants, 84-S5. The Bra- shaers, Causins, Contees, Du Valles, Jarbos, Lacounts, Lamars, and Ri- cauds, 84.
FRIENDS. See Quakers.
G.
GENTLEMAN, 116. A large class in Mary - land, 116. County Court judges taken from them, 116.
GERRARD, Doct. Thos., a Roman Catho- lic, 33 and 53. A privy councillor, 56. Lord of St. Clement's Manor, 33 and 158. His non-compliance with the Rev. Father Fitzherbert's requisi- tion. 55. His cattle-mark, 227. Fleur- de-lis, 227. His estates with the R. C. prefix, 250. See also Cases.
GOLDSBOROUGH, Hon. Robt. H., arrival of his ancestry. 203. Ancestry of the Goldsboroughs of Myrtle-Grove, and of other families, 263. Blood of Abo- riginal Chiefs, 108.
GOLDSBOROCGHS, of Myrtle-Grove, 263. GooKiss, Capt. Daniel, 151.
GOVERNMENT, frame-work of, 115-117.
GREEN, Gov. Thomas, a law-giver of 1649, 134. A Privy Councilior, 184. His proclamation in favor of Charles the Second, 181 and 256. Notice of his life. and family, 1s1-192. His faith. 182. Sympathy with the royal family, 121. A representative of the Roman Catholic sentiment, 237.
GREENS, of Green's Inheritance, ances- try of, 162.
Growru of a great idea, 23, and 26-96.
281
INDEX:
HANSON, Col. Hanse, 79. His posterity, 79. Arms upon the seal of a near descendant, 79.
HANSONS, of Kent, their ancestry, 79. HARDWICK, Lord Chancellor, his deci- sion of the case between the proprie- taries, 167. Virtual settlement of the Controversy, 167.
HARFORD, Henry, the Lord Proprietary, 17 ).
HAT-BAND, 123. Gold hat-band worn, by the early cavaliers of Maryland, 123.
HATTON, Hon. Thomas, 200. Secretary of the Province, 185, and 202. A Privy Councillor, 135. Clothed with the powers of a Governor, 203. At- torney-General, 2:2. A law-giver of 1649, 135. His death at the battle near the Severn, 204. His life, and character, 200-205. His faith, 204. Family, 200 and 205.
HATTON, Richard, the brother of the Secretary, 200. Arrival of his wife and children, 201.
HATTON, Sir Christopher, 200.
HATTON, Sir Thomas, 201.
HATTON, Sir Robt., 201.
HATTONS, of London, their arms, 202.
HATTONS, of Piscataway, their ancestry,
206. Relationship to the Hon. Thos. Hatton, 206.
HATTONS, their connexion with the family of Capt. Banks, 233; and with the first Anglo-Catholic Clergyman, 204.
HAWKINS, arrival of the family of, 263. Their various family seats, 263. Two of its most distinguished members, 263. Interesting memorial of a judge of the Provincial Court, 264. A con- missioner to the Indians in 1639, 83. Indirectly connected with the family of Lord Baltimore, 264. Connected with the Williamses, of Roxbury, 261. A large posterity, 261.
HEAD-CLOTHES. See MIrs. Fenwick's Will.
HEBDEN, Thos., his gift to the R. C. Mis- sionaries, 246. His Deposition, 121. HEMPSTEAD, Hon. Mrs., her ancestry, 83.
HERMANS, of Bohemia Manor, their pos- terity, 51 and 204.
HERMAN, Augustine, a native of Prague, 85; distinguished in the early history of New York, So. His Treaty with the Busquehannocks, lui and 209. Settle- mert upon Bohemia River, 59. A
H.
little colony froin New York, 80 and 263. His Map, 80-81. Original lord of Bohemia Manor, SO. His posterity, 81 and 264.
HIGHARWIXONS desire to put themselves under the proprietary's protection, 196.
HISTORY, charm of External, 19. Illus- . trations from Islamism, from Chris- tianity, and from Toleration, 19-24. HOLT, Robert, his case. Sze Cases.
HOLY CHURCH, definition of, 30 and 55. See also the case of Father Fitzher- bert, 61.
HONOR due to the Roman Catholic free- men of MId., 160-161.
HONORABLE applied to the Privy Coun- cillors, and the judges of the Provin- cial Court, 196.
HOOD. See Mrs. Fenwick's Will.
HUNDREDS. See St. Mary's County.
HYNSON, Thes., ancestor of the lyn- sons of Kent, and foreman of the Grand Jury, in the cases of Wilkin- son and Holt, 153.
HYNSONS, 261. Their early arrival, 201. One of the distinguished families of Kent, 261-262. Large number of descendants, 262.
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