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Leonard CalvertLeonard Calvert
First Governor of Maryland

 Michael Humphries, MA

 

“…that in time they be very careful
            to do justice to every man  
                   without partiality…”*

 

              Setting sail for the new land of Terra Maria, Governor Leonard Calvert and his adventurers gazed at the passing landscape for the last time on that fateful day of November 22, 1633.  With intrigue and deception following their every move, the future colonists boarded two ships, the Ark of London and the Dove, and set sail for the open waters of the Atlantic.  Four months later they would arrive to found the colony of Maryland after an epic voyage.  Retiring to his cabin, Leonard, the second son of the late George Calvert, First Lord Baltimore, reviewed the instructions brought to him just before sailing by Father Andrew White, S. J.  This important document consisted of warnings, policies, and concrete plans for the future.  Calvert thought the order in which they were written was interesting.  Following the vision of their father, Sir George, Cecil and Leonard were dedicated to the ideas embellished by their family.  The Calvert’s viewed the New World as an opportunity to increase their personal wealth by accumulating land, establishing markets, and obtaining natural resources.  Foremost in their plans for the colony was the ideas providing a sanctuary for those whom were religiously oppressed.

 

            The first instruction was basic to the idea of Maryland and what it should represent.  Cecil wrote stating that the leaders of the colony “be very careful to preserve unity and peace amongst the passengers…and that they suffer no scandall nor offence to be given to any of the Protestants…all Acts of Romane Catholique Religion to be done as privately as my be, and that they instruct all Romane Catholiques to be silent upon all occasions concerning matters of Religion…”

 

            Foremost in the minds of the Calvert’s was the determination that the colony would not fail because of religious intolerance.  The Calvert’s were careful in respecting the rights of all the colonists.  It is a fact that the majority of passengers were of the Anglican faith while most of the leadership of the colony came from English Catholics.  The remainder of the instructions cautioned Leonard against spies and informers being aboard his ships.  He was told to avoid the Virginians for the first year and not to give them cause to complain.  Other sections emphasized the importance of planting crops, arming and training a militia, and establishing a relationship with William Claiborne, an English entrepreneur and Indian trader who would bring strong opposition to the Calvert’s and the colony of Maryland.

 

            Leonard’s early childhood was spent on the family manor at Kiplin Hall in Yorkshire.  Born to Sir George Calvert and his wife, Anne Mynne, he was baptized in the Church of England.  In his teens, he and his siblings were sent to the continent where they received a Catholic education.  When the first Lord Baltimore announced his conversion to Catholicism, Leonard apparently followed suit.  In 1623, George Calvert gained a charter of Avalon, Newfoundland and in 1628, he relocated his family, including Leonard, to his colony.

 

            While the family was in Avalon, the French, operating from their base in Quebec, began attacking the English fishing vessels.  Lord Baltimore commissioned Leonard, then 18 years old as commander of the militia.  Leonard, who had some military experience, trained his recruits into a fighting force and went to sea aboard the Ark of Avalon.  Joining two Royal Naval vessels, this small armada defeated the French discouraging them from attempting to dislodge the English from their colony in Newfoundland.  This experience helped Leonard Calvert prepare for the responsibilities he would assume as the first governor of Maryland.

 

            Governor Leonard Calvert’s personal life was shaded in mystery.   Little is known of the private life of Maryland’s first governor outside of official reports and letters sent to his brother.  He may have married Anne, daughter of Richard Brent, after returning to England in 1643.  With the outbreak of the English Civil War, it is quite possible that the marriage was performed in secret by a Catholic priest and was never recorded.  It is also thought that during his seventeen-month absence from Maryland, Leonard fathered two children, William and Anne.  When he returned to Maryland he arrived alone, perhaps leaving his children with a nurse.

 

            The Maryland Charter extended to the colonists the same basic rights enjoyed by all Englishmen.  The king reserved two stipulations concerning the governing of tLeonard Calverthe new colony founded by the Lords Baltimore.  The first of these required the Lords Baltimore to recognize the authority of the monarchy over the Charter of Maryland.  The second granted freemen the right to participate in the colonial government.  After the historic landing on St. Clement’s Island in the spring of 1634, and following the negotiations with the Indians, the new Marylanders gathered to commemorate their successful crossing of the ocean.  As some unloaded necessities, and others performed guard duty, the remainder of the colonists waded ashore and joined the governor and his council in a dignified ceremony declaring that the colony of Maryland was from this point forward established in the name of “our Saviour and our Sovereign, the King of England.”  The instructions from Lord Baltimore were read only then to the colonists.  A Mass of thanksgiving celebrated by Father Andrew White and Father John Altham highlighted the event.  This was the first Roman Catholic Mass in the English speaking colonies.

 

            The Governor, after moving the colony to St. Mary’s City, called the freemen together to propose legislation for the new colony.  These new laws were sent to Lord Baltimore for his approval.  However, Lord Baltimore rejected the initiative from the colonists and sent his own laws for their adoption.  After rejecting these proposed laws from the Proprietor, Governor Calvert reasoned that the colonists knew better what laws should be enacted for the success of the colony.  Lord Baltimore agreed and made the statement that he had enemies enough in England and Virginia without creating more in Maryland.  Governor Calvert appointed a council of advisors to assist him in governing the colony.  At the same time, he called for an assembly of freemen to approve and initiate new laws.  These two bodies evolved into our present form of government with the freemen becoming the House of Delegates and the Governor’s Council the State Senate.

 

            A more serious threat to the colony arrived with the outbreak of the English Civil War.  King Charles, with his doctrine of “Divine Right of Kings” to rule alienated the predominantly Puritan Parliament who insisted on a limited monarchy.  Before the outbreak of the English War, Governor Calvert following his brother’s instructions avoided contact with Captain William Claiborne.  After a year, Claiborne was offered the opportunity to participate in Lord Baltimore’s colony but he refused stating that his settlement on Kent Island was a part of the colony at Jamestown and was included in the Virginia charter. 

 

            A stand off ensued between Claiborne and Governor Calvert with the tension being increased as Claiborne sent Thomas Smith in the Long Taile to trade with the Indians near St. Mary’s City.  Henry Fleete, an early trader on the Potomac and sometimes ally of the Calvert’s, was sent to seize the Long Taile.  When Claiborne realized the governor had seized the Long Taile, he sent the Cockatrice to recapture his vessel.  Instead, the Cockatrice met Calvert’s ships, the St. Margaret and St. Helen in Pocomoke Sound and a sea battle began: the first in Maryland waters.  Thomas Cornwallis,** captain of the St. Margaret attacked Claiborne’s vessel and captured it after a short skirmish.  In February of 1638, after demanding the surrender of Claiborne’s subordinate, Thomas Smith and his garrison on Kent Island, Leonard Calvert, Thomas Cornwallis and musketeers of the St. Mary’s City Militia led by Sergeant Robert Vaughn, invaded Kent Island.  Thomas Smith was taken prisoner and transported to St. Mary’s City where he was tried for piracy, convicted, and hung.  This saga of adventure and intrigue also includes Governor Calvert’s concept of fairness and reconciliation.  As Chief Justice of the colony, Governor Calvert had the option of seizing the property of the late Thomas Smith.  This he did.  However, when he learned that Smith left behind a widow and two children, he promptly returned the property.

 

            The English civil War was in full force and the King’s army became besieged at every turn.  Queen Henrietta Maria, Maryland’s namesake had gone to Europe in search of supplies to support her husband’s Royalists as the war with Parliament continued.  Lord Baltimore tried to remain neutral during this conflict in order to preserve his Maryland Charter.  The war had not reached Maryland until the ship Reformation of London arrived in the Potomac and anchored off St.Where MD Began Clement’s Island.  Captain Richard Ingle had arrived with the thundering statement that he was “Captain of Graveshead for the Parliament against the king!”  In the meantime, Governor Calvert had gone to Virginia and had appointed Giles Brent as Acting Governor.  Believing the colony to be in danger, Brent arrested Ingle and had him confined to the custody of the sheriff Edward Packer.  Lord Baltimore’s old friend, Thomas Cornwallis and James Neale, a member of the Governor’s Council, were able to persuade the sheriff to allow them custody of Ingle.  They then proceeded to the Reformation of London where the trio persuaded the guard to lay down their arms.  Ingle was now back in command of his ship.  After Ingle’s escape, Neale, Packer and Cornwallis were arrested.  Neale and Packer were acquitted but Cornwallis was found guilty and heavily fined.  After his conviction, Cornwallis angrily returned to England with Ingle.  In 1645, the Reformation of London returned with authority from Parliament to seize the colony.  Governor Calvert realizing Ingle held the advantage decided to leave Maryland for Virginia to escape capture.  Here, Governor Calvert remained in exile for two years.  Supporters of Governor Calvert including Father Andrew White and Giles Brent were arrested and sent to England in chains.  Ingle’s men invaded, burned and looted St. Mary’s City and the outlying plantations.

 

            With the execution of King Charles I in 1649, the Puritans established a commonwealth and abolished the monarchy.  Governor Leonard Calvert was not through however, and raised an army consisting of Marylanders and Virginians to retake his colony by force.  In 1646, Governor Calvert returned to Maryland and sailed up the Potomac River to St. Mary’s City.  The Governor arrived unopposed and he was greeted as a liberator.  Meanwhile, in England, the conditions of the Maryland Charter were modified by Parliament and the Lords Baltimore lost some of their power.  Their claim to Maryland was upheld and with the restoration of the government in St. Mary’s City, Kent Island recognized the authority of the Calvert’s and no longer pose a threat.

 

            With the English Civil War and the Kent Island conflict in the past, Governor Calvert was ready to lead the infant colony in a hopeful era of prosperity.  This was not to happen, however.  On a morning early in June, Governor Calvert became seriously ill.  As his life faded, he instructed the Mistress Margaret Brent, his close friend and lawyer, to attend to his affairs after his death.  This included the paying of the soldiers that had returned with him the previous year and who were now petitioning for their wages.  After this final request, Governor Leonard Calvert died on June 11, 1645.  The location of his grave is unknown but it is thought that he is buried in St. Mary’s City in the Chapel Field.

 

            As a final tribute to Maryland’s first governor, Father Andrew White wrote “…he had led the colonists and by wise and humane measures won the friendship of the Indians, the confidence of his sovereign, the Proprietor, and his fellow colonists, and brought the plan to successful fruition…”***

 

 

*   Cecil Calvert’s Instructions to his colonists 1633

** Ancestor of General Charles Cornwallis who surrendered the British army to General Washington as Yorktown in

         1781 and ending the American Revolution.

***Leonard Calvert and the Maryland Adventure, Ann Jensen.  On sale in the museum


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