As part of the activities celebrating the 350th anniversary of the founding of Charles County, the College of Southern Maryland and the Charles County Heritage Commission present a monthly Friday Lecture Series dedicated to tales of the countyโs history.ย
Earlier this month, Scott Hill, of the Thomas Stone National Historic Site, delivered the first Friday Lecture at CSM La Plata.ย The Bay Net is pleased to present his program, “Well Disposed to Give Battleโ – The Patriots of Charles County as six-part series.ย ย
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Neglecting the Few Who Did So Much:ย Marylandโs Founding Fathers
If an historian asked an average American about the Revolutionary War, that person might be able to rattle off events such as the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, the signing of the Declaration of Independence or possibly the surrender at Yorktown.ย ย
If the same historian asks about well-known people involved in that struggle, the names of John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and George Washington might come to mind. ย Certainly these events and people hold honored positions in our collective memory of the American Revolution. ย Yet these events and people are not all there are to the story of this period.
In most discussions of the Revolution, Maryland receives very little attention, even though Maryland was the fourth most populous colony with almost 200,000 residents at the outbreak of the war. ย This neglect is understandable to a certain degree. ย Maryland had no large scale engagements fought in its boundaries. ย Its people had not the outspoken voices heard in Massachusetts or Virginia. ย Its best known figures seemed to pale in comparison with other more colorful figures from other states.ย ย
But if Maryland receives little attention for its role in the Revolution, then by comparison, Charles County receives no recognition for its role at all. ย This is unfortunate, and I argue, an absolute oversight on the part of historians that fail to mention Charles Countyโs contributions to the revolutionary cause.
Charles County was not large in terms of population; its roughly 15,000 inhabitants ranked the county in the middle of Marylandโs total population. ย Of this total, almost half were slaves. ย Out of the remaining, half were women; another 20% were children or youth too young to serve in the war. ย This left a white male population of approximately 2,000 of the correct age.ย ย
Yet this thinly populated, mostly rural county witnessed some of the most ardent Maryland Patriots created in the whole war.ย This county produced a signer of the Declaration of Independence, a signer of the Constitution, a President of the United States under the Articles of Confederation government, the highest-ranking Marylander in the Continental Army, the Physician General of the United States, a Representative in the first United States Congress in 1789, and two state governors. ย What was it about this small southern Maryland County that could produce so many luminaries?
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