Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel FIRST GENERATION

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel FIRST GENERATION Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel FIRST GENERATION 1. Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel was born in 1632 in Canterbury, England. He died in March 1698 in Dorchester Co.. Henry Trippe was a Captain in the Dorchester County Militia. From "The Colonial Families of the United States: The Trippes lived in Kent County England, as far back as the Norman Conquest. The name is found in the Dooms Day Book in the title of lands. A.D. 1234, Nicholas Tryppe gave Lamplands, County Kent, to Elham Church. The first record we have of the family in maryland is in 1663, when Lieutenant Colonel Henry Trippe ( b. Canterbury, England, 1633; d. in Dorchester County, Maryland March 1698; who had fought in Flanders under the Prince of Orange, afterwards William III. of England), brought with him to the Province three of his troopers and took up land in Dorchester County; Representative in Maryland Assembly, 1671-75, 1681-82, 1692-93- one of the Committee of Twenty for regulating affairs in Maryland, 1690; Justice and County Commissioner, 1669-81, 1685-94- Captain of Foot, 1676; Major of Horse, 1689; his brother, Thomas Trippe, is mentioned by James, Duke of York, afterwards James II., in his autobiography (Nairn papers) as aiding him to escape from St. James Palace after the beheading of Charles I. Henry Trippe m. (firstly) in 1665 Frances Brooke, widow of Michael Brooke of St. Leonard's Creek, Calvert County, Maryland; m. (secondly) Elizabeth, who survived him, and by whom had the following decendants. He was married to Frances BROOKE in 1665. He was married to Elizabeth ??. Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel and Elizabeth ?? had the following children: +2 i. Henry TRIPPE. 3 ii. John TRIPPE. John Trippe moved to Bath County, North Carolina. Changed his name to Tripp, then back to Trippe when the Robert Tripp family from Rhode Island moved ito the same area of Beaufort County, North Carolina. Evidently his family wanted to keep the distinction of different Tripps. +4 iii. Edward TRIPPE . +5 iv. Henerita ( Hennetta ) TRIPPE. +6 v. William TRIPPE. SECOND GENERATION 2. Henry TRIPPE (Henry-1) died in 1744. Henry Trippe was Captain in the Dorchester County Militia. He was married to Susannah HERON. Henry TRIPPE and Susannah HERON had the following children: +7 i. Henry TRIPPE. +8 ii. Sarah TRIPPE. +9 iii. Mary Emerson TRIPPE. +10 iv. John TRIPPE. +11 v. Elizabeth TRIPPE. +12 vi. Edward TRIPPE. +13 vii. Sarah TRIPPE. +14 viii. Mary TRIPPE. 4. Edward TRIPPE (Henry-1). He was married to Susan SHERWOOD. Susan SHERWOOD died in 1755. 5. Henerita ( Hennetta ) TRIPPE (Henry-1). She was married to JOHN on 25 November 1746. 6. William TRIPPE (Henry-1) died on 24 April 1770. He was married to Jean TATE. William TRIPPE and Jean TATE had the following children: 1 Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel +15 i. Henrietta TRIPPE. +16 ii. Elizabeth TRIPPE. +17 iii. William TRIPPE. +18 iv. Edward TRIPPE. +19 v. John TRIPPE (born on 17 April 1711). THIRD GENERATION 7. Henry TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1). Henry Trippe was one of the Justices of the Quorum, High Sheriff and Deputy Commissary of Dorchester County. He was married to Elizabeth EMERSON. Henry TRIPPE and Elizabeth EMERSON had the following children: 20 i. Henry TRIPPE died in 1770. +21 ii. Elizabeth TRIPPE. 8. Sarah TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1) . She was married to Henry CALLISTER. 9. Mary Emerson TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to Robert GOLDSBOROUGH on 22 September 1768. Mary Emerson TRIPPE and Robert GOLDSBOROUGH had the following children: +22 i. Robert GOLDSBOROUGH. 10. John TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1) died in 1745. He was married to Ann ENNALLS. John TRIPPE and Ann ENNALLS had the following children: +23 i. Elizabeth TRIPPE. +24 ii. Ann TRIPPE. 11. Elizabeth TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to Bartholomew ENNALLS in 1734. Elizabeth TRIPPE and Bartholomew ENNALLS had the following children: +25 i. Henry ENNALLS. 12. Edward TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1) died in 1772. He was married to Margaret MURRAY. 13. Sarah TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to Philip EMERSON. 14. Mary TRIPPE (Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to Jacob HINDMAN on 29 January 1739. Jacob HINDMAN died in 1766. Mary TRIPPE and Jacob HINDMAN had the following children: 26 i. James HINDMAN. James Hindman was a Captain in the Mryland Line, Continental Army. 27 ii. John HINDMAN . John Hindman was a Lieutenant Colonel of the Maryland Line, Continental 2 Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel Army. 28 iii. William HINDMAN. William Hindman was a member of U.S.Congress 1793-97. 15. Henrietta TRIPPE (William-2, Henry-1) . She was married to ?? HUGHES. 16. Elizabeth TRIPPE (William-2, Henry-1). She was married to Edward NOEL. Elizabeth TRIPPE and Edward NOEL had the following children: +29 i. Elizabeth NOEL. +30 ii. Sarah NOEL. 17. William TRIPPE (William-2, Henry-1) died in June 1777. He was married to Eliza GIBSON. William TRIPPE and Eliza GIBSON had the following children: +31 i. James TRIPPE. +32 ii. Richard TRIPPE (born on 30 June 1763). +33 iii. John TRIPPE Doctor (born in November 1771). He was married to Elizabeth SKINNER. 18. Edward TRIPPE (William-2, Henry-1). He was married to Sarah NOEL. Edward TRIPPE and Sarah NOEL had the following children: +34 i. James TRIPPE. 19. John TRIPPE (William-2, Henry-1) was born on 17 April 1711. John Trippe was a Captain of Cavalry in the French and Indian Wars. He was married to Elizabeth NOEL in 1745. Elizabeth NOEL was born on 25 April 1729. She died on 24 April 1778. John TRIPPE and Elizabeth NOEL had the following children: +35 i. Amelia TRIPPE. +36 ii. William TRIPPE. +37 iii. Edward TRIPPE (born on 29 June 1771). +38 iv. Henrietta TRIPPE (born on 16 April 1774). 39 v. Levin TRIPPE . Levin Trippe was killed at sea, in command of the Privateer Isabella. +40 vi. Frances TRIPPE. +41 vii. May TRIPPE. FOURTH GENERATION 21. Elizabeth TRIPPE (Henry-3, Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to George MAXWELL. Elizabeth TRIPPE and George MAXWELL had the following children: +42 i. Elizabeth MAXWELL. +43 ii. Daughter MAXWELL. +44 iii. Daughter MAXWELL. 22. Robert GOLDSBOROUGH (Mary Emerson TRIPPE-3, Henry-2, Henry-1) . Robert Goldsborough was a U.S. Senator 1813-1819. 3 Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel He was married to Sarah YERBER. Robert GOLDSBOROUGH and Sarah YERBER had the following children: +45 i. Sarah GOLDSBOROUGH. 23. Elizabeth TRIPPE (John-3, Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to Hugh ECCLESTON. 24. Ann TRIPPE (John-3, Henry-2, Henry-1). She was married to John DICKINSON. 25. Henry ENNALLS (Elizabeth TRIPPE-3, Henry-2, Henry-1) . He was married to Sarah GOLDSBOROUGH (daughter of Robert GOLDSBOROUGH and Sarah YERBER). 29. Elizabeth NOEL (Elizabeth TRIPPE-3, William-2, Henry-1) . She was married to James KEMP Reverend. 30. Sarah NOEL (Elizabeth TRIPPE-3, William-2, Henry-1). She was married to ?? COX Captain. Sarah NOEL and ?? COX Captain had the following children: +46 i. COX Lieutenant. 31. James TRIPPE (William-3, William-2, Henry-1). He was married to Ann DAWSON. He was married to Elizabeth SKINNER. 32. Richard TRIPPE (William-3, William-2, Henry-1) was born on 30 June 1763. He died on 16 January 1849. He was married to Harriet EDMONDSON. He was married to Mary ENNALLS (daughter of Joseph ENNALLS and Sarah ??) on 5 May 1799. Richard TRIPPE and Mary ENNALLS had the following children: +47 i. Edward Thomas TRIPPE (born on 14 February 1808). 33. John TRIPPE Doctor (William-3, William-2, Henry-1) was born in November 1771. He died on 22 September 1811. He was married to Susan HERON. John TRIPPE Doctor and Susan HERON had the following children: +48 i. William Richard TRIPPE. +49 ii. John Fletcher TRIPPE. +50 iii. Mary Ann TRIPPE. 34. James TRIPPE (Edward-3, William-2, Henry-1) died in 1812. He was married to Elizabeth PENNEL. He was married to Mary PENNEL. Mary PENNEL died in 1812. James TRIPPE and Mary PENNEL had the following children: +51 i. Joseph Everett TRIPPE (born on 18 July 1805). 35. Amelia TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1) . 4 Descendants of Henry TRIPPE Lt Colonel She was married to James WOOLFORD Colonel. 36. William TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1). He married his cousin Mary Noel. He was married to Mary NOEL. William TRIPPE and Mary NOEL had the following children: +52 i. Margaret TRIPPE. +53 ii. Eliza TRIPPE. 54 iii. John TRIPPE. John, Lieutenant U.S.N., distinguished himself at Tripoli, 1804, and had a sword and gold medal voted him by Congress, and a sword by the State of Maryland. He died July 9th 1810 in command of the U.S. Brigadeer Vixen. 37. Edward TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1) was born on 29 June 1771. He died on 2 February 1846. He was married to Elizabeth BARNEY (daughter of Moses BARNEY and Sarah BOND) on 25 February 1794. He was married to Ann Tolly TOWSON (daughter of William TOWSON General). He was married to Sarah E. TRIPPE (daughter of Richard TRIPPE). Edward TRIPPE and Sarah E. TRIPPE had the following children: 55 i. Edward Richard TRIPPE. Edward Richard Trippe was and M.D. of Easton, Maryland. 38. Henrietta TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1) was born on 16 April 1774. She was married to William BRICKHEAD Colonel. 40. Frances TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1). She was married to John Elder GIST. 41. May TRIPPE (John-3, William-2, Henry-1).
Recommended publications
  • Charles Roberts Autograph Letters Collection MC.100
    Charles Roberts Autograph Letters collection MC.100 Last updated on January 06, 2021. Haverford College Quaker & Special Collections Charles Roberts Autograph Letters collection Table of Contents Summary Information....................................................................................................................................7 Administrative Information........................................................................................................................... 7 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................7 Collection Inventory...................................................................................................................................... 9 110.American poets................................................................................................................................. 9 115.British poets.................................................................................................................................... 16 120.Dramatists........................................................................................................................................23 130.American prose writers...................................................................................................................25 135.British Prose Writers...................................................................................................................... 33 140.American
    [Show full text]
  • State Treasurer's
    MarylandState Treasurer’s 0 2010 ANNUAL REPORT 0 INVESTING FOR MARYLAND’S FUTURE Maryland State Treasurer’s 2010 ANNUAL REPORT TABLE OF CONTENTS Biography of the Honorable Nancy K. Kopp, Treasurer of Maryland 2 Maryland State Treasurer’s Office, Historical Review 3 Maryland State Treasurers of the Past 4 Maryland’s Board of Public Works 5 Schedule of Selected Financial Data 7 Executive Division 8 Administration Division 11 Banking Services Division 15 Debt Management Division 18 Information Technology Division 23 Insurance Division 27 Investment Division 31 Legal Division 35 Appendix A – Investment Inventory 38 Acknowledgements 47 1 Maryland State Treasurer’s 2010 ANNUAL REPORT BIOGRAPHY OF THE HONORABLE NANCY K. KOPP Elected in February 2002, and re-elected to and Economic Development. She also served on full four-year terms in 2003 and 2007, Nancy the Capital Budget Subcommittee, Subcommit- K. Kopp is the 23rd Maryland State Treasurer tee on Pensions, and Joint Committee on Budget since the adoption of the Constitution of 1851. and Audits, and at various times as Deputy Ma- She is the second woman ever to serve as Mary- jority Leader and Speaker Pro Tem. During her land’s State Treasurer and is the only woman legislative career, Treasurer Kopp was named by serving Maryland in a Constitutional Office. In her colleagues as the most effective woman legis- addition to her responsibilities for managing the lator and one of the 10 most effective members Office of State Treasurer and representing the of the House. General Assembly, the Treasurer holds positions of leadership on a number of key State financial Treasurer Kopp has been active in numerous planning committees.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    FOURTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1795, TO MARCH 3, 1797 FIRST SESSION—December 7, 1795, to June 1, 1796 SECOND SESSION—December 5, 1796, to March 3, 1797 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—June 8, 1795, to June 26, 1795 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN ADAMS, of Massachusetts PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—HENRY TAZEWELL, 1 of Virginia; SAMUEL LIVERMORE, 2 of New Hampshire; WILLIAM BINGHAM, 3 of Pennsylvania SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—SAMUEL A. OTIS, of Massachusetts DOORKEEPER OF THE SENATE—JAMES MATHERS, of New York SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JONATHAN DAYTON, 4 of New Jersey CLERK OF THE HOUSE—JOHN BECKLEY, 5 of Virginia SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH WHEATON, of Rhode Island DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—THOMAS CLAXTON CONNECTICUT GEORGIA Richard Potts 17 18 SENATORS SENATORS John Eager Howard Oliver Ellsworth 6 James Gunn REPRESENTATIVES James Hillhouse 7 James Jackson 14 8 Jonathan Trumbull George Walton 15 Gabriel Christie 9 Uriah Tracy Josiah Tattnall 16 Jeremiah Crabb 19 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE 20 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE William Craik Joshua Coit 21 Abraham Baldwin Gabriel Duvall Chauncey Goodrich Richard Sprigg, Jr. 22 Roger Griswold John Milledge George Dent James Hillhouse 10 James Davenport 11 KENTUCKY William Hindman Nathaniel Smith SENATORS Samuel Smith Zephaniah Swift John Brown Thomas Sprigg 12 Uriah Tracy Humphrey Marshall William Vans Murray Samuel Whittlesey Dana 13 REPRESENTATIVES DELAWARE Christopher Greenup MASSACHUSETTS SENATORS Alexander D. Orr John Vining SENATORS Henry Latimer MARYLAND Caleb Strong 23 REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE SENATORS Theodore Sedgwick 24 John Patten John Henry George Cabot 25 1 Elected December 7, 1795.
    [Show full text]
  • The Baltimore Directory for ... [Serial]; Containing The
    &® \i* X*» v sS "><o * K «?vP '®fc / \ n \ •20 ^ ^ 17 12 -„ i » a I / 25 2! lb 13 111 24 22 15 14- lo Long- Street 41 42 bo / 27 3o 4b *1 40 4 J .„ 45 4.8 it 35 X ^- "--. ,*- - 39 |. H - *<•<//<- ,•' Perches J ft ./' 1^2-t / •>» / THE BALTIMORE DIRECTORY FOR 1799 , CONTAINING THE NAMES OCCUPATIONS, AND PLACES OF ABOpI f Of THE CITIZENS, ARRANGED IN ALPHA- BETltAL ORDER i ALSO , A REGISTER, a.*\di Qf 'Hve, E*CCMfc"cv«, f Lcacdk**<A>e, Judical }v<aAi,lt^<L^ c| fivt WITH AN ACCURATE TABLE: Or* "tke Dultco orv Goods ^W^^^tvurt Me^dvuvdue*) TOGETHER WITH A GENERAL. ABSTRACT FROM THE. REVENUE. LAWS Htx, • Tixy~ Cw<4tq*«e*J ef (Jcedi — 0f Gffi'cerj cf £c^/p7»kj— Of »hch4 of ftuirUj, c&C, AhcC tie fifrttc c£ B'nt'^u at 4^6- Cu.4.4o*tt -Hiide **v tie JhtfMrrfifttCo* rf Cccdj . TO AU WHICH ARK ADDED. AN AocoLfrtfc o\ ike. P«4.t- 0fftc<2 E'stalj/.u4k^vt'»vt-TK^ Bct^tci TaXotu <rj- Menace JL. c. ^i{U. cua, AifkJodltai Livt PRINTED FOR THE EDITOR, BY >- WARNER (JcHANNA, No.2.N©rtk-Gay itro& iJ9$. - THE BALTIMORE DIRECTORY. >j Abbot 7™^,*, ^occr, s.owrus iwt , . 37. vAbov>V, Jcfcolv, ffvoc fWe, Bctitt more Xtrett, 5" 5". forfliuuns TU<rtv»a^ ta/tortv, 0ay ftrcd /?>. A t Abroikcun T. fcutjttcr, "Pr^it ft rcet. j^t>"«mci4<. Gjco; ^roC^r CftrniAn Ptveet .Old-town. , 7 30 lAt^ref* Tkomo^s , cordwa-iTtcvr, Bond- Pfc, FcUa Point, M^.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    34 Biographical Directory DELEGATES IN THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS CONNECTICUT Dates of Attendance Andrew Adams............................ 1778 Benjamin Huntington................ 1780, Joseph Spencer ........................... 1779 Joseph P. Cooke ............... 1784–1785, 1782–1783, 1788 Jonathan Sturges........................ 1786 1787–1788 Samuel Huntington ................... 1776, James Wadsworth....................... 1784 Silas Deane ....................... 1774–1776 1778–1781, 1783 Jeremiah Wadsworth.................. 1788 Eliphalet Dyer.................. 1774–1779, William S. Johnson........... 1785–1787 William Williams .............. 1776–1777 1782–1783 Richard Law............ 1777, 1781–1782 Oliver Wolcott .................. 1776–1778, Pierpont Edwards ....................... 1788 Stephen M. Mitchell ......... 1785–1788 1780–1783 Oliver Ellsworth................ 1778–1783 Jesse Root.......................... 1778–1782 Titus Hosmer .............................. 1778 Roger Sherman ....... 1774–1781, 1784 Delegates Who Did Not Attend and Dates of Election John Canfield .............................. 1786 William Hillhouse............. 1783, 1785 Joseph Trumbull......................... 1774 Charles C. Chandler................... 1784 William Pitkin............................. 1784 Erastus Wolcott ...... 1774, 1787, 1788 John Chester..................... 1787, 1788 Jedediah Strong...... 1782, 1783, 1784 James Hillhouse ............... 1786, 1788 John Treadwell ....... 1784, 1785, 1787 DELAWARE Dates of Attendance Gunning Bedford,
    [Show full text]
  • A Russian Way of War? Westernization of Russian Military Thought, 1757-1800
    A Russian Way of War? Westernization of Russian Military Thought, 1757-1800 by Eugene Miakinkov A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Master of Arts in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2009 ©Eugene Miakinkov 2009 AUTHOR'S DECLARATION I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract The present study constitutes one of the first attempts to establish the extent to which Russian military thought became westernized by the end of the eighteenth century. The task is an important one in light of Soviet and Russian scholarship that maintains that Russia developed a unique, different, and, some argue, superior way of war to the West. This work argues that Russian military thought was greatly influenced by the ‘military enlightenment’ of Europe, and that the ideas proposed by Russia’s foremost military theoreticians were not as novel as previously claimed. Therefore, the final intellectual product was more a continuation of, rather than a break with, Western practices and traditions of warfare. In this respect, the underlying theme of this thesis clashes with traditional Russian national military historical scholarship. The second major theme of this study is to challenge the pervasive but flawed and often simplified interpretation of the Russian army and its soldiers as undisciplined and uneducated barbarians. Contrary to these misleading views, the writings of Russian theorists bring to light the concerns about discipline and education for the officers, personal hygiene and hospital care for the soldiers and Russian awareness of complex strategic theoretical issues.
    [Show full text]
  • “[America] May Be Conquered with More Ease Than Governed”: the Evolution of British Occupation Policy During the American Revolution
    “[AMERICA] MAY BE CONQUERED WITH MORE EASE THAN GOVERNED”: THE EVOLUTION OF BRITISH OCCUPATION POLICY DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION John D. Roche A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History. Chapel Hill 2015 Approved by: Wayne E. Lee Kathleen DuVal Joseph T. Glatthaar Richard H. Kohn Jay M. Smith ©2015 John D. Roche ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT John D. Roche: “[America] may be conquered with more Ease than governed”: The Evolution of British Occupation Policy during the American Revolution (Under the Direction of Wayne E. Lee) The Military Enlightenment had a profound influence upon the British army’s strategic culture regarding military occupation policy. The pan-European military treatises most popular with British officers during the eighteenth century encouraged them to use a carrot-and-stick approach when governing conquered or rebellious populations. To implement this policy European armies created the position of commandant. The treatises also transmitted a spectrum of violence to the British officers for understanding civil discord. The spectrum ran from simple riot, to insurrection, followed by rebellion, and culminated in civil war. Out of legal concerns and their own notions of honor, British officers refused to employ military force on their own initiative against British subjects until the mob crossed the threshold into open rebellion. However, once the people rebelled the British army sought decisive battle, unhindered by legal interference, to rapidly crush the rebellion. The British army’s bifurcated strategic culture for suppressing civil violence, coupled with its practical experiences from the Jacobite Rebellion of 1715 to the Regulator Movement in 1771, inculcated an overwhelming preference for martial law during military campaigns.
    [Show full text]
  • MIDNIGHT JUDGES KATHRYN Turnu I
    [Vol.109 THE MIDNIGHT JUDGES KATHRYN TuRNu I "The Federalists have retired into the judiciary as a strong- hold . and from that battery all the works of republicanism are to be beaten down and erased." ' This bitter lament of Thomas Jefferson after he had succeeded to the Presidency referred to the final legacy bequeathed him by the Federalist party. Passed during the closing weeks of the Adams administration, the Judiciary Act of 1801 2 pro- vided the Chief Executive with an opportunity to fill new judicial offices carrying tenure for life before his authority ended on March 4, 1801. Because of the last-minute rush in accomplishing this purpose, those men then appointed have since been known by the familiar generic designation, "the midnight judges." This flight of Federalists into the sanctuary of an expanded federal judiciary was, of course, viewed by the Republicans as the last of many partisan outrages, and was to furnish the focus for Republican retaliation once the Jeffersonian Congress convened in the fall of 1801. That the Judiciary Act of 1801 was repealed and the new judges deprived of their new offices in the first of the party battles of the Jeffersonian period is well known. However, the circumstances surrounding the appointment of "the midnight judges" have never been recounted, and even the names of those appointed have vanished from studies of the period. It is the purpose of this Article to provide some further information about the final event of the Federalist decade. A cardinal feature of the Judiciary Act of 1801 was a reform long advocated-the reorganization of the circuit courts.' Under the Judiciary Act of 1789, the judicial districts of the United States had been grouped into three circuits-Eastern, Middle, and Southern-in which circuit court was held by two justices of the Supreme Court (after 1793, by one justice) ' and the district judge of the district in which the court was sitting.5 The Act of 1801 grouped the districts t Assistant Professor of History, Wellesley College.
    [Show full text]
  • Maryland Historical Magazine, 1911, Volume 6, Issue No. 2
    /V\5A.SC 5^1- i^^ MARYLAND HISTORICAL MAGAZINE Voi,. VI. JUNE, 1911. No. 2. THE MARYLAND GUARD BATTALION, 1860-61.1 ISAAC F. NICHOLSON. (Bead before the Society April 10, 1911.) After an interval of fifty years, it is permitted the writer to avail of the pen to present to a new generation a modest record of a military organization of most brilliant promise— but whose career was brought to a sudden close after a life of but fifteen months. The years 1858 and 1859 were years of very grave import in the history of our city. Local political conditions had become almost unendurable, the oitizens were intensely incensed and outraged, and were one to ask for a reason for the formation of an additional military organization in those days, a simple reference to the prevailing conditions would be ample reply. For several years previous the City had been ruled by the American or Know Nothing Party who dominated it by violence through the medium of a partisan police and disorderly political clubs. No man of opposing politics, however respectable, ever undertook to cast his vote without danger to his life. 'The corporate name of this organization was "The Maryland Guard" of Baltimore City. Its motto, " Decus et Prsesidium." 117 118 MAEYLAND HISTORICAL MAGAZIlfE. The situation was intolerable, and the State at large having gone Democratic, some of our best citizens turned to the Legis- lature for relief and drafted and had passed an Election Law which provided for fair elections, and a Police Law, which took the control of that department from the City and placed it in the hands of the State.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    FIFTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1797, TO MARCH 3, 1799 FIRST SESSION—May 15, 1797, to July 10, 1797 SECOND SESSION—November 13, 1797, to July 16, 1798 THIRD SESSION—December 3, 1798, to March 3, 1799 SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1797, for one day only; July 17, 1798 to July 19, 1798 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—THOMAS JEFFERSON, of Virginia PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM BRADFORD, 1 of Rhode Island; JACOB READ, 2 of South Carolina; THEODORE SEDGWICK, 3 of Massachusetts; JOHN LAURANCE, 4 of New York; JAMES ROSS, 5 of Pennsylvania SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—SAMUEL A. OTIS, of Massachusetts DOORKEEPER OF THE SENATE—JAMES MATHERS, of New York SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JONATHAN DAYTON, 6 of New Jersey CLERK OF THE HOUSE—JOHN BECKLEY, of Virginia; JONATHAN W. CONDY, 7 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH WHEATON, of Rhode Island DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—THOMAS CLAXTON CONNECTICUT Henry Latimer MARYLAND SENATORS REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE SENATORS 16 James Hillhouse James A. Bayard John Henry James Lloyd 17 Uriah Tracy GEORGIA John E. Howard REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE REPRESENTATIVES John Allen SENATORS George Baer, Jr. Joshua Coit 8 James Gunn William Craik Jonathan Brace 9 Josiah Tattnall John Dennis George Dent Samuel W. Dana REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Nathaniel Smith William Hindman Abraham Baldwin James Davenport 10 William Matthews John Milledge William Edmond 11 Samuel Smith Chauncey Goodrich Richard Sprigg, Jr. 12 KENTUCKY Roger Griswold MASSACHUSETTS SENATORS SENATORS John Brown DELAWARE Benjamin Goodhue Humphrey Marshall SENATORS Theodore Sedgwick John Vining 13 REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES Joshua Clayton 14 Thomas T.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    SECOND CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1791, TO MARCH 3, 1793 FIRST SESSION—October 24, 1791, to May 8, 1792 SECOND SESSION—November 5, 1792, to March 2, 1793 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1791, for one day only VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN ADAMS, of Massachusetts PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—RICHARD HENRY LEE, 1 of Virginia; JOHN LANGDON, 2 of New Hampshire SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—SAMUEL A. OTIS, of Massachusetts DOORKEEPER OF THE SENATE—JAMES MATHERS, of New York SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JONATHAN TRUMBULL, 3 of Conneticut CLERK OF THE HOUSE—JOHN BECKLEY, 4 of Virginia SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH WHEATON, of Rhode Island DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—GIFFORD DALLEY CONNECTICUT James Gunn William Pinkney 16 17 REPRESENTATIVES John Francis Mercer SENATORS William Vans Murray Oliver Ellsworth Abraham Baldwin Joshua Seney 18 William S. Johnson 5 Francis Willis William Hindman 19 Roger Sherman 6 Anthony Wayne 7 Upton Sheridine John Milledge 8 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Samuel Sterett James Hillhouse KENTUCKY 9 MASSACHUSETTS Amasa Learned SENATORS Jonathan Sturges SENATORS Jonathan Trumbull John Edwards 10 Caleb Strong George Cabot Jeremiah Wadsworth John Brown 11 REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES DELAWARE Fisher Ames Alexander D. Orr 12 Shearjashub Bourne SENATORS Christopher Greenup 13 Elbridge Gerry Richard Bassett Benjamin Goodhue George Read MARYLAND George Leonard REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE SENATORS Theodore Sedgwick George Thacher John Vining John Henry Artemas Ward Charles Carroll of Carrollton 14 GEORGIA Richard Potts 15 NEW HAMPSHIRE SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS William Few Philip Key John Langdon 1 Elected April 18, 1792. 8 Elected to fill vacancy caused by declaring the seat 14 Resigned November 30, 1792.
    [Show full text]
  • A List of the Names and Places of Abode of the Members of the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States
    A list of the names and places of abode of the members of the Senate and House of representatives of the United States Copied from the original in the American Antiquarian Society. 1353 A LIST OF THE NAMES, AND PLACES OF ABODE, OF THE MEMBERS of the Senate, and House of Representatives, Of the UNITED STATES; and their Officers. JOHN ADAMS, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate,—13 South Fourth. SENATORS. New-Hampshire, John Langdon, 192 High. Samuel Livermore, 18 No. Third. Massachusetts. George Cabot, 67 Pine. Caleb Strong, 81 No. Sixth. Rhode-Island. William Bradford, 18 Chesnut. Theodore Foster, 45 Vine. Connecticut. Oliver Elsworth, 128 No. Second. Jonathan Trumbull, 67 Pine. Vermont. A list of the names and places of abode of the members of the Senate and House of representatives of the United States http:// www.loc.gov/resource/rbpe.14801400 Moses Robinson, 77 No. Third. Elija Paine, 18 No. Third. New-York. Aaron Burr, 270 High. Rufus King, 104 Spruce. New-Jersey. Frederick Frelinghuysen, 46 Walnut. John Rutherfurd, 13 So. Fourth. Pennsylvania. William Bingham, So. Third. James Ross, 94 So. Third. Delaware. Henry Latimer, 67 Pine. John Vining, 100 No. Third. Maryland. John Henry, Richard Potts, Virginia. Stephen Thompson Mason, 29 No. Third. Heny Tazewell, 90 So. Eighth. A list of the names and places of abode of the members of the Senate and House of representatives of the United States http:// www.loc.gov/resource/rbpe.14801400 Kentucky. John Brown, 13 So. Fourth. Humphrey Marshal, 112 So. Second. North-Carolina. Timothy Bloodworth, 206 Sassafras.
    [Show full text]