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Topic: Edward Lloyd (Governor of Maryland)


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  The Probert Encyclopaedia - People and Peoples (E)
Edward III was son of Edward II and King of England from 1327 to 1377.
Edward the confessor was a son of Ethelred and King of England from 1042 to 1066.
Ethelred was a son of Edgar and succeeded Edward the martyr as King of England from 978 to 1016.
www.fas.org /news/reference/probert/C41.HTM   (6559 words)

  
 National Governors Association   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
EDWARD LLOYD, the eleventh governor of Maryland, was born in Talbot County, Maryland on July 22, 1779.
Lloyd was elected to his own term in November 1809, and was reelected in 1810.
Governor Edward Lloyd passed away on June 2, 1834, and was buried in the family cemetery at Wye House in Talbot County, Maryland.
www.nga.org /portal/site/nga/menuitem.29fab9fb4add37305ddcbeeb501010a0/?vgnextoid=cd0e224971c81010VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD&vgnextchannel=e449a0ca9e3f1010VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD   (277 words)

  
  Edward Lloyd, The Puritan
Governor Fendall soon after this, began to betray a faithfulness to the interests of Lord Baltimore which at this day is inexplicable, except upon the assumption that he had become possessed by the spirit of republicanism which was passing out of the Puritans.
Lloyd did not accompany them, he approved of their course, for we find that after Fendall was displaced and the Upper House restored, he was one of those whom Gov. Philip Calvert, who had been secretary, called to be one of the new Council.
Lloyd's life was not spent in the indulgence of religious sentiment, nor in the defence or propagation of political theories.
www.talb.lib.md.us /mdroom/worthies/lloyd/puritan.html   (4002 words)

  
 Edward Lloyd
LLOYD, Edward, statesman, born in Maryland in 1799; died in Annapolis, Maryland, 2 June.
He was governor of Maryland in 1809-'11, and United States senator from that state from 6 December, 1819, till January, 1826, when he resigned.
Lloyd became ex-officio governor of the state, and in January, 1886, he was chosen by the legislature to fill the unexpired term, ending in 1888.
www.famousamericans.net /edwardlloyd   (385 words)

  
 Maryland Historical Trust
He was a co-founder of the Maryland Historical Society in 1844 as well as a charter member of the Board of Trustees of the Peabody Institute in 1980.
He was a member of the Maryland lower House between 1751-54, and 1758-70; a member of the Council of Safety, 1775-76; a Signer of the Association of Freemen in 1775.
James Hollyday III, the son of Henry Hollyday of Ratcliff Manor (1758-1807) was a lawyer and an Associate Judge of the Circuit Court, composed of the Upper Eastern Shore Counties.
www.marylandhistoricaltrust.net /search.html   (21563 words)

  
 Edward Overman - pafg02.htm - Generated by Personal Ancestral File   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
(Edward) was born in 1652 in Saxony, Germany.
Charles Calvert, Governor of MD, was witness to one and beneficiary of the other.
Lloyd for divers good causes mee thereunto moving, and in consideration of fower thousand pounds of Tob.
users.ev1.net /~dhoskins/web/edwardove/pafg02.htm   (1476 words)

  
 Edward Lloyd
LLOYD, Edward, statesman, born in Maryland in 1799; died in Annapolis, Maryland, 2 June.
He was governor of Maryland in 1809-'11, and United States senator from that state from 6 December, 1819, till January, 1826, when he resigned.
Lloyd became ex-officio governor of the state, and in January, 1886, he was chosen by the legislature to fill the unexpired term, ending in 1888.
famousamericans.net /edwardlloyd   (386 words)

  
 Barrymore.com
Lloyd is taken back by this disguise, and Alan explains that it was his one chance of seeing his true love "Maryland Calvert," Lloyd's sister.
Lloyd tells Thorpe that he has saved Charlesville for the North--and he confesses that he told Maryland about the plan so that she might try to keep Alan safe.
Maryland was dragged from the bell tower, placed under arrest and sent by Thorpe to the house under guard.
ciajfk.com /barrymore/maryland-2.html   (1959 words)

  
 History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Lord Baltimore appointed William Stone as Governor and Edward Lloyd as Commander of Anne Arundel County.
Lloyd had the authority to appoint the sheriff and other offices in the county.
To fulfill the duties of the Office of the Sheriff in a dignified manner so as to inspire the confidence of the public and to consistently strive to advance the quality of life in Anne Arundel County.
www.annearundelsheriff.org /history.htm   (746 words)

  
 TONA Research Committee - Chronology of Historic Events
Accompanying the letter is a resolution dated January 31, 1811, requesting the Governor to communicate the ratification to The Senate and House of the United States, and to the Governor of each of the states, certified by the Secretary of the State of Kentucky.
The Governor is requested to transmit copies to The Secretary of State of the United States, President of the Senate, and Speaker of the House.
Governor Thomas Randolph of Virginia sends a letter to Governor John Adair of Kentucky recommending Benjamin Watkins Leigh as advisor for the revision of the Statute Law of Kentucky.
www.amendment-13.org /chronology.html   (8266 words)

  
 Abolitionists, Free Blacks, and Runaway Slaves: Surviving Slavery on Maryland's Eastern Shore
Maryland, a border state, known as "the middle temperament" and "the middle ground," was no exception.
The Lloyd Plantation, the "home plantation" of Colonel Edward Lloyd, on the Eastern Shore was one of those "secluded, dark, out-of-the-way places" Douglass mentioned in his autobiography.
Maryland was not covered by the Emancipation Proclamation, since it was not a state in rebellion, and slaveholders were not required to free their slaves.
www.udel.edu /BlackHistory/abolitionists.html   (4141 words)

  
 Maryland, Timeline of State History - SHG Resources
Governor Stone invites Virginia Puritans to settle in Maryland.
Voting restricted by Governor to planters with 50-acre freehold or property worth 40 pounds; officeholding restricted to owners of 1,000 acres.
Cecil County erected from Baltimore and Kent counties by proclamation of Governor.
www.shgresources.com /md/timeline   (7128 words)

  
 [No title]
Key was a descendant of the Maryland Federalist elite of the colonial period and moved in elevated political circles for most of his life.
Francis Scott Key was born on August 1, 1779, in Frederick Maryland to John Ross Key (1754-1821) and Anne Phoebe Penn Dagworthy Charlton (1756-1830).
She was the granddaughter of Edward Lloyd, royal governor of the Maryland colony in the second decade of the eighteenth century and sister to Edward Lloyd V, thirteenth governor of the Maryland colony.
www.mdoe.org /keyFS.html   (1307 words)

  
 174Maryland Naval McHenry Troop Trip   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Maryland is now the only state in America in which the homes of all of its signers still exist, and all are preserved in Annapolis.
He carried Lord Baltimore¹s commission appointing him Attorney General of Maryland and a new family motto: "Anywhere So Long As There Be Freedom." Within months of Carroll¹s arrival, the edicts of the Glorious Revolution jeopardized the position of Catholics in Maryland and threatened the power of their benefactor, the Lord Proprietor.
It is architecturally reminiscent of the Maryland manor houses of the late 17th century.
members.tripod.com /BSATroop174/MarylandNavalMcHenryTrip.html   (7296 words)

  
 Wright
Edward WRIGHT was Planter and Surveyor in Somerset and Dorchester Counties.
Edward WRIGHT was living in 1723 when he made a complaint to the Board held at Annapolis that Capt. John RIDER and Wm ENNALS had taken possession of some of the Indian's land grants.
Edward WRIGHT obtained a patent for 250 acres of land called Barrens Quarter, 13 May 1700 in Somerset Co., province of Maryland.on north side of creek issuing out of the south side of the Nanticoke River called Barrens Creek.
www.goldenlyon.com /wright.html   (5033 words)

  
 Francis Scott Key
In September, 1814, Dr. William Beanes, a physician from Upper Marlboro, Maryland, who had caused the arrest of a disorderly band of British soldiers, was unjustly captured.
The flag that Francis Scott Key saw during the bombardment is preserved in the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C. The 30 X 42-foot flag has fifteen alternate red and white stripes and fifteen stars for the original 13 states, and Kentucky and Vermont.
Her original house, c.1793, a National Historic Landmark originally known as the Baltimore Flag House, and known today as the Star-Spangled Banner Flag House and Museum, was restored in 1953 and is now a museum.
byfaithonly.com /America/Key.html   (1314 words)

  
 Bay Weekly: This Week's Lead Story
Maryland governor Edward Lloyd thought so highly of the breed he sent a Baltimore clipper just to fetch one.
In 1964, the Chesapeake retriever was legislatively proclaimed the official state dog of Maryland.
Within 25 years of the shipwreck, the American Shooting Manual of 1827 called this new retriever the Chesapeake Bay Ducking Dog and hunters from Maine to the Alaskan wilderness sought to own them.
www.bayweekly.com /year06/issuexiv9/leadxiv9_1.html   (2420 words)

  
 Anne Arundel County Places of Interest   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Edward Lloyd IV of Talbot County bought the unfinished shell of this house from Samuel Chase, young American lawyer and later signer of the Declaration of Independence.
Lloyd finished the home, one of the grandest in Annapolis, in the early 1770’s.
Georgian mansion built between 1763 and 1765 by William Paca, signer of the Declaration of Independence and Governor of Maryland.
www.angelfire.com /md/ssrhs/AAplaces.htm   (1000 words)

  
 U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association Press Room   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
In 1931, the Board of Governors decided it would be wise to form a new organization which would embrace in its membership non-graduates as well as graduates.  In May of that year, the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association was incorporated under the laws of the District of Columbia.
The two-story brick house located a block from Gate 3 of the Naval Academy was built in 1739 by Dr. William Stevenson, who died shortly after finishing construction.  The house became a rental property and was rented by Samuel Ogle, Governor of Maryland, from 1747 until his death in 1752.  Eventually, Mrs.
In 1847, the house was sold to retiring Maryland Governor Thomas Pratt; it was then sold to Judge and Mrs.
www.usna.com /Press/AAHistory.htm   (479 words)

  
 Maryland Study Commission and Task Force Reports, I-O, at the MD State Law Library
Report of the Joint Governor's Commission and Baltimore City Bar Association's Committee for the Study of the Public Defender System for the State of Maryland: December 29, 1970: Md. Y3.
Municipal Home Rule in Maryland, as Provided for by Article 11 E of the Constitution of Maryland and Chapters 258 and 423 of the Laws of Maryland of 1955: 1955: Md. Y3.
Maryland Nutritional Surveillance Feasibility Study: Report to the General Assembly, October 10, 1985 from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene: 1985: Md. Y3.
www.lawlib.state.md.us /taskrep_i-o.html   (4279 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Lawyer Politicians in Maryland, K-Q
Maryland state house of delegates, 1797; circuit judge in Maryland, 1802; U.S. Representative from Maryland at-large, 1805-07.
Governor of Maryland, 1969-77, 1979; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Maryland,
Governor of Pennsylvania, 1883-87, 1891-95; defeated, 1902; candidate for
www.potifos.com /tpg/geo/MD/lawyer.K-Q.html   (1536 words)

  
 Richard J. Cox   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Maryland boundary dispute and the historical-legal compilation of Thomas Bacon--were abundant.
The strongest part of Maryland's "golden age" was its belletristic literature, 51 and because of the
Maryland was a proprietary colony, owing its origin to and reaping benefits for the Calvert family.
www.sis.pitt.edu /~rcox/Chapter2.htm   (14325 words)

  
 Ogle Family of Maryland and Allied Families
In December 2005, an Antique Dealer in Maryland, contacted the Museum office and is in possession of a high style Baltimore 1820's mahogany wardrobe with desk.
In the early days of colonial Maryland, hundreds of tracts of land were patented to the settlers and planters who flocked to the Chesapeake Bay.
MURAL BY ALLYN COX-OIL ON CANVAS 1973-1974- REPRESENTED IN THE MURAL IS COL. BENJAMIN TASKER OF MARYLAND.
www.oglefamilyofmarylandandalliedfamilies.com   (3255 words)

  
 Grand Houses of Annapolis - Tour Annapolis Maryland with Capital City Colonials
The Old Senate Chamber, where George Washington came to resign his commission as commander in chief of the Continental Army in 1783, has been maintained to look much as it did on that momentous occasion.
The Chase-Lloyd House was begun in 1769 by Samuel Chase, one of Maryland's signers of the Declaration of Independence, and finished by Edward Lloyd IV, who employed assistance from William Buckland.
This five-part mansion and gardens was built in 1763-65 by William Paca, a three-term governor of Maryland, and another of Maryland's signers of the Declaration of Independence.
www.capitalcitycolonials.com /grand_houses.cfm   (357 words)

  
 Maryland Historical Society Library: Otho Holland Williams Papers, 1744-1839 (Part 8/8), MS. 908 (Part 8/8) - Finding ...
Dall senior are there, but they are leaving soon; sorry to hear William is no better; suggests naming the baby for their brother Henry, for he may not have a son for a long time, and he wants a boy named Henry; Ann [Edward's wife] sends her love to Susan.
Certificate that Otho Williams of Baltimore [had] spent several years in St. Mary's College, studying Latin, English and mathematics; to it are affixed the smaller seal of the College and the signature of the President.
Certificate of the membership of Williams S. Williams in the Maryland Society of the Cincinnati, through his father William Elie, and his grandfather, Otho Holland Williams, an original member; In Testimony whereof we the President and Vice-President...
www.mdhs.org /library/Mss/ms000908G.html   (4273 words)

  
 Richard J. Cox   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Maryland historical studies, Scharf's name probably would be the most frequently mentioned.
Through this project, the Archives is making accessible in electronic form and preserving for future generations records that are scattered among a number of repositories and that often exist only on rapidly disintegrating paper.” The URL for this valuable resource is http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/megafile/msa/speccol/sc2900/sc2908/html/index.html.
91 These statistics are based solely on the collections at the Maryland Historical Society, the assumption being that most members would have presented copies of their works to the institution.
www.sis.pitt.edu /~rcox/Chapter3.htm   (15907 words)

  
 Membership of the 19th Congress of the United States
(elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Edward Lloyd; served from January 24, 1826)
Joseph Kent (resigned January 6, 1826 to become Governor of Maryland)
John C. Weems (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph Kent; served from February 1, 1826)
borzoiblog.com /19th.htm   (706 words)

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