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Cecil
Calvert, 2nd Lord of Baltimore
Cecil
Calvert, 2nd Lord of Baltimore, founded Maryland
in 1632. Cecil's father, George Calvert had received
a royal charter for the land from King Charles I.
The new colony was named after Henrietta Maria,
the wife the king. In November of 1633, about 200
Catholic settlers led by Cecil's younger brother
boarded the ships ARK and DOVE, and set sail for
Marie's Land (later Maryland).
By 1634,
Maryland became one of the few territories of England
to be predominately Catholic. Their settlement became
known as St. Mary's and is currently the fourth
oldest permanent British settlement in America.
In 1649,
the Maryland Toleration Act was passed which guaranteed
religious tolerance to settlers, as long as the
religion was a sect of Christianity. After England's
"Glorious Revolution" of 1688, which established
the Protestant faith in England, Catholicism was
outlawed in Maryland until after the Revolutionary
War. The Puritan government of Maryland at the time
burned down all of southern Maryland's original
Catholic churches.
By the
1700's, Maryland and Virginia became plantation
economies, and grew tobacco as the cash crop. Up
to 40 percent of Maryland's population were slaves
or convicts who worked in the tobacco fields. Soon,
Baltimore, a large port on the Chesapeake Bay, became
an important center for tobacco export.
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