TALBOT COUNTY, MARYLAND

HISTORICAL CHRONOLOGY


1661/62, Feb. 18. Talbot County known to have been established by this date, when a writ was issued to county sheriff.

1682. Quakers began building Third Haven Meeting House (completed 1684), Talbot County.

1682. Grist mill erected at Wye Mills.

1683, Nov. 20. Oxford-Bellevue Ferry started.

1706. Queen Anne's County formed from northern Talbot County and southern Kent County.

1710. Talbot Court House (later East Town or Easton).

1712, June. First Courthouse completed at Easton.

1732, Nov. 2. John Dickinson (1732-1808), Delaware Signer of U.S. Constitution, born at "Croisadore" near Trappe.

1744, Dec. 25. Tench Tilghman (1744-1786), Aide-de-Camp to Gen. George Washington, born at Fausley near Easton.

1755. Charity Working School established in Talbot County by Rev. Thomas Bacon (c.1700-1768) to educate children without regard to race, sex, or status.

1774, May 24. "Talbot Resolves" at Easton in support of Boston.

1774-1776. Matthew Tilghman (1718-1790), of Talbot County chaired Maryland Provincial Conventions.

1776, Sept. 16. Eastern Shore Battalion of Flying Camp fought under Colonel William Richardson at Battle of Harlem Heights.

1778, July 13. Samuel Stevens, Jr. (1778-1860), Governor of Maryland, 1822-26, born at Trappe.

1779, July 22. Edward Lloyd (1779-1834), Governor of Maryland, 1809-11, born at “Wye House”, near Easton.

c.1780. Daniel Martin (1780-1831), Governor of Maryland, 1829-30, 1831, born near Easton.

1783. Freemasons, meeting at Talbot Court House, formed Maryland Grand Lodge.

1790. Easton incorporated.

1790, May 11. Easton Maryland Herald and Eastern Shore Intelligencer, first newspaper on Eastern Shore, published by James Cowan.


[photo, Talbot County Courthouse, 11 North Washington St., Easton, Maryland] 1794, June. Second Courthouse completed at Easton.

1804. St. Michaels incorporated.

1810, Sept. 12. Philip Francis Thomas (1810-1890), Governor of Maryland, 1848-51, born in Easton.

Talbot County Courthouse, 11 North Washington St., Easton, Maryland, February 2005. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.


1813, Aug. 10. British attacked St. Michaels.

1813, Aug. 26. Gen. Perry Benson and local militia defended St. Michaels from British attack.


[photo, Frederick Douglass statue, Holmes Hall, Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland] 1818, Feb. Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) born at Tuckahoe Creek, Talbot County.

1827. Trappe incorporated.

1838. Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) escaped from slavery in Baltimore.

1845. Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) published Narrative of his life in slavery.

Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) statue (1956), by James E. Lewis, Holmes Hall, Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland, August 2003. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.

Douglass was born Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey in Talbot County on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, February 1817. Although a slave, he escaped north and became an abolitionist and champion of universal suffrage.


1852. Oxford incorporated.

1853. Queen Anne incorporated.

1860, Dec. 12-1861, Jan. 14. Philip Francis Thomas (1810-1890) of Talbot County served as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.

1886, March 13. Frank (Home Run) Baker (1886-1963), American League Baseball Hall of Famer, born in Trappe.

1907. Memorial Hospital (now University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Easton) founded at Easton.

1926, Nov. 13. Harry R. Hughes, Governor of Maryland, 1979-87, born in Easton.

1943. Easton Airport originally constructed by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

1957. Two wings added to Courthouse at Easton.

1962, Jan. 6. Freedom Ride from Baltimore to Easton organized by Baltimore Civic Interest Group.

2004, March 2. Electronic voting system used during primary elections at polling places and for absentee ballots in all counties and Baltimore City.

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