Maryland Day commemorates March 25, 1634. On that day, settlers disembarked from two small sailing ships - the Ark and the
Dove - on to Maryland soil. At St. Clement's Island, they landed in what is now St. Mary's County, Maryland. The Maryland
settlement was authorized under the charter granted June 20, 1632, by Charles I of England to Cecil Calvert, Baron of Baltimore.
Traveling on the Ark to the new colony, Leonard Calvert, Lord Baltimore's brother, led the Maryland settlers. The purpose
of their voyage was not to discover new lands but to settle them. And, as it happened, they journeyed from island to island
to find their new world. Departing on November 22, 1633, these travelers (about 140 in number) set off from Cowes
on the English Isle of Wight. Three days later a severe storm tossed them relentlessly about at sea. The morning after, the
Dove (the smaller ship) could not be seen. The Ark continued its journey, following the European coast south to the Fortunate
(now Canary) Islands. From the Canaries, the Ark sailed due west across the Atlantic, touching land at the island of Barbadoes
in the West Indies on January 3, 1633/4. There, the ship's weary travelers stayed three weeks replenishing provisions, and
there the Dove reappeared, having weathered the Atlantic voyage alone. At other Caribbean isles they also landed, and then
sailed north. They reached Virginia on February 27th, gathered more supplies, and navigated Chesapeake Bay north to the mouth
of the Potomac by March 3rd. As these voyagers approached southern Maryland shores in March 1634, their ships alarmed
Native Americans, who sent alerts with huge signal fires. To meet the Conoy Indian chief and calm Indian fears, Leonard Calvert
on the Dove sailed to Piscataway. There, they negotiated a peaceable accord, and then Calvert sailed back down the Potomac
off present-day St. Mary's County. On March 25th, the English settlers climbed down from the Ark and the Dove and rowed to
the island which they named St. Clement's. They held a day of thanksgiving for their safe voyage end, and we continue to commemorate
it as Maryland Day. The formal observance of Maryland Day began in 1903 when the State Board of Education chose one day
in the school year to be devoted to Maryland history. March 25th was named Maryland Day by the Board. In 1916, the General
Assembly authorized Maryland Day as a legal holiday (Chapter 633, Acts of 1916). For more about the early Maryland settlement
and the voyage from England, see MARYLAND . . . AT THE BEGINNING, by Lois Green Carr, Russell R. Menard, and Louis Peddicord
(1984). This and other information can be found at http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/mdmanual/01glance/html/mday.html
Governor Parris Glendening State House Annapolis, MD 21401 (410) 974-3901 1-800-811-8336 (toll free, Maryland) e-mail: governor@gov.state.md.us
fax: (410) 974-3275 tty: (410) 333-3098 web: www.gov.state.md.us
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