Maryland Vacation Guide System
Maryland History
The history of Maryland included only Native Americans until
Europeans, starting with John Cabot in 1498, began exploring the area.
The first settlements came in 1634 when the English arrived in
significant numbers and created a permanent colony. In 1776, during the
American Revolution, Maryland became a state in the United States.
Although it was a slave state where many planters had Confederate
sympathies, by 1860 nearly half the black population was already free,
due mostly to manumissions after the American Revolution. Maryland
remained in the Union during the American Civil War.
Although
small in size, the state has distinct socio-political-economic regions,
including the city of Baltimore, Baltimore's suburbs, the Washington
suburbs, Western Maryland, and the Eastern Shore. Maryland has a
democratic-type of state government.
Pre-Colonial history
It
appears that the first humans to arrive in the area that would become
Maryland appeared around the 10th millennium BCE, about the time that
the last Ice-age ended. They were hunter-gatherers organized into
semi-nomadic bands. They adapted as the region's environment changed,
developing the spear for hunting as smaller animals, like deer, became
more prevalent and by about 1500 BCE. Oysters had become an important
food resource in the region. With the increased variety of food
sources, Native American villages and settlements started appearing and
their social structures increased in complexity. By about 1000 BCE
pottery was being produced. With the eventual rise of agriculture more
permanent Native-American villages were built. But even with the advent
of farming, hunting and fishing were still important means of obtaining
food. The bow and arrow were first used for hunting in the area around
the year 800. They ate what they could kill, grow or catch in the
rivers and other waterways.
By 1000 BCE, there were about 8,000
Native Americans, all Algonquian-speaking, living in what is now the
state, in 40 different villages. The following Piscataway tribes lived
on the eastern bank of the Potomac, from south to north: Yaocomicoes,
Chopticans, Nanjemoys, Potopacs, Mattawomans, Piscatways, Patuxents
just south of what is now Washington, DC, Nacotchankes in current DC
and on the western bank of the Potomac, and the Potomacs. The Shawnee
lived near Oldtown in a site abandoned around 1731. On the Eastern
Shore of the Chesapeake, from south to north, there was the Nanticoke
tribes: Annemessex, Assateagues, Wicomicoes, Nanticokes, Chicacone,
and, on the north bank of the Choptank River, the Choptanks. The
Tockwogh tribe lived near the headwaters of the Chesapeake near what is
now Delaware.
When Europeans began to settle in Maryland in the
early 17th century, the main tribes included the Nanticoke on the
Eastern Shore. Early exposure to new European diseases brought
widespread fatalities to the Native Americans, as they had no immunity
to them. Communities were disrupted by such losses.
Early European exploration
In
1498 the first European explorers sailed along the Eastern Shore, off
present-day Worcester County. In 1524 Giovanni da Verrazzano, sailing
under the French flag, passed the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. In 1608
John Smith entered the bay.
Colonial Maryland
See also: Province of Maryland
Map of the Maryland colony
George
Calvert, 1st Lord Baltimore applied to Charles I for a royal charter
for what was to become the Province of Maryland. After George Calvert
died in April 1632, the charter for "Maryland Colony" (in Latin Terra
Mariae) was granted to his son, Cęcilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore,
on June 20, 1632. Some historians viewed this as compensation for his
father's having been stripped of his title of Secretary of State in
1625 after announcing his Roman Catholicism.
The colony was
named in honor of Queen Henrietta Maria, the wife of King Charles I.
The specific name given in the charter was phrased Terra Mariae,
anglice, Maryland. The English name was preferred due to undesired
associations of Mariae with the Spanish Jesuit Juan de Mariana, linked
to the Inquisition.
As did other colonies, Maryland used the
headright system to encourage people to bring in new settlers. Led by
Leonard Calvert, Cecil Calvert's younger brother, the first settlers
departed from Cowes, on the Isle of Wight, on November 22, 1633 aboard
two small ships, the Ark and the Dove. Their landing on March 25, 1634
at St. Clement's Island in southern Maryland is commemorated by the
state each year on that date as Maryland Day. This was the site of the
first Catholic mass in the Colonies, with Father Andrew White leading
the service. The first group of colonists consisted of 17 gentlemen and
their wives, and about two hundred others, mostly indentured servants
who could work off their passage.
After purchasing land from the
Yaocomico Indians and establishing the town of St. Mary's, Leonard, per
his brother's instructions, attempted to govern the country under
feudalistic precepts. Meeting resistance, in February 1635, he summoned
a colonial assembly. In 1638, the Assembly forced him to govern
according to the laws of England. The right to initiate legislation
passed to the assembly.
In 1638, Calvert seized a trading post
in Kent Island established by the Virginian William Claiborne. In 1644,
Claiborne led an uprising of Maryland Protestants. Calvert was forced
to flee to Virginia, but he returned at the head of an armed force in
1646 and reasserted proprietarial rule.
A large broadside of the Maryland Toleration Act.
Maryland
soon became one of the few predominantly Catholic regions among the
English colonies in North America. Maryland was also one of the key
destinations where the government sent tens of thousands of English
convicts punished by sentences of transportation. Such punishment
persisted until the Revolutionary War.
The Maryland Toleration
Act, issued in 1649, was one of the first laws that explicitly defined
tolerance of varieties of Christianity. It has been considered a
precursor to the First Amendment.
The founders designed the city
plan of the colonial capital, St. Mary's City, to reflect their world
view. At the center of the city was the home of the mayor of St. Mary's
City. From that point, streets were laid out that created two
triangles. Located at two points of the triangle extending to the west
were the first Maryland state house and a jail. Extending to the north
of the mayor's home, the remaining two points of the second triangle
were defined by a Catholic church and a school. The design of the city
was a literal separation of church and state that reinforced the
importance of religious freedom.
The largest site of the
original Maryland colony, St. Mary's City was the seat of colonial
government until 1708. Because Anglicanism had become the official
religion in Virginia, a band of Puritans in 1642 left for Maryland;
they founded Providence (now called Annapolis).
In 1650, the
Puritans revolted against the proprietary government. They set up a new
government prohibiting both Catholicism and Anglicanism. In March 1655,
the 2nd Lord Baltimore sent an army under Governor William Stone to put
down this revolt. Near Annapolis, his Roman Catholic army was
decisively defeated by a Puritan army in the Battle of the Severn. The
Puritan revolt lasted until 1658, when the Calvert family regained
control and re-enacted the Toleration Act.
The Puritan
revolutionary government persecuted Maryland Catholics during its
reign. Mobs burned down all the original Catholic churches of southern
Maryland. In 1708, the seat of government was moved to Providence,
renamed Annapolis in honor of Queen Anne. St. Mary's City is now an
archaeological site, with a small tourist center.
Just as the
city plan for St. Mary's City reflected the ideals of the founders, the
city plan of Annapolis reflected those in power at the turn of the 18th
century. The plan of Annapolis extends from two circles at the center
of the city – one including the State House and the other the Anglican
St. Anne's Church (now Episcopal.) The plan reflected a stronger
relationship between church and state, and a colonial government more
closely aligned with the Protestant church.
Based on an
incorrect map, the original royal charter granted Maryland the Potomac
River and territory northward to the fortieth parallel. This was found
to be a problem as the northern boundary would have put Philadelphia,
the major city in Pennsylvania, within Maryland. The Calvert family,
which controlled Maryland, and the Penn family, which controlled
Pennsylvania, decided in 1750 to engage two surveyors, Charles Mason
and Jeremiah Dixon to establish a boundary.
They surveyed what
became known as the Mason-Dixon line, which became the boundary between
the two colonies. The crests of the Penn family and of the Calvert
family were put at the Mason-Dixon line to mark it. Later the
Mason-Dixon line was used as a boundary between free and slave states
under the Missouri Compromise of 1820.
The Revolutionary period
Further information: History of the United States (1776-1789)
Main article: History of Maryland in the American Revolution
Maryland
did not at first favor independence from Great Britain and gave
instructions to that effect to its delegates to the Continental
Congress. During this initial phase of the Revolutionary period,
Maryland was governed by the Assembly of Freemen, an Assembly of the
state's counties. The first convention lasted four days, from June 22
to June 25, 1774. All sixteen counties then existing were represented
by a total of 92 members; Matthew Tilghman was elected chairman.
Thomas Johnson, Maryland's first elected governor under its 1776 Constitution.
The
eighth session decided that the continuation of an ad-hoc government by
the convention was not a good mechanism for all the concerns of the
province. A more permanent and structured government was needed. So, on
July 3, 1776 they resolved that a new convention be elected that would
be responsible for drawing up their first state constitution, one that
did not refer to parliament or the king, but would be a government
"...of the people only." After they set dates and prepared notices to
the counties they adjourned. On August 1, all freemen with property
elected delegates for the last convention. The ninth and last
convention was also known as the Constitutional Convention of 1776.
They drafted a constitution, and when they adjourned on November 11,
they would not meet again. The Conventions were replaced by the new
state government which the Maryland Constitution of 1776 had
established. Thomas Johnson became the state's first elected governor.
On
March 1, 1781 the Articles of Confederation took effect with Maryland's
ratification. The articles had initially been submitted to the states
on November 17, 1777, but the ratification process dragged on for
several years, stalled by an interstate quarrel over claims to
uncolonized land in the west. Maryland was the last hold-out; it
refused to ratify until Virginia and New York agreed to rescind their
claims to lands in what became the Northwest Territory.
Marylander
John Hanson (circa 1765 to 1770) was the first person to serve a full
term as President of the Continental Congress under the Articles of
Confederation.
No significant Battles of the American
Revolutionary War occurred in Maryland. However, this did not prevent
the state's soldiers from distinguishing themselves through their
service. General George Washington was impressed with the Maryland
regulars (the "Maryland Line") who fought in the Continental Army and,
according to one tradition, this lead him to bestow the name "Old Line
State" on Maryland. Today, the Old Line State is one of Maryland's two
official nicknames.
The state also filled other roles during the
war. For instance, the Continental Congress met briefly in Baltimore
from December 20, 1776 through March 4, 1777. Furthermore, a
Marylander, John Hanson, served as President of the Continental
Congress from 1781 to 1782. Hanson was the first person to serve a full
term as President of the Congress under the Articles of Confederation.
From
November 26, 1783 to June 3, 1784, Annapolis served as the United
States capital and the Confederation Congress met in the Maryland State
House. (Annapolis was a candidate to become the new nation's permanent
capital before Washington, D.C. was built). It was in the old senate
chamber that George Washington famously resigned his commission as
commander in chief of the Continental Army on December 23, 1783. It was
also there that the Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War,
was ratified by Congress on January 14, 1784.
Maryland, 1789–1849
Further information: History of the United States (1789-1849)
Quasi-war with France
After
the Revolution, the US Congress approved construction of six frigates
to form a nucleus of what became the United States Navy. Of the first
three commissioned, one was designated for construction in Baltimore's
shipyards and was named USS Constellation.
Constellation became
the first official US Navy ship put to sea. Almost immediately after
getting underway, Constellation was ordered to the Caribbean to protect
US interests against the French. Tensions had increased following the
Haitian Revolution and independence in 1804, as European powers
attempted to maintain control. During the Quasi-War, Constellation,
under the command of Captain Thomas Truxtun, was forced into two major
ship-to-ship naval battles involving the French ship L'Insurgente and
the heavier frigate Vengeance. With its victories in both encounters,
Constellation also achieved the first capture by an American vessel of
an enemy ship (L'Insurgente.) Its return to Baltimore was accompanied
by joyous celebration and nationwide fame. The Constellation's
incredible speed and power inspired the French to nickname her the
"Yankee Racehorse".
The War of 1812
During the War of 1812
the British conducted raids against cities along the Chesapeake Bay, up
to and including Havre de Grace. There were also two notable battles
that occurred in the state. The first was the Battle of Bladensburg,
which occurred on August 24, 1814 just outside the national capital,
Washington, D.C. The militiamen defending the city were routed and
retreated in confusion through the streets of the city. After
overrunning the confused American defenders at Bladensburg, the British
took Washington, D.C. They burned and looted major public buildings
(see Burning of Washington), forcing President James Madison to flee to
Brookeville, MD.
Battle of North Point Monument (dedicated 1815),
ca. 1870–1875, which appears on both the flag and the seal of
Baltimore, Maryland.
The British marched next to Baltimore,
where they hoped to strike a knockout blow against the demoralized
Americans. Baltimore was not only a busy port, but the British thought
it harbored many of the privateers who were despoiling British ships.
The city's defenses were under the command of Major General Samuel
Smith, an officer of Maryland militia and a United States Senator.
Baltimore had been well fortified with excellent supplies and some
15,000 troops. Maryland militia fought a determined delaying action at
the Battle of North Point, during which a Maryland militia marksman
shot and killed the British commander, general Robert Ross. The battle
bought enough time for Baltimore's defenses to be strengthened.
After
advancing to the edge of American defenses, the British halted their
advance and withdrew. With the failure of the land advance, the sea
battle became irrelevant and the British retreated.
At Fort
McHenry, some 1000 soldiers under the command of Major George Armistead
awaited the British naval bombardment. Their defense was augmented by
the sinking of a line of American merchant ships at the adjacent
entrance to Baltimore Harbor in order to thwart passage of British
ships. The attack began on the morning of September 13, as the British
fleet of some nineteen ships began pounding the fort with rockets and
mortar shells. After an initial exchange of fire, the British fleet
withdrew just beyond the 1.5 miles (2.4 km) range of Fort McHenry's
cannons. For the next 25 hours, they bombarded the outmanned Americans.
On the morning of September 14, an oversized American flag, which had
been hastily sewn for this event, still flew over Fort McHenry. The
British knew that victory had eluded them. The bombardment of the fort
inspired Francis Scott Key, a native of Frederick, Maryland, to write
"the Star-Spangled Banner" as witness to the assault. It later became
the country's national anthem.
Maryland during the Frontier Age
In
1839, the United States' first passenger railway service opened between
Baltimore and nearby Ellicott City. As the railway expanded westward to
Cumberland and Chicago, it competed for business with the earlier 189
miles (304 km) Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and the National Road.
The
United States Naval Academy was founded in Annapolis in 1845, and the
Maryland Agricultural College chartered in 1856, growing eventually
into the University of Maryland.
Maryland in the Civil War
Main article: Maryland in the American Civil War
See also: American Civil War, Origins of the American Civil War and History of slavery in Maryland
Maryland's sympathies
8th
Massachusetts regiment repairing Railroad bridges from Annapolis to
Washington destroyed with the support of Maryland political leaders,
Confederate sympathizers.
Maryland was one of the border states,
straddling the North and South. As in Virginia and Delaware, some
planters in Maryland had freed their slaves in the twenty years after
the Revolutionary War. By 1860 Maryland's free black population
comprised 49.1% of the total of African Americans in the state. After
John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry, Virginia (now in West Virginia),
some citizens in slaveholding areas began forming local militias. Of
the 1860 population of 687,000, about 60,000 men joined the Union and
about 25,000 fought for the Confederacy. The political sentiments of
each group generally reflected their economic interests.
Governor Hicks prevented Maryland from seceding in 1861.
The
first bloodshed of the Civil War occurred in Baltimore involving
Massachusetts troops who were fired on while marching between railroad
stations on April 19, 1861. After that, Baltimore Mayor George William
Brown, Marshal George P. Kane, and former Governor Enoch Louis Lowe
requested that Maryland Governor Thomas H. Hicks, a slave owner from
the Eastern Shore, burn the railroad bridges and cut the telegraph
lines leading to Baltimore to prevent further troops from entering the
state. Hicks reportedly approved this proposal. These actions were
addressed in the famous federal court case of Ex parte Merryman.
Maryland
remained part of the Union during the United States Civil War.
President Abraham Lincoln's strong hand suppressing violence and
dissent in Maryland and the belated assistance of Governor Hicks played
important roles. Hicks worked with federal officials to stop further
violence. As an illustration of the state's sympathies, it is notable
that in the 1860 election, Lincoln received only one vote in Prince
George's County.
Marylanders sympathetic to the South easily
crossed the Potomac River to join and fight for the Confederacy. Exiles
organized a "Maryland Line" in the Army of Northern Virginia which
consisted of one infantry regiment, one infantry battalion, two cavalry
battalions and four battalions of artillery. According to the best
extant records, up to 25,000 Marylanders went south to fight for the
Confederacy. About 60,000 Maryland men served in all branches of the
Union military. However, many of the Union troops were said to enlist
on the promise of home garrison duty.
To prevent an uprising in
Baltimore, a Union artillery garrison was placed on Federal Hill with
express orders to destroy the city should Southern sympathizers
overwhelm law and order there. Following the Baltimore riot of 1861,
Union troops under the command of General Benjamin F. Butler occupied
the hill in the middle of the night. This was against Washington
orders. Butler and his men erected a small fort, with cannon pointing
towards the central business district. Their goal was to guarantee the
allegiance of the city and the state of Maryland to the Federal
Government under threat of force. This fort and the Union occupation
persisted for the duration of the Civil War. A large flag, a few
cannon, and a small Grand Army of the Republic monument remain to
testify to this period of the hill's history.
Because Maryland
remained in the Union, it was not included under the Emancipation
Proclamation. A constitutional convention was held during 1864 that
culminated in the passage of a new state constitution on November 1 of
that year. Article 24 of that document outlawed the practice of
slavery. The right to vote was extended to non-white males in the
Maryland Constitution of 1867, which is still in effect today.
During
this time the USS Constellation was flagship of the US African Squadron
from 1859 to 1861. In this period, she disrupted the African slave
trade by interdicting three slave ships and releasing the imprisoned
slaves. The last of the ships was captured at the outbreak of the
American Civil War: Constellation overpowered the slaver brig Triton in
African coastal waters. Constellation spent much of the war as a
deterrent to Confederate cruisers and commerce raiders in the
Mediterranean Sea.
The war on Maryland soil
See also: American Civil War: Eastern Theater 1861–1863
Battle of Antietam by Kurz and Allison.
The
largest and most significant battle fought in the state was the Battle
of Antietam, fought on September 17, 1862, near Sharpsburg. The battle
was the culmination of Robert E. Lee's Maryland Campaign, which aimed
to secure new supplies; recruit fresh men from among the considerable
pockets of Confederate sympathies in Maryland; and to impact public
opinion in the North. With those goals, Lee's Army of Northern
Virginia, consisting of about 40,000 men, had entered Maryland
following their recent victory at Second Bull Run.
While Major
General George B. McClellan's 87,000-man Army of the Potomac was moving
to intercept Lee, a Union soldier discovered a mislaid copy of the
detailed battle plans of Lee's army. The order indicated that Lee had
divided his army and dispersed portions geographically (to Harpers
Ferry, West Virginia, and Hagerstown, Maryland), thus making each
subject to isolation and defeat in detail if McClellan could move
quickly enough. McClellan waited about 18 hours before deciding to take
advantage of this intelligence and position his forces based on it,
thus endangering a golden opportunity to defeat Lee decisively.
Dead Confederate soldiers from Starke's Louisiana Brigade, on the Hagerstown Turnpike, north of the Dunker Church.
The
armies met near of the town of Sharpsburg by the Antietam Creek.
Although McClellan arrived in the area on September 16, his trademark
caution delayed his attack on Lee, which gave the Confederates more
time to prepare defensive positions and allowed Longstreet's corps to
arrive from Hagerstown and Jackson's corps, minus A.P. Hill's division,
to arrive from Harpers Ferry. McClellan's two-to-one advantage in the
battle was almost completely nullified by a lack of coordination and
concentration of Union forces, which allowed Lee to shift his defensive
forces to parry each thrust.
Although a tactical draw, the
Battle of Antietam was considered a strategic Union victory and a
turning point of the war. It forced the end of Lee's invasion of the
North. It also was enough of a victory to enable President Lincoln to
issue the Emancipation Proclamation, which took effect on January 1,
1863. He had been advised by his Cabinet to make the announcement after
a Union victory, to avoid any perception that it was issued out of
desperation. The Union's winning the Battle of Antietam also may have
dissuaded the governments of France and Great Britain from recognizing
the Confederacy. Some observers believed they may have done so in the
aftermath of another Union defeat.
During the war, Maryland's
naval contribution, the relatively new sloop-of-war USS Constellation
maintained her duty in slave ship interdiction for the Union Navy.
Stationed in the Mediterranean, the Constellation actively protected
convoys and defended against commerce raiders.
1865–1920
See also: History of the United States (1865–1918)
Post-Civil War political developments
Since
Maryland had remained in the Union during the Civil War, the state did
not undergo Reconstruction like the states of the former Confederacy.
However, as a former "slave state", Maryland did have issues with the
civil rights of freedmen and formerly free blacks, and racial tensions
as did the states in the Confederacy. The deep divisions in the state
between those who fought for the North and those who fought for the
South were also difficult to reconcile.
Thomas Swann, the only Governor of Maryland elected under the state's 1864 constitution.
The
Democratic Party rapidly regained power in the state and replaced
Republicans who had ruled during the war. Support for the Constitution
of 1864 ended and Democrats replaced it with the Maryland Constitution
of 1867. That document, which is still in effect today, resembled the
1851 constitution more than its immediate predecessor and was approved
by 54.1% of the state's population. Although the reapportionment of the
legislature based on population, not counties, gave greater power to
freedmen (as well as to urban areas), the new constitution deprived
African Americans of some of the protections of the 1864 document.
Austin Lane Crothers, the 46th Governor of Maryland, supported the Digges Amendment.
Over
the next several decades, the African-American population struggled in
a discriminatory environment. In 1910 the legislature proposed the
Digges Amendment to the state constitution. It would have used property
requirements to effectively disfranchise many African Americans as well
as many poor whites (including new immigrants.) The Maryland General
Assembly passed the bill, which the Governor Austin Lane Crothers
supported. Before the measure went to popular vote, a bill was proposed
that would have effectively passed the requirements of the Digges
Amendment into law. Not only did that measure fail (after a public
outcry) but the amendment was also rejected by the voters of Maryland.
This was the most notable rejection of a black-disfranchising
amendment. Other similar measures were proposed, but also failed to
pass (Poe Amendment in 1905 and the Straus Amendment in 1909.)
The
businessmen Johns Hopkins, Enoch Pratt, George Peabody, and Henry
Walters were philanthropists of 19th century Baltimore who through
their generosity founded notable educational, cultural, and health care
facilities in that city, bearing their names.
Progressive era reforms
See also: Progressivism
In
the early 20th century, a political reform movement arose, centered in
the rising new middle class. One of their main goals included having
government jobs granted on the basis of merit rather than patronage.
Other changes aimed to reduce the power of political bosses and
machines, which they succeeded in doing.
In a series of laws
passed between 1892 and 1908, reformers worked for standard
state-issued ballots (rather than those distributed and pre-marked by
the parties); obtained closed voting booths to prevent party workers
from "assisting" voters; initiated primary elections to keep party
bosses from selecting candidates; and had candidates listed without
party symbols, which discouraged the illiterate from participating.
Although promoted as democratic reforms, the changes had other results
sought by the middle class. They discouraged participation by the lower
classes and illiterate voters. Voting participation dropped from about
82% of eligible voters in the 1890s to about 49% in the 1920s.
Other
laws regulated working conditions. For instance, in a series of laws
passed in 1902, the state regulated conditions in mines; outlawed child
laborers under the age of 12; mandated compulsory school attendance;
and enacted the nation's first workers compensation law. The workers
compensation law was overturned in the courts, but was redrafted and
finally enacted in 1910. The law become a model for national
legislation a few decades later.
The debate over prohibition of
alcohol, another progressive reform, led to Maryland's gaining its
second nickname. A mocking newspaper editorial dubbed Maryland "the
Free State" for its allowing alcohol.
Great Baltimore Fire
The aftermath of the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904.
The
Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 was a momentous event for the Maryland's
largest city and the state as a whole. The fire raged in Baltimore,
from 10:48 a.m. Sunday, February 7, to 5:00 p.m. Monday, February 8,
1904. More than 1,231 firefighters worked to bring the blaze under
control.
One reason for the fire's duration was the lack of
national standards in fire-fighting equipment. Although fire engines
from nearby cities (such as Philadelphia and Washington, as well as
units from New York, Wilmington, and Atlantic City) responded, many
were useless because their hose couples failed to fit Baltimore
hydrants. As a result, the fire burned over 30 hours, destroying 1,526
buildings and spanning 70 city blocks.
In the aftermath, 35,000
people were left unemployed. After the fire, the city was rebuilt using
more fireproof materials, such as granite pavers.
The World War I Era
Entry into World War I brought changes to Maryland.
Maryland
was the site of new military bases, such as Camp Meade (now Fort
Meade), the Aberdeen Proving Ground, which were established in 1917,
and the Edgewood Arsenal, which was founded the following year. Other
existing facilities, including Fort McHenry, were greatly expanded.
To
coordinate wartime activities, like the expansion of federal
facilities, the General Assembly set up a Council of Defense. The 126
seats on the council were filled by appointment. The Council, which had
a virtually unlimited budget, was charged with defending the state,
supervising the draft, maintaining wage and price controls, providing
housing for war-related industries, and promoting support for the war.
Citizens were encouraged to grow their own victory gardens and to obey
ration laws. They were also forced to work, once the legislature
adopted a compulsory labor law with the support of the Council of
Defense.
Maryland in the 20th century
See also: History of the United States (1918-1945)
The Ritchie administration
Albert C. Ritchie, elected to his first of five terms in 1918, is probably the most popular governor in state history.
In
1918, Maryland elected Albert C. Ritchie, a Democrat, governor. He was
reelected four times, serving from 1919 to 1934, and is arguably the
state's all-time most popular governor. Handsome and aristocratic,
Ritchie was very pro-business. He hired a management firm to streamline
government operations and established a budget process controlled
largely by economists. He also won approval for a civil service system
that had long been sought by reformers, who wanted positions given on
the basis of merit and not patronage; reduced the number of state
elections by extending legislative terms from two to four years; and he
appointed many citizens' commissions to advise on nearly every aspect
of government. State property taxes dropped sharply under Ritchie, but
so did state services. A powerful state movie censorship board kept
subversive ideas away from the masses. Three times, including 1924 and
1932, Ritchie was a candidate for President of the United States,
arguing that Presidents Coolidge and Hoover were hopeless spendthrifts.
Ritchie lost his bid for the Democratic Party's nomination for
President in 1932. Despite a large demonstration for support at the
convention, Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated and went on the win the
election. Ritchie continued to serve as governor until 1935.
The Great Depression, World War II, and aftermath
Maryland's
urban and rural communities had different experiences during the
Depression. In 1932 the "Bonus Army" marched through the state on its
way to Washington, D.C. In addition to the nationwide New Deal reforms
of President Roosevelt, which put men to work building roads and park
facilities, Maryland also took steps to weather the hard times. For
instance, in 1937 the state instituted its first ever income tax to
generate revenue for schools and welfare.
The state had some
advances in civil rights. The 1935 case Murray v. Pearson et al.
resulted in a Baltimore City Court's ordering integration of University
of Maryland Law School. The plaintiff in that case was represented by
Thurgood Marshall, a young lawyer with the NAACP and a native of
Baltimore. When the state attorney general appealed to the Court of
Appeals, it affirmed the decision.
Because the state did not
appeal the ruling in the federal courts, this state ruling under the
U.S. Constitution was the first to overturn Plessy v. Ferguson, the
1896 Supreme Court decision that allowed separate but equal facilities.
While the ruling was a moral precedent, it had no authority outside the
state of Maryland.
A hurricane in 1933 created an inlet in
Sinepuxent Bay at Ocean City, making the then small-town attractive for
recreational fishing. During World War II additional large defense
facilities were established in the state such as Andrews Air Force
Base, Patuxent River Naval Air Station, and the large Glenn L. Martin
aircraft factory east of Baltimore.
In 1952, the eastern and
western halves of Maryland were linked for the first time by the long
Chesapeake Bay Bridge, which replaced a nearby ferry service. This
bridge (and its later, parallel span) increased tourist traffic to
Ocean City, which experienced a building boom. Soon after, the
Baltimore Harbor Tunnel allowed long-distance interstate motorists to
bypass downtown Baltimore, while the earlier Harry W. Nice Memorial
Bridge allowed them to bypass Washington, D.C. Two Beltways, I-695 and
I-495, were built around Baltimore and Washington, while I-70, I-270,
and later I-68 linked central Maryland with western Maryland, and I-97
linked Baltimore with Annapolis. Passenger and freight steamboat
transportation, previously very important throughout the Chesapeake Bay
and its many tributaries, came to an end in mid-century.
In
1980, the opening of Harborplace and the Baltimore Aquarium made that
city a significant tourist destination, while Charles Center, the World
Trade Center, and the popular Camden Yards baseball stadium were
constructed in the downtown area. Fells Point also became popular. The
historic Annapolis waterfront area, previously a working-class fishing
port, also became gentrified and a tourist destination. Baltimore's
largest employer, the Bethlehem Steel factory at Sparrows Point,
shrunk, and the General Motors plant closed, while Johns Hopkins
University and Health Care System took Bethlehem's place as Baltimore's
largest employer. There are over 350 biotechnology companies in the
state. The Social Security - Health Care Financing Administration,
Bureau of Standards, Census Bureau, National Institutes of Health, and
Public Health Service have their headquarters in the state. Metrorail
lines were constructed in Montgomery and Prince George's counties,
while Baltimore opened its own 20 miles (32 km) Metro Subway as well as
the north-south Baltimore Light Rail system.
In addition to
general suburban growth, specially planned new communities sprung up,
most notably Columbia, MD, but also Montgomery Village, MD, Belair at
Bowie, MD, St. Charles, MD, Cross Keys, and Joppatowne, MD, and
numerous shopping malls, the states' three largest malls being
Annapolis Mall, Arundel Mills and Towson Town Center. Community
colleges were established in nearly every County in Maryland.
Large-scale, mechanized poultry farms became prevalent on the lower
Eastern Shore along with irrigated vegetable farming. In Southern
Maryland tobacco farming had nearly vanished by the century's end, due
to suburban housing development and a State tobacco incentive buy-out
program. Industrial, railroad, and coal-mining jobs in the four
westernmost counties declined, but that area's economy was helped by
expansion of outdoor recreational tourism and new technology jobs and
industries. As the 21st century dawned, Maryland joined neighboring
states in a new initiative to save the health of Chesapeake Bay, whose
aquatic life and seafood industry are threatened by waterfront
residential development, as well as by fertilizer and livestock waste
entering the Bay, especially from Pennsylvania's Susquehanna River. In
addition, about 580 acres (230 ha) of Maryland shore are eroded per
year due to the land sinking and rising sea levels.


"You can get anything you want @ CeeAmerica"