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C. Domingo Cabello y Robles; Jean-Jacques Caffieri; Guido Calcagnini; Leopoldo Marco Antonio Caldani; José António Caldas; David Caldwell (North Carolina minister)
Isham Randolph (born August 18, 1724), married Sarah Hargreaves in 1749, in Philadelphia. [4] Mary Randolph (born October 15, 1725, in Colonial Williamsburg), [6] who married Colonel Charles Lewis of Buck Island and had eight children, including Charles Lilburn Lewis, one of the founders of Milton, Virginia. [7] [8] Elizabeth Randolph (born ...
(1605 – 31675) politician, peer and lawyer, first proprietor of Maryland: Leonard Calvert (1606 – 1647) first proprietary governor of the Province of Maryland: Phillip Calvert (governor) (c. 1626 - c. 1682), fifth Governor of Maryland Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore (1637 – 1715) English peer and colonial administrator
Ralph Northam (born 1959) – 73rd Governor of Virginia; Johnny Newman (born 1963) – University of Richmond and NBA basketball player; Tommy Newsom (1929–2007) – saxophone player, bandleader; Wayne Newton (born 1942) – singer, entertainer, actor; Nick Novak § (born 1981) – placekicker for San Diego Chargers
George Mason's coat of arms. Mason was born in present-day Fairfax County, in the Colony of Virginia, in British America, on December 11, 1725. [1] [2] [3] Mason's parents owned property in Mason Neck, Virginia and a second property across the Potomac River in Maryland, which had been inherited by his mother.
Henry Randolph I (1623-1673), born in Little Houghton, Northamptonshire, England, [2] [3] immigrated to the colony of Virginia in 1642, [4] protege of Sir William Berkeley. [5] Randolph became clerk of the county court, and when Charles Norwood left the colony, Speaker Francis Moryson put forth Randoph's name for the position and the House of ...
The Flag of Maryland Location of Maryland on the U.S. map. The following are some notable people from the American state of Maryland, listed by their field of endeavor.This list may not include Federal officials and members of the United States Congress who live in Maryland but are not actual natives.
Thomas was dismissed from all offices by the Governor of Maryland, John Seymour, in 1708 as a result of close Roman Catholic ties—his brothers were Jesuits and Col. Henry Darnall was his stepfather—and for poor Council attendance, although his attendance had been very regular prior to Seymour's governorship. Brooke was reappointed to the ...