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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)
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.
Colonel Thomas Brooke Jr. of Brookefield (1660 – 1731) was President of the Council in Maryland and acting 13th Proprietary Governor of the Province of Maryland. He was the son of Major Thomas Brooke Sr. and Esquire and his second wife Eleanor Hatton who later remarried Col. Henry Darnall . [ 1 ]
Many of them were greedy and became extremely wealthy and powerful through their exactions from the poor. The tax collectors were therefore hated by the people. Louis Mandrin was born in 1725 at Saint-Étienne-de-Saint-Geoirs, Dauphiné, then a border province. His family was well established in the region, but was no longer as prosperous as in ...
This category includes people who were notable in the Province of Maryland prior to the era of American Revolution. That is, they were notable before about 1765. People who are primarily associated with the Revolutionary era are located Category:People of Maryland in the American Revolution, instead of this category.
Larry Hogan (born 1956), governor of Maryland; born in D.C. Abraham Katz (1926–2013), diplomat, United States Ambassador to the OECD; lived in D.C. Sharon Pratt Kelly (born 1944), mayor of the District of Columbia, 1991–1995; born in D.C. Ned Lamont (born 1954), businessman and 89th Governor of Connecticut; born in D.C.
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.
[6]: 603 James was for a number of years in the Maryland legislature. [6]: 603 Thomas, the second son of Col. Cresap, was killed by a Native – whom he killed at the same instant. [6] [7] He left a widow and one child. Michael, was born in Frederick County, Maryland, 29 June 1742. He succeeded his father in the Indian trade.