LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT.
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as to fulfil essential purposes; surveys being instituted chiefly
by the government, while the consequent grants were issued
by the officers of the proprietary. This state of things
continued, but with various fluctuations, and some absolute
suspension of the business of the land office, throughout the
successive reigns of William and Mary, king William (alone)
and queen Anne. Upon the accession of king George I. in
1715, the powers of government were restored to the then
proprietary Charles lord Baltimore, grandson of the (c) former
Charles, who was at that period found to have been educated
in the established religion of England, and had thus become
capable of holding governmental authorities subordinate to
the crown. This event forms a new aera in the land affairs of
Maryland. The proprietary sent out a commission to the
king's governor, Mr. Hart, to continue in the same station
under his authority, and that gentleman accepted the trust,
but soon became dissatisfied with his situation. Mr. Carroll
who had long held the place of chief agent, and who about
this time had gone to England, brought out with him a new
commission which bore evidence of a greater change in the
proprietary's circumstances than in his sentiments by vesting the
same agent with additional powers appertaining seemingly
rather to matters of government than to the functions of a
revenue officer. The governor offended at the abridgement of his
own power, desired to be recalled, and was, in effect, some time
afterwards required to appear in England, in order to defend
himself against several charges that had been made against
him: but, previous to this, although the government and the
agent now held their authority from the same source, they
were far from having a good understanding respecting the
affairs of the land office. Governor Hart refused to
commission the surveyors appointed by the agent for the several
counties, unless they would qualify in the form required by law
(by taking the oath of abjuration, &c.) The agent accused
the governor of having shut up his lordship's land office by
withholding the necessary commissions from his officers duly
appointed: the charge was retorted, and much dispute and
recrimination continued to agitate the provincial government,
and to affect the course of land transactions until the
departure of Mr. Hart, when these unnecessary violences seem to
have subsided. From this time the affairs of the province
(c) The second proprietary never returned to the province after leaving
it in 1684. He died on the 20th of February 1714—15, leaving the
proprietaryship, to his son Benedict Leonard Calvert, who had scarcely time
to notify his succession by letter to Mr. Carroll and to desire copies of the
commission and instructions under which that gentleman acted, when he
also died, and was succeeded by his son Charles then a minor, and under
the guardianship of lord Guilford who joined his name to that of the
proprietary in all public acts.
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