MARYLAND MANUAL 19
printing press—William Nuthead's—, the departure of the
Governor and Assembly from St. Mary's to Annapolis,
and the passage of the "Act for the encouragement of
Learning" (October 18, 1694). This last was the prelude
to the opening of King William's School, the third institu-
tion of its sort in the colonies.
As the new century appeared, about 35,000 people made
up the population of Maryland. Nearly twenty per cent of
these were Negro slaves—slavery having been established
within five years after settlement. Another large group
were "bound men", or indentured servants. Many of the
latter soon became "redemptioners" and often, in time, the
owners of extensive property.
After the "Restoration"
With the restoration of proprietary rights, April 15,
1715, Charles Calvert, Fifth Lord Baltimore, resumed con-
trol of the colony. Since he was a minor at that time, and
in later life primarily interested in English politics, devel-
opment in Maryland lacked rigorous control from without.
Furthermore, a strong "County", as separate from a Pro-
prietary, party manifested itself in the General Assembly.
Significant among the expansionist movements in Charles
Calvert's time were the founding of a settlement at Balti-
more Town (July 30, 1729) and the beginnings of Western
Maryland (1735). Swedes and Dutch on the Delaware
River, having found the Maryland charter's geographical
limits vague, pressed for a boundary line. In 1732 this was
established for Delaware, but at the other limitations final
boundary judgments had to wait till the early twentieth
century. One of the consequences of dispute with Pennsyl-
vania was a survey in 1763 by two Englishmen, Jeremiah
Dixon and Charles Mason, for whom the line marking the
northern boundary of Maryland was named.
Frontier Development and Warfare
In Western Maryland boundary disputes made for vio-
lence; therefore, Thomas Cresap, Maryland's heroic fron-
tiersman, figures as an outlaw in Pennsylvania's history.
In this same quarter warfare flared, not only sporadically
with Indians, but also systematically when the French,
making claim to Western Empire, began to drive out the
traders of the Ohio Company. As this trading venture was
largely Virginian in character, the Maryland Assembly
was stern against Governor Horatio Sharpe and refused to
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