MARYLAND MANUAL 25
first site, St. Mary's City, called then "Augusta Carolina,"
was available. A palisade was erected immediately.
Government from St. Mary's City
For upwards of sixty years, the Province centered
around St. Mary's City. The Assembly, set up very soon
after a food supply had been assured and protection against
enemies provided, was made up of the freemen, i.e., plant-
ers and settlers. The combined efforts of all the settlers
were needed, moreover, to cope with the almost immediate
difficulty that arose with white settlers from Virginia who
had begun trading with the Indians before the Calvert
party arrived. The foremost among these men was Cap-
tain William Claiborne, a trader with headquarters on
Kent Island. The dispute is sometimes known as the Cal-
vert-Glaiborne controversy. After a naval skirmish and
slight loss of life, Claiborne was declared an outlaw March
24,1637.
"Ingle's War" was another vexation in the peaceful order-
ing of the new colony. Richard Ingle was a vigorous parti-
san of Parliament in its victorious struggle with the King
that was to produce the Commonwealth. Coming first to
Maryland in 1642, he finally exceeded any legal powers he
might have had and took possession of St. Mary's City,
making prisoner members of the Assembly. The affair
ended inconclusively in 1646, but Ingle, meanwhile, arrested
Father Andrew White and Father Thomas Copley and took
them in chains to England.
Act of Toleration
The bigotry implicit in Ingle's special irritation at Cath-
olic priests and Royalists makes especially pointed the solici-
tude Lord Baltimore showed at this period for religious free-
dom. As early as 1643, the Puritan Governor of Massa-
chusetts, John Winthrop, had spoken approvingly of Gov-
ernor Calvert as "for free liberty of religion." The Gov-
ernor had taken a more liberal attitude on the question
of Puritan settlers, certainly, than had the administrators of
Virginia. The "Act concerning Religion," which the Mary-
land Assembly passed in 1649, gives Maryland claim to be-
ing one of the first civil regimes to recognize freedom of
religion. The fact that within sixty years after the passage
of this law Catholics were repressed under an "Act to pre-
vent the growth of popery" does not detract from the
boldness of Lord Baltimore's action in the mid-seventeenth
century.
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