c. 10,000 B.C. ............
c. 1000 B.C...............
c. 800 B.C. ..............
c. 1000 A.D.. ............
1498...................
1524...................
1572...................
1608...................
1629...................
1631 ...................
1632, June 20............
1633, Nov. 22 ...........
1634, March 25 ..........
1634/5,Feb.26 ..........
1645 ...................
1647/8, Jan. 21 ..........
1649, April 21 ...........
1650, April 6 ............
1652, March 29 ..........
1655, March 25 ..........
1657.Nov.30 ...........
1664...................
1683, May 15............
1685, Aug.31 ...........
1689, July-1690, May
1690, May-1692, April
1692, April-1715.........
1692...................
1694/5, Feb..............
1696...................
1715...................
1718...................
1727, Sept... ............
1729...................
1732...................
1744, June 30............
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Indians known to have lived in Maryland by this date.
Indian introduction of pottery.
Indian introduction of domesticated plants.
Permanent Indian villages established.
John Cabot sailed along Eastern Shore off present-day Worcester
County.
Giovanni da Verrazano passed mouth of Chesapeake Bay.
Pedro Menendez de Aviles, Spanish governor of Florida, explored
Chesapeake Bay
Capt. John Smith explored Chesapeake Bay.
George Calvert, 1st Lord Baltimore, left Avalon in Newfoundland,
visited Virginia.
Kent Island settled by Virginians under William Claiborne.
Maryland Charter granted to Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore, by
Charles I, King of England.
The Ark and the Dove set sail from Cowes, England, for Maryland.
Landing of settlers at St. Clement's Island.
First General Assembly met at St. Mary's City.
Ingle's Rebellion.
Margaret Brent denied right to vote in General Assembly.
Religious toleration law enacted.
General Assembly divided into an upper and lower house.
Parliamentary commissioners held jurisdiction over colony, curtailing
proprietary authority.
Puritans from Virginia defeated Gov. William Stone's forces at Battle of
the Severn.
Lord Baltimore's claim to Maryland reaffirmed.
Slavery sanctioned by law; slaves to serve for life.
Headright system of land grants ended.
Printing press of William Nuthead used at St. Mary's City by this date.
Maryland Revolution of 1689.
Interim government of Protestant Associators.
Crown rule; Maryland governed as a royal colony rather than as a
proprietary province.
Church of England made the established church. Royal assent to
establishment act given in 1702.
Capital moved from St. Mary's City to Annapolis.
King William's School (later St. John's College) founded at Annapolis.
Restoration of proprietary rights to Charles Calvert, 5th Lord Baltimore.
Catholic disenfranchisement.
Maryland Gazette began publication at Annapolis.
Baltimore Town established.
Establishment of boundary line with three lower counties of Pennsylvania,
which later became Delaware.
Indian chiefs of the Six Nations relinquished by treaty all claims to land in
colony.
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