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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text.
Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original
book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not
illustrated. 1915 edition. Excerpt: ...portion of Talbot County
than now belongs to it. There were then within its bounds, besides
the Parish Church--called "Chester Church"--three Chapels of ease,
viz.: the "Up-River Chapel" (upon the site of the present St.
Luke's, Church Hill)--"Tuckahoe Chapel" (in what is now St. John's
Parish, in the counties of Caroline and Queen Anne) and "St.
Luke's, Wye." From the fact that the Parish Church very shortly
afterwards needed repair, and the Chapel at Wye renewal, these
structures, even at that early date, must have been standing for a
number of years. The probability is that the first Chester Church
and the first St. Luke's at Wye, were the very earliest churches
erected on the mainland of the Eastern Shore. We all know that Kent
Island was the cradle of the Church of Maryland, the first
settlement within its borders having been made there, and having
been made by members of the Church of England. As early as 1618
Capt. William Claiborne, Secretary of State to the Virginia Colony,
who is referred to in his appointment to that office as "a man of
quality and trust,"--came from Jamestown to Kent Island with a
company of one hundred colonists. There were with this colony a
clergyman of the Church of England, the Rev. Richard James, by
whom, in all human probability, the foundation of the first Church
in Maryland was laid, and whose death occurred in 1638. From the
Island the colony spread, carrying of course, the Church with it,
to the neighboring territory, and Chester and Wye Churches being
nearest to the Island, were the first erected. From these data, we
may safely infer that these churches were built about the year
1640--certainly not later than 1650. The records begin with the
rectorship of the Rev. John Lillingston in 1694--whether...
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text.
Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original
book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not
illustrated. 1915 edition. Excerpt: ...portion of Talbot County
than now belongs to it. There were then within its bounds, besides
the Parish Church--called "Chester Church"--three Chapels of ease,
viz.: the "Up-River Chapel" (upon the site of the present St.
Luke's, Church Hill)--"Tuckahoe Chapel" (in what is now St. John's
Parish, in the counties of Caroline and Queen Anne) and "St.
Luke's, Wye." From the fact that the Parish Church very shortly
afterwards needed repair, and the Chapel at Wye renewal, these
structures, even at that early date, must have been standing for a
number of years. The probability is that the first Chester Church
and the first St. Luke's at Wye, were the very earliest churches
erected on the mainland of the Eastern Shore. We all know that Kent
Island was the cradle of the Church of Maryland, the first
settlement within its borders having been made there, and having
been made by members of the Church of England. As early as 1618
Capt. William Claiborne, Secretary of State to the Virginia Colony,
who is referred to in his appointment to that office as "a man of
quality and trust,"--came from Jamestown to Kent Island with a
company of one hundred colonists. There were with this colony a
clergyman of the Church of England, the Rev. Richard James, by
whom, in all human probability, the foundation of the first Church
in Maryland was laid, and whose death occurred in 1638. From the
Island the colony spread, carrying of course, the Church with it,
to the neighboring territory, and Chester and Wye Churches being
nearest to the Island, were the first erected. From these data, we
may safely infer that these churches were built about the year
1640--certainly not later than 1650. The records begin with the
rectorship of the Rev. John Lillingston in 1694--whether...
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