William Stone (Maryland governor)

[A]fter Leonard Calvert died in 1648, Lord Baltimore appointed the Protestant as governor.  He required the governor to take an oath not to violate the free exercise of religion by any Christians, specifically including Roman Catholics.  …  then denounced the Puritans and the commissioners as fomenters of sedition.  The result was the capture of St. Marys by the commissioners in 1654, and their appointment of a Puritan Council and of Capt. William Fuller as governor.  Catholics were now excluded from voting and from the Assembly, and the Toleration Act as well as the rule of the proprietor were canceled.  …  The Puritans made it clear that freedom of worship would now be extended only to Protestants free of either "popery or prelacy."

William Stone, 3rd Proprietary Governor of Maryland (c. 1603c. 1660) was an English pioneer and an early settler in Maryland.  He was governor of the colony of Maryland from 1649 to 1655.

Quotes about Stone

  • Until 's appointment, Maryland's Catholic rulers had had to struggle with indigenous Protestants, Protestants from Virginia, and Protestants in England to retain control.  further complicated matters when in 1649 he invited a group of some 500 Puritans to settle what is now Annapolis.  As the proprietor's representative, he soon found himself on the defensive when the Commonwealth government in England appointed Maryland's old enemy Claiborne, the Puritan leader at Annapolis, and two Protestant sea captains to obtain the submission of the Chesapeake colonies.  Claiborne and the Puritan leader went to St. Mary's in 1652, ejected from governorship, and sought to establish a new administration under their control.  When , under orders from Lord Baltimore, resisted, they appointed William Fuller as governor, and in 1655 civil strife broke out.  The Puritan faction quickly won a decisive victory.
    • William E. Nelson, "The Battle for Baltimore," ch. 6 of The Common Law in Colonial America vol. 1 (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 102.
  • Hon. , Governor of Maryland, was the second son of Lord Dunlam of Sussex, England, whose family name was Stone.  Owing to unkind feelings between him and his father and a brother, left England to seek his fortune in the American colonies.  ...  A letter was written urging his son to return (was supposed to be the contents), but his son, deeply resentful, destroyed the letter unopened.  Some years later another letter came which met the same fate.  Many years later the respected Governor had been gathered to his fathers.  After his death it was discovered the announcement of his succession of the title and estate in England.  He had unwittingly destroyed the proof of his inheritance.  This was discovered by his descendant, Thomas Stone, the signer of the Declaration of Independence.  A British officer, Captain Ponsonby, was found to be a younger member of the family and the succession went to him in default of the real heir.
    • James Edmund Nowlin, "Governor William Stone and Descendants," ch. 1 of "The Stones in Maryland," §2 of The Nowlin-Stone Genealogy ed. by Mary Nowlin (Salt Lake City, Utah: Martha Webb Nowlin, 1916), pp. 473–474.

Murray N. Rothbard, "Maryland", ch. 12, Pt. II of Conceived in Liberty vol. 1 (Arlington House, 1975)

  • The Catholic royalist deputy governor, Thomas Greene, foolishly decided to recognize Charles II in the same year as the legitimate ruler of England.  This proclamation naturally angered Parliament and precipated[sic] severe reaction.  The following year Parliament sent to the Chesapeake colonies commissioners, of whom the angry Claiborne was one, to subdue the recalcitrants.  After settling matters in Virginia, the commissioners proceeded to Maryland, where they removed the governor and ousted the proprietary.  was reinstated, but he, in turn, persisted in trying to reinstate the authority of the proprietor.  He compounded his difficulties by insisting on imposing an oath of allegiance on Lord Baltimore.  The oath offended Puritans.  then denounced the Puritans and the commissioners as fomenters of sedition.  The result was the capture of St. Marys by the commissioners in 1654, and their appointment of a Puritan Council and of Capt. William Fuller as governor.  Catholics were now excluded from voting and from the Assembly, and the Toleration Act as well as the rule of the proprietor were canceled.  A law of 1654 declared that "none who professed and exercised the popish religion could be protected in this province."  The law disfranchised not only Catholics, but also Anglicans.  The Puritans made it clear that freedom of worship would now be extended only to Protestants free of either "popery or prelacy."

    now raised his insurrectionary army loyal to the proprietary, and in 1655 attacked Providence, the principal Puritan settlement in Maryland.  The erstwhile governor was crushed by a force of Puritan planters, was imprisoned, and several of his followers executed, even though they had been promised their lives before surrender.

    • Page p. 117.