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1ST BARON GEORGE CALVERT BALTIMORE (C...

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 288 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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1ST

BARON GEORGE CALVERT BALTIMORE (C. 1580—1632)  ,
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English statesman, son of Leonard Calvert, and Alice, daughter of John Crosland of Crosland, was born at Kipling in
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Yorkshire and educated at Trinity College, Oxford . After travelling on the continent, he entered the public service as secretary to Robert
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Cecil, afterwards
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earl of Salisbury . In 1606 he was appointed clerk of the
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crown in Connaught and Clare, in r6o8 a clerk of the council, and was returned to parliament for Bossiney in 1609 . He assisted James I. in his discourse against Vorstius, the Arminian theological professor of
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Leiden, and in 1613 took charge of the
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Spanish and
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Italian correspondence . The same
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year he was sent on a
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mission to Ireland to investigate grievances . For these services he was rewarded by
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knighthood in 1617, followed by a secretaryship of state in 1619 and a pension of £2000 a year in 162o . He represented successively Yorkshire (1621) and Oxford University (1624) in the House of
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Commons, where it fell to him in his official capacity to communicate the king's policy and to obtain supplies . He was distrusted by the parliament, and was in favour of the unpopular
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alliance with Spain and the Spanish
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marriage . Shortly after the failure of the scheme he declared himself a
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Roman Catholic, and on the 12th of
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February 1625 threw up his office, when he was created Baron Baltimore of Baltimore and received a grant of large estates in Ireland . Henceforth .he was seen little in public
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life and his attention was directed to colonial enterprise, with which his name will be always associated . He had established a small settlement in
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Newfoundland in 1621, for which under the name of Avalon he procured a charter in 1623, and which he himself visited in 1627 . In consequence of disputes and the unsuitable nature of the
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climate he sailed thence for Virginia, but was forbidden to settle there unless he took the oaths of allegiance and supremacy .

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home, and died on the 15th of
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April 1632 before a new concession was secured, the charter of
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Maryland passing the
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great seal on the 20th of
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June 1632 in favour of his son Cecilius, second Lord Baltimore, who founded the colony . Baltimore married Anne, daughter of George Mynne of Hurlingfordbury, Hertfordshire, by whom he had six sons and five daughters . He wrote Carmen funebre in D .
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Hen . Untonum (1596); The Answer to Tom Tell-Troth . . . (1642) is also attributed to him, and Wood mentions Baltimore as having composed " something concerning Maryland." His letters are to be found in various publications, including Strafford's Letters, Clarendon State Papers and the Calendars of State Papers .

End of Article: 1ST BARON GEORGE CALVERT BALTIMORE (C. 1580—1632)
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