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Monday, September 30, 2013

Chestertown, Maryland

    Last week, I gave a book talk at Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland.  Washington College, my host, Ted Maris-Wolf, and the audience were wonderful.  It is a great place to speak, and the town has a picture-book setting.  But as with many of my speaking venues, Chestertown has a connection to the book.  Artist Charles Willson Peale lived there for a short time when he was a boy.  He had been born in Centerville, Maryland, and later his father, a teacher, took a job in Chestertown.  Peale didn't live there long because his father died and his mother moved the family to Annapolis.  Nonetheless, while there, I naturally had to track down Peale's house.  It is gone, but I was told it was at the intersection of Queen and Cannon streets.  The gray house on the right side of the street in this photograph is where the Peale house used to be.
Peale''s boyhood home
Peale liked the water, so I took the picture below to show how close this house was to the Chester River.  This is more or less what Peale would see when he ran out his front door.  The green frame house on the right is an inn from the colonial period.  I don't know if it was standing when Peale lived in Chestertown, but the historical sign next to it said that George Washington stayed there.
View of Cannon Street and Chester River
Naturally there are many other things to see in Chestertown.  My favorite was what I call "lawyers' row."  Across the street from the courthouse are the buildings in the photograph below.  They are lawyers' offices.  I don't know when they were built, but they are still in use today.  I was there on a beautiful September morning, and the doors to some of the offices were open.
Lawyers' offices 


Sotterley Plantation

  In June, I spoke at Sotterley Plantation in St. Mary's County, Maryland.  http://www.sotterley.org/  The restored plantation is an historical gem.  It is the physical embodiment of Chapter 2 of From Slave Ship to Harvard:  Tobacco and the Importation of a Labor Force.  Situated on the Patuxent River, just up from the Chesapeake Bay, it had a wharf for the plantation owners and others to use to load tobacco directly onto sailing ships bound for England and to buy slaves from arriving slave ships from Africa. Sotterley's first owner, James Bowles, was married to Rebecca Tasker Addison.  She was the niece of Benjamin Tasker, Sr., who would become acting colonial governor of Maryland in 1752.  Governor Tasker's inaugural address to the colonial legislature was delivered the week Yarrow Mamout arrived in Annapolis on a slave ship.  In fact, Tasker's daughter had married the merchant and transatlantic slave trader, Christopher Lowndes.  Lowndes and the governor's son, Benjamin Tasker, Jr., placed the advertisement for the arrival of the Elijah which brought Yarrow, in the Maryland Gazette.
slave ship,
Maryland Gazette, May 1752