MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE
SECESSION
That Maryland is divided
by the Chesapeake Bay, into the Eastern Shore and
the Western Shore is a fact
that tends to sharpen political rivalries between the two
regions.
During Maryland history the
two shores have developed a different sort of interest. The
West have seen the East
have conservative isolated provincial cultures. The East see the
West as a cosmopolitan
society.
This accounts for the so
called “separatist movements” which have sprung up
on occasion in Maryland
history.
Even before Lord
Baltimore sat his settlement on the Western Shore at St. Mary's,
William Claiborne and
followers made attempts to separate sections of the Eastern Shore
from the province. For
40 year to his deathbed Claiborne carried this thought , but, it was
more of a conflict between
Clairborne and Lord Baltimore than between the two shores of
Maryland..
Major attempts for
secession , of which one could say were five, were strongest
between 1776 and 1851. At the November 3 1776 State Convention ,
Queen Anne's
delegate, Turbutt Wright,
proposed to make it possible to separate one from the other,
failed by 30 to 17 votes.
In 1833 Delaware urged
the Eastern Shore t o join Delaware, and Dorchester's
Martin Wright took it to
the House of Delegates which received a 40 for, 24 against vote,
however, a vote of 60 -
5 called for a postponement and the proposal suffered a major
defeat.
The next move, in March
1842, by Worcester's Levi Cathell, to allow Eastern
Shore counties to join
Delaware, but it too was defeated.
The final attempt made
during the 1850-1851 Convention of Maryland, and was
turned down by a 46 to
27 vote.
Abstract:; Salisbury
Daily Times, April 8, 1959, Delmarva Heritage, by
William H. Wroten, Jr.,
history Professor, Salisbury State Teacher College. By Harrison H.
May 19, 2018. for
www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment