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CHAPTER VIII ALONG THE EASTERN SHORE It was a wise friend who
counselled us to begin our tour of the Eastern Shore at Eastville. By
the
Eastern Shore is meant the peninsula bounded on the north and east by
Delaware
Bay, on the south and east by the Atlantic, and on the west by the
Chesapeake,
a quaint and venerable region containing about one-third of Maryland
and two
counties of Virginia. Bountifully endowed by nature, it is also, for
the man
who loves the past, a land of delight. When New York was yet a
wilderness and
Plymouth a virgin forest, men of English birth were growing tobacco,
dredging
oysters, and shooting wild fowl on the Eastern Shore. The descendants
of these
first settlers still follow the same pursuits. Moreover, locked away
for the
better part of three hundred years in this neglected nook, they cling
with
affectionate tenacity to the manners and customs, the traditions and
modes of
life, of their forefathers, so that one finds on the peninsula the
indolent
old-time existence and the broad hospitality of an earlier age, along
with the
careless air of ancient gentility, tempered and made piquant by an
aristocratic
exclusiveness. And sleepy Eastville, near
its southern end, is the Eastern Shore in miniature. Only during the
last dozen
years has it had easy connection with the outer world, and even now it
feels
but dubiously the intestine stir of modern ideas. Rows of white,
low-roofed
houses line its single dusty street, with two or three country stores
and a
couple of roomy taverns dropped in between, while a court-house and
clerk's
office bear witness to the fact that it is the shire town of the
ancient county
of Northampton. Eastville is the centre of a land overflowing with milk
and
honey, and above it and below it are the homes of people who in the
golden days
before the Civil War counted their slaves by hundreds and their acres
by
thousand sands, — old families whose ancestors date far back into the
seventeenth century as men of importance and power. Beside the inlets and
rivers that deeply indent the shores of the peninsula stand the roomy
dwellings
of these old families outlooking over the bay, with lawns in front
smooth as
green velvet, dipping down to the water's edge. Such is the old Parker
mansion,
standing at the junction of two creeks, a fine old house surrounded by
a thick
cluster of trees, with large porches front and back, paved with marble
slabs,
and a long colonnade running from the kitchen to the main building. In
these
old dwellings the kitchen is almost always separated from the house,
connected
with it only by this covered way, thus securing coolness to the house,
at the
same time providing shelter from the rain for the dainty dishes,
delicate yet
simple, such as only the negro cook of the South can compound.
Erstwhile the
cook held absolute sway in her quarters, with a parcel of jolly,
grinning
little negro boys as pages. The mistress might rule the household and
the
master the fields, but in her own dominions, portly Dinah, with white
teeth
showing beneath her red turban, reigned supreme. The name of Parker is
repeated on every page of the early history of the lower Eastern Shore;
and so
is that of the well-known Custis family, high in social position and
pride of
birth, one of the later descendants of which was the first husband of
Martha
Washington. Arlington, the whilom seat of the Custises, faces the
Chesapeake a
dozen miles below Eastville, and is reached by a drive along a
grass-grown road
that never carries one out of sight of the placid waters of the bay. No
vestige
of the mansion remains; but near its former site are a couple of
crumbling and
weather-beaten tombstones that once stood, as is customary throughout
Virginia,
close to the old homestead. The inscription on the most elaborate of
the two
tells the visitor that beneath it lies the body of John Custis, who
died “aged
seventy-one years and yet lived but seven years which was the space of
time he
kept a bachelor's house at Arlington on the Eastern shore of Virginia.”
On
another side of the tomb is the statement, duly chiselled in the
marble, that
“the foregoing inscription was placed on this stone by the direction of
the
deceased.” The father-in-law of Mrs. Washington, if not an unhappy
husband, was
surely one of the most eccentric of men. John Custis's tomb and its
companion grave are the only visible reminders of the glory of
Arlington, but
it is an easy and pleasant task to recreate the vanished era in which
it had
its place. A hard-swearing, hard-drinking, hard-driving, — ay, and a
hard-working lot, when the humor was on them, — were these men of the
Eastern
Shore, of a period when “the planter who had the most hoes at work was
the best
man,” — to every hoe a slave or a convict; when tobacco stood for all
that was
notable and characteristic in life and manners; when every large
proprietor was
in direct communication with England; when the ships of Bristol and
London
brought supplies directly to the planter's own wharf, and his eldest
son, as
well as his tobacco, was often shipped across in return. The wives, sisters, and
sweethearts of these dead and gone worthies were their comrades and
competitors
in the saddle or the dugout. Though they delighted to gossip of Chinese
silks,
brocades, lutestring, taffeta, sarsenet, ginghams, and camlets, — not
forgetting pyramids and turbans, jewelled stomachers, breast-knots, and
high-heeled shoes for the minuet, — they were also at home on the
bridle-path
and comfortable on the pillion; they rode to hounds, and were clever in
the
handling of a tiller or the trimming of a sail. Irving describes them
as going
to balls on their side-saddles, with the scarlet riding-habit drawn
over the
white satin gown. “In the flashing canoe, ticklish and fascinating,
they
maintained,” we are told, “the equilibrium of their bodies and their
tempers
with an expertness that was not ungraceful, and with a graciousness in
which
long training had made them expert. The dugout, dancing in the creek,
waited
upon their freaks and caprices with uses as frequent and familiar as
those
which pertained to the wagon or the gig, — to race in a ladies'
regatta, or to
run out to the old-country ship in the offing, with its pulse-stirring
news of
fashions and revolutions, battles and brocades, cloaks, cardinals, and
convicts, sultana plumes, French falls, and the fate of nations.” The spirit of the age was
knightly, and the sword, not the purse, the symbol of distinction. When
the
Revolution came, the Maryland section of the Eastern Shore was warmly
attached
to the patriot cause; but in the Virginia counties of Northampton and
Accomac
the Loyalists were numerous; and one of the earlier episodes of the
seven years'
struggle was a small civil war on the peninsula. Dunmore, expelled from
the
mainland of Virginia, took refuge in Accomac, and soon had some
hundreds of
Tories under arms. The situation looked grave; but Matthew Ward
Tilghman,
chairman of the Maryland Committee of Safety, and his seven Eastern
Shore
colleagues proved equal to it. They promptly called out two companies
of
militia and suppressed the rising before the worst came of it.
Afterwards the
two victorious companies, with a third from the Eastern Shore, were
embodied in
Smallwood's regiment, the famous First of the Maryland line. Perhaps
the most
brilliant exploit of the Revolution was the stand made by four hundred
of this
regiment, under Lord Stirling, on the fatal day of Long Island. In six
successive
charges they beat back the greatly superior pursuing force of
Cornwallis, and
were on the point of dislodging him entirely when Grant, with nine
fresh
regiments, overwhelmed them by a rear attack. The Second Maryland
Regiment was wholly recruited on the Eastern Shore, while Pulaski's
legion and
Baylor's cavalry, besides several other organizations, also drew
largely from
the peninsula. It sent, moreover, seven hundred militiamen, under Gist,
to the
battles of Brandywine and German-town; furnished Washington with one of
his
most valued staff officers, Lieutenant-Colonel Tench Tilghman, and at
the same
time gave to the councils of the State and nation Cæesar Rodney,
Matthew Ward,
and his kinsman Edward Tilghman, William Paca, Thomas Ringgold, and
other men
of high character and unusual ability. Though the War of 1812
revived the old military traditions, the golden age of the Eastern
Shore went
out with the Revolution. Slipshod and sluttish husbandry, that counted
it
cheaper to take up new land than to foster and restore the old, bore
speedy
fruit in mortgaged crops and acres, while the gradual substitution of
wheat and
corn for tobacco marked the increasing poverty of a soil worn out in
its youth,
and which sank from good to bad and from bad to worse. So things went
on till
sixty years ago. Since then they have changed for the better, and,
though
checked for a time by the loss of slaves and the turmoil of civil war,
the
upward movement is still in progress. Fertilizers have been introduced
and
improved breeds of stock. Machinery has taken the place of hand-labor
in
farm-work; and worthless fields have been limed and drained into
fertility. In other respects, however, the Eastern
Shore remains
unchanged, — a severed fragment of colonial America. The new-comer from
over
the seas has gone on to the cheaper and freer lands of the West, and
the busy
Northern man, as he hurries by, barely pauses to knock at its doors.
And so the
years, as they wax and wane, find the same population on the same soil,
— a
population composed, now as of old, of three classes, — the “gentleman
born,”
the “plain people,” and the negroes. Each class, save in exceptional
cases,
marries strictly within its own limits; and half a dozen surnames will
frequently include nearly the whole gentry of a county, the
appellations of
present-day bride and bridegroom tallying exactly with those on the
century-old
tombstones of their common ancestors. Again, for the upper classes
there is
still but one church, the Anglican. They have listened in the same
seats to the
same service for generations, and, more often than not, they take the
communion
service from a chalice that was new in the days of the Restoration.
Some of
them can show ancestral souvenirs of the Martyr King. Easter and
Whitsuntide
remain universally recognized holidays, and antique observances still
cluster
around the minor festivals. Thus, freedom from change has made the
Eastern
Shore a land of serenity and dignity; but its confines are too narrow
for
youthful enterprises. It has no imperial possibilities, and must ever
be a
nook. Mount Custis, an
Eastern
Shore Homestead Proof of many of these
things was before us as we drove to and from Arlington, and a little
later set
out from Eastville for a further exploration of the Eastern Shore. Our
destination was the island of Chincoteague, on the Atlantic side of the
peninsula, and the road led through the hamlet of Anancock and the
sound of the
same name, the latter a loop or skein of salt coves widening up between
green
mounds and golden bluffs, and terminating at an exquisite landing,
where
several creeks pour into the cove from the estates of well-to-do
planters.
Drummondtown, the county-seat of Accomac, was also passed on the way.
Three
miles beyond we halted for a half-hour's rest at Mount Custis, a roomy,
rambling old house standing close to the shores of a creek, which, as
its name
indicates, once belonged to the masters of Arlington, and in the late
afternoon
found ourselves on board the tiny steamer “Widgeon” with Chincoteague
in the
eastern offing. Outlying along the
Atlantic coast and extending southward for more than fifty miles from
the mouth
of Delaware Bay is a narrow strip of sandy beach, its western side
washed by
the waters of a landlocked sound and its eastern beat upon by the
surges of the
ocean. Its southern end, called Assateague, is separated from the
mainland by
Chincoteague Sound, and lying within this sound is the island of the
same name,
only its southern extremity being thrust out from its snug hiding-place
behind Assateague
and exposed to the Atlantic. Yet at every turn the visitor to
Chincoteague,
with its gray-green waters and its far horizons, feels the majesty and
pervasive presence of the sea. The air has a salty, pungent quality;
all along
the shore lie craft of one sort or another, and every grown man carries
in his
face the mellow marks of sun and wind, for the people of Chincoteague
get their
living from the sea, which affords them, directly or indirectly, not
only food
and drink, but clothing and shelter. Nobody asks alms, and want and
theft are
unknown. At the island's feet lie oyster-beds of wondrous richness, and
any
skilled worker can earn a living wage during nine months of the year.
Winter,
however, is the season of greatest activity, and then Chincoteague's
fleet of
oyster-boats is busy from sunrise to sunset. Early morning finds the
oystermen
hoisting sail; all day long they can be seen on the western horizon
groping for
the hidden treasure; and when twilight falls, scores of their little
craft, beating
homeward, make the harbor, facing the mainland, a snowstorm of canvas. Truth is that Chincoteague
is merely a standing-place and lodging-house for its inhabitants. The
visitor
discovers, to his surprise and delight, that it is also the
breeding-place of a
race of ponies unlike any other in the world. Some are watched and
tended on
private lands, but most of them, to the number of half a thousand,
inhabit the
common pastures at the south end of the island, whence, when the
weather is bad
and the waves high, scores of the little fellows are sometimes swept
away and
lost. Skirting the coast in a boat, one sees them feeding together on
the
pastures or standing knee-deep in the salt water, the breeze scattering
their
tangled manes. They are about thirteen hands high, nearly all sorrels
or bays,
and are fine-bodied and neatly limbed. The yearlings, which are never
gelded,
come through the winter with shaggy coats that are in rags and shreds
before
the summer is old, and still show tattered remnants at the yearly
penning and
branding in August. No one knows whence they came or how long they have
inhabited the island, but as they have the head and eyes of the
Arabian, the
supposition is that the ancestors of the present generation came ashore
from a
wreck in colony times. When we left Chincoteague
and its contented fisherfolk it was to journey, by way of Berlin and
Snow Hill,
to Crisfield on the hither side of the peninsula. That intrepid sailor,
Stephen
Decatur, was born near Berlin, and Snow Hill has a peaceful history
dating back
to the seventeenth century, while Crisfield, facing the beautiful
waters of
Tangier Sound, has been aptly described as a town of oysters reared on
oyster-shells. A man on building bent buys a lot at the bottom of the
harbor,
encloses it with piles, and then purchases enough oyster-shells to
raise it
above high-water mark. The product of this singular practice is a
village which
stands, as it were, up to its knees in the water of a little harbor
that cuts
jaw-like into the end of a small peninsula thickly flecked with the
homes of
fishermen and oystermen. Moreover, the railroad that runs through the
length of
the town, terminating at the water's edge, rests on a roadbed of
oyster-shells
as firm and solid as broken granite. Along the harbor front, and all
built upon
shells, are the huge, barn-like packing-houses in which centres the
chief
interest of Crisfield, — the shucking and packing of oysters for the
Northern
market. These come mainly from the beds of Tangier Sound, perhaps the
finest in
the world; dredging for them gives constant employment to a fleet of
several
hundred sloops and schooners, and the annual returns from the trade
mount into
the millions. In winter thousands of bushels of oysters are sent off
from
Crisfield simply shelled, drained, and pressed into kegs or cans; but
later in
the season they are canned in hermetically sealed tins, in which
condition they
will keep for years. Crisfield and its oyster
trade belong to the present. Tangier Island, across the Sound, is part
and parcel
of the past. Much homely matter anent this sequestered nook is to be
found in
“The Parson of the Islands,” a book dealing with the life story of a
humble
fisherman evangelist who labored with such effect in an unpromising
field that
to this day, when a flag is raised on the little island chapels,
signifying
“Preacher amongst us from the mainland,” the waters fill with canoes
scudding
down from every point of the compass. The island parson kept a canoe,
called
“The Methodist,” to haul the preachers to and fro, and in the second
war with
England, when the whole British army established a permanent camp on
Tangier
Island, and thence ravaged the shores of the Chesapeake, burnt
Washington, and
sought to capture Baltimore, this unpretending gospeller preached to
them, and
prevailed upon them to respect the immemorial camp-meeting groves. Tangier, like
Chincoteague, is a land of far horizons, of restless gray-green water,
of vivid
marsh grass, and of sweet salt air. Like Chincoteague, it is the home
of a hardy,
primitive people, who fear God and find no fault with their lot. The
benevolent
bay yields a living to all who are able and willing to work, and it is
the
boast of the islanders that there are neither drunkards, paupers, nor
criminals
among them. Less could be said of a more favored community. From Crisfield a railroad
— its route a giant interrogation point — runs by way of Westover, the
centre
of the berry culture of the Eastern Shore, to Cambridge on the
Choptank. This
stream is the noblest water-course of the peninsula, — at its mouth, a
superb
sound, curtained with islands, several miles wide; farther inland a
net-work of
coves and deep creeks, to whose beachy margins slope the lawns and
orchards of
many fine old homesteads; and Cambridge is a gem worthy of so exquisite
a
setting. A salt creek, bordered with snug old mansions of wood and
brick,
creeps up behind the tree-embowered town; and a clear spring rises
under an
open dome in the village square, which faces an ivy-covered
court-house, while
a little way removed from the business centre stands an old Episcopal
church,
garbed in living green and surrounded with mouldering gravestones
carved with
crests, shields, and ciphers. There are a score of other
objects in Cambridge to please an artist's eye, and another quaint and
beautiful hamlet is Oxford, on the northern shore of the Choptank,
where Robert
Morris, the financier of the Revolution, passed the greater part of his
boyhood. Threadhaven Creek — a perfect fiord, unexcelled by any
low-lying
Danish or Swedish marine landscapes — enters the Choptank at Oxford,
and a few
miles away, at the head of the same stream, nestles the quiet town of
Easton.
The road from Oxford to Easton leads past Whitemarsh Church, a
dilapidated but
picturesque structure dating back to the seventeenth century, and in an
oak-shaded dell about a quarter of a mile from the latter place stands
another
house of worship which was already old when the republic was born. This
is a
Quaker meeting-house of antique design, which, according to tradition,
once numbered
William Penn among its worshippers. His followers still meet within its
walls
on First and Fifth Days. Easton suggests in more
ways than one the stately affectations of a bygone time; and nearby St.
Michael's, at the mouth of Miles River, though now the chief depot of
the
oyster trade of the Middle Chesapeake, boasts intimate association with
the
great men and stirring events of the Revolutionary period. The
ship-builders of
St. Michael's have plied their craft for two hundred and fifty years,
and when
the eighteenth century was still young, vessels launched from their
yards
controlled the coastwise commerce from New England to the West Indies.
The
country bottoms of the Chesapeake traded with Liverpool and Bristol;
smuggled for
Holland and France, and when the Revolution came, turned to
privateering and
became as hornets and wasps in the face of the foe. The records show
that in
less than six years two hundred and forty-eight vessels sailed out of
the bay —
“and this with a British fleet at Hampton Roads and inside the capes
all the
time” — to fight and capture ships and small craft at the very gates of
the
enemy's ports, in the British and Irish Channels, off the North Cape,
on the
coasts of Spain and Portugal, in the East and West Indies, and in the
Pacific
Ocean. This record was repeated in 1812, when at least one Chesapeake
privateer, the “Chasseur,” made a true viking's record. Armed with
twelve guns,
manned by men from the Eastern Shore, and commanded by Captain Thomas
Boyle,
she captured eighty vessels, thirty-two of equal force and eighteen her
superior in guns and men. Boyle was born at Marblehead in 1776, married
in
Baltimore in 1794, and died at sea in 1825. He commanded a ship at
sixteen, was
a husband two years later, and made a dramatic end of a romantic and
glorious
career at forty-nine. From either Easton or St.
Michael's it is an easy and inviting detour to Wye House and Wye
Island, — two
storied shrines of the Eastern Shore. Called after the little river
which rises
in the Cambrian Hills, and mingling its waters with those of the
Severn, flows
out through Bristol Channel to the Atlantic, there are few American
water-ways
more lovely than the Wye. Its banks are free from the sombre borders of
marsh
which fringes most of its sister streams, and its channel, from head to
mouth,
sweeps between bold bluffs of woodland and smiling fields, dotted by
the
manor-houses of men and women whose ancestors dispensed stately
hospitalities
in these same homes more than a century ago. And nowhere, in those days
of
pleasantness and peace, had the stranger more generous welcome than was
sure to
be given him by the master of Wye House. This sturdy domicile,
built of bricks brought over from England, was burned in 1781, when a
British
marauding party looted the plantation and the mansion; but near its
site stands
another spacious structure, which invites the present-day wayfarer in
the name
of all the generations of gentle, kindly folk who have dwelt there
since Edward
Lloyd, in 1668, set up his son Philemon to be lord of the manor of Wye
and
master of Wye House. The main building of two lofty stories is
connected by
corridors with one-storied wings, presenting a façade of two hundred
feet,
looking out upon a noble, tree-strewn lawn, and over engirdling woods
to Wye
River and the island beyond. Behind the mansion is a flower-garden, and
in the
rear of that the family burial-ground, where is gathered the dust of
many
worthies and dames of the blood of the Lloyds. Here beneath a battered
shield
supported by mortuary emblems sleeps that Henrietta Maria Lloyd who had
the
hapless wife of Charles I for her godmother; and here, without a stone
or a
stake to mark the spot, rests all that was mortal of William Paca,
thrice
member of Congress, twice governor of Maryland, and signer of the
Declaration
of Independence. Moving memories also color
the later history of Wye House, whose present gracious mistress is the
granddaughter of Colonel John Eager Howard of Revolutionary fame and of
Francis
Scott Key, author of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Eighty-odd years ago
the
steward or bailiff of the Lloyd estate was a certain Captain Anthony,
of St.
Michael's. This man was the owner of a negro boy who escaped from
bondage, and
became before middle age the foremost figure of his race. In 1881,
Frederick
Douglass, white-haired and honored of men, was moved to revisit the
scenes of
his childhood and his thrall, and one day found himself at the door of
Wye
House. The son of its master gave him welcome, and when he had made
known the
motive of his visit, he was conducted over the estate. Each spot he
remembered
and described with all its childish associations, — here a spring,
there a
hedge, a lane, a field, a tree, — and the whole heart of the man seemed
to go
out to the place as he passed from ghost to ghost as in a dream. Then befell a strange
thing. Standing mute and musing for a while, he said softly and low, as
one who
communes with himself, “Over in them woods was whar me and Marse Dan
uster trap
rabbits.” Marse Dan was the son of the whilom master of Wye House and
Douglass's playmate in childhood. Thus, humor blending with pathos, was
the
ennobling lesson of an unusual life compacted into the homely
reflection and
phrase of a barefoot slave boy. Afterwards Douglass plucked flowers
from the
graves of the dead Lloyds he had known, and at the table drank to the
health of
the master of the old house and his children, “that they and their
descendants
may worthily maintain the character and the fame of their ancestors.” Philemon Lloyd, first
master of Wye House, at his death left to his only daughter thousands
of
fertile acres on the Wye. This daughter, by her marriage to Samuel
Chew, a
planter of ancient lineage and great wealth, who early left her a
widow, added
to her already large possessions; and one of her bequests to her son
Philemon,
when her time came to die, was the island of three thousand acres which
faces
both Wye House and the mouth of the Wye, and which he passed one to his
two
sisters. Mary Chew became the wife
of William Paca, and Margaret was wooed and won by John Beale Bordley,
the
descendant of an old Yorkshire family, the last of the admiralty judges
of
Maryland under the provincial government, and an earnest supporter of
the patriot
cause in the Revolution. No trace remains of the many-roomed house at
the lower
end of Wye Island, built by Samuel Chew of material brought from
England, and
long occupied by Judge Bordley and his family; but the mansion which
Paca's son
erected is still standing at the island's upper end, and promises to
outlast
another century. The Paca homestead crowns a commanding eminence,
whence it
looks down upon the narrows separating it from Wye House, and controls
a view
of long reaches of rich acres once the inheritance of the Lloyds and
Chews, and
still owned, to a great extent, by their descendants. The land
naturally slopes
downward from the river-bluff, but has been terraced up until it forms
a broad
plateau, sufficient to accommodate not only the house, but the garden
which surrounded
it, and which, with its extensive conservatories, was once a gayer
paradise of
shrubs and flowers. Wye Hall, though fallen
from its former state, gives ample evidence of its early grandeur. The
building
is in the Doric style, the central portion square, with spacious, II. —
3 lofty
columned porticoes, and stretching away on either side are covered
arcades,
terminating, the one in the kitchen and offices, the other in the grand
parlor
or ball-room. This grand parlor is a beautiful and stately room, the
high
ceiling ornamented with handsome stucco-work and the walls hung with
family
portraits by the fathers of our native art. Among them is a full-length
picture
of Governor Paca. Painted by the elder Peale, and in his best manner,
it shows
a man of commanding presence and strikingly handsome features. The rich
dress
and easy carriage betoken high birth and breeding, the dark eye and
well-chiselled mouth character and firmness. The entrance-hall and
corridors of Wye House are, likewise, noble apartments, and here, also,
one
wanders in the past. The Signer's solid and substantial bookcase, on
the
shelves of which yet stand the volumes of his law library, and the
tables where
he played short whist with his Revolutionary associates are still used
by his
descendants. Here, too, are the antique chairs which graced the
executive
mansion at Annapolis when Paca was governor, and which were loaned for
use when
Washington resigned his commission. The career of William Paca has been
briefly
sketched in another place. His last days were spent in delightful
retirement on
Wye Island, than which there can be imagined no more charming retreat
for a man
of wealth and culture wearied with the burdens of public life in trying
times,
and there he died in October, 1799. During his last illness “he
conversed with
perfect resignation on his approaching dissolution, and cheerfully
submitted to
sickness and death under a deep conviction of the unerring wisdom and
goodness
of his heavenly Father, and of the redemption of the world by our Lord
and
Saviour, Jesus Christ. To the faith and charity of a Christian he added
the
civil virtues of a gentleman, "fond as a husband, indulgent as a
father,
constant as a friend, and kind as a master.” Such is the testimony of
some
appreciative friend, whose manuscript, without date or name to lead to
the
identification of its author, is preserved among the family archives at
Wye
Hall. When we left Wye Island it
was to board one of the steamboats trading to Baltimore, which weekly
visit the
bays and creeks of the Eastern Shore, and which carried us, during the
early
hours of a sunny afternoon, down the Wye and west across Eastern Bay to
the
lower end of Kent Island, where was established the first colony of
white men
on the Maryland shores of the Chesapeake. Kent Island belies its name,
for it
is, in fact, a peninsula connected with the mainland by a short and
narrow
isthmus, and in shape very like the hammer of an old-fashioned musket;
and it
has no ruins and no town; yet at every stage of the northward drive,
past
pleasant farms and fishing beaches to the mouth of the Chester, one is
made to
feel that he is riding over historic ground. About a year after the
landing at Plymouth Rock William Claiborne established a trading post
at the
southern end of Kent Island. This Claiborne, a man of enterprise and
daring,
was secretary to Sir John Harvey, then governor of Virginia. Obtaining
a grant
from Harvey, he claimed Kent Island and the bay for the colony of
Virginia, and
when the Calverts founded the Catholic settlement of St. Mary's, he
disputed
their jurisdiction over the Eastern Shore, and carried the question
through the
colonial and English courts. Defeated at every point, Claiborne
resolutely
maintained his ground, and when Sir Leonard Calvert came with an armed
force,
met him in the bay and completely routed him off Kent Point in what was
probably the first naval battle fought in American waters. Then, taking
the
offensive in his turn, Claiborne marched into Western Maryland and
swept
Calvert across the Potomac into Virginia. In the seesaw of factions
neither
could long keep uppermost, for in 1646 Lord Baltimore's authority was
reestablished on the Western Shore, the Eastern submitting to him at
the end of
another year. Still, Claiborne's defeat
was not final, for in 1653 he returned from England with a commission
from the
Puritan government then in power to reduce the royalist provinces about
the
Chesapeake. Lord Baltimore's rule was overturned, Kent Island restored
to
Claiborne, and a government selected by him established on the Western
Shore.
It retained control until Charles II., on his accession, reinstated the
Calverts, with full power over the whole colony. Then Claiborne,
deeming the
contest hopeless, withdrew to Virginia. There he founded the county of
New
Kent, in memory of the isle he had struggled for half a lifetime to
retain;
represented his new home in the colonial Legislature, and ended by a
gallant
death at the Indian battle of Moncock a career that reads like a
romance in
even the barest statement. In one respect, however,
Claiborne's influence still abides on the Eastern Shore. When he first
colonized Kent Island he brought with him from Jamestown the Rev.
Richard
James, a clergyman of the Church of England, who became the founder of
the first
Christian church on the soil of Maryland. This episode of Claiborne's
Virginia
chaplain gave the Anglican Church a permanent foothold on the Eastern
Shore,
for as the colony of the Isle of Kent spread gradually to the mainland,
wherever it fixed itself the parish was organized, the church was
built, and
the magistrate's duties devolved upon the vestrymen and church-wardens.
All
traces of the structure in which James officiated have been long since
lost,
but more than one of the ancient churches that issued therefrom lie
within the
reach of a drive from Kent, by way of Queenstown and Centreville, to
Chestertown, near the head of the beautiful river from which it takes
its name. The first churches built
upon the mainland of the Eastern Shore were those of Chester and Wye.
The ruins
of the former, which was of extraordinary size, may still be seen near
Centreville, while the latter, more gently dealt with by the years and
the
elements, occupies its original site on the Wye, its black-glazed
bricks
continually telling the story of its age to the worshippers who yet
gather
within its walls. Both churches were built between the years 1640 and
1650.
Most of the old parish churches of the Eastern Shore, however, were
erected
between 1693 and 1700. The oldest of these later edifices which
preserves its
original shape and construction is that of St. Luke's, which tops a low
hill, a
few miles south of Chestertown, a square edifice, with apsidal chancel,
heavy
galleries, and spireless roof. The vestry-room is a detached building,
with
brick floor and huge fireplace at either end, suggestive of the
dignified,
ease-loving lords of the manor, who of old time administered the
discipline of
church and state. Our zigzag tour of the
Eastern Shore ended at Chestertown, an old place with a decayed college
overlooking it, a loamy country round, and a broad and placid river
laving its
feet, but not before we had made visits to The Hermitage, a historic
homestead
facing one of the loveliest reaches of the Chester, which from the year
1660 to
that of 1881 never passed out of the hands of a Richard Tilghman, and
to the
old church of St. Paul's, in the county of Kent. This noble relic of
bygone
days flanks the ancient thoroughfare which was, in Revolutionary days,
the main
line of travel between Annapolis and Philadelphia, and has counted
seven
generations among its worshippers. A bold and curving stream
sweeps close up under the shadows of the giant oaks which shade the
church, and
which must have been sturdy trees when it was built in 1693. The church
itself
is of the type before described, and around it lies a quiet God's Acre,
kept
bright with flowers and fresh with verdure by loving hands. The ground
is
sacred with forgotten graves, and the sexton's spade, when hollowing a
bed for
some new sleeper, seldom fails to turn out relics of the unknown dead.
In such
a church-yard might Gray have wandered as he framed the stanzas of his
“Elegy,”
and sight of this lovely resting-place, where, as the sun sweeps around
his
daily course, the shadows of the old church falls successively on every
sodded
bed, remains one of the lasting mellow memories of ten days of
delightful
strolling along the Eastern Shore. |