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Moving - Prince Frederick, Maryland
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Please enjoy reading some history of
Prince Frederick, MD.
A Brief History of Prince Frederick,
Maryland
Miles End Plantation, Prince Frederick,
Maryland
The original name of the plantation was
Mile's End. Bigger was a horse trader who supplemented his
income by working as an appraiser and transporting settlers
to the Maryland colony. Bigger accumulated several
plantations in what are now St. Mary's, Calvert, and Prince
George's county. Bigger married Ann Stoakley of the Puritan
family for which Stoakley Road is named. On his death,
Mile's End passed to his oldest son, also named John Bigger.
While no one knows what structures existed at the time,
there must have been farm buildings as well as at least a
rudimentary dwelling. In all probability, they were located
at or near the present site of Cedar Hill.
By June 2, 1700, Colonel John Bigger had
transformed Mile's End from an estate of 350 acres to create
a new property of 1,055 contiguous acres, now known as
Bigger Plantation. Bigger was a merchant planter who bought
tobacco crops from his neighbor and shipped them to London
at his risk. He became wealthy from his tobacco trading
activities. He became a colonel in the provincial militia,
of which he was deputy commander at the time Lord Baltimore
was overthrown in the Protestant Revolution of 1689. While
he participated in one of the main military actions of the
rebellion, Bigger was not a partisan of the Jewkes faction
that plotted the rebellion. He was one of only a handful of
members of the House of Burgesses, the colonial assembly,
who voted against the articles of impeachment against Lord
Baltimore.
Like most of the other leading planters
in Maryland colony, Bigger was an Anglican. He played a role
in the establishment of the Anglican Church in the 1690s.
Bigger was also the first Treasurer of the King William
School, in Annapolis, now St. John's College, the 3rd oldest
college in the United States. Upon Bigger's death in 1714,
his widow married Patrick Andrew who remained in residence
at Bigger Plantation after her death, notwithstanding
Bigger's bequest of the property to a nephew, Kendal Head.
Head's son, with the unfortunate name, Bigger Head, conveyed
title to James Carroll of Annapolis, who had Andrew
ejected.
In the 1730's, the house was rented to
and later sold to Thomas Crompton. Crompton died in 1743,
and his widow married James Weems, a wealthy Calvert County
planter of the same family as the legendary independent
bookseller, Rev. Mason Locke (Parson) Weems. It was Weems
who authored an invented biography of George Washington,
which included the lovely confection about Washington
chopping down the cherry tree.
James Weems held the property in trust
for Crompton's son, also named Thomas Crompton. Crompton
took possession in 1767 and died in 1773. Crompton left the
plantation to his daughter, Mary Crompton Gantt, and
thereafter to his grandson, Dr. Thomas Gantt. During Gantt?s
tenure, Cedar Hill was the site of an important social
event, the marriage of the eldest daughter of Capt. Edward
Gantt to Thomas John Claggett, the first Episcopal bishop
ordained in the United States. Claggett was also Chaplain of
the U.S. Congress.

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