Daniel Dulany the Elder
{{Short description|American politician (1685–1753)}}
{{More footnotes|date=March 2013}}
{{Infobox politician
| name = Daniel Dulany
| image = Daniel Dulany the Elder.jpg
| caption =
| office = Receiver General
| term_start =
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| office2 = Member, Maryland General Assembly
| term_start2 = 1722
| term_end2 = {{Circa|1742}}
| predecessor2 =
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| office3 = Member, Governor's Council
| term_start3 =
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| office4 = Judge of Admiralty
| term_start4 =
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| birth_date = 1685
| birth_place = Queen's County, Kingdom of Ireland
| death_date = {{death year and age|1753|1685}}
| death_place = Annapolis, Province of Maryland, British North America
| children = Daniel Dulany the Younger
| alma_mater =
| partner = Rebecca Smith
| residence =
| occupation = lawyer, politician
| website =
}}
Daniel Dulany the Elder (1685–1753) was a lawyer and land-developer in colonial Maryland, who held a number of colonial offices. In 1722 Dulany wrote a pamphlet entitled The Right of the Inhabitants of Maryland, to the Benefit of the English Laws, asserting the rights of Marylanders over the Proprietary Government.
Early life
Dulany was born in Upperwoods, Queen's County, Ireland about 1685. In November 1702, a flotilla of merchantmen, known as the "Armada of 100 ships" sailed for the Chesapeake Bay, arriving in March, 1703. Dulany, along with two older brothers (William and Joseph) landed at Port Tobacco, and became indentured to Colonel George Plater II for a three-year period. Plater put Dulany to work as a law clerk. In 1709 Dulany was admitted to the Charles County bar. In 1717 Dulany was admitted to Gray's Inn.{{cite book |last1=Papenfuse |first1=Edward C. |last2=Day |first2=Alan F. |last3=Jordan |first3=David W. |last4=Stiverson |first4=Gregory A. |title=A Biographical Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1635-1789 |date=1979 |publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore |isbn=0-8018-1995-4 |page=285 }}{{Cite web |title=New Dictionary of National Biography |url=https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/000300/000371/html/ndnbdulanysr.html |access-date=2025-01-08 |website=msa.maryland.gov}}
Politics
In 1720, Dulany moved to Annapolis. In 1722, he was elected to represent the town in the Lower House of the Maryland General Assembly. From 1724 until 1739, he represented Anne Arundel County in the Lower House. He again represented Annapolis from 1739 to 1742 before being elected to the Upper House in 1742 and remaining in that office until his death in 1753.{{cite book |last1=Papenfuse |first1=Edward C. |last2=Day |first2=Alan F. |last3=Jordan |first3=David W. |last4=Stiverson |first4=Gregory A. |title=A Biographical Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1635-1789 |date=1979 |publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore |isbn=0-8018-1995-4 |pages=285-286 }}
At that time the Province of Maryland was under the proprietary governorship of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore. Lord Baltimore vetoed a bill in 1722 which the General Assembly had passed in order to bring the colony fully under all English statute law. Dulany led protests against this, writing a pamphlet in 1728 entitled "The Right of the Inhabitants of Maryland, to the Benefit of the English Laws".{{cite book |last1=Papenfuse |first1=Edward C. |last2=Day |first2=Alan F. |last3=Jordan |first3=David W. |last4=Stiverson |first4=Gregory A. |title=A Biographical Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1635-1789 |date=1979 |publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore |isbn=0-8018-1995-4 |page=286 }}
Lord Baltimore later appointed Dulany to the posts of Receiver General, Judge of Admiralty, and Commissary General,In 1672, Lord Baltimore created the post of Commissary General, that official with administrative and judicial responsibility for all colonial Maryland probate matters. In 1777, during the American Revolution, the Maryland Legislature created the still-current Orphans' Court and abolished the Commissary General as well as appointing him to the Governor's Council.{{citation needed|date=March 2013}}
Border dispute with Pennsylvania
{{main|Penn–Calvert Boundary Dispute}}
In the 1730s, under the rule of Governor Samuel Ogle, Maryland became engaged in a border dispute with Pennsylvania.{{cite book
|last=Warfield
|first=Joshua Dorsey
|title=The Founders of Anne Arundel And Howard Counties, Maryland
|publisher=Kohn & Pollock
|date=July 1905
|location=Baltimore, Maryland
|pages=[https://archive.org/details/foundersofannear00warf_0/page/n215 208]
|url=https://archive.org/details/foundersofannear00warf_0
|quote=Samuel Ogle.
|isbn=0-8063-7971-5}}
Several settlers were taken prisoners on both sides and Penn sent a committee to Governor Ogle to resolve the situation. Rioting broke out in the disputed territory and Ogle appealed to the King for resolution. In 1736 Ogle dispatched Dulany to Philadelphia in order to negotiate the release of a number of imprisoned Marylanders, though without success, and the border warfare continued.Andrews, p230
Lawyer, planter, land developer
Dulany became wealthy from his legal practice, and through the 1720s began to accumulate and develop land. He advertised for tenants to settle his land in Baltimore, Kent and Prince Georges county, paying with tobacco, corn or wheat.{{cite news|newspaper= The Maryland Gazette|date=8 April 1729|title=Advertisements}} He is credited with the founding of Frederick.{{Citation needed|date=January 2025}}
Personal life
File:Coat of Arms of Daniel Dulaney.svg
Dulany married three times, first to Charity Courts Smallwood, widow of Bayne Smallwood. She died one year after wedding Daniel.{{citation needed|date=March 2013}} By his second wife Rebecca Smith, the daughter of Colonel Walter Smith, he had a large family, not atypical for the time:
- Daniel Dulany the Younger (1722–1797), a noted Maryland Loyalist, Mayor of Annapolis, who played a prominent role in Maryland during the American Revolution.
- Walter Dulany (1722-1773), who would also become Mayor of Annapolis.[https://books.google.com/books?id=eUB5oCNIgJEC&dq=walter+dulany+annapolis&pg=PA184 Warfield, J. D., p. 184, The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland] Retrieved November 2010
- Rebecca
- Rachel
- Mary
- Margaret, who married doctor Alexander Hamilton in 1747.
Daniel married a third time to Henrietta Maria Lloyd Chew, a widow. {{citation needed|date=March 2013}} By her he had another child, Lloyd.
= Death =
Dulany died on December 5, 1753, in Annapolis. At the time of his death, the value of his estate was £10,921.9.8 current money, including 187 slaves. A significant landowner and planter, he owned more than 10,000 acres of land in five counties.
After his death, in 1754, Dulany's third wife, Henrietta Maria, appeared before Michael MacNamara, then Deputy Commissioner of Anne Arundel County, seeking to overturn the will of her late husband.[https://books.google.com/books?id=EraSyeJoDpoC&dq=Michael+MacNamara+maryland&pg=PA8 Wright, Edward F., p.8, Maryland Calendar of Wills, Volume 11: 1753-1760] Retrieved November 2010
See also
Notes
{{Reflist}}
References
- Andrews, Matthew Page, History of Maryland, Doubleday, New York (1929)
- Land, Aubrey C. The Dulanys of Maryland: A Biographical Study of Daniel Dulany, the Elder (1685-1753), and Daniel Dulany, the Younger (1722-1797). Baltimore, Maryland Historical Society: 1955.
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Category:18th-century American lawyers
Category:Irish emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies
Category:People from colonial Maryland
Category:Members of the Maryland General Assembly
Category:Lawyers from County Laois