Southern Maryland

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Place in Maryland, United States
Southern Maryland
A map of the counties of Southern Maryland. According to the state of Maryland, the region includes all of Calvert, Charles, and St. Mary's counties (red) and the southern portions of Anne Arundel and Prince George's counties (light red)[3]
A map of the counties of Southern Maryland. According to the state of Maryland, the region includes all of Calvert, Charles, and St. Mary's counties (red) and the southern portions of Anne Arundel and Prince George's counties (light red)[3]
CountryUnited States
StateMaryland
Largest CommunityWaldorf[1][2]
Counties
Population
 (2020 Census)[4][5][6][7]
 • Total373,177
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)

Southern Maryland, also referred to as SoMD, is a geographical, cultural and historic region in Maryland composed of the state's southernmost counties on the Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. According to the state of Maryland, the region includes all of Calvert, Charles, and St. Mary's counties and the southern portions of Anne Arundel and Prince George's counties.[3] It is largely coterminous with the region of Maryland that is part of the Washington metropolitan area.[8] Portions of the region are also part of the Baltimore Metropolitan Area[9] and the California-Lexington Park Metropolitan Statistical Area.[10] As of the 2020 Census, the region had a population of 373,177.[4][5][7][6] The largest community in Southern Maryland is Waldorf, with a population of 81,410 as of the 2020 Census.[1][2]

The first European settlement in Maryland was established in Southern Maryland at St. Mary's City in 1634.[11] This settlement is considered by historians to be the birthplace of religious freedom in North America.[12] Throughout the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, the area developed an agricultural slave economy,[13][14] with agriculture maintaining prominence following emancipation.[15] Many historical events occurred in Southern Maryland during the American Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the American Civil War.[16][17][18] Much of the area remains rural, however the region saw suburban growth in the late 20th and early 21st centuries as Washington's suburbs expanded southward.[8][19]

Geography

A Tidal Estuary in Mattawoman Creek

Counties located in Southern Maryland include Calvert County, Charles County, St. Mary's County, and the southern portions of Prince George's County and Anne Arundel County. The region's northern boundary passes through Prince George's County and Anne Arundel County,[3] east of Washington. Its eastern boundary is the Chesapeake Bay and its southern and western boundary is the Potomac River, Maryland's boundary with Virginia (and through it, the Northern Neck).

The Patuxent River runs through Southern Maryland, separating Calvert County and Anne Arundel County from Charles County, Prince George's County and St. Mary's County.

Land features in Southern Maryland include the St. Mary's Peninsula and the Calvert Peninsula.

Geologic formations of the Chesapeake Group can be found in Southern Maryland, including the Calvert Formation, the St. Marys Formation, and the Choptank Formation. Many of these formations are present at the Calvert Cliffs State Park in Calvert County.[20]

Southern Maryland is within the Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic region.[21]

History

Colonial Era

Leonard Calvert, first Proprietary Governor of the Maryland Colony

Southern Maryland was originally inhabited by the indigenous Piscataway people.[22][23][24] English explorer Captain John Smith explored the area in 1608 and 1609.[25][26]

Cecilius Calvert was granted a charter to establish a colony meant to be a safe-haven for Catholics in 1632. Expeditions were launched into modern day Maryland, with an expedition reaching St. Clement's Island in 1634.[24][11] Later that year, the Maryland Colony was established by Leonard Calvert, first Governor of Maryland and brother of Cecilius. The colony's capital, and first settlement, was the newly established St. Mary's City.[13] The colony originally focused on tobacco farming and was very successful although disease was a problem and many settlers died until immunities built up in the population. Religious tensions and also periods of open conflict also continued to be a major challenge.

St. Mary's City is widely considered to be the birthplace of religious freedom in North America.[27][24] The colony there started under a mandate of religious tolerance in a time when England was anything but religiously tolerant. This was due to the colony's charter, which did not prohibit non-protestant churches.[13] In 1649, the Maryland Colonial Assembly passed of one of the earliest laws requiring religious tolerance, known as the Maryland Toleration Act of 1649.[28]

After 61 years as Maryland's capital an uprising of Protestants put an end to religious tolerance, overthrowing the old Catholic leadership and putting an end to colonial St. Mary's City itself, moving the colonial capital to Annapolis.[29][30][31][24]

Plantation economy and slavery

A painting of Charles Calvert with a slave by John Hesselius. Charles Calvert was the eldest son of Benedict Swingate Calvert, who was the third Proprietary Governor of Maryland.

St. Mary's City was abandoned as a capital but was slowly consolidated from smaller farms into a large, single slave plantation by the late 1600s.[32][33] Originally, laborers were Indentured Servants, with African slaves arriving in 1639.[11] Tobacco and (later) also wheat plantations expanded there[33] and in Southern Maryland as a whole during the slavery era. The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade brought African slaves by the boatloads, with 100,000 slaves disembarking in Maryland during the century before the American Revolution.[14] From the late 1600s to early 1700s, about half of Maryland's enslaved population lived in Calvert, St Mary's, Prince George's, and Charles counties.[13] By 1755, one third of Maryland's population were enslaved Africans.[14] Slavery proved vital to Maryland's economy, with the institution providing the foundation for Maryland's economy and society.[14] The profits from slavery also provided the means for Maryland's gentry to gain power and dominate politics.[14]

A notable abolitionist from southern Maryland was Josiah Henson, a slave who was born in Charles County before escaping to Canada. Henson wrote an autobiography that inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin.[34] Slavery ended in Maryland in November 1864 during the American Civil War, when Maryland ratified a new Constitution that abolished slavery.[14]

The American Revolution and the War of 1812

During the American Revolutionary War, British forces landed on St. George Island in St. Mary's County on July 15, 1776, under the command of John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore.[17][35] Dunmore's forces were defeated by local Flying Camp militia led by Captain Rezin Beall, and they left the island on August 9, 1776.[36] During the war, American slaves throughout the Chesapeake region flocked to British lines following Dunmore's Proclamation, which promised freedom for slaves who fought for the British military.[14]

Due to Southern Maryland's proximity to the national capitol, the region was deeply affected by the War of 1812, with the war severely disrupting the lives of the region's citizens.[17] During August and September 1814, the British launched a campaign in the Chesapeake region. British forces landed in Benedict, Charles County on August 19, 1814.[37] Intent on marching to Washington, the British marched to Upper Marlboro before engaging American troops at the Battle of Bladensburg. The battle resulted in a British victory. By nightfall on August 24, 1814, British forces entered Washington and burned several government buildings.[38] The British then marched back to Benedict.[39] Similarly to what occurred in the Revolutionary War, enslaved Marylanders fled to British controlled areas to receive freedom.[14]

American Civil War

A large portion of John Wilkes Booth's escape route following the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln runs through Southern Maryland

During the American Civil War, wartime sympathies were divided in Maryland[40][41] and Southern Maryland was sympathetic to the Confederates next to Maryland's Eastern Shore. From the war's beginning, however, large numbers of Union occupying troops and patrolling river gunboats prevented the state's secession, although frequent nighttime smuggling across the Potomac River with Virginia took place, including of Maryland men volunteering for Confederate service. John Wilkes Booth was helped by several people in his escape through the area and in crossing the river after killing President Abraham Lincoln.[16][40] Thousands of captured Confederate troops were confined in harsh conditions at Point Lookout Prison Camp at the southern tip of the peninsula.[18] During the war, in November 1863, Maryland ratified a new state Constitution which abolished slavery in the state.[14]

Transition to modern era

Southern Maryland was traditionally a rural, agricultural, oyster fishing and crabbing region; linked by passenger and freight steamboat routes.[42] These steamboat routes operated on the Chesapeake Bay and major rivers until the 1930s before the building of highways and the Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge on U.S. Highway 301. (The latter highway was named after Robert Crain, an attorney who owned the state's largest farm, Mount Victoria, and who campaigned for the road's construction[43]). Weekend excursion boats also carried Washingtonians to small amusement parks and amusement pavilions at numerous Potomac shore locations.[44] From 1949 (1943 in some places) to 1968, the region was known for its poverty and its slot machine gambling.[45]

Modernizing St. Mary's County

Poverty was common in St. Mary's County in the 1960s,[46] and gambling in the region came to be seen as a blight and was outlawed by Governor J. Millard Tawes and the state legislature.[47] A local political figure, St. Mary's County politician J. Frank Raley Jr. organized a slate of local candidates with the platform of challenging the political status-quo and lifting the region out of its generations long poverty.[47]

The region's isolation was ended by having a series of bridges built and roads expanded into highways.[46][48] These developments are credited for enabling the development of modern St. Mary's County.[46][48]

Raley was falsely accused of working to end gambling outright in the region,[47] which ended in his defeat and his official political career.[47] In fact he had supported a referendum on gambling which would have put the decision directly in the hands of voters.[47] He continued nevertheless lobbying on behalf of the Southern Maryland region and sitting on development boards and continued to have a major influence on economic development in the region for the rest of his life.[48]

Population and economy

A Boeing VC-25, commonly known as Air Force One, taking off from Joint Base Andrews

Since the 1980s, the region experienced suburban development as the Washington suburbs expanded southward.[49][50][8][51] This expansion took place primarily in Prince George's County, and around Waldorf (a regional shopping hub) and St. Charles (a planned community in Charles County), Lexington Park (St. Mary's County) and Prince Frederick (Calvert County). Much of the area remains rural, a mixture of forest and farmland, despite suburban growth.[52][53][15][19][54] This suburban growth has occurred and continued despite concerns from locals and environmental advocates.[51][55][56]

Many southern Marylanders work for the United States Armed Forces or the United States Federal Government and its related industries. Other smaller industries include a nuclear power plant[57] and a liquified natural gas terminal[58] (both in Lusby), a Naval ordnance test ground (at Indian Head),[59][60] electric power plants (at Aquasco and Morgantown)[61] and an oil terminal[62] (at Piney Point). The towns of Solomons Island and Chesapeake Beach are tourist resorts.[63][64][65] The Maryland International Raceway and Budds Creek Raceway near Chaptico attract many auto and motocross racing enthusiasts.[66][67]

Military bases

Military installations in Southern Maryland include:

Suburban areas of Southern Maryland also have many Washington-area military related commuters.[79][80]

Tourism

The Drum Point Lighthouse in Solomon's Island

The Southern Maryland National Heritage Area was established in the National Heritage Area Act in 2022.[81] The National Heritage Area will help preserve and promote destinations in four counties.[82][83]

Tourist Attractions in Southern Maryland include historical sites, such as the Thomas Stone National Historic Site, Historic St. Mary's City, and Port Tobacco Village,among others.[84][85][86] Museums in the area include the Calvert Marine Museum, and the Patuxent River Naval Air Museum.[84] Waterfront sites along the Chesapeake Bay, the Potomac River, and the Patuxent River are also tourist attractions. These include Mallows Bay and Solomon's Island.[84][64]

Politics

The entire region is contained within Maryland's 5th Congressional District,[87][88] which has been represented by Rep. Steny Hoyer since 1981.[89]

Maryland's 2 U.S. Senators are Chris van Hollen (junior) and Ben Cardin (senior).[88]

Food and cuisine

Oysters are still widely available although they were once fished from the bay and its tidal tributaries in greater numbers, and are served either fried, raw, or stuffed. "Rockfish", the Maryland word for striped bass, is considered the most prized fish dish in Southern Maryland.[90]

Perhaps the most notable food dish originating from Southern Maryland is stuffed ham, which includes cabbage, kale, onions, spices and seasonings that are chopped and mixed, then stuffed into deep slits slashed in a whole, corned ham.[91]

Sports

Club League Venue Established Championships
Southern Maryland Blue Crabs ALPB, Baseball Regency Furniture Stadium 2008 0

Many residents also identify with national sports teams in Washington DC or Baltimore.

Colleges

Calvert Hall located at St. Mary's College of Maryland

Colleges in Southern Maryland include:

Notable people

See also

Notes

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Southern Maryland.