|
From mountains, to the bay, to
the Atlantic Ocean, Maryland boasts a vast assortment of outdoor activities,
unique attractions, and historical landmarks.
Into camping, hiking and the
Great Outdoors? Try the Western Region for Deep Creek Lake, waterfalls and a
portion of the Appalachian Trail. Maybe you'd prefer a more patriotic experience
in the Capital Region, where you can explore Washington, D.C. and learn about
space travel at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Maryland's Southern Region
boasts historical sites dating back to prehistoric times. Take a whirl through
the expansive Central Region with a mix of intimate vineyards, immaculate public
gardens and the bustling nightlife of Baltimore's Inner Harbor. And don't forget
the Eastern Shore, with its abundance of creek to bay fishing, quiet country
roads and beach-bumming pleasures.
The first Marylanders were Paleo-Indians
who came more than 10,000 years ago from other parts of North America to hunt
mammoth, great bison and caribou. By 1,000 B.C., Maryland had more than 8,000
Native Americans in about 40 different tribes. Most of them spoke Algonquian
languages. They grew corn, peas, squash and tobacco. They also hunted, fished
and traded with tribes as far away as New York and Ohio.
We do not know what the Native
Americans called the Chesapeake Bay. That name came from the Native American
word "Chesepiuk," an Algonquian name for a village that the Roanoke,
Virginia colonists discovered in 1585 near the mouth of the Bay. Later,
mapmakers used the word to name the Bay. People have said that Chesapeake means
"great salt water" or "great shellfish bay," but no records
exist to verify those definitions.
On the map of the state, you'll
see names of other places, such as Potomac, Piscataway, Accokeek and Choptank,
that remind us of the Native Americans who lived here before there was a
Maryland.
Giovanni da Verrazano, an Italian
explorer in the 1500s, was the first European to visit the Chesapeake. Later
came English settlers, who left England for more economic opportunities and to
escape religious oppression. In 1608, Captain John Smith thought there was
"no place more perfect for man's habitation" than the Chesapeake Bay.
Fur trader William Claiborne thought so, too, and set up a fur trading post on
Kent Island in 1631. This was the first English settlement in the upper
Chesapeake.
Maryland began as a colony when
King Charles I promised George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore, a colony north
of Virginia. Before he could visit the colony, George Calvert died. His son,
Cecilius, became the second Lord Baltimore and the Lord Proprietor of Maryland.
He named his colony "Terra Maria," or "Maryland" in honor of
the king's wife, Queen Henrietta Maria. Because Cecilius Calvert had to remain
in England, he sent his younger brother, Leonard, to accompany the colonists and
to be the first governor.
- From the mdisfun.org website
To learn more about Maryland visit http://www.mdisfun.org/
|