The Golden Lyon, a merchant ship …
Years: 1655 - 1655
March
The Golden Lyon, a merchant ship commanded by Captain Roger Heamans, arrives in Maryland on January 31, 1655, and Stone reports to the Captain that he is no longer Governor of Maryland.
At about this time, another ship, The Golden Fortune, arrives in the colony with a letter from Oliver Cromwell, by this time Lord Protector, addressed to Captain Stone, Governor of Maryland.
Using this as a form of recognition, Stone challenges the authority of the commissioners, seizes back the records of the colony, and musters his troops to deal with the Puritan settlers allied with them.
Recruiting from St. Mary's County, Stone recaptures the Assembly records located on the Patuxent River, and sails with a small fleet up the Chesapeake Bay north towards Providence.
Heamans is informed of a plot to kill the inhabitants of Providence, as well as to burn his ship and kill his crew and officers.
Following the removal of the women and children of Providence to The Golden Lion, a war council is convened, and appoints William Fuller of the Puritan settlers of Providence as its leader.
The council on March 23, 1655, issues a warrant to Heamans to serve as a counselor, with Heamans relating to Stone that he is bound to do so, ignoring his contrary orders.
Heamans on March 24 fires on sloops and boats heading toward his ship, forcing their retreat.
He then orders an armed sloop to bar their escape by blocking Spa Creek, the inlet of the Severn to which Stone's forces had retreated.
After Fuller retrieves the only Commonwealth flag in the colony for use as his colors in battle, the forces meet on Horn Point on March 25, with Fuller's forces driving Stone's small force to the end of the peninsula.
The battle is over in less than a half hour, with seventeen of Stone's forces having been killed, including Thomas Hatton, secretary of the colony, and thirty-two wounded, including Stone.
Only two of Fuller's force are killed.
This is the first battle ever fought between American soldiers on American soil, is the only battle in America in which the flag of the Commonwealth of England is flown, and the first in which the Provincial flag of Maryland is flown.
Stone surrenders after he is promised mercy.
Following hostilities, however, the war council issues death sentences for Stone and nine others.
Four of the prisoners—William Eltonhead, Esq., Captain William Lewis, John Legatt, and John Pedro—are executed, but the remainder are saved when the women of Providence beg that their lives be spared.
Stone takes no further part in public affairs.
Locations
People
Groups
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Protestantism
- Maryland, Province of (English Colony)
- England, Commonwealth of
