Please note: if the source for a marriage is given
as csm, this marriage record is still being researched.
The marriage database contains 10,096 marriages, most
of which occurred in St. Mary's County, Maryland
between 1637 and 1820. Source records include County Court
Records (marriage licenses), wills, deeds, extant church
records (St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, St. Francis Xavier
Catholic Church, and St. Inigoes Catholic Church, including marriage and baptisms)
and Prerogative Court Records (compiled by V.L. Skinner,
Jr.).
Most of the research and documentation was provided by
Linda Davis Reno, but many contributions were made by
members of the St. Mary's County Discussion List.
Court Records provide the complete date of the marriage
license, however this is not a guarantee that the marriage
actually occurred. Marriage dates based on wills, deeds
and baptisms are assumed dates based on available information.
The database is continually updated and corrected.
For more detailed information see:
- Chronicles of St. Mary's, Vol. 29,
No.7; Vol. 28, No. 7;
- Lois Green Carr, "The Planters Wife: The Experience
of White Women in Seventeenth-Century Maryland,"
William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. XXXIV,
p 544
Conclusions:
One in ten individuals were married more than once. A
surprising 8% of the marriages recorded were second marriages.
This is primarily a reflection of the high mortality rate
and frequent death at an early age. The Proceedings of
the Orphan's Court corroborate these multi-marriages.
The Orphan's Court records would suggest a large percentage
of the population of children were missing one or both
parents. The difficulty of providing for children would
have been an impetus for remarriage.
Marriage
|
# of People
|
Percent
|
M 2
|
863
|
9%
|
M 3
|
133
|
1 %
|
M 4
|
15
|
.015%
|
It is frequently assumed that the mortality rate for
women was considerably higher than that for me, in part
due to death during childbirth. However, the marriage
records suggest a reevaluation: 57% of the second marriages
were females; this increased to 60% for third marriages
and 80% of fourth marriages. Women lived at least as long
as men.
The stalwart individuals who were married four times
are an interesting group.
Barber, Thomas
|
Ann Amery, Susanna Latimore, Margaret
Unknown, Ellen Unknown (wid/
John Dallam)
|
Calvert, Ann (d/ Gov. Leonard)
|
Baker Brooke, Thomas Tasker, Henry
Brent, Col. Richard Marsham
|
Calvert, Charles (3rd Lord Baltimore) (m1)
|
Mary Darnall, Jane
Lowe, Mary Thorpe, Mary Charleton
|
Gerard, Frances (d/ Dr. Thomas)
|
Thomas Speake, Valentine Peyton,
John Appleton, Col. John Washington
|
Marsham, Sarah
|
Basil Waring, William III Barton,
John Haddock, William Brodgen
|
Mason, Elizabeth
|
John Rogers, Dr. Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer,
John Theobold, Robert
Whythill
|
Millard,
Mary (d/ Richard Millard & Ann ???) |
Thomas
Melton, Thomas Walker, William Hayden, Edward Welsh |
Neale, Mary (d/ James
& 1st wife Elizabeth Calvert)
|
Charles Egerton, Jeremiah Aderton, Joseph Van Swearingen, William Deacon
|
Wheeler, Anastasia
|
Patrick Connelly, James Keen, Richard Johnson, Richard Crupper
|
Taylor,
Elizabeth (d/ Henry Taylor, Jr. & Faith Campbell) |
James
Delicourt, Thomas Clapom, William Innis, Benjamin
Woodward |
Unknown, Sarah
|
William Cole, William Clawe, Alexander
Younger, Richard Bentham
|
Unknown, Elizabeth
|
William Evans, John Jordain,Cuthbert
Scott, John Baptist Carberry
|
Unknown, Mary (5 marriages)
|
John Lambert, Philip Tippett, John
Fanning, Thomas Simpson, Benoni
Melton
|
The second interesting trend in the marriage records
is the fluctuation in the number of marriages per decade.
The data does not show a steady growth in the number of
marriages, which would suggest that the population was
not increasing at a steady rate.
Theoretically, the number of marriages should have doubled
every 15-20 years. The years 1700 to 1750 show a stagnant
population growth, at least of marriageable individuals.
This can be attributed to high mortality rates, low birth/survival
rates, and weak economic factors which could have affected
the number of individuals who could afford to get married.The decrease in marriages between 1780 and 1790
is partially the result of the migrations out of Maryland
and into western territories. Approximately 25%-30% of
the population removed from St. Mary's County during this
period. The 200 % increase in marriages after the American
Revolution, may simply be due to revised record keeping,
with more extant records.
1637-1650
|
103
|
1651-1660
|
127
|
1661-1670
|
181
|
1671-1680
|
234
|
1681-1690
|
192
|
1691-1700
|
218
|
1701-1710
|
282
|
1711-1720
|
246
|
1721-1730
|
285
|
1731-1740
|
331
|
1741-1750
|
319
|
1751-1760
|
385
|
1761-1770
|
459
|
1771-1780
|
670
|
1781-1790
|
521
|
1791-1800
|
1,083
|
1801-1810
|
1,312
|
1811-1820
|
1,212
|
Exact dates are not available for all of the SMC marriages.
For those marriages where a complete record exists, fully
42% of the marriages in any one year occurred between
December and February.The fewest
marriages were in the month of August. Speculation would
suggest that this reflects an agrarian timeline: marry
when there is not much farming work.
Month
|
# mrgs
|
% of known-date population
|
January
|
788
|
17
|
February
|
498
|
11
|
March
|
280
|
6
|
April
|
303
|
7
|
May
|
291
|
6
|
June
|
302
|
7
|
July
|
254
|
6
|
August
|
248
|
5
|
September
|
284
|
6
|
October
|
310
|
7
|
November
|
409
|
9
|
December
|
643
|
14
|
|