The St.
Clement's Island Museum
The St. Clement’s
Island Museum rests on the east shore of the Potomac River
overlooking St. Clement’s Island,
Maryland's First Colonial Landing in 1634.
The Museum’s mission concentrates on Maryland’s earliest history
and Potomac
River heritage.
Click
Here for a Downloadable Brochure on St. Clements Island and St. Clements
Island Museum in PDF format.
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HOURS OF OPERATION
March 25
though September Weekdays: 10 am to 5 pm Weekends:
10 am to 5 pm
October
1 through March 24 Wednesday through Sunday: 12
noon to 4 pm
Museum Closed: Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, New
Year's Day
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Museum guided tours available by
pre-arrangement with the Education Curator.
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Water Taxi tours
to St. Clement's Island available seasonally and for
chartered tours. Click here for detailed
information.
Click
Here for additional information.
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Admission: $3
adults, $1.50 Children 6 - 18, Free Children 5 and under.
-
Guided Tours for students and adults are
available by pre-arrangement with the Education Curator.
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Pier and docking facilities available.
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Picnic tables available riverside.
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The St. Clement’s Island
Museum and grounds and the Little Red Schoolhouse are
A.D.A. compliant.
For Directions Click Here
St.
Clement’s Island Museum, 38370 Point
Breeze Road, Colton’s
Point, Maryland 20626
301-769-2222
301-769-2225 FAX |
The
Museum focuses on the English history that preceded the voyage to Maryland
relating the religious and political issues of the 16th and 17th
centuries. Here you discover the vision of George Calvert, the First Lord
Baltimore, to found a colony incorporating religious
tolerance
and his sons’ implementation of this vision.
You
will learn of the voyage of The Ark and The Dove departing
from the Isle of Wight in England on the feast day of St. Clement, the
patron saint of mariners. Follow the treacherous crossing of the Atlantic
Ocean, braving pirates and dangerous storms, and their venture up the
Chesapeake Bay to the
Potomac River.
Discover Father Andrew White’s written account of the voyage and landing
on St. Clement’s Island.
View the 7 by 20 foot mural depicting the colonial arrival along with an
exhibit regarding their negotiation with the Native Americans for a
permanent settlement.
The
Potomac Room shares this river’s heritage of the Blackistone
Lighthouse once on St. Clement’s
Island
along with the industries of hunting, crabbing, fishing and oystering.
Also
on the Museum grounds you will find the “Little Red Schoolhouse,” an
authentic 19th century one-room school. Formerly known as the
Charlotte Hall School,
this building was moved to its present location in 1991 where it has been
restored and preserved as a St. Mary’s County historical treasure.
The
Museum is also host to an authentic historic watercraft, the Doris C,
a Potomac River dory boat that work the waters of the Potomac
for decades
in the early 1900’s.
St. Clement’s Island
Maryland's First Colonial Landing 1634
Maryland Begins Here!
Their
reasons for leaving England were simple. For the Catholics aboard the Ark
and the Dove, it was to escape persecution and being marginalized socially
and economically. For Protestants, it was to seek a better life and like
their Catholic shipmates, be open to opportunities the New World offered –
opportunities that made the risks worthwhile.
George Calvert, a Catholic, was well-regarded by the English court. The
King, James I,
admired Calvert’s diplomatic skills and knighted him, making him Lord
Baltimore. To the Protestant King, Calvert’s Catholicsm was not
significant, although Catholics throughout England and its Empire were
constrained from practicing their religion openly. Nevertheless, Calvert
resigned his royal posts and asked the King for a land grant in the
colonies where he, his family and others seeking religious freedom could
settle. James I died but his successor, Charles I, acceded to Calvert’s
request, granting him the land “to the true meridian of the first
fountains of the River Pattowmeck.” The land would be named for the wife
of Charles I, Henrietta Maria.
George Calvert died before he could visit Terra Mariae, or “Mary’s Land.”
His son, Cecil, accepted the charter and made plans for the voyage. Each
adult going to Maryland would be granted 100 acres, each child, 50.
Indentured servants would receive personal supplies and food.
Cecil’s brother, Leonard, led the small group of colonists to the New
World. Seventeen Catholic gentlemen signed up to go, along with three
Jesuit priests and about 140 others, most of whom were probably
Protestants. A small number of women also made the trip. On November
23, 1633, the Ark, a 360-ton ship, and the Dove, a 60-ton pinnace, set
sail from Cowes,
Isle of Wight,
England. The ships entered the Chesapeake Bay on March 3, 1634. They
sailed up the Potomac River and landed at an island which they named for
St. Clement, patron saint of sailors, on whose feast day they had
departed. On March 25, the Catholic passengers assembled at a mass
celebrated by Father Andrew White, S.J. – the first Roman Catholic mass in
the 13 English-speaking colonies.
George
Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore, had decided before his death that
Maryland was not to be a colony just for Catholics, but a place where
Christians of different denominations could practice their faith without
impediment. The Maryland colony did not recognize any one religion
keeping separate those issues of church and state. Religious toleration
became the official policy of the
Maryland
colony, as did recognition of the Native Americans as a separate people
with inherent rights. This was extraordinary for the time, as views in
the other colonies and the mother country were sharply different. These
two progressive pieces of 17th-century policy foreshadowed the
provisions of the U. S. Constitution guaranteeing separation of church and
state and subsequent laws enacted to protect civil rights.
Since
those earliest days, St. Clement’s
Island lay witness from its vantage
point, swept by wind, storms, and tide, to many evolutions. The colonial
years saw plantations spring up along the river shores producing an infant
tobacco industry and the promise of wealth. From those infant years to
well into the 20th, it would inherit the name of Blackistone
Island, as signature to more than 200 years of ownership by the Blackistone
family. The Blackistone Lighthouse, built in 1851 by master lighthouse
builder John Donahoo, stood on the south end of the island serving
Potomac River
mariners until it was decommissioned in 1932. The vacant lighthouse was
burned by vandals in 1956 and forever lost as an important monument to
Potomac River heritage.
In
1934, to celebrate Maryland’s 300th birthday, Governor Albert
Ritchie, dedicated a 40- foot commemorative cross recognizing this site as
the location where religious toleration in America had its foundation. It
stands tall today and welcomes all with the same tribute to the brave
colonists who risked their lives to seek an ideal America cherishes today.
In
1962, the island returned to its original identity as St.
Clement's Island when the Federal Government leased the island
to the State of Maryland. Since that time, the island was
designated as a state park and is managed by Maryland's
Department of Natural Resources. Today, the island is accessible
by private boat or by seasonal water taxi transportation
provided by the St. Mary's County Museum Division at the St.
Clement's Island Museum in Colton's Point. There is a covered
picnic pavilion with tables and grills and picnic tables and
benches dot the scenic riverside shoreline on the east side of
the island. There is a marked hiking trail and interpretive
panels that offer visitors information about the island from
colonial landing in 1634 to the present.
Through the efforts of the St. Clement's
Hundred, a local community organization created for the
preservation of St. Clement's Island, a replica of the
Blackistone Lighthouse was constructed and completed in June of
2008. The replica is located on the southern end of the island
and stands on higher ground and overlooks the ruins of the
original lighthouse. This magnificent 2-story structure was
built using the original blueprints of the 1851 lighthouse and
offers a modern generation insight to the historical and
cultural heritage of the island, the Potomac River, and the
people who lived, worked, and visited here in the 19th and 20th
centuries.
Click
Here for a Downloadable Brochure on St. Clements Island and St. Clements
Island Museum in PDF format.
Directions:
From
Washington, D.C.:
Take 495/95 to
Beltway to Exit 7a (Route 5 South to Waldorf). Follow Route
5 South to Mechanicsville where Route 5 South will bear right
toward Leonardtown. Follow Route 5 South to Morganza and
turn right onto Route 242 South to the end at Colton’s Point.
Follow Museum parking signs.
From Virginia:
Take State
Route 301 to 234 East to Clements. Turn right on Route 242
South to the end at Colton’s Point. Follow Museum parking
signs
Click Here for directions from MapQuest