Augustine Herman

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Herman's 1670 map of Maryland and Virginia Augustine Herrman 1670 Map Virginia Maryland.jpg
Herman's 1670 map of Maryland and Virginia

Herman, weary of conflict with Stuyvesant and remembering the fine lands he crossed in the upper Chesapeake Bay, offered to produce Lord Baltimore a map of the region in return for a grant of land in the area of his choosing. The offer was accepted and the grant made in September 1660 so Herman began his 10 years of work on the map. [4] It stated that as compensation for his services Lord Baltimore would grant him "Lands for Inhabitation to his Posterity and the Privilege of the Manor." Wasting no time, Herman moved his family to Maryland by 1661. [4]

Herman selected his first grant of 4000 acres of land and named it "Bohemia Manor" after his birthplace. It included much of the land east of the Elk River and north of the Bohemia River. [1] The manor house was built on the north shore of the Bohemia River, across from Hacks Point, and just to the west of present-day Maryland Route 213. The property included an enclosed park where Herman kept deer as pets. [5]

Because he was of non-British origin, Herman was obliged to apply for citizenship of Maryland by an act of their Assembly. His petition, in 1666, was successful and he became a naturalized citizen of Maryland. [5]

Once he completed the map of Maryland and Virginia in 1670, additional grants were made. They became known as "Little Bohemia," south of the Bohemia River, and "St. Augustine Manor," stretching to the Delaware River between St. George's Creek and Appoquinimink River. [1] In all he owned nearly 30,000 acres (120 km2) and became one of the largest landowners in North America. For added insurance he then successfully negotiated an agreement to pay a compensatory sum for the territory to the Susquehannock Native Americans, who owned the land.

Jasper Danckaerts and Peter Sluyter, emissaries of Friesland pietists, known as Labadists, met Ephraim George Herman, the son of Herman, in New York and he introduced them to his father in 1679. Initially Herman did not want to grant land to them, only permit their settlement, but in 1683, he conveyed a tract of 3,750 acres (15 km2) to them because of legal issues. The group established a colony but it was not very successful not growing larger than 100 people. The settlement ceased to exist after 1720. [4]

For the remainder of his life, Herman managed his plantation and enjoyed the life of a country squire, occasionally engaging in mercantile activities and official duties. He was a member of the governor's council and a justice of Baltimore County which then included all of the upper Chesapeake Bay. In 1674, Cecil County was created, and the first courthouse was built near the Sassafras River. In 1678, Herman was appointed as Cecil County's Commissioner for Peace to treat with the Native Americans.

Death

During his last years Herman was disabled by paralysis, and according to one source, by an "inattentive wife." He was 65 years old when he died in September 1686 at Bohemia Manor in Cecil County, Maryland and he is buried there.[ citation needed ]

Legacy

Plaque in Mseno, Czech Republic Mseno, Cinibulkova, deska rodneho mista Augustina Hermana.jpg
Plaque in Mšeno, Czech Republic

A plaque is displayed in the town of Mšeno, Czech Republic on Cinibulkova street. On the plaque Herman is referenced using the Czech spelling of this name, Augustin Heřman.

During the later 1800s and early 1900s, the Czech community of Baltimore made an annual pilgrimage to Cecil County to visit Herman's grave. In 1907, 400 Czechs from Baltimore boarded the steamship Annapolis to attend the pilgrimage at Bohemia Manor, where they were joined by 700 locals, many of whom were descended from Herman. [6] [7]

Children and grandchildren

  • Ephraim George Herman, the eldest son, became Second Lord of Bohemia Manor. He was born in New Amsterdam in 1652. Ephraim lived in New York City in 1673, and was in New Castle County by 1676 where he was at various times Clerk of the Courts of New Castle County and Upland County and Surveyor for St. Jones County and New Castle County. About 1680 he became a Labadist, but was taken sick, lost his mind, and died on Bohemia Manor in 1689, surviving his father by only three years. He had married Elizabeth van Rodenburg, who survived him, subsequently marrying Major John Donaldson, a member of the provincial council of Pennsylvania. They had four children, but it is believed that all of Ephraim's children died before reaching maturity, and the Lordship passed to his brother when he died.
  • Casparus Augustine Herman, the second son, became the third Lord of Bohemia Manor. He was born in New Amsterdam in 1656 and died on Bohemia Manor in 1704. Casperus lived in New Castle for a number of years and represented New Castle County in the general assembly of Pennsylvania and the Lower Counties from 1683 to 1685. He was later a member of the legislature of Maryland in 1694.
  • Anna Margaritta Herman, the first daughter, was born in New Amsterdam before her baptism date of 10 March 1658. She married Thijs Jacobsz. She had issue.
  • Judith Herman, the second daughter, was born 9 May 1660 in New Amsterdam. She married first to John Thompson and secondly to John Dowdall. She had issue with her first husband.
  • Francina Herman, the third daughter, was born before her baptism date of 12 March 1662 in New Amsterdam. She married Joseph Wood Sr.
  • Ephraim Augustine Herman, grandson of Augustine, was the fourth Lord of Bohemia Manor. He was born either on St. Augustine's Manor, or in nearby New Castle County, and died on Bohemia Manor in 1735. He was a member of the legislature of Maryland from Cecil County in 1715, 1716, 1728, and 1731.
  • Casparus Herman, the son of Ephraim Augustine, became the fifth and final Lord of Bohemia Manor in 1735. He died four years later without any children and so the title became extinct. His elder sister, Mary Augustine Herman, was his primary heir, and she married John Lawson, who secured the inheritance. Eventually most of this passed to Richard Bassett through his step father, Peter Lawson, and his mother, Judith Thompson, a granddaughter of Augustine Herman, the first Lord, through his daughter, Judith Herman.

Other descendants

  • Even beyond his numerous accomplishments during his lifetime, part of Augustine Herman's legacy have been the numerous distinguished descendants he left. Some of them are listed below.
Richard Bassett, Daniel Brewster, James A. Bayard, James A. Bayard Jr., Richard H. Bayard, Thomas F. Bayard, Thomas F. Bayard, Jr., Francis Beverley Biddle, James Bouldin, Thomas Bouldin, John B. Breckinridge, Lloyd Bryce, Ezekiel F. Chambers, Thomas Clayton, Henry W. Collier, Albert Constable, Robert Daniel, Lucius Q. C. Lamar, William B. Lamar, George E. Mitchell, Edmund Randolph, David Ross, and Joseph Tydings.[ citation needed ]

Place names

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Fiske, John (March 2005). Old Virginia and Her Neighbors Part Two. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN   978-1-4179-3463-8.
  2. Hatfield, April Lee (2007-03-15). Atlantic Virginia: Intercolonial Relations in the Seventeenth Century. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 97–100. ISBN   978-0-8122-1997-5.
  3. Nelson, William (1976). Patents and Deeds and Other Early Records of New Jersey, 1664-1703. Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN   9780806307114.
  4. 1 2 3 Nead (1980). The Pennsylvania-German in the Settlement of Maryland. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN   978-0-8063-0678-0.
  5. 1 2 Maryland's Colonial Eastern Shore: Historical Sketches of Counties and of Some Notable Structures. Heritage Books Inc. 1996. ISBN   978-0-7884-0555-6.
  6. "At Herman's Old Home". Baltimore Sun . Retrieved 2025-10-05.
  7. "Pilgrimage to the Tomb of Augustine Hermen". Cecil Whig . Retrieved 2025-10-05.
  8. Arnett, Earl; et al. (1999). Maryland: A New Guide to the Old Line State (2nd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p.  136. ISBN   0-8018-5980-8 . Retrieved 2009-04-29.
  9. Vincent Rogers and Rosemary Troy (July 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Augustine Beach Hotel". National Park Service.
Augustine Herman
Augustineherrmann1.jpg
First Lord of Bohemia Manor
In office
September 1660 September 1686
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