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  1. Henry Darnall. Colonel Henry Darnall (1645 – 17 June 1711) was a planter, military officer and politician in colonial Maryland. Darnall served as the Proprietary Agent in the colony for Lord Baltimore; he also briefly served as Deputy Governor of Maryland.

  2. Henry Darnall III (1702-ca. 1787) – Maryland Center for History and Culture. open today 10:00 am - 5:00 pm hours. Search the Collection. Henry Darnall III (1702-ca. 1787) Description. Full-length portrait shows Henry Darnall III as a boy in yellow-orange tunic and green cape holding a bow and arrow.

  3. In the summary of this case which is essentially about a slave's right to inherit, two names appear that confirm that Nicholas and Henry Darnall are the young men in whose lives Capt. Cuffe had...

  4. Henry Darnall III (c. 1702-c. 1783) was a wealthy planter in Colonial Maryland. He was the son of the politician and planter Henry Darnall II , and the grandson of Henry Darnall who was the Proprietary Agent of Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore (1605–1675), and served for a time as Deputy Governor of the Province.

  5. Col. Henry Darnall. Colonel Henry Darnall was granted 7,000 acres (28 km 2) of land in Prince George's County, Maryland in 1703 by Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore, which Darnall named in recognition of Lord Baltimore's gesture. Darnall built a house for his family on a nearby property, known as The Woodyard, between 1683 and 1711.

  6. Sea of Liberty | image. Description. The main subject of this 1710 painting is eight-year-old Henry Darnall III, son of a Maryland planter family. Like other colonial portraits, this one included props that signified the wealth and power of its subject–one of which was the enslaved boy, gazing upward and awaiting orders from his young master.

  7. Duhamel: Col. Henry Darnall and His Family 133 tells us it was after the Battle of Naseby in July, 1643, that Charles I sought refuge at Raglan Castle, the home of Henry, the fifth Earl of Somerset and the first Marquis of Worcester. Henry Somerset, the father of the inventor, was one of the many nobles whose loyalty to Charles I. had