RICHARD INGLE.

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“Captain Richard Ingle, ... a pirate and a rebel, was discovered hovering about the settlement.”—McSherry, History of Maryland, p. 59.

“The destruction of the records by him [Ingle] has involved this episode in impenetrable obscurity, &c.”—Johnson, Foundation of Maryland, p. 99.

“Captain Ingle, the pirate, the man who gloried in the name of ‘The Reformation.’”—Davis, “The Day Star,” p. 210.

“That Heinous Rebellion first put in Practice by that Pirate Ingle.”—Acts of Assembly, 1638-64, p. 238.

“Those late troubles raised there by that ungrateful Villaine Richard Ingle.”—Ibid., p. 270.

“I hold it that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.”—Jefferson, Works, Vol. III, p. 105.


Fund Publication, No. 19

CAPTAIN RICHARD INGLE,

The Maryland “Pirate and Rebel,”

1642-1653.

Maryland Historical Society 1844 crest

A Paper read before the Maryland Historical Society,

May 12th, 1884,

BY

EDWARD INGLE, A. B.

Baltimore, 1844.

PEABODY PUBLICATION FUND.

Committee on Publication.

1884-5.

HENRY STOCKBRIDGE,
JOHN W. M. LEE,
BRADLEY T. JOHNSON.

Printed by John Murphy & Co.
Printers to the Maryland Historical Society,
Baltimore, 1884.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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