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In 1742 Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore (1699–1751) sent his eldest but illegitimate son, Benedict Swingate Calvert, then aged around ten years old, [4] to Annapolis and placed him in Steuart's care. [5] Steuart evidently benefited from the Calvert family's patronage, as he later was appointed to a number of important Colonial offices.
Steuart was born in West River, Maryland, on April 10, 1865. [1] He was the son of Captain George Biscoe Steuart (1817–1884). Steuart's grandfather was Dr Charles Calvert Steuart (1784–1836), a physician from Prince George's County, Maryland, who married Ann Fitzhugh Biscoe on November 1, 1814. [2]
Elizabeth Calvert (1753–1814), twin sister of Eleanor. [19] Married the physician Charles Steuart (1750–1798/1822), third son of Calvert's former guardian George H. Steuart on June 15, 1780. [20] Charles Calvert (1756–1773), who was sent to be educated in England at Eton College and died there aged 17 and unmarried. [19] Philip Calvert ...
The Steuart family were a prominent family in Maryland during the colonial era and during the American Civil War. Pages in category "Steuart family" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
Robert Douglas Stuart Jr. (April 26, 1916 – May 8, 2014) was the son of Quaker Oats Company co-founder R. Douglas Stuart, the founder of the America First Committee in 1940, the CEO of Quaker Oats from 1966 to 1981, and United States Ambassador to Norway from 1984 to 1989.
William Frederick Steuart (1816–1889) was a Maryland-born medical doctor who served in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. He was a surgeon in the 3rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, a unit that formed part of the brigade commanded by his cousin, General George H. Steuart.
"Maryland Square" was the Baltimore residence of the Steuart family from around 1795, when purchased by physician James Steuart of Annapolis, son of the politician and planter George H. Steuart. [3] The Steuart family moved to Baltimore from Annapolis in 1795, as Baltimore began to eclipse Annapolis in size and importance. [ 3 ]
Maryland Square, later known as Steuart Hall, c1868. George Hume Steuart was born on August 24, 1828, into a family of Scottish ancestry in Baltimore.The eldest of nine children, [1] he was raised at his family's estate in West Baltimore, known as Maryland Square, located near the present-day intersection of Baltimore and Monroe Streets.