CAPITAL


[Color

ANNAPOLIS

Annapolis is the State capital of Maryland. Toward the end of the Revolutionary War, the city also served as capital to the newly forming American nation when the Continental Congress met in Annapolis from November 26, 1783 to June 3, 1784.





State House (view from Maryland Ave.), Annapolis, Maryland,
1998. Photo by James Hefelfinger (Hefelfinger Collection,
MSA SC 1885-763-2, Maryland State Archives).


[color Located on the Severn River in Anne Arundel County, Annapolis is not only the center of Maryland government but also home to the U.S. Naval Academy, and St. John's College whose curriculum is based, in large part, upon the study of the classics.

From the founding of Maryland in 1634, however, St. Mary's City was the first seat of Maryland's colonial government. In 1694, the General Assembly designated Anne Arundel Town as the capital and, in February 1694/5, the government moved there. After Queen Mary's death in December 1694, Anne Arundel Town was renamed Annapolis for her sister, the heiress apparent, Princess Anne.

Historic St. Mary's City still can be visited today. In southern Maryland, it is located in St. Mary's County.

State Circle, Annapolis, Maryland, May 1999. Photo by Diane P. Frese.


Map of Government Buildings in Central Annapolis
Maryland Municipalities (by name)
Maryland Municipalities (by county)
Maryland Counties
Maryland at a Glance


Maryland Manual On-Line

e-mail: mdmanual@mdarchives.state.md.us

 Maryland Manual On-Line, 1999

July 6, 1999   
Note: In this past edition of Maryland Manual, some links are to external sites.  View the current Manual


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