The Snodland manuscript collection
Abstract
The Snodland manuscript collection contains a volume of accounts and genealogical records of the Tilghman family of Kent, England and Queen Anne's County, Maryland from 1539 to 1853 [in Latin and English]. The collection also includes a copy of the manuscript completed by William McMurtrie Tilghman in 1851 and added to as a Tilghman family register through 1900, and miscellaneous family records, including an estate inventory of Richard Tilghman of Queen Anne's County dated November 18, 1766.
Dates
- 1539 - 1900
Creator
- Tilghman, William, 1518-1593 (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use.
Conditions Governing Use
The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.
Biographical / Historical
The Tilghman family of Queen Anne’s County, Maryland, descends from a line of English parish gentry rooted in Snodland, Kent, beginning with William Tilghman (1518–1593). William Tilghman resided in Snodland during the Tudor period and appears in parish and probate records as a landholding householder. His descendants remained in Snodland through the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, maintaining their status within the local community.
William Tilghman’s son, Thomas Tilghman (d. 1606), continued the family line, and his will, proved in 1606, documents the family’s property and heirs. Thomas was succeeded by his son William Tilghman (d. 1629), whose son Philip Tilghman (d. 1649) lived during the political unrest leading to the English Civil War.
Philip Tilghman’s son, Richard Tilghman (1626–1675), emigrated to the Province of Maryland in 1653. Appointed Surveyor General of the Eastern Shore in 1659, Richard acquired extensive landholdings in Talbot County and became a prominent colonial official. In 1669 he was appointed to the Governor’s Council, securing the family’s place among Maryland’s provincial elite. Through land acquisition, public service, and marriage alliances, he established the foundation of the Tilghman family’s long-term prominence on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.
By the early eighteenth century, Richard Tilghman’s descendants were established in what became Queen Anne’s County (formed in 1706). The estate known as “The Hermitage,” near present-day Centreville, emerged as the principal family seat. The Hermitage functioned as a plantation worked by enslaved labor and served as the social and political center of the family for generations.
Among Richard Tilghman’s grandsons was Matthew Tilghman (1718–1790), born at The Hermitage. A planter and statesman, Matthew served in Maryland’s colonial assembly for decades, presided over the Maryland Convention of Delegates in 1774, chaired the Council of Safety during the Revolutionary crisis, and later became the first President of the Maryland Senate under the Constitution of 1776. His leadership marked the family’s continued influence from the colonial period into the early republic.
In the nineteenth century, members of the Tilghman family remained active in public and professional life in Maryland. Among them was William McMurtrie Tilghman (1815–1900), a distinguished jurist and descendant of the Eastern Shore Tilghmans. Born in Maryland, he pursued a legal career and served as Chief Judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, from 1870 to 1874. His tenure reflected both legal expertise and the continued civic prominence of the Tilghman family in Maryland’s political and judicial spheres during the nineteenth century. Judge Tilghman’s career demonstrates the family’s transition from plantation-based leadership in the colonial and revolutionary eras to professional and institutional influence in the post–Civil War period.
Across successive generations—from William Tilghman (1518–1593) of Snodland parish to the establishment of The Hermitage in Queen Anne’s County and the later judicial service of William McMurtrie Tilghman—the family’s history reflects patterns of English migration, Chesapeake plantation society, Revolutionary leadership, and continued public service in Maryland. The Tilghman family remained associated with Queen Anne’s County and with civic leadership in Maryland for more than three centuries.
Extent
2.0 Linear Feet (2 boxes)
Language of Materials
English
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift of the Tilghman family, June 2025. Accession #2025-009-LIB.
Bibliography
Emory, Frederic. Queen Anne’s County, Maryland: Its Early History and Development. Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society, 1950.
Maryland State Archives (Annapolis, Maryland). Land Office Records.
Maryland State Archives (Annapolis, Maryland). Proceedings of the Council of Maryland, 1636–1770.
Maryland State Archives (Annapolis, Maryland). Proceedings of the Conventions of the Province of Maryland, 1774–1776.
Papenfuse, Edward C., Alan F. Day, David W. Jordan, and Gregory A. Stiverson, eds. A Biographical Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1635–1789. 2 vols. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979–1985.
Peden, Henry C., Jr. Tilghman Family of Maryland. Westminster, Md.: Family Line Publications, 1988.
Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Wills. The National Archives (Kew, England).
Scharf, J. Thomas. History of Maryland from the Earliest Period to the Present Day. 3 vols. Baltimore: John B. Piet, 1879.
Skirven, Percy G. The Tilghman Family in England and America. Baltimore: privately printed, 1911.
Snodland Parish Registers. Kent History and Library Centre (Maidstone, England).
Scope and Contents
The "Snodland Manuscript" was described by William McMurtrie Tilghman in his 1851 copy as thus:
The following 204 pages contain a literal copy of an old M.S. volume, originally the property of William Tilghman, Esq. of Holoway Court in the parish of Snodland, Kent, which his grandson Richard Tilghman, brought with him from England, on emigrating to this country in 1661. From that time to the present, it has remained in the possession of his descendants, successive owners of his Estate called "The Hermitage" on Chester River, Queen Anne's County, Maryland.
It is a small book, about six inches long, by four and a quarter wide, containing 204 pages, enclosed in a parchment cover, itself part of an old rubricated manuscript. The paper is thick, in places stained by exposure to damp, and much worn at the edges, but still in good preservation. Five leaves (those preceeding pages 1-7-43-61-and that following 204) have been torn out, but in other respects the book seems perfect. Thirteen leaves, (pages 59 to 84), are of red colored paper, and a little smaller than the rest; and six others (pages 117 to 128), are of vellum.
The volume is made up of six small books, some of which, it is evident, were used separately, prior to 1545, when they were all stitched together and enclosed in their present cover. This appears from the fact that in some of the entries dated in 1544 (in the 6th book), the writing is behind the threads which fasten the cover, where it could not have been placed after the cover was put on, thus showing that the books were separate in 1544. While the entry of the birth of Dorothea Tilghman in 1545, made on the first page of the fourth book (consisting of vellum leaves), immediately following that of the birth of her brother Henry in 1543, which is on the last page of the third book, shows, that at that time, the several books had been joined together as we now see them.
All the entries of a date prior to 1584 are in the hand of William Tilghman Jr., except those on pages 1-2 and partly of 3; 5-6, 47-48, 57, 152 and 153. These latter are presumed to be in the handwriting of William Tilghman Sr. (grandfather of William Tilghman Jr.), who died August 27, 1541. They are certainly in the same hand as that of the list entitled "Stuffe geven & delywed by me William Tilgham the elder" (page 47), which it is fair to presume was written by him.
After the death of its first owner, the book probably owed its preservation to the circumstances of it containing original entries of the births of his children. It then appears to have passed into the possession of his son Whitenhall Tilghman, who also entered in it the births of his children; and the practice, thus begun, has been continued by its successive owners of the Tilghman family for more than three centuries, thus converting the volume from its original character of a mere memorandum or account book into that of a family register, and of course making it an object of increasing interest to each succeeding generation. Some of the entries of births occur at irregular intervals, having been inserted without regard to order, wherever there happened to be a vacant space, the handwriting and dates forming the only clue to the connection of the series.
The following is believed to be an accurate list of the various members of the Tilghman family by whom entries in the original manuscript have been made:
1. William Tilghman Senior--A.D. 1539
2. William Tilghman Junior--1539 to 1584
3. Whitenhall Tilghman--1607 to 1633
4. Nathaniel Tilghman--1642 to 1644
5. Samuel Tilghman--1645
6. Richard Tilghman--1652 to 1675
7. Richard Tilghman--1700 to 1738
8. Richard Tilghman--1739 to 1768
9. Richard Tilghman--1768 to 1810
10. Richard Cooke Tilghman--1810-1851
The Snodland manuscript is stored alongside a small box that originlly held the manuscript. This metal box is decorated with the Tilghman family coat of arms, and the spine reads "Family Records" and "Tilghman 1539."
In his 1851 copy of the original manuscript, William M. Tilghman also provides a table of contents listing all of the entries in the volume, their page numbers, and the dates the entries cover. The earliest entries do not contain family records; instead, they are more concerned with deeds and accounts relevant to the Tilghman family in Kent. These include "Debts due to William Tilghman" (1540-1547); "Bond to Sir Thomas Cromwell" (1539); "List of lands of William Tilghman..." (1540), etc. Later entries primarily pertain to family records.
William M. Tilghman also included some additional information to his copy of the manuscript after transcribing the original 204 pages from the old manuscript. These include rubbings taken from the grave of William Tilghman Senior by Richard A. Tilghman in 1855; photographs of Snodland parish taken in July 1858; photographs of Tilghman family members; maps glued to the pages; and various notes about the Tilghman family up through 1893. There are also various newspaper articles pasted into the later pages of the volume, the latest dated 1900. Tilghman includes a full list of additional materials added in the table of contents.
In addition to the original manuscript and the copy, the collection contains a folder of loose papers found stored with the original manuscript. These include a 15-page inventory of Richard Tilghman's estate in Queen Anne's County, Maryland, dated 1766; notes and poems, and two undated newspaper clippings.
Creator
- Tilghman, William, 1518-1593 (Person)
- Tilghman, William McMurtrie, 1815-1900 (Person)
- Title
- Guide to the Snodland manuscript collection
- Status
- Under Revision
- Author
- Mallory Harwerth
- Date
- 2025-08
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750
specialcollections@mdhistory.org
