Michael MacNamara was an Irish-American lawyer and politician in Colonial Maryland, who had three terms as mayor of Annapolis. He was a Loyalist, his interests aligned with those of the ruling Calvert family, the Barons Baltimore, whose rule was overthrown following the American Revolution.
Samuel Chase, signer of the Declaration of Independence and MacNamara's implacable opponent.
George H. Steuart (politician)
George Hume Steuart, (1700–1784) was a Scottish physician, tobacco planter, and Loyalist politician in colonial Maryland. Born in Perthshire, Steuart emigrated to Maryland in around 1721, where he benefited from proprietarial patronage and was appointed to a number of colonial offices, eventually becoming a wealthy landowner with estates in both Maryland and Scotland, and serving two terms as mayor of Annapolis. However, he was forced by the outbreak of the American Revolution to decide whether to remain loyal to the Crown or to throw in his lot with the American rebels. In 1775 Steuart sailed to Scotland, deciding at age 75 that "he could not turn rebel in his old age". He remained there until his death in 1784.
Steuart Plantation house at Dodon, near Annapolis, built c1800.
The Annapolis Subscription Plate, awarded to Steuart's racehorse Dungannon in 1743.
Argaty, Steuart's Perthshire estate.
Lord North, to whom Steuart made representations in 1764.