Margaret Brent
First Woman to Request the Vote
By Anne
Adams
The fact
that women vote today is completely accepted,
but 350 years ago in colonial America it was
very rare. Yet when Margaret Brent asked for not
one but two votes in the 1647 Maryland colonial
assembly she did not want to set a precedent for
her gender but merely acquire what she
considered economically necessary for herself
and her community. Moreover, while she did not
succeed in obtaining the votes she sought, the
fact that she was in a position to request it –
as a successful business professional in her own
right –made her as unique as her request.
Margaret
Brent was born about 1600 in England to a titled
peer and his wife. The Brent family was wealthy,
but also Catholic, and as such were likely to
encounter political and social disfavor if they
remained in England . When their fellow
Catholics, the Calvert family, received royal
approval to colonize the Maryland area of
America as a refuge for other members of their
faith, the Brents considered immigration to the
new area. The head of the Calvert family, Cecil,
the second Lord Baltimore, was well aware that
to assure the success of his colony he would
need to welcome non-Catholics, so to encourage
them to settle he promised religious tolerance
for all faiths. It was an unusual, even
experiential situation. Since Cecil remained in
England , he appointed his brother Leonard
Calvert to be the governor of the new colony.
When
Margaret Brent, with two brothers and a sister,
arrived in 1638 the brothers settled in one
area, and Mary and Margaret setup a separate
home. Because they had brought a great number of
servants, officials had granted the sisters a
great deal of land and Margaret soon became a
successful businesswoman. She lent money to new
arrivals, imported and traded servants and even
appeared in local courts to collect debts.
Actually such business activity by a woman was
not unprecedented or illegal, but what was
unique was that Margaret could only do it
because she was single and never married. For at
that time a married woman lost control of her
property to her husband so as long as she and
her sister remained single Margaret could direct
her own property interests. Also, the fact that
she remained single was unusual since even young
girls were nudged into marriage because wives
were so important to the colony.
The
English Civil War spread to Maryland when in
1645 a Protestant-led revolt led to colonial
Governor Leonard Calvert fleeing to nearby
Virginia . The colony was in temporary disorder,
but when Calvert returned a year later with
hired soldiers he defeated the Protestant
rebels. However, Calvert soon fell ill and died,
but not before he had appointed another
governor, and Margaret as executrix, a position
that meant she would be in charge of paying his
debts and settling his estate. His instructions
were clear: “To take all and pay all.” While
other women had been executrixes they were
usually widows, but Margaret was not Calvert’s
wife, and in fact was not married at all. Her
decisions would eventually affect the entire
colony and its survival
.
The
soldiers hired by Calvert to put down the revolt
were now clamoring for back pay, there were food
shortages, and there was the very real danger
that the dissatisfied soldiers could disrupt the
public safety. Margaret had used Calvert’s money
to cover his debts but lacked the funds to pay
the soldiers so she took an unusual step.
Leonard Calvert had been serving as attorney for
his brother Cecil, the second Lord Baltimore who
had remained in England and Margaret asked that
the Provincial Court appoint her Lord
Baltimore’s attorney-in-fact so she could sell
more assets to raise the money to pay the
soldiers.
On January
21, 1748 Margaret appeared before the colonial
Assembly and asked for two votes – one for
herself since she was a landowner, and the other
because she was Lord Baltimore’s attorney.
Historians have speculated that she wasn’t
seeking the vote for women in general but just
for this specific situation. As historian Dr.
Lois Green Carr put it: “She knew well that many
members of the assembly were more interested in
preserving their estates than in the welfare of
Lord Baltimore’s colony and would refuse to levy
a tax to pay the soldiers. She must have hoped,
by her request for the vote, to at least cover
herself when she sold Lord Baltimore’s cattle
without his knowledge and consent. She may even
have hoped to persuade the men present to
contribute a share that would make such an act
unnecessary.” However, the Assembly refused her
request and Margaret was forced to act on her
own.
Under her
authority as Lord Baltimore’s attorney, she sold
some of his cattle and paid the soldiers, Yet
when Lord Baltimore, who was did not understand
the situation because he was not on the scene,
protested her actions the Assembly wrote a
letter of support: “We do Verily Believe and in
Conscience report that it was better for the
Collonys (sic) safety at that time in her hands
than in any mans (sic) else in the whole
Province…She rather deserved favour and thanks
from your Honour for her so much Concurring to
the publick safety then to be justly liable
to…..bitter invectives.”
But
Baltimore did not share their sentiments and his
opposition plus the appointment of a Protestant
governor, created an unfavorable atmosphere for
the Brents. They moved to Virginia , established
new settlements, and Margaret acquired a new
plantation she named “Peace.” There she died in
1671.
While
history remembers Margaret Brent as the first
woman to request the right to vote, her reasons
were not necessarily for the promotion of her
gender, but for the benefit of the survival of
her homeland. She was unique not just for the
request for the vote but for taking such an
active role in the business and governmental
survival of Maryland .
~*~
A native
of Kansas City , Missouri , Anne grew up in
northwestern Ohio , and holds degrees in
history: a BA from Wilmington College ,
Wilmington , Ohio (1967), and a MA from Central
Missouri State University , Warrensburg ,
Missouri (1968)
A
freelance writer since the early 1970s, she has
published in Christian and secular publications,
has taught history on the junior college level,
and has spoken at national and local writers’
conferences. Her book “Brittany, Child of Joy”,
an account of her severely retarded daughter,
was issued by Broadman Press in 1987. She also
publishes an encouragement newsletter “Rainbows
Along the Way.”
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