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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Graham, Michael. "Churching the Unchurched: The Establishment in Maryland, 1692-1724." Maryland Historical Magazine, 83 (Winter 1988): 297-309.

Moran, Michael. "The Writings of Francis Patrick Kenrick, Archbishop of Baltimore (1797-1863)." Records of the American Catholic Historical Society, 41 (September 1930): 230-62.

"Harry Hosier, 1750(?)-1806." Third Century Methodism, 49 (April 2009): 1.

Higman, Daniel. "The Fields of Fortune in Colonial Maryland: Part III: Vegetables, Fruits & a Little Pot!" Anne Arundel County History Notes, 40 (Winter 2009): 5-8.

Higman, Daniel. "The Fields of Fortune in Colonial Maryland: Part IV: Conclusion." Anne Arundel County History Notes, 40 (Spring 2009): 5-6, 13-16.

Sarson, Steven. "Yeoman Farmers in a Planters' Republic: Socioeconomic Conditions and Relations in Early National Prince George's County, Maryland." Journal of the Early Republic, 39 (Spring 2009): 63-99.

Cofield, Sara Rivers. "A Preliminary Study of 17th- and 18th-Century Leather Ornaments from Maryland." Maryland Archeology, 44 (September 2008): 12-27.

Olmert, Michael. Kitchens, Smokehouses, and Privies: Outbuildings and the Architectureof Daily Life in the Eighteenth-Century Mid-Atlantic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University, 2009.

Lanman, Barry. Baltimore County: Celebrating a Legacy 1659-2009. Baltimore, MD: Martha Ross Center for Oral History at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 2009.

Lanman, Barry. "Baltimore County: Celebrating a Legacy 1659-2009." History Trails of Baltimore County, 40 (Winter-Spring 2009): 1-12.

Pilling, Ronald. "David Stodder--Shipbuilder and Patriot in Post-Revolutionary Baltimore." Sea History, 128 (Autumn 2009): 12-15.

Simmons, Clara Ann. Chesapeake Ferries: A Waterborne Tradition, 1636-2000. Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society, 2009.

Grafe, Melissa J. Making 'Medical Hall': Dr. John Archer, Medical Practice, and Apprenticeship in Early America, 1769-1820. Ph.D. diss., John Hopkins University, 2009.

McIntyre, James. "Separating Myth from History: The Maryland Riflemen in the War of Independence." Maryland Historical Magazine, 104 (Summer 2009): 100-19.

Neville, Barry Paige. "For God, King, and Country: Loyalism on the Eastern Shore of Maryland During the American Revolution." International Social Science Review, 84 (no. 3-4, 2009): 135-56.

Libster, Martha M., and Sister Betty Ann McNeil. Enlightened Charity: The Holistic Nursing Care, Education and Advices Concerning the Sick of Sister Matilda Coskery, 1799-1870. Farmville, NC: Golden Apple Publications, 2009.

McKitrick, Patrick. "The Material Culture of Magic and Popular Belief in the ColonialMid-Atlantic." Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology, 25 (2009): 59-72.

Meacham, Sarah Hand. Every Home a Distillery: Alcohol, Gender and Technology in the Colonial Chesapeake. Early America: History, Context, Culture Series. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009.

Robbins, Karen. "'Domestic Bagatelles': Servants, Generations, and Genders in the McHenry Family of the Early Republic." Maryland Historical Magazine, 104 (Spring 2009): 30-51.

Twitty, Michael W. "Shad, Fried Chicken and Apple Butter: The Foodways of Historic Montgomery County, 1600-1900." Montgomery County Story, 52 (Fall/Winter 2009): 23-38.

Wagner, Heather Lehr. Benjamin Banneker. Leaders of the Colonial Era series. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 2010.

Ervin, Tim. Hampton National Historic Site: a pictorial glimpse of Maryland life, 1783-1948. Virginia Beach, VA: Donning Company Publishers, 2010.

Strang, Cameron B. "Michael Cresap and the Promulgation of Settler Land-Claiming Methods in the Backcountry, 1765-1774." Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 118 (no. 2, 2010): 106-35.

Himmelheber, Peter. "Bought of Philip Key or St. Margaret's Forrest: A Chronology, 1682-1950." Chronicles of St. Mary's, 57 (Spring 2010): 4-12.

Walsh, Lorena. Motives of Honor, Pleasure, and Profit: Plantation Management in the Colonial Chesapeake, 1607-1763. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, 2010.

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