Description:

Port of Annapolis Permit for Sloop "Grampus" Commanded by John Brackett

Partially Printed Document Signed, "John Ridout", 1p, 7.5" x 3.75", September 22, 1775, a permit for John Brackett as commander of the Sloop Grampus “...burthen Fifty tons, mounted with guns, navigated with six men, Plantation built, as per register..." Housed in protective mylar, can be easily removed. Folds and creases, some with separation and loss at same. Repairs at verso. Light soiling and discoloration. In very good condition.

John Ridout was an Oxford graduate. John married 18 year old Mary "Molly" Ridout. Molly was born in England in 1746, the second daughter of provincial Maryland governor, Samuel Ogle, and his wife, Anne Tasker Ogle. The Ogles were a prominent family, with influence in both England and Maryland throughout the eighteenth century. Molly's brother, Benjamin, later served as governor of Maryland between 1798 and 1801.

Ridout accompanied Governor Horatio Sharpe to Maryland as his personal secretary. Under Sharpe's patronage, Ridout quickly garnered several political positions including Judge of Probate (1761-1762) and naval officer of the Port of Annapolis (1762-1777). Upon Sharpe's departure from Maryland in 1773, the former governor left the couple his mansion, Whitehall, on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay. This property, along with their Annapolis townhouse on Duke of Gloucester street known as Ridout House, played host to several social events attended by Maryland's high society.

In pre-Revolutionary Annapolis, the Ridouts found themselves at the center of an elite social circle. Molly Ridout's friends included Sir Robert Eden, the last royal governor of Maryland, Henry Harford (the illegitimate son of Frederick Calvert, the last Lord Baltimore), and the Weems family. Interestingly, the Ridouts also appeared to have forged a friendship with George Washington before the American Revolution, who dined at Ridout House in 1771. Perhaps due to their strong links in both England and the colonies, the Ridouts stayed politically and militarily uninvolved throughout the American Revolution. However, by the end of the Revolution, Molly Ridout did express her opinions on the new nation to her mother (Anne Tasker Ogle), declaring, "Indeed My dear Madam you are exceedingly mistaken with regard to America. It is not at all disagreeable and as to our little town I believe I may...say you would like it as well as ever you did tho there are not so many people in it as when you left."

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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