Listed below are a couple of books I've used for researching the Calvert line. Colonial Virginians and Their Maryland Relatives Author: Norma Tucker Clearfield Company, Inc. by Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, Maryland 1994), pg. 177, Elizabeth Stone married William Calvert, son of Leonard Calvert of Maryland, grandson of George Calvert, first Baron of Baltimore. (Crowe). Call # 0-8063-4507-1 George Calvert; The Early Years Author: James W. Foster The Museum and Library of Maryland History Marylnad Historical Society 1983. Call # ISBN 0-938420-24-0 pg. 24 " I love Richmondshire with all my heart and it warms me when you talk of it, as cold a country as it is." wrote George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, from London to a fellow Yorkshireman, Sir Thomas Wentworth. pg. 77 Shortly before the 4th child was born, Sam Calvert wrote that Mrs. Calvert was ill. "I pray God, " he wrote, "send him [George Calvert] health and comfort if his wife dail (which we all fear) now upon her time of delivery. She hath so long languished upon a lingering sickness. I protest unto you there are not many such friends living, nor many such women, such is the love she hath gained (besides her own worth) amongst her husband's kindred... I shall but too soon miss her." Mrs. Calvert, however, outlived the author of this gloomy prediction. She was to bear seven other children, and die in 1622 at the birth of the 11th. pg. 91. George and Anne's fifth child, Leonard, must have been born in 1611, for he is described in his father's will, 1632, as having just come of age, but no report of his birth or baptism can be found. Since the register of St. Martin's includes the baptisms of his brothers and sisters both before and after this date, the omission is curious. Possibly it was a case of inadvertence on the part of the vicar or the parish clear, whose memory may have failed him. Happy Hunting, Your Lone Star Cousin, Vicki Kay CALVERT Spencer