Isaac Chapline came to America in the Ship in 1610 as a membrer of the Kings Council. His Wife Mary came in the ship James in 1622. They had the following children: John b England 1607 m name unkown in Talbot Co VA in 1635 Mary b 1623 supposelyd m an andrew wyatt in 1645 William b 1645 from Colonial Families of the United States p175. Another record indicates that Mary is dau of George, Colonial Families, Vol VI page 287 Under a topic titled Calbert Lineage. Also note various spellings of the name: Chaplin Kaplan etc. of Isaac's surname. You will find him as Isack as well. I don't know if this was what you were looking for or not. I actually am more interested in your more recent Ancestor....wonder if possible ties to my family. Granteda...what I cited are secondary sources. see below also: dai The Chapline Family and the Settlement of Maryland Isaac Chapline was born in England in 1585, he became a Captain in the Royal Navy. In 1606 hemarried Mary Calvert, daughter of Leonard Calvert. (the founding family of Maryland) In 1622 Isaac and Mary immigrated to America settling in what is nowSouthern Maryland on the Patuxent River near Cedar Branch. By the early 1700's th e population was already shifting to the west and there was great interest in s ettling the land of the great valley beyond the Blue Ridge. So in1730, William Chapline, then living along the Potomac just south of present dayWashington, D.C., moved westward settling on 465 acres just 4 miles upstream from Shepherds town, Virginia. His son Joseph shortly thereafter received a g rant of 2175 ac res from Lord Baltimore to establish his own estate. This was to be along the P otomac, 2 miles downstream from his father's Virginia esta te, but onthe Maryla nd side of the river. In 1739 Joseph Chapline began con struction of his estate, "Mt. Pleasant", moving there in 1740. ("Mt. Pleasant "is located in the area o f Snyder's Landing, just 1.5 miles from Sharpsbu rg). After moving to "Mt. Pleas ant" Joseph's fortunes soared, he was a parto wner of theOhio Company, which t raded the Indians manufactured goods for fu rs, and builta two-story log storeh ouse at Wills creek on the Virginia shor e.He servedasJustice of the Peace, a nd also as elected representativeofFr ederick County to the General Assembly i n Annapolis. When the French and Ind ian War broke out Joseph raised and organiz ed troops, financed the wareffort , and helpedbuild Ft. Cumberland and Ft. Fre derick along the frontier. For hiswar efforts Joseph Chapline received an addi tional 11,000 acres of land fromGov. Horatio Sharpe of Maryland and 645 acres from Lord Fairfax of Virgi nia. The Founding of Sharpsburg Following the res toration of peace in1763, J oseph took a 300 acre parcel of his land surroundin g a large constant spring , surveyed 187 lots, and on July 9th, 1763 founded the town of Sharpes Burgh naming it for his good friend Gov. Sharpe. Each lot was 103 by 206 feet and initially were sold for 2 pounds, 10 shillings. By the time of his death in 1769, Joseph had sold 84 lots mostly to speculators, but a few houses had als o been built. BIOGRAPHY: Joseph Chapline II Joseph Chapline II was born in 1746 at "Mt. Pleasant". After his father's death he took over the developme nt of the town , and built the first stone house in 1769. (229 W. Chapline St.). In 1770 he married Mary Ann Christian Abigail Ferguson, of Frederick Towne. Li ke hisfat her before him he was appointed Justice of the Peace for Frederick Co unty. W hen the American Revolution started he was appointed Captain and organiz ed a group of volunteers"TheSharpsburg Select Militia". Joseph and Mary Ann C hapline did not have any children Chapline's Gift On February 18, 1804, Jos e ph and Mary Ann Chapline sold the lot on which our house stands to Jane Fergu s on and her brother John White Ferguson. Jane and John Ferguson were Mary An n Ch apline's relatives. Along with the land the Chapline's gave them a house . The d eed states that the Ferguson's paid "Five Pounds current money" and t hey also p romised that "every year forever on the ninth day of July theannua l rent ofth ree shillingsand six pence current money of Great Britain" woul d be paidto th e heirs of Joseph Chapline. The deed emphasizes that the sale included "the hal f ofthe aforesaid lot which has the premises and improvem ents". Atthis time t helot alone was valued at 5 pounds. Additional languag e has both Joseph and Mary individually attest to their intentions. Asthe Chapline's had no children,they made sure their gift of the house would not b e contested when they passed away. BIOGRAPHY: CHAPLIN FAMILY JOHN CHAPLIN was a First Settler of Woodbridge in 1697, and probably some time before that date. Chaplain, Chapline and other variations obtained in the earlier records. BIOGRAPHY: The famous movie actor, Charlie Chaplin, has done more than any other descendant (?) to perpetuate the name. BIOGRAPHY: Chapline was one of the prominent Colonial Families of Maryland and Virginia, originating in that "Isaac Chapline, Ensign Royal Navy, who came to America in the "Starr" in 1610 as King's Council under Lord Delaware. He was granted large tracts of land on the south side of the James River, in the Parish of Jordan's and on Bickers Creek, which land he named "Chapline's Choice." (Hotten's Original Lists." "Chapline's From Maryland and Virginia, by Maria J. Liggett Dare, 1902, p. 14.) BIOGRAPHY: CHAPLIN We have recorded warrants for land in South Carolina for "John Chaplin and Ann his wife" as follows: BIOGRAPHY: "Warrants for Lands in So. Car. (1672 - 1679) Carolina:" BIOGRAPHY: "You are further to admeasure and lay out unto John Chaplin and Ann his wife free persons of this province one hundred and fortie acres of land in som convenient place not yet laid out or marked to be laid out for any other person or use and if it happen upon any Navigable or river capable to be made Navigable you are onlie to allow the 5th part of ye depth thereof by the waterside and a certificat fullie specifyeing the bounds and its scituacon you retorne to us with all convenient speed. BIOGRAPHY: "Dated ye 25th day of January 1678: BIOGRAPHY: "To Capt. M: Mathews and: Piercevall Survey'r. J: West generall: Rich: Conant John Godfrey - -" BIOGRAPHY: "The Chaplins of the Coast of South Carolina have been settled there as far back as 1678 or earlier. We find John Chaplin and his wife Ann Chaplin, who had grant of land on James Island testifying before the grand Council that he had been among the Yemassee Indians with whom the Spaniards were then tampering and that he had personally seen arms being delivered to the Indians. This was prior to the Yemassee uprising in 1715." BIOGRAPHY: "The Chaplin Coat of Arms, shown today, is taken from the silver which has descended in the Chaplin family, and was granted to their English ancestors in the year 1593. The name is one of the oldest in England and in America, dates back to Francis Chaplin who settled in Virginia in 1608, and to Thomas and Isaac who came to Virginia in 1610." BIOGRAPHY: The above excerpts are from the papers of Mr. William Edward Fripp, and were taken from the S. C. Historical and Genealogical Magazines, public records, family papers and Land Grants. BIOGRAPHY: In the Compendium of American Genealogy Vol. V, we find the following listed under Immigrant Ancestors, page 753: BIOGRAPHY: "Chapline, Isaac (born circa 1584) ens. Royal Navy; from England in the `Starr,' as King's Council under Lord Delaware 1610; settled in `Chaplaine's Choyce' south side of James River 1622, married circa 1606 Mary Calvert (born circa 1586) to America 1622 in the `James' with son John and 4 servants." BIOGRAPHY: "The Chaplins of the Coast of South Carolina have been settled there as far back as 1678 or earlier. We find John Chaplin and his wife Ann Chaplin, who had grant of land on James Island testifying before the grand Council that he had been among the Yemassee Indians with whom the Spaniards were then tampering and that he had personally seen arms being delivered to the Indians. This was prior to the Yemassee uprising in 1715." BIOGRAPHY: "The Chaplin Coat of Arms, shown today, is taken from the silver which has descended in the Chaplin family, and was granted to their English ancestors in the year 1593. The name is one of the oldest in England and in America, dates back to Francis Chaplin who settled in Virginia in 1608, and to Thomas and Isaac who came to Virginia in 1610." BIOGRAPHY: The above excerpts are from the papers of Mr. William Edward Fripp, and were taken from the S. C. Historical and Genealogical Magazines, public records, family papers and Land Grants. BIOGRAPHY: IMMIGRATION: Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s Place: Virginia Year: 1610 Primary immigrant: Chapline, Isaac Permanent entry number: 1746879 Accession number: 9634387 Source publication code: 9448 Source publication page number: 20 Source publication: VIRKUS, FREDERICK A., editor. Immigrant Ancestors: A List of 2,500 Immigrants to America before 1750. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1964. 75p. Repr. 1986. Source annotation: In the years from 1925 to 1942, Frederick A. Virkus edited seven volumes with the title, The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, published in Chicago by the Institute of American Genealogy. Each volume has a section in the main body of the work, complete in itself, entitled "Immigrant Ancestors," containing much genealogical information: vol. 1, pp. 965-997; vol. 2, pp. 387-421; vol. 3, pp. 645-692; vol. 4, pp. 727-777; vol. 5, pp. 741-793; vol. 6, pp. 749-819; vol. 7, pp. 825-895. The section in vol. 7 appears to be the most complete and it has been reprinted. Thus that 1964 reprint list is the only one appearing in no. 2048, Filby, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index. The Virkus work supplies facts on birth, ancestry, time and place of arrival on this continent, marriage, and death of each immigrant that it includes. A more complete list of immigrants to America before 1750 whose surnames begin with the letter A or the letter B through "Battles! " is contained in the material listed in item no. 9450. Source: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index Isaac Chapline found in: IMMIGRATION: Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s Place: Virginia Year: 1610 Primary immigrant: Chapline, Isaac Permanent entry number: 3899511 Accession number: 9999965713 Source publication code: 7204.40 Source publication page number: 37 Source publication: REAMY, MARTHA, AND BILL REAMY Immigrant Ancestors of Marylanders, As Found in Local Histories. Westminister, MD: Willow Bend Books, 2000. 358p. Source annotation: Date and port of arrival, or date and place of settlement or mention in the New World. Occupation, place of residence and information on at least one generation in America may also be provided. Source: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index MARRIAGE: Isaac Chapline found in: MARRIAGE: U.S./International Marriage Records, 1340-1980 Marriage Year: 1606 Marriage Location Code: En Gender: The gender of Isaac Chapline is male. Birth Year: 1584 Birth Location Code: En Spouse: Mary Calvert Birth Year: 1586 Birth Location Code: Yo Source Number: 163.000 Source Type: Electronic Database Number of Pages: 1 Submitter Code: GL1