Philip Key (U
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Philip Key (U
Philip Key may refer to: * Philip Key (U.S. politician), Representative of the State of Maryland in the United States Congress from 1791 to 1792 * Philip Barton Key, Representative of the State of Maryland in the United States Congress from 1807 to 1812 * Philip Barton Key II Philip Barton Key II (April 5, 1818 – February 27, 1859)Richardson, Hester Dorsey. ''Side-Lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families.'' Baltimore, Md.: Williams and Wilkins company, 1913. was an American lawyer who ser ...
, murder victim in a controversial nineteenth-century trial {{hndis, name = Key, Philip ...
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Philip Key (U
Philip Key may refer to: * Philip Key (U.S. politician), Representative of the State of Maryland in the United States Congress from 1791 to 1792 * Philip Barton Key, Representative of the State of Maryland in the United States Congress from 1807 to 1812 * Philip Barton Key II Philip Barton Key II (April 5, 1818 – February 27, 1859)Richardson, Hester Dorsey. ''Side-Lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families.'' Baltimore, Md.: Williams and Wilkins company, 1913. was an American lawyer who ser ...
, murder victim in a controversial nineteenth-century trial {{hndis, name = Key, Philip ...
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Philip Barton Key
Philip Barton Key (April 12, 1757 – July 28, 1815), was an American Loyalist during the American Revolutionary War and later was a United States Circuit Judge and Chief United States Circuit Judge of the United States circuit court for the Fourth Circuit and a United States representative from Maryland. Education and career Born on April 12, 1757, near Charlestown, Cecil County, Province of Maryland, British America, Key pursued an academic course. He was a Loyalist during the American Revolutionary War, fighting with the British Army from 1777 to 1781. He served in the Maryland Loyalists Battalion as a captain.Conway Whittle Sams, Elihu Samuel Riley, ''The Bench and Bar of Maryland: A History 1634 to 1901'' (1901), p. 292. Key and his entire battalion were captured by the Spanish Army– who were at war with the British– in Pensacola, Florida. Key was a prisoner for a month in Havana, Cuba before being paroled and sent to New York City, New York until the end of the war. ...
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