Cecilton, Cecil County, Maryland Genealogy

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Histories and Tidbits
Cecilton is located at 39°24′11″N, 75°52′10″W (39.402919, -75.869430)

Founding a town called Ceciltown was a favorite project with the early settlers. The one to be established at the present Town Point (on the Bohemia River) failed. Another attempt was made at Broxen's Point, at the junction of Scotchman's Creek and Bohemia River. This project also failed.

Most transportation had been by water until the early 1700s when the road system began to develop and crossroads towns came into being. Another attempt to found a town named Ceciltowne was made by Alfonse Cosden. This time the settlement was permanent and it was called Cecilton, located at the intersection of Routes 213 and 282 near the center of Sassafras Neck.

Some of the finest farmland in the state surround Cecilton. To the south of town is Greenfield, a remarkably beautiful estate.The house is a Georgian Manor House, built in the mid 1700’s on a 750 acre tract patented to John and Mary Ward in 1674, is noted for its architectural purity, fine paneling and woodwork. The Ward burying ground nearby also contains graves of Lusbys and Pascaults, later owners. • Greenfield is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. — Map(db m1569)

On the east side of Cecilton is 1,000-acre Worsell Manor.

To the west of town are Mt. Harmon Plantation, Frisby's Prime Choiceand Rose Hill. Essex Lodgeand Cherry Groveare to the northwest. The Anchorage and Bohemia are north on Route 213. All are well-tilled farms that date back to the 17th and 18th centuries.

These farms, and others like them, give life blood to Cecilton.

Churches
 Bethel A.M.E. at  Cecilton ;  Maryland State Archives WPA Survey file : MSA S 1512-2030 00/59/06/47 

 Bohemia Parish    St Xavier or  Old Bohemia  - The Roman Catholic Church of St. Francis Xavier, also called the Old Bohemia Shrine, is near  Warwick . Founded 1704 by Rev. Thomas Mansell, S.J., one of the earliest permanent Catholic establishments in the English Colonies.  Bohemia offered advantages which were influential in the selection of this spot for a center of missionary enterprise. It was accessible both by land and water. A trading post at a nearby landing offered opportunities for the shipment of tobacco to England and the import of supplies needed by the colonists. By land, the Delaware Path or Highway was an artery of traffic between the two bays. </li>  Bohemia Academy Founded 1745 by Rev. Thomas Pulton, S.J. attended by Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a signed of the Declaration of Independence, and his cousin John Carroll, first Catholic Bishop in the U.S. </li> <a href="http://speccol.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/speccol/catalog/cfm/dsp_number.cfm?speccol=3572"> Maryland State Archives </a>has the records for the Bohemia Parish, Archdiocese of Wilmington, Roman Catholic, New Castle and Kent Counties, Delaware and Cecil and Kent Counties, Maryland: baptisms and births 1789-1842; deaths and burials 1790-1882. </li> </ul>

St. Basil (Ukrainian Catholic Church, Byzantine Rite) at Chesapeake City </li> <a href="http://speccol.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/speccol/catalog/cfm/dsp_number.cfm?speccol=2488"> St Mary Anne's Parish (North Elk Parish) </a> </li> <ul> St. Mary Anne's Church North East, MD </li> </ul> St. Paul's Methodist Church at Johntown or Earleville (?) </li> St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church in Chesapeake City </li> St. Stephens Church in Earleville; <a href="http://speccol.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/speccol/catalog/cfm/dsp_number.cfm?speccol=2507"> St Stephen's Parish (North Sassafras Parish) at the Maryland State Archives </a> </li> Shelemiah United Methodist Church in North East - <a href="http://speccol.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/speccol/catalog/religion/cfm/dsp_countyresults.cfm?county=CE"> Maryland State Archives WPA Survey file </a>: MSA S 1512-2012 00/59/06/47 </li> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrewsbury_Church"> Shrewsbury Parish (South Sassafras Parish) </a>(now in Kent County, Maryland) </li> Trinity M.E. Church in Chesapeake City </li> Trinity Church Elkton, MD </li> Wesley M.E. Church at Elk Neck </li> West Nottingham Preparative Meeting </li> West Nottingham United Presbyterian Church in Colora </li> Wright's A.M.E. Church Elkton, MD </li> <li><a href="https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/extensions/FCKeditor/fckeditor/editor/Zion%20Methodist%20Episcopal%20Church"> Zion Methodist Episcopal Church </a> at Cecilton - Zion Methodist Church was founded in 1819. the original building was on the north side of the road on ground now used as a cemetery. It was never fully finished. A church was erected in 1850 on the present site, the land being deeded to the church by John Ward Jones. On August 21, 1888, Zion Church was destroyed by a cyclone. Ground was broken for the new building April 2, 1889. <img src="https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/extensions/FCKeditor/fckeditor/editor/images/spacer.gif" alt="" width="1" height="1" /></li> </ul>

Community Web Sites
Cecilton, Maryland, the town government's web site

Cecilton, Marylandin Wikipedia