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25 Pub. Cont. Newsl. 1 (1989-1990)

handle is hein.journals/procurlw25 and id is 1 raw text is: 














Section of Public Contract Law, American Bar Association          Volume 25, Number 1, Fall 1989


FOR THE HONOR OF ANNE OF

                       ENGLAND


Maryland State House: Oldest in the nation still in
legislative use
Maryland and its capital, Annapolis, bear the mark
of England's tumultuous Seventeenth Century. In
1632, a charter for the lands between the Potomac
River and the fortieth parallel north was granted
to Lord Baltimore by Charles I, England's later be-
headed Catholic King. The state is named in honor
of Charles' queen consort, Henrietta Maria. Often,
it is referred to as the Free State because of a guar-
antee of religious freedom that was made at the
time of its founding.
  In the years that followed, Britain's Catholic
crown and Protestant Parliament vied for power.
The struggle essentially concluded with the blood-
less Revolution of 1688-89. It placed William and
Mary on the British throne, assuring the ascend-
ancy of Parliament and the Church of England.
Five years later, Maryland's provincial capital was


moved from St. Mary's, the original settlement of
Lord Baltimore, north to Protestant Providence,
and renamed Annapolis in honor of the later to be
Queen, Anne.
  The Congress met in Annapolis in 1783. Three
years later, an Annapolis Convention called for
convening of the Constitutional Convention, which
subsequently was held in Philadelphia. George
Washington frequented Annapolis during those
years. (A priest at the old Episcopal Church at the
center of town was heard to remark that after one
of his less successful sermons, a parishioner had
suggested he place a sign in the aisle saying that
George Washington slept here.)
  Annapolis is at the center of historic Maryland,
near the outflow of the Severn River into the Ches-
apeake Bay. Since 1845, except for a brief inter-
ruption during the Civil War, Queen Anne's town
has been home for the U.S. Naval Academy. John
Paul Jones, famous because of our first naval vic-
tory over the British and for his proud reply of Sir,
I have not begun to fight to a suggestion of sur-
render, is buried here.
  Our ABA Section convenes at the Historic Inns
of Annapolis on Friday and Saturday, November
3 and 4. We start with a CLE program on procure-
ment's new Minotaur, the procurement integrity
provisions at 41 U.S.C. section 423. Knowledge-
able speakers will lead you through the labyrinth.
Then, on Saturday, the Council of the Section, un-
der our Theseus, Don Gavin, will address current
issues of procurement in open session, inspired by
John Paul Jones' immortal words. We hope you
will join us.
  There is much to see and enjoy in Annapolis-
Colonial homes; the state house (1772); the old
Treasury (1695); the Naval Academy and other
places of interest. Restaurants cater to those who
want to enjoy the fruits of the Chesapeake Bay, and
those who do not. Our system of federal govern-
ment began to function two hundred years ago in
1789. Our visit to Annapolis will be a fitting re-
minder of that historic occasion.


Issue Highlights: Chairman's Comments, page 2 • Procurement Integrity and
   Compliance, Fall Program, page 12 - Section Directory, pullout section

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