SR 427/Chapel Point Rd., Port Tobacco, Maryland. County/parish: Charles.
Added to the National Register of Historic Places November 10, 1988. NRIS 88002050.
4 contributing buildings. 2 contributing sites.Also known as:
St. Thomas Manor (1741) is a historic home and Catholic church complex located near Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland. Known as St. Ignatius Church and Cemetery, the manor house complex is the oldest continuously occupied Jesuit residence in the world. The mission settlement of Chapel Point was established in 1641 by Father Andrew White, S.J., an English Jesuit missionary. Father White ministered to the Potapoco Native Americans, some of whom he converted to Catholicism. Established in 1662, this is the oldest continuously active Catholic parish in the American Thirteen Colonies. With the consecration in 1794 of Bishop John Carroll, St. Thomas became the first Catholic see in the United States.
(read more...)National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/106777231