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  1. Mary Chase Barney (1785–1872), was an American editor. She was the manager and editor of the magazine National Magazine in Baltimore in 1829–1831. She attracted much attention as a woman participator in the public political debate in the Antebellum South.

  2. Barney, as she says, was a daughter of Samuel Chase, the bitterly partizan judge whom the Jeffersonian Republicans impeached in 1804, but without convicting him. Her husband, William B. Barney, a son of Commodore Joshua Barney, had been naval officer of the port of Baltimore since 1818.

  3. Mary Barney, daughter of Judge Samuel Chase (who signed the United States Declaration of Independence), was born on May 1, 1785 in Baltimore, Maryland. She was married to Major William Bedford Barney, son of Revolutionary naval hero Commodore Joshua Barney.

  4. At her residence in this city of paralysis yesterday, Mrs. Mary Chase Barney, daughter of Judge Samuel Chase of Maryland and one of the only two surviving daughters of any of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.

  5. May 2, 2022 · Death of a Notable Lady. District of Columbia. At her residence in this city of paralysis yesterday, Mrs. Mary Chase Barney, daughter of Judge Samuel Chase of Maryland and one of the only two surviving daughters of any of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.

    • Maryland
    • May 1, 1785
    • William Bedford Barney
    • June 30, 1872
  6. William Bedford Barney, b.7 DEC 1781, Philadelphia, Philadelphia Co, PA, son of Joshua Barney + Ann Bedford; + Mary Chase, b.1785, Annapolis, Anne Arundel Co, MD

  7. Jan 25, 2017 · On April 8, 1782, American naval Lt. Joshua Barney replied with a broadside of grape, canister and round shot, killing some sailors and marines. He ordered his ship to port and unleashed another round of shot. The boats were so close that the enemies’ shouted commands were heard.

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