Background
He was the son of John Stevens and Elizabeth Connoly, and a descendant of the Quakers who had initially settled both Dorchester and Talbot Counties.
governor of Maryland politician
He was the son of John Stevens and Elizabeth Connoly, and a descendant of the Quakers who had initially settled both Dorchester and Talbot Counties.
He intermittently represented Talbot County, Maryland in the House of Delegates from 1807 to 1820. Samuel Stevens, Junior. is thought to have been born in Talbot County, Maryland on July 13, 1778. His father died when he was 16 years old.
He had no formal education and was in business in Philadelphia for a short time.
He inherited the estate Compton from his father in 1794. He was chosen to the Maryland House of Delegates from Talbot County in 1807 and served a number of non-consecutive terms until 1820.
Stevens was elected Governor on December 9, 1822, defeating James B. Robins. His tenure is remembered for the enfranchisement of the Jews, the abolition of a religious test for Maryland office holders, the extension of the civil liberties guaranteed in the Bill of Rights to State law, and the creation of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal.
The governor also welcomed the Marquis de Lafayette to Maryland during his triumphal tour of the nation.
He was re-elected in 1823 and 1824. He was succeeded as governor by Joseph Kent on January 9, 1826, and retired to his home on "Dividing Creek." He died at "Compton" on February 7, 1860, at 81 years old and buried in the family cemetery. Compton was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.