1st Company - Captain John Hoskins Stone
2d Company - Captain Patrick Sims
3d Company - Captain Barton Lucas
4th Company - Captain Thomas Ewing
5th Company - Captain Nathaniel Ramsey
6th Company - Captain Peter Adams
7th Company - Captain John Day Scott
8th Company - Captain Samuel Smith
9th Company of Light Infantry - Captain George Stricker
(31 August - 10 November 1776)
Parent unit
McDougall's Brigade
Components
Maryland Independent Companies (19 September 1776) added consisting of: 1st Independent Maryland Company (Charles & Calvert Counties) - Captain Rezin Beall
2d Independent Maryland Company (Somerset County) - Captain John Gunby
3d Independent Maryland Company (Worcester COounty)- Captain John Watkins
4th Independent Maryland Company (Talbot County)- Captain James Hindman
5th Independent Maryland Company (St. Mary's County)-Captain John Allen Thomas
6th Independent Maryland Company- Captain Thomas Woolford
7th Independent Maryland company (Queene Anne & Kent Counties)-Captain Edward Veazy
The 1st Maryland Regiment (Smallwood's Regiment) originated with the authorization of a Maryland Battalion of the Maryland State Troops on January 14, 1776 which was organized in the spring at Baltimore, Maryland (three companies) and Annapolis, Maryland (six companies) under the command of Colonel William Smallwood consisting of eight companies and one light infantry company from the northern and western counties of the colony of Maryland.
The Maryland Battalion distinguished itself at the Battle of Long Island by singlehandedly covering the retreat of the American forces against numerically superior British and Hessian forces. Thereafter, General George Washington relied heavily upon the Marylanders as one of the few reliable fighting units in the early Continental Army. For this reason, Maryland is sometimes known as "The Old Line State." [1] See the 115th Infantry Regiment.