History
The name Choptank is thought to be from the Nanticoke word ''tshapetank:'' a stream that separates, or place of big current. The Algonquian-speaking Choptank were independent, but they were related in culture and language to the Nanticoke, the larger paramount chiefdom immediately to their south, which was dominant on the Eastern Shore. After the arrival of English colonists, the tribes' histories took different paths. The Choptank maintained good relations with the European settlers. Eventually they were assimilated into the mainstream society through intermarriage. Like many other small tribes, they ceased to exist as a separate entity, although their descendants survive. The only Indian reservation which the English established in fee simple on the Eastern Shore was the Choptank Indian Reservation in 1669. The territory included what later became the city of Cambridge, the county seat of Dorchester County. The last town in Dorchester County occupied by the Choptank was Locust Neck Indian Town, which they left about 1790. In 1822, the state of Maryland sold the land of the reservation for development. The state used some of the proceeds to pay its share of contribution to the formation of the District of Columbia The U.S. Navy tugboat ''Choptank'' was named after the tribe. It served from 1918 until 1946. The towns of Choptank, Maryland, and Choptank Mills, Delaware,See also
* Native American tribes in MarylandReferences
{{authority control Eastern Algonquian peoples Extinct Native American tribes Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands Nanticoke tribe Native American history of Maryland Native American tribes in Maryland Lenape Algonquian ethnonyms