When Chancellor
Alexander Contee Hanson died in office, the
Governor of Maryland,
Robert Bowie had first offered the position as
Chancellor of Maryland to
Gabriel Duvall (then serving as the federal
Comptroller of the Treasury), who declined, and then to
Robert Smith (the acting
Attorney General of the United States), who also declined. Gov. Bowie then appointed Kilty, and he accepted, taking his seat on January 26, 1806. In
Dashiell vs. Attorney-General, 5 H. & J., 403, the court said that "the book was compiled, printed and distributed under the sanction of the State for the use of its officers and is a safe guide in exploring an otherwise very dubious path". Kilty also undertook other public activities during his Chancellorship. In 1807, he was appointed to a committee of prominent citizens to address a British blockade of American vessels; and in January 1808 he assisted in drafting a resolution further condemning British actions against U.S. shipping. Kilty held that office until his death on October 10, 1821, in Annapolis. A memorial was held on October 11, 1821, in the Baltimore County Court, and the
National Intelligencer for October 17, 1821, reported an account of the action of the Bar of the District of Columbia on the death of Kilty. ==Personal life==