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Carrollton Avenue in New Orleans, Louisiana was named in his honor. The surrounding neighborhood formerly made up the separate town of Carrollton, but was incorporated into the city of New Orleans 1833.
Carrollton Avenue in New Orleans, Louisiana was named in his honor. The surrounding neighborhood formerly made up the separate town of Carrollton, but was incorporated into the city of New Orleans 1833.


In 1903 the state of Maryland added a bronze statue to the [[United States Capitol]]'s [[National Statuary Hall Collection]]. It is located in the Hall of Columns.<ref name="aoc"/>
In 1903 the state of Maryland added a bronze statue to the [[United States Capitol]]'s [[National Statuary Hall Collection]]. It is located in the Crypt.<ref name="aoc"/>


In 1906, the [[University of Notre Dame]] constructed what is now known as Carroll Hall, a residence hall named after Charles Carroll.
In 1906, the [[University of Notre Dame]] constructed what is now known as Carroll Hall, a residence hall named after Charles Carroll.

Revision as of 13:28, 3 April 2010

Charles Carroll
United States Senator
from Maryland
In office
March 4, 1789 – November 30, 1792
Preceded byOffice Created
Succeeded byRichard Potts
Maryland State Senate
In office
17771801
Personal details
NationalityAmerican
Political partyFederalist
SpouseMary Darnall
Alma materCollege of St. Omer
College of Louis the Grand
Signature

Charles Carroll of Carrollton (September 19, 1737 – November 14, 1832) was a delegate to the Continental Congress and later United States Senator for Maryland. He was the only Catholic and the longest-lived signatory of the Declaration of Independence, dying at the age of 95.

Biography

He was born at Annapolis, Maryland, the son of Charles Carroll of Annapolis (1702–1781) and Elizabeth (Brooke) Carroll. His reputed attendance at the Jesuit preparatory school at Bohemia in Cecil County cannot be confirmed from contemporary records, and he may have been schooled at home before departing for Europe, where he attended the College of St. Omer in France, and graduated from the College of Louis the Grand in 1755. He continued his studies in Europe, and read for the law in London before returning to Annapolis in 1765.

Charles Carroll of Annapolis granted Carrollton Manor to his son, Charles Carroll of Carrollton. It is from this tract of land that he took his title, “Charles Carroll of Carrollton.”

Signatory of the Declaration of Independence

Carroll was a voice for independence in Maryland. In 1772 he engaged in a debate conducted through anonymous newspaper letters and maintained the right of the colonies to control their own taxation. As a Roman Catholic, he was barred from entering politics, practicing law, and voting.

It is reputed that the First Amendment to the Constitution was written in appreciation for his financial support during the Revolutionary War by his peers discerning his contributions in such stark contrast to the denial of civic rights due to his Catholicism. However, writing in the Maryland Gazette under the pseudonym "First Citizen," he became a prominent spokesman against the governor's proclamation increasing legal fees to state officers and Protestant clergy. Carroll served on various committees of correspondence.[1]

From 1774 to 1776, Carroll was a member of the Annapolis Convention. He was commissioned with Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Chase and his cousin John Carroll in February 1774 to seek aid from Canada.[1] He was a member of Annapolis' first Committee of Safety in 1775. In early 1776, while not yet a member, the Congress sent him on a mission to Canada. When Maryland decided to support the open revolution, he was elected to the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, and remained a delegate until 1778. He arrived too late to vote in favor of it, but was able to sign the Declaration of Independence. He was the last living signatory of the Declaration of Independence.

His signature reads "Charles Carroll of Carrollton", which is why he has gone down in history this way. At the time he was one of the richest men in America. As he signed, an observer stated "There go a few millions." Throughout his term in Congress, he served on the board of war.

Member of the U.S. Senate

Carroll returned to Maryland in 1778 to assist in the drafting of a constitution and forming a state government. Carroll was re-elected to the Continental Congress in 1780, but he declined. He was elected to the state senate in 1781 and served there continuously until 1800.

When the United States government was created, the Maryland legislature elected him to the first United States Senate. In 1792 Maryland passed a law that prohibited any man from serving in the State and national legislatures at the same time. Since he preferred to be in the Maryland Senate, he resigned from the U. S. Senate on November 30, 1792.

Attitude to slavery

The Carroll family were slaveholders, and Charles Carroll was himself a substantial and wealthy planter. Although he supported the gradual abolition of slavery, he did not free his own slaves, perhaps fearing that they might be rendered destitute in the process.[2] Carroll introduced a bill for the gradual abolition of slavery in the Maryland senate but it did not pass. [3] In 1828 he served as president of the Auxiliary State Colonization Society of Maryland,[4] the Maryland branch of the American Colonization Society, an organization dedicated to returning black Americans to lead free lives in African states such as Liberia.

Death & Legacy

Cornerstone of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad laid by Carroll on July 4, 1828, now displayed at the B&O Railroad Museum

Carroll retired from public life in 1801. After Thomas Jefferson became president, he had great anxiety about political activity, and was not sympathetic to the War of 1812. After both Jefferson and John Adams died on July 4, 1826, he became the only surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence. He came out of retirement to help create the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in 1827. His last public act, on July 4, 1828, was the laying of the cornerstone of the railroad.[5] In May 1832, he was asked to appear at the first ever Democratic Convention but did not attend on account of poor health.[6]

He died on November 14, 1832, in Baltimore, and is buried in his Doughoregan Manor Chapel at Ellicott City, Maryland. His death left Egbert Benson, John Marshall and James Madison as the only surviving Founding Fathers of the United States.

Carroll funded the building of what is known today as Homewood House, a 140 acre (570,000 m²) estate in northern Baltimore, Maryland as a wedding gift to his son, Charles Jr. and Harriet Chew. Charles Jr. then oversaw the design and construction of the house, which began construction in 1801 and had mostly finished by 1808. Research shows that he incorporated suggestions from his wife. It took five years to build and cost $40,000, four times the budgeted expense. The house never fulfilled the family's expectations, as it did nothing to cure Charles Jr.'s idleness and alcoholism, factors which led to the failure of the marriage by binding separation.

Homewood was donated to Johns Hopkins University in 1876 and later became its main campus. Today, Johns Hopkins operates Homewood House as a museum, and its Federal-style architecture serves as the inspiration for the Hopkins' architecture.

His home Brooklandwood in Baltimore County, Maryland was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.[7]

He is remembered in the third stanza of the state song 'Maryland, My Maryland'.

Thou wilt not cower in the dust,

(Maryland!)

Thy beaming sword shall never rust,

(Maryland!)

Remember Carroll's sacred trust,
Remember Howard's warlike thrust,-
And all thy slumberers with the just,
Maryland! My Maryland!

Monuments and memorials

The bronze statue located in the Hall of Columns in the United States Capitol

Named in his honor are counties in Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio, and Virginia, as well as East and West Carroll Parishes, Louisiana. Carroll County, Kentucky and its county seat, Carrollton, are both named for him. Also named for him are the Carroll Gardens neighborhood in Brooklyn and the Greater Carrollwood neighborhoods of Tampa; as well as the city of New Carrollton, home to Charles Carroll Middle School.

Carrollton Avenue in New Orleans, Louisiana was named in his honor. The surrounding neighborhood formerly made up the separate town of Carrollton, but was incorporated into the city of New Orleans 1833.

In 1903 the state of Maryland added a bronze statue to the United States Capitol's National Statuary Hall Collection. It is located in the Crypt.[1]

In 1906, the University of Notre Dame constructed what is now known as Carroll Hall, a residence hall named after Charles Carroll.

Family

Arms of Carroll of Maryland

Charles of Carrollton's grandfather, Charles Carroll the Settler, was an Irishman from Littemourna, who was a clerk in the office of Lord Powis.[8] Around the year 1659,[9] he emigrated from England to America, thus establishing one of the most influential families in American politics.[10]

Charles Carroll the Settler had just one son, born in 1702 and also named Charles. To distinguish himself from his father he was known as Charles Carroll of Annapolis[11].

Charles Carroll of Carrollton married Mary Darnall, known as Molly, on June 5, 1768. She was a grand-daughter of Henry Darnall. They had seven children before Molly died in 1782, but only three survived infancy:

  • Mary Carrollton, married Richard Caton. From 1820 to 1832, Carroll would winter with the Catons in Baltimore. One of Mary's daughters married the British statesman Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley, who was the brother of the legendary military commander Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. A sister-in-law of Mary was Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte.
  • Charles Carrollton Jr. (sometimes known as Charles Carroll of Homewood because he oversaw its design and construction) married Harriet Chew and lived in Philadelphia. Harriet was the daughter of Benjamin Chew, the chief justice of Pennsylvania, and her sister married John Eager Howard who had served in the Senate with Charles Carroll of Carrollton. Charles Jr. was an alcoholic who reportedly consumed up to two quarts of brandy a day. This led to erratic behavior that resulted in his separation from Harriet.
  • Kitty Carrollton.

Today, Carroll's descendants continue to own Doughoregan Manor the largest parcel of land in Howard County, Maryland, with over 1000 acres (4 km²) of valuable, but historically preserved land in Ellicott City, Maryland.

Irish noble ancestry

The Carroll family were descendents of the Ó Cearbhaill lords of Éile[12] (Lords of Ely) in County Tipperary. A descendant of Irish rebels, Carroll was born on September 19, 1737, in Annapolis, Maryland. The only child of Charles Carroll of Annapolis (1702-1782) and Elizabeth Brooke (1709-1761), he remained illegitimate until his parents married in 1757. Charles (Carroll, of Annapolis) grandfather, Charles Carroll the Settler (1660 - 1720), left his native Ireland (Kings County) because of English discrimination against his faith. Hoping to find a freer existence in the New World, Carroll arrived in St. Mary¹s City, capitol of the colony of Maryland, in 1689.[13] Charles the settler Carroll was the son of Daniel O'Carroll of Litterluna. The "O'" in Irish surnames was often dropped due to the Anglicisation policy of the occupying English, particularly during the period of the "Penal Laws".

Carroll's signature

In the 1940s, newspaper journalist John Hix's syndicated column "Strange As It Seems" published an interesting (though unverified) explanation for Charles Carroll's distinctive signature on the Declaration of Independence. Every member of the Continental Congress who signed this document automatically became a criminal, guilty of sedition against King George III. Carroll, because of his wealth, had more to lose than most of his companions. Some of the signators, such as Caesar Rodney and Button Gwinnett, had unusual and distinctive names which would clearly identify them to the King; other signators, with more commonplace names, might hope to sign the Declaration without incriminating themselves.

According to Hix, when it was Carroll's turn to sign the Declaration of Independence, he rose, went to John Hancock's desk where the document rested, signed his name "Charles Carroll" and returned to his seat. At this point another member of the Continental Congress, who was prejudiced against Carroll because of his Catholicism, commented that Carroll risked nothing in signing the document, as there must be many men named Charles Carroll in the colonies, and so the King would be unlikely to order Carroll's arrest without clear proof that he was the same Charles Carroll who had signed the Declaration. Carroll immediately returned to Hancock's desk, seized the pen again, and added "of Carrollton" to his name.

Some believe that Carroll was using the "of Carrollton" suffix signature at least as early as September 15, 1765, in a letter written to a friend in England.[14]

Carroll in fiction

Charles Carroll was portrayed by actor Terrence Currier in the 2004 film National Treasure starring Nicolas Cage. He is accurately described as the last living signatory of the Declaration of Independence. Carroll is also described as a Freemason in the film; the Catholic Church does not allow its members to be Freemasons, so he would have had to join the fraternity secretly, which is highly unlikely. Also, although the film does not explicitly state it, it is implied that Carroll died in Washington, D.C.[15] Before he dies, he tells Thomas Gates that: "The Secret lies with Charlotte." A scene which did not make the final cut of the film (but appears as a deleted scene on the DVD) shows then-President Jackson rushing out of the White House to find Carroll's body in a carriage. Carroll is mentioned in the movie Gone With The Wind; "Charles Carroll of Carrollton."

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c aoc.gov Cite error: The named reference "aoc" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Miller, Randall M., and Wakelyn, Jon L., p.214, Catholics in the Old South: Essays on Church and Culture Mercer University Press (1983). Retrieved Jan 21 2010.
  3. ^ Leonard, Lewis A. p.218, Life of Charles Carroll of Carrollton New York, Moffat, Yard and Company, (1918). Retrieved Jan 21 2010
  4. ^ Gurley, Ralph Randolph, Ed., p.251, The African Repository, Volume 3 Retrieved Jan 15 2010
  5. ^ J.E. Hagerty. "Catholic Encyclopedia: Charles Carroll of Carrollton". Retrieved April 24, 2006. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dateformat= ignored (help)
  6. ^ Dees Stribling. "First Democratic Pary Convention". Retrieved May 21, 2008. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dateformat= ignored (help)
  7. ^ "Maryland Historical Trust". National Register of Historic Places: Brooklandwood. Maryland Historical Trust. 2008-10-05.
  8. ^ Charles Carroll, Signer of Declaration of Independence
  9. ^ Colonial Hall: Biography of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Page 1
  10. ^ Maryland Traces Its Irish Roots
  11. ^ History of Independence Hall (1859)
  12. ^ Ireland's History in Maps - Tuadmumu, Kingdom of Thomond
  13. ^ The Charles Carroll House of Annapolis
  14. ^ Hoffman, Ronald, Sally D. Mason and Eleanor S. Darcy, Eds. Dear Papa, Dear Charley: Vol. I, p. 375. Chapel Hill, NC. The University of North Carolina Press, 2001.
  15. ^ Christopher Plummer (playing John Adams Gates) (2004). National Treasure. Event occurs at 00:01:54.

Further reading

Political offices
Preceded by President of the Maryland State Senate
1783
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Maryland State Senate
1783
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by
None
U.S. senator (Class 1) from Maryland
1789–1792
Served alongside: John Henry
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Oldest living U.S. Senator
June 1, 1832 – November 14, 1832
Succeeded by

he was a good person!