Who was
Charles Carroll of Carrollton?
Charles Carroll was born on September 19, 1737 in Annapolis. He was the grandson of Charles Carroll the Settler, who came to Maryland in 1688 and became the Attorney General of the Maryland colony.
The younger Carroll was educated in Jesuit schools in France, and studied law in London. He was not allowed, however, to practice law in Maryland when he returned because of his religion. He became very involved in public affairs, but did not run for public office until the Revolution, because he was a Roman Catholic.
At age 27, Carroll received from his father a 10,000-acre estate in southern Frederick County called “Carrollton Manor.” From then on, he took the name Charles Carroll of Carrollton to distinguish himself from the other Charles Carrolls residing in Maryland.
Carroll became a recognized spokesman of Maryland colonists who desired to proclaim their independence from the British crown. From March until June in 1776, Carroll accompanied his cousin, Reverend John Carroll, the first United States Roman Catholic Archbishop and founder of Georgetown University, along with Benjamin Franklin and Judge Samuel Chase, on a mission to Canada seeking assistance and for the colonies during the Revolutionary War.
In June of 1776, he was sent, along with Samuel Chase, William Paca and Thomas Stone, to represent the State of Maryland at the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, and was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.
In 1789, Charles Carroll was the first United States Senator from Maryland, along with John Henry. He was appointed to the Senate Judiciary Committee and in this capacity helped draft the “Bill of Rights.” He drafted a bill in 1789 for the gradual abolition of slavery in Maryland.
In 1821, he moved permanently to Baltimore from Annapolis, and on July 4, 1828, as the Director of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad he laid the “first stone” for the railroad. Charles Carroll of Carrollton died on November 14, 1832, at 96 years old, and the last survivor of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.
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