Description:

Carroll Charles

Charles Carroll, Declaration Signer, autographed signed letter in gorgeous display

 

A beautiful display with an ALS, 6.25" x 7.5",  by Charles Carroll of Carrollton. Letter dated "Baltimore 4th Febry, 1823", and signed by Carroll as "Ch. Carroll of Carrollton." Matted alongside a lovely portrait engraving. The mat is ruled in a gilt foil which fully sets off the set. Display size of 13.75" x 8.75"

 

Carroll's letter written only months before his death at the age of 96, discusses charges and credits with the intent that once everything was in order that:

 
" … you will according to promise transmit to me the accounts of all received at the mill, as also the number of bushels delivered by M. Dean.

I am with regards

Sir yourrmost hum Servt

Ch. Carroll of Carrollton"

 

Carroll led an extraordinary life. His revolutionary voice was formally recognized in 1774 when he was asked by Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Chase to seek aid from Canada. While his efforts in Canada were unsuccessful, his notoriety in Maryland proved useful. In 1775, Carroll became a delegate to the Revolutionary Convention in Maryland and he was instrumental in convincing Marylanders to vote on behalf of independence. Due largely to the combination of his French language fluency and Catholic ties, Carroll was sent to Canada again in 1776, right before he was named delegate to the Continental Congress, on July 4, 1776. When given the opportunity to sign the Declaration of Independence, on August 2, 1776, Charles Carroll reportedly replied that he would sign “most willingly.” An amusing historical legend claims that when Carroll initially signed only as “Charles Carroll,” John Hancock challenged his dedication to the cause. Hancock audaciously suggested that “Charles Carroll” was a common enough name that Carroll could escape persecution by claiming a case of mistake identity. Without argument, Carroll made the designation “of Carrollton,” at which point another member was said to have whispered, “there goes another million”, in reference to the vast sum that Carroll stood to lose by signing.

 

Charles Carroll remained on the Continental Congress from 1776 until 1778 and he was a member of the Board of War from 1776-1777. He declined re-election to the Continental Congress, but served in the US Senate from 1789 to 1792. In this position, Carroll participated in the joint Senate-House committee that approved and finalized the wording for the Bill of Rights to the US Constitution. When new laws were enacted to prevent members from serving at both the national and state levels, Charles Carroll followed his loyalty to Maryland. He gave up his national position in favor of the Maryland State Senate. Carroll’s tenure as a Maryland Senator lasted from 1777-1800. Carroll acted as Senate president and was instrumental in the ratification of a State constitution, which ensured religious freedoms.

 

He briefly came out of retirement in 1828 to lay the cornerstone for the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. Charles Carroll died in 1832, at the age of 96. He was the final signer to pass away. Today, Charles Carroll of Carrollton is best known for being the only Catholic signer and the last living signer. 


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