Daniel
Carroll was member of a prominent Maryland family of Irish descent. A collateral
branch was led by Charles Carroll of Carrollton, signer of the Declaration of
Independence. Daniel's older brother was John Carroll, the first Roman Catholic
bishop in the United States.
Daniel was born in 1730 at Upper Marlboro, MD. Befitting the son of a wealthy
Roman Catholic family, he studied for 6 years (1742-48) under the Jesuits at St.
Omer's in Flanders. Then, after a tour of Europe, he sailed home and soon
married Eleanor Carroll, apparently a first cousin of Charles Carroll of
Carrollton. Not much is known about the next two decades of his life except that
he backed the War for Independence reluctantly and remained out of the public
eye. No doubt he lived the life of a gentleman planter.
In 1781 Carroll entered the political arena. Elected to the Continental
Congress that year, he carried to Philadelphia the news that Maryland was at
last ready to accede to the Articles of Confederation, to which he soon penned
his name. During the decade, he also began a tour in the Maryland senate that
was to span his lifetime and helped George Washington promote the Patowmack
Company, a scheme to canalize the Potomac River so as to provide a
transportation link between the East and the trans-Appalachian West.
Carroll did not arrive at the Constitutional Convention until July 9, but
thereafter he attended quite regularly. He spoke about 20 times during the
debates and served on the Committee on Postponed Matters. Returning to Maryland
after the convention, he campaigned for ratification of the Constitution but was
not a delegate to the state convention.
In 1789 Carroll won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, where he
voted for locating the Nation's Capital on the banks of the Potomac and for
Hamilton's program for the federal assumption of state debts. In 1791 George
Washington named his friend Carroll as one of three commissioners to survey and
define the District of Columbia, where Carroll owned much land. Ill health
caused him to resign this post 4 years later, and the next year at the age of 65
he died at his home near Rock Creek in Forest Glen, MD. He was buried there in
St. John's Catholic Cemetery.
Image: Courtesy of The Maryland Historical Society