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  1. charlescarrollhouse.org › wp-content › uploadsCharles Carroll House

    Charles Carroll of Carrollton (19 Sep 1737 - 14 Nov 1832) & Mary Darnall Il (19 Mar 1749 - 10 Jun 1782) Elizabeth Carroll (3 Apr 1769 7 Aug 1769) Mary Carroll (2 sep 1770 1846) & Richard Caton (1763 - 19 May 1845) Elizabeth Caton (1787 - 29 Oct 1862) & Sir George William Jerningham, Baron Stafford (27 Apr 1771 Marianne Caton (1788 17 Dec 1853)

  2. charlescarrollhouse.org › house-garden| Charles Carroll House

    He was re-interred in the Carroll House garden and is the only family member with a grave on the site. CCC died in Batimore in 1832, and left the property to his daughter, Mary. When she died in 1846, the property passed on to the 4 Caton sisters. For 20 years, the property was leased to a variety of tenants.

  3. Mary Ann Caton (1788–1853), the daughter of Richard and Mary Carroll Caton, married merchant Robert Patterson (1781-1822), who was the brother of Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte. Her sister Emily Caton (1793-1867) married John McTavish (1788–1852), who served as British Consul to Baltimore.

  4. After major restoration efforts, the doors of the Carroll Mansion opened to the public once again in 1967 as a museum and a collection of antiques to mirror the 1820s and 1830s when the Caton and Carroll families occupied the mansion was started. In 1985 the mansion became part of the Baltimore City Life Museums and the collection was expanded ...

  5. Louisa Caton Hervey Osbourne, Duchess of Leeds (1793-1874) was the third daughter of Richard Caton (a Briton living in America) and Mary Carroll, a member of the wealthy and prominent Irish-American Carroll family of Maryland, and daughter of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, signer of the Declaration of Independence.

  6. Caton was married to Mary "Polly" Carroll (1770–1846) at Annapolis on November 25, 1787. Polly was the daughter of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence. After the wedding, Carroll gave Polly and Richard a home, known as Castle Thunder, which stood from 1787 to 1907.