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  1. Explore historical records and family tree profiles about Eleanor Darnall on MyHeritage, the world's family history network. Trusted by millions of genealogists since 2003 Trusted information source for millions of people worldwide

  2. Mary Darnall was the daughter of Colonel Henry Darnall (1645-1711) and his wife, Eleanor Hatton, the widow of Thomas Brooke. She was married on February 14, 1693 to Charles Carroll, as his second wife, and had issue.

  3. Daniel Carroll I was born in Ireland. Daniel was born in 1696 in Ireland, the son of Keane Carroll [1] . In 1717, when he was 21 years old, Daniel emigrated to Maryland after the trustees of forfeited estates had refused to reinstate his father's land at Aghagurty. Daniel married Eleanor Darnall, in 1727. She was a distant cousin by marriage ...

  4. Mary Darnall was born in 1678. She was the daughter of [Darnall-82|Henry Darnall] and [Hatton-211|Elinor Hatton]. She was 15 years old when she married Charles Carroll The Settler, also known as Charles Carroll the Immigrant, on 14 February 1693. He was a 32 year old widower with 4 orphaned step children, 2 of whom were still minors and he was ...

  5. When Col. Darnall died in 1711, he owned 27,000 acres (11,000 ha) in Prince George's County, as well as holdings in four other counties. The property of what became known as Darnall's Chance passed through his family to his granddaughter Eleanor Darnall, who married Daniel Carroll I in 1727.

  6. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Carroll was born in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, county seat of Prince George's County, Maryland on July 22, 1730. He was a scion of the wealthy Carroll family. His parents' home was Darnall's Chance, a plantation of 27,000 acres which his mother, Eleanor Darnall Carroll, had inherited from her grandfather.

  7. Eleanor Darnall Carroll (1703-1796), was a wealthy heiress in colonial Maryland. She was the wife of Daniel Carroll, a politician and wealthy planter. Their son Daniel Carroll became one of the Founding Fathers of the United States; their son John Carroll became the Archbishop of Baltimore and found