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  1. 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 founder of Georgetown University.

    • 1796
    • Daniel Carroll
  2. Carroll. Birth. 1704. Upper Marlboro, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA. Death. 3 Feb 1796 (aged 91–92) Forest Glen, Montgomery County, Maryland, USA. Burial. Saint John the Evangelist Catholic Church Cemetery.

  3. When Elinor Carroll was born in 1640, in County of the Cross of Tipperary, Ireland, her father, Charles O'Carroll, was 28 and her mother, Mary Clare O'Connor, was 27. She married John MacCubbin about 1670, in Anne Arundel, Maryland, British Colonial America.

    • Female
    • John Maccubbin, John Howard
  4. Eleanor Brooke Carroll formerly Darnall. Born 1703 in Woodyard Plantation, Prince Georges, Maryland. Ancestors. Daughter of Henry Darnall II and Anna (Digges) Darnall. Sister of Ann (Darnall) Bradford, Henry Darnall III and Richard Darnall [half] Wife of Daniel Carroll I — married 18 Jun 1727 in Prince George County, Maryland. Descendants.

    • Female
    • February 3, 1796
    • Daniel Carroll I
  5. Eleanor Darnall Carroll, ca. 1703-1796. Eleanor Darnall was born about 1703, probably at the Woodyard, the Darnall home in Prince George’s County, Maryland. Her parents were Anne Digges and Henry Darnall II, both from prominent, landholding families. Her father held several governmental offices.

  6. Eleanor was born at "The Woodyard," in Prince George's County to Anne Digges Darnall (1685-ca. 1750) and Henry Darnall II (1682-1759). She was one of very few women in colonial America to attend school and was sent to Europe to complete her education. Around 1727, she married Daniel Carroll (1696-1751), a wealthy merchant, and Irish immigrant ...

  7. Eleanor Darnall Carroll, the mother of John Carroll, our founder, was one of the few women in colonial America to be given a formal education. For the Maryland Catholics, this meant convent schools in Flanders. Her influence clearly was vital throughout son John's entire life.