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Doughoregan Slave Quarters Carriage House circa 1940. Doughoregan Manor is a colonial manor house built in the early 18th century. [3] The slave plantation was founded on 7,000 acres patented to Charles Carroll I as "Doughoreagan" (sometimes spelled Doororegan) named for a family estate in Ireland, in 1702, and expanded to 10,000 acres as "Doughoreagan Manor" in 1717.
HO-22, Doughoregan Manor (Charles Carroll III of Carrollton House), 3500 Old Manor Lane, Ellicott City; HO-23, Burleigh Manor and Gate House (Burleigh Cottage), 3950 White Rose Way, Ellicott City; HO-24, Font Hill, 3838 Parrot Drive, Ellicott City; HO-25, Brick House on the Pike (Brick House Farm, Ellerslie), 9564 National Pike (US 40 ...
The William Johnson House is a historic house supporting Doughoregan Manor in Ellicott City, Maryland.. The Johnson house is a historic located on land that was patented to Charles Carroll the Settler in 1702.
At his death in 1832, he was the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence and was laid to rest with other Carrolls in the crypt at the family chapel at Doughoregan. In 1784, Charles bought Marys Lott, a 75-acre (30 ha) farm from Jacob Burgoon, a Catholic immigrant from Alsace-Lorraine , France, who came to America in about 1745 ...
Doughoregan Manor. November 11, 1971 : Ellicott City Howard: Built in 1766; until 1832 home of Charles ...
Homewood is a stone house located off of Homewood road in Ellicott City in Howard County, Maryland.. Homewood was built on the Carroll family's Doughoregan Manor for Robert Goodloe Harper Carroll (1839-1915), who served in Company K of the Confederate 1st Virginia Cavalry.
The history of the property on which the Shrine of St. Anthony sits can be tied back to the Carroll family. In 1700 Charles Carroll of Annapolis was granted 10,000 acres (40 km 2; 16 sq mi) of property in what is now Howard County, MD. In 1717 he began construction of Doughoregan Manor.
His paternal grandfather was Charles Carroll of Doughoregan Manor was himself the grandson of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the last surviving signor of the Declaration of Independence. They were descended from the prominent Carroll family. [5] He was educated at Georgetown College, which his family helped to found. [6]