MSA SC 6301-1-1
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "Miscellaneous - Carroll Documents/ Lists Re: Slaves." Contains family tree of people enslaved by Charles Carroll of Carrollton, including Old Grace (? -04/01/1773); copies of records relating to Cecelia Addison; a typescript biography of Moll (1750 - ?); and handwritten copies from cemetery records with the family names: Hill, Joyce, Dorsey, Addison, Burgers, Cross, and Hart.
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MSA SC 6301-1-2
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research notes: "Indentured Servants." Includes resarch notes and citations from sources consulted by Joan Scurlock about about indentured, convict, and hired servants in Maryland. Topics include: laws; runaways; legal status, especially differences in status between enslaved and indentured persons and the status of those enslaved compared with free African Americans during the Revolutionary War era.
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MSA SC 6301-1-3
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2000
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research notes: "Hoffman Book" Joan Scurlock's typescript notes on Ronald Hoffman's book "Princes of Ireland, Planters of Maryland: A Carroll Saga, 1500-1782" (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000). Scurlock's document heading states: "The following excerpts from Ronald Hoffman's book provide relevant information on the lives of slaves & indentured servants within the Charles Carroll Households, primary at Annapolis and Doughoregan. These facts should be useful in developing Historic Interpretations at the Charles Carroll House. There are also a few facts pertaining to the whereabouts and lives of the Carrolls that may be insightful for this purpose. All material is presented chronologically from Hoffman's book."
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MSA SC 6301-1-4
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1998
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research notes: "Ann Joice" - Genealogical chart for the descendants of Ann Joice, an enslaved woman in the household of Charles Carroll of Carrollton. Associated family names include: Mahoney. Also contains two photocopies of essay "From Recompense to Revolution: Mahoney v. Ashton and the Transfiguration of Maryland Culture, 1791-1802" by Eric Robert Papenfuse, pages 38-62 IN Slavery and Abolition, vol. 15, no. 3 (December 1994). Text of interpretive brochure for Darnell's Chance property near Upper Marlboro, Prince George's County. A list of African American names starting with the letter "M" appearing in the Baltimore Directory, 1865-66 for comparison to Scurlock's Mahoney research. Notes from Ms. Scurlock's research in Anne Arundel Co. court records at the Maryland State Archives. Photocopy, with Ms. Scurlock's annotations, of an article, "The Price of Freedom: Slavery and Manumission in Baltimore and Early National Maryland" by T. Stephen Whitman. Typescript transcription and photocopies of correspondence between Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Doughoregan, to Robert Harper, Baltimore, including: 11 July 1802 concerning the trial of Rev. Ashton Mahoney and petition for Joyce's freedom; 14 July 1802, Carroll's views on the case put forward by enslaved "descendants of Joyce" at the trial of Charles Mahoney. Handwritten Joyce family genealogy notes and testimonies (?) in suits for freedom. Handwritten notes on court records and Anne Arundel County wills pertaining to Joyce/Joice family descendants and suits for freedom.
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MSA SC 6301-1-5
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder labeled "Census Data" that actually contains research on Doughoregan, Charles Carroll of Carrollton's residence in Howard County; Photocopies from Enoch Pratt Library's verticle file on Doughoregan, includes: articles on the house's history and people enslaved by the Carroll and his family there, as well as the National Historic Landmark registry of and Maryland Historical Trust's 30-year easement on the structure. News articles: obituaries for Philip Acosta Carroll (died 1957), and former owner of Doughoregan. Includes photocopy of an article by William Voss Elder III entitled "The Carroll House in Annapolis and Doughoregan Manor" from a book (?) entitled "Anywhere So Long As There Be Freedom." (SEE also MSA SC 6301-1-13)
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MSA SC 6301-1-6
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1997
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder labeled: "Carroll Slave Artifacts." Nine photocopies of a short article "African Survival" from Historic Preservation magazine, volume 44, number 2 (March/April 1992), p. 11 and a typed annontation from 1997 regarding the archeaological discovered of artifacts in the Charles Carroll House of Annapolis. It refers to a cache of objects collected by people with West African heritage (specifically Sierra Leone). The object were recognized by historical archaeologists as evidence that African religious practices were maintained by enslaved people in the Carroll household until at least 1820. The 1997 note apended to the article describes the Carroll House's plan to exhibit and interpret these artifacts.
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MSA SC 6301-1-7
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1998-2000
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "Descendants of Carrolls & Slaves" containing: Ms. Scurlock's research notes on descendants; a typescript by David Anthony Durham (p. 7 of an unknown article or book) with a one-page narrative (possibly a fictional work) of an enslaved person named Caesar experiencing the trauma of being auctioned; Louis S. Diggs' list of African American names starting with the letter "C" appearing in Woods' Baltimore Directory, 1881; a copy of "A Tribute to Our Senator Clarence M. Mitchell, III" which includes his family relationship through his maternal grandmother, Dr. Lillie May Carroll Jackson, of desending from a great grandfather, Charles Henry Carroll, who was born on Charles Carroll's plantation at Doughoregan Manor; Holland family research and other correspondence that documents Ms. Scurlock's research tracing various descendants.
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MSA SC 6301-1-8
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Folder: "Charles Carroll Slave Lectures." Lectures written by Joan Scurlock. "Slaves in the Charles Carroll Family" (two versions, one with annotations includes copies of research documents intended as handouts include "Manumission Document for Nancy Mahoney & Children," "Moll (1750-?)," "Jack,The Gardener (1759-?)," and "Henny (1749-?)." An untitled introduction to a dramatic presentation scripted by Scurlock about enslaved household worker and nurse, "Henny," portrayed by Annapolis actor Scotti Preston. Two versions of "Charles Carroll Slave Presentation." SEE ALSO MSA SC 6301-1-10.
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MSA SC 6301-1-9
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1773-1782
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder labeled "1774 Carroll Slaves Inventory & Others." Includes photocopies of inventories listing enslaved people at Charles Carroll of Carrollton's Annapolis and Doughoregan properties from 1773-1782.
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MSA SC 6301-1-10
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1990-1998
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Folder: "Carroll House Slave Interpretations." Joan Scurlock's introductions and handouts given to audiences at dramatic presentations about the lives of several enslaved workers at the Charles Carroll House in Annapolis. Her work is based upon based upon her historical research documented in this collection. Several versions of the handouts are included: "Jack, The Gardener (1759-?)," "Henny (1749-?)," "Moll (1750-?)," along with a photocopy from the 1998 11th Annual Kunta Kinte Festival article featuring a Carroll House living history re-enactment presented by Scotti Preston and Kim Jones. SEE ALSO: MSA SC6301-1-8.
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MSA SC 6301-1-11
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1990-2000
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "Carroll Brochures & History." Charles Carroll House brochures for a Gala Exhibition "Where Ever There Be Freedom: Three Generations of Carrolls, 1706-1832 (1998); public programs and interpretive guides (1997-1999); articles about the museum (1997-1999); exhibition plans; a historical research report by a Carroll House intern; and information about the museum Vision 2006 master plan.
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MSA SC 6301-1-12
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1982
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "1833 Carroll Slaves Inventory." Photocopies of an article by Carolyn Behrendt, "Charles Carroll of Carrollton Inventory of Property Slave List." Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin 23:4 (Fall 1982).
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MSA SC 6301-1-13
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1990-2000
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "1795/1796 Carroll Doughoregan List." Database, inventory of enslaved workers from Charles Carroll of Carrollton's Doughoregan household and notes about their family relationships from the 1795/1796 inventory, their assigned location, and articles of clothing distributed to them. (two copies)
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MSA SC 6301-1-14
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "Carroll Correspondence Comments Re: Slaves." Ms. Scurlock's research on Charles Carroll of Carrollton's correspondence focused on the letters that mention enslaved workers. Includes Scurlock's transcriptions and published transcriptions of documents and handwritten notes. Letters found in Maryland Center for History & Cultures library manuscript collections, Charles Carroll papers, 1731-1833, MS 206 and Robert Goodloe Harper family papers, 1747-1910, MS 431.
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MSA SC 6301-1-15
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Paper
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02/46/09/23
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Description
Research folder: "Carroll Slave Genealogy." Research notes and genealogical charts for enslaved workers on Charles Carroll of Carrollton's properties. Family charts include: Nann, Lucy, Nan Cooke, Old Grace, Charles (Joice?), Rachel, Sue, Kate, Jack (Carpenter), Clogger Jack, Sukey, Old Fanny, Sibey, Peter, Long Caesar, Yellow Dick, Nelly, Iron Works Lucy, Old Moll, Hannah, Banks Nanny, James, Unk, Old Nell, Long Grace, Sharper, Old Robin, Old Carpenter James, and Battle Creek Nanny. Several versions of some family chart exist with Joan Scurlock's annotations. Ms. Scurlock's plans for a Charles Carroll Slave Descendant Reunion and articles on "African American/Indentured Servant Genealogy" are also included.
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