"Death of Miss Carroll---A Daughter of Governor Thomas King Carroll---Southern Convocation of Easton. Special dispatch to the Baltimore Sun.
Cambridge, Md. Sept. 27---Miss Mary H. Carroll, who was a daughter of Thomas King Carroll, who was Governor of Maryland in 1829, died last evening at the home of her brother, Dr. Thomas King Carroll, near Church Creek. Miss Carroll had spent much of her life in Washington.
Miss Carroll was a highly cultivated woman, whose life was for many years given up to the devotion and care of her sister, Miss Anna Ella Carroll, whose remarkable work in aid of the Union cause during the Civil War has a permanent place in the records of the government. Miss Carroll was a sister of Mrs. Ida Carroll Bowdle, who resides at 1112 Thirteenth Street NW, Washington city. She possessed considerable literary talent, and had contributed to a number of periodicals. During her residence in Dorchester, she has done a good deal for the preservation of the Episcopal church at Church Creek, which is a relic of Colonial days."
"Death of Miss Carroll---A Daughter of Governor Thomas King Carroll---Southern Convocation of Easton. Special dispatch to the Baltimore Sun.
Cambridge, Md. Sept. 27---Miss Mary H. Carroll, who was a daughter of Thomas King Carroll, who was Governor of Maryland in 1829, died last evening at the home of her brother, Dr. Thomas King Carroll, near Church Creek. Miss Carroll had spent much of her life in Washington.
Miss Carroll was a highly cultivated woman, whose life was for many years given up to the devotion and care of her sister, Miss Anna Ella Carroll, whose remarkable work in aid of the Union cause during the Civil War has a permanent place in the records of the government. Miss Carroll was a sister of Mrs. Ida Carroll Bowdle, who resides at 1112 Thirteenth Street NW, Washington city. She possessed considerable literary talent, and had contributed to a number of periodicals. During her residence in Dorchester, she has done a good deal for the preservation of the Episcopal church at Church Creek, which is a relic of Colonial days."
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