![]() ![]() His Baltimore home, "Mount Clare," is still one of the show places in the City. This and succeeding issues of the Magazine contain many of his letters, although none about the 1776 Constitution. ![]() Stull Holt, "Charles Carroll, Barrister: The Man," in 32 Md. ![]() Thomas Scharf, History of Maryland (1879), II, 76. ![]() Of Sir Robert Eden he said: "With all his follies and foibles, which were indeed abundant, he had such a warmth and affectionateness of heart that it was impossible not to love him" (p. 65), called the Homony Club "the best club in all respects I have ever heard of, as the sole object of it was to promote innocent mirth and ingenious humor" (p. Anne's, who thought Annapolis "the genteelist town in North America" (p. In his Reminiscences of an American Loyalist (Boston, 1925), the Rev. The Homony Club included leading lights of both the Proprietary and Country Parties, providing a common meeting ground in which friendly discussion and humor could soften the acerbities of political differences. Steiner, Life and Administration of Sir Robert Eden (Balto., 1898 JHU Studies, XVI, Nos. Land, The Dulanys of Maryland (Balto., 1955, 1968). quoted in The Spirit of Seventy-Six, Edited by Henry Steele Commager and Richard B. Writing It All Down - Maryland Constitution Writing It All Down: The Art of Constitution Making for the State and the Nation, 1776-1833 ![]()
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