Voice for independence Carroll was not initially interested in politics, But as the dispute between
Great Britain and her
American colonies intensified in the early 1770s, Carroll became a powerful voice for independence. In 1772, he engaged in a debate, conducted through anonymous newspaper letters, maintaining the right of the colonies to control their own taxation. Writing in the
Maryland Gazette under the pseudonym "First Citizen," he also criticized the royal governor's proclamation that increased special fees paid by colonists to state officials and Protestant clergy. Opposing Carroll in these written debates, using the name "Antillon", was
Daniel Dulany the Younger, a noted lawyer and
Loyalist politician. In these debates, Carroll argued that the government of Maryland had long been the monopoly of four families, the Ogles, the Taskers, the Bladens and the Dulanys, with Dulany taking the contrary view. Dulany soon resorted to highly personal ad hominem attacks on "First Citizen", and Carroll responded, in statesmanlike fashion, with considerable restraint, arguing that when "Antillon" engaged in "virulent invective and illiberal abuse, we may fairly presume, that arguments are either wanting, or that ignorance or incapacity know not how to apply them". In the early 1770s, Carroll appears to have embraced the idea that only war could break the impasse with Great Britain. According to legend, Carroll and
Samuel Chase (who would also later sign the Declaration of Independence on Maryland's behalf) had the following exchange: :Chase: "We have the better of our opponents; we have completely written them down." :Carroll: "And do you think that writing will settle the question between us?" :Chase: "To be sure, what else can we resort to?" :Carroll: "The bayonet. Our arguments will only raise the feelings of the people to that pitch when open war will be looked to as the arbiter of the dispute."
Continental Congress Beginning with his election to Maryland's
committee of correspondence in 1774, Carroll represented the colony in most of the pre-revolutionary groups. He became a member of Annapolis' first
committee of safety, known as the "Annapolis Committee of Correspondence and Council Safety" in 1775. The commission did not accomplish its mission. Carroll was elected as a Maryland representative the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, and remained a delegate until 1778. He arrived at the 2nd Continental Congress too late to vote in favor of the
Declaration of Independence but was present to sign the official document that survives today. He signed the document in Philadelphia on August 2, 1776. After both
Thomas Jefferson and
John Adams died on July 4, 1826, Carroll became the last living signatory of the Declaration of Independence. His signature reads "Charles Carroll of Carrollton" to distinguish him from his father, "
Charles Carroll of Annapolis," who was still living at that time, and several other
Charles Carrolls in Maryland, such as Charles Carroll, Barrister, and his son Charles Carroll Jr., also known as "Charles Carroll of Homewood." He is usually referred to this way by historians. At the time, he was the richest man in America and had much to lose by identifying himself on the document. Throughout his term in the
Second Continental Congress, he served on the board of war. Carroll also gave considerable financial support to the
American Revolutionary War. ==Post-revolution political career==