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Bolton Hill Historic District
The Bolton Hill Historic District is a residential neighbo...
Pascault Row
This handsome row of eight three-and-one-half story dwelli...
Rieman Block
In April of 1880, Joseph Rieman began accumulating land at...
Baltimore and Ohio Transportation Museum and Mount Clare Station
The National Historic Landmark Baltimore & Ohio Transp...
St. Luke's Church
St. Luke's Episcopal Church is a Gothic Revival building d...
Franklin Square Historic District
In 1839, James and Samuel Canby of Wilmington, Delaware, d...
H. L. Mencken House
A National Historic Landmark, this brick, Italianate row h...
Union Square - Hollins Market Historic District
Begun during the influx of English, Irish and German immig...
Mount Clare
Mount Clare is the oldest extant colonial building in Balt...
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine
Fort McHenry is forever associated with Francis Scott Key'...
Results for C
Bolton Hill Historic District
The Bolton Hill Historic District is a residential neighborhood with 20 blocks of relatively unaltered buildings dating from the second half of the 19th century. Although the area was originally open farmland, northward development from the city and the construction ...
Pascault Row
This handsome row of eight three-and-one-half story dwellings is Baltimore's last remaining example of early 19th-century townhouses. In 1819, wealthy merchant Louis Pascault built the rowhouses, now called Pascault Row. They represent an important phase in the evolution of the ...
Rieman Block
In April of 1880, Joseph Rieman began accumulating land at the southwestern edge of Lexington Market for an eight-unit, block-long,commercial and residential development. Established in 1782, Lexington Market is the City's oldest and most famous public market and, during the ...
Baltimore and Ohio Transportation Museum and Mount Clare Station
The National Historic Landmark Baltimore & Ohio Transportation Museum and Mount Clare Station is a collection of three interrelated buildings standing on the oldest railroad terminal site in the country. The fledgling Baltimore & Ohio Railroad established its headquarters at ...
St. Luke's Church
St. Luke's Episcopal Church is a Gothic Revival building designed according to the dictates of the Ecclesiological Society. The Society held that proper Christian worship could take place only in churches modeled after medieval English precedents. St. Luke's Parish consulted ...
Franklin Square Historic District
In 1839, James and Samuel Canby of Wilmington, Delaware, donated a two-and-one-half acre park to the city for $10,000. The city agreed to widen the surrounding streets and landscape this park, later named Franklin Square. It was common in the ...
H. L. Mencken House
A National Historic Landmark, this brick, Italianate row house was the residence of noted Baltimore Sun journalist and author Henry Louis Mencken from 1883 until his death in 1956. A curmudgeon with an acidic writing style, Mencken gained national recognition ...
Union Square - Hollins Market Historic District
Begun during the influx of English, Irish and German immigration of the 1830s, the Union Square-Hollins Market Historic District is a dense area of rowhouses that includes Federal, Greek Revival and Italianate architectural styles. To the west, Union Square Park ...
Mount Clare
Mount Clare is the oldest extant colonial building in Baltimore. It was built in 1760 by Charles Carroll, a barrister (lawyer), and distant relative of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Charles Carroll the barrister ...
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine
Fort McHenry is forever associated with Francis Scott Key's composition of "The Star Spangled Banner." Built as part of the East Coast defense system, Fort McHenry replaced Fort Whetstone. During the War of 1812, the British moved north to invade ...