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Epping Forest, Maryland is a private community located near Annapolis, Maryland, established by Dr. Arthur Drevar in 1874. [1] [2] [3] References
Annapolis: Brick building built 1821-1822 by the City of Annapolis; now commercial space. 69: Old Colony Cove Site: November 21, 1978 : Address Restricted: Rose Haven: Shell midden and is 2,000 feet (610 m) long by 300 feet (91 m) wide. 70: OLIVER'S GIFT: September 18, 1985 : 3473 Ranger Rd.
Annapolis, Maryland: 1764 Residence Mitchell House: Fair Hill, Maryland: 1764 Residence Long Island Farm: Parkville, Maryland: 1764 Farm Galloway Mansion: Queenstown, Maryland: 1764 Residence Moved from its original location at Easton, Maryland in 2019. John Ridout House: Annapolis, Maryland: 1764–1765 Residence Cross Manor: St. Inigoes ...
Norton Mandeville Manor Norton Heath, High Ongar, Epping Forest: House: 1613: 29 June 1984 ... Epping Forest: Gunpowder Works: 1787-1800: 26 November 1993
[2] [3] The neighborhood was first settled in 1655, and became known as Eastport in 1888, before being annexed to Annapolis in 1951. In 1998, Eastport residents declared independence as a mock secession in response to the Maryland State Highway Administration 's temporary shutdown of the drawbridge connecting Eastport to the rest of Annapolis.
Bell Common is a hamlet [1] in the Epping Forest District of Essex, England.It lies south of the town of Epping and north of the Ambresbury Banks archaeological site.. Its former name, Beacon Common, is attributed to a story about an ancient beacon erected at Bell Common by locals to alert them in the event of invasion.
The Epping Forest (also known as the Alfred I. duPont Estate) was a historic, 58-acre (230,000 m 2) estate in Jacksonville, Florida, United States where a luxurious riverfront mansion was built in the mid-1920s by industrialist Alfred I. du Pont and his third wife, Jessie Ball du Pont.
In 1880 the Earl sold 184 acres (0.74 km 2) of the former house's grounds to the Corporation of London for preservation as a part of Epping Forest, and the resultant new municipal park of Wanstead was officially opened by the City of London Corporation in 1882. The Earl's family sold further land to Wanstead Sports Grounds Limited in 1920.