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Avenue F near W. Scott St. Greenwood, Mississippi: Location of "black Elks" lodge. Listed on the Mississippi Blues Trail. [6] 30: Elks Building (Jackson, Mississippi) 119 President Street, South Jackson, Mississippi: Designated a Mississippi Landmark in 1992 [5] 31: Elks Club Lodge No. 501: 1904 built 1985 NRHP-listed 318—320 W. 4th St.
A Maryland state historical marker outside the historic 1855-1856 façade of the Baltimore County Courthouse on Washington Avenue, in Towson, Maryland. Originally constructed in 1854–55, at a cost then of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000), the building is one of the few H-plan buildings, public or private, remaining in the State.
In 1971, as Earle T. Hawkins, former president of Towson State University, researched the school's history, he became especially interested in the meaning of the name of the house, "Glen Esk", now the counseling center. Hawkins published an article in The Baltimore Sun, in which he suggested he was trying to solve this mystery.
One of Baltimore County's main cross-county roads on the north side of the county. Divided in central Towson into West and East Joppa Road. To the west of central Towson, Joppa Road is primarily a two-lane residential road. In Towson, a segment is one-way westbound. To the east of the Towson Circle, it is a four+ lane commercial corridor.
[5] [9] The property in West Towson came from two land grants: 400-acre Gott's Hope in 1719, and Gunner's Range in 1706. [10] In 1790, businessman Capt. Charles Ridgely completed the Hampton Mansion just north of Towsontown, the largest private house in America at the time. The Ridgelys lived there for six generations, until 1948. [11]
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The same year the White Marsh Branch opened in "15,000 square-foot" facility, which is within the current White Marsh Town Center. [32] In the 1990s, there were further changes. The Towson Branch was expanded in 1990, becoming a "landmark building in the heart of Towson." [29] The same year all branches of the BCPL were closed for Staff Day. [33]