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This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map. [1]
Davidsonville Historic District is a national historic district at Davidsonville, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. It is located around a rural crossroads at the intersection of Central Avenue and Davidsonville Road . The district consists of fifteen properties: three churches, one commercial building, and eleven houses.
It is the only surviving schoolhouse erected in Maryland in response to the Maryland Free School Act of 1723. [2] It may have served a prominent role in history as Johns Hopkins likely attended the school from 1806 to 1809. Later, when Hopkins's abolitionist parents freed their slaves, he was forced to quit school and work in their tobacco fields.
One is the Anne Arundel Free School. On October 26, 1723 the Maryland Colonial Assembly, under the Lord Proprietor Charles Calvert, the Fifth Lord Baltimore, and his governor, passed "An Act for the Encouragement of Learning and Erecting Schools in the Several Counties," or the Free School Act. [3]
This is a list of school districts in Maryland. Each of the following parallel the boundary of one of the counties of Maryland, [1] and all of them are dependent on county and independent city governments. Maryland does not have independent school district governments. [2]
CDP Population (2020) [1] County Aberdeen Proving Ground: 1,668 Harford: Abingdon: 4,826 Harford: Accokeek: 13,927 Prince George's: Adamstown: 2,331 Frederick: Adelphi
The government of Maryland is conducted according to the Maryland Constitution. The United States is a federation ; consequently, the government of Maryland , like the other 49 state governments , has exclusive authority over matters that lie entirely within the state's borders, except as limited by the Constitution of the United States .
Portable classrooms are colloquially known as bungalows, slum classes, t-shacks, trailers, terrapins, huts, t-buildings, portables, mobiles, or relocatables. In the UK, those built in 1945–1950 were known as HORSA huts after the name of the Government's post-war building programme, "Hutting Operation for the Raising of the School-leaving Age".