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The Hendler Creamery consists of two adjacent building complexes. The original 59,340-square-foot (5,513 m 2) three-story brick Richardsonian Romanesque building was constructed as a cable car powerhouse in 1892, replacing five old houses on the site in the Old Town / Jonestown neighborhood east of the downtown neighborhood and the dividing Jones Falls stream in East Baltimore. [3]
Location of Baltimore County in Maryland. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Baltimore County, Maryland. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
The right to produce High's brand of ice cream was sold in 1989 to Kay's Ice Cream, based in Knoxville, Tennessee (which was subsequently acquired by C. F. Sauer Company in 1990). Until 2010 there was a High's Ice Cream parlor remaining in Portsmouth, Virginia, but it sold Hershey's brand ice cream. At the time of its closing, it still had the ...
1983: Maryland Cup bought by Fort Howard Paper Company, a Wisconsin-based paper manufacturer. At the time, Maryland Cup has 33 plants, more than 10,000 employees and a net worth of $250 million. 1983–1985: Fort Howard boosts capital spending in cup business, while cutting costs through layoffs.
The popular frozen treat, which features pound cake chunks and swirls of red icing and green sprinkles in a vanilla base, returned to Walmart shelves in November 2022—but there's a catch: Like ...
Howard Street is a major north–south street through the central part of the city of Baltimore, Maryland. About 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (4 km) long, the street begins at the north end of I-395 near Oriole Park at Camden Yards and ends near Johns Hopkins University , where it splits.
A pint (16 ounces) of generic ice cream you can find at the grocery store hovers around $5, while a pint of artisanal ice cream — think Jeni’s, Van Leeuwen, or McConnell’s — costs anywhere ...
Sealtest had milk and ice cream plants across the midwestern and northeastern part of the United States, with large operations in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, La Crosse, Wisconsin, Huntington, Indiana, Rockford, Illinois, Philadelphia, Baltimore and New York City. Its Mid-South operations were based in Nashville. [citation needed]