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Gambrills: The only surviving schoolhouse erected in Maryland in response to the Maryland Free School Act of 1723; constructed between 1724 and 1746. 6: Artisan's House: Artisan's House: November 29, 1972 : 43 Pinckney St. Annapolis
In 2015, Grotto Pizza opened a restaurant in Gambrills, Maryland (now closed). This marked the beginning of a plan to expand into the Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area, where a lot of the summertime customers at the locations at the Delaware and Maryland beaches come from. [6] A location in Columbia, Maryland opened in 2016. [7]
Location of Frederick County in Maryland. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Frederick County, Maryland. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Frederick County, Maryland, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
HO-546, Denton Driver Farm (Mathias Farm), 3770 Woodbine Road (MD 94), Woodbine; HO-547, Warfield Farmhouse (Vierling-Hutchinson House), 3248 Jones Road, Woodbine; HO-548, Humphries Tenant House (Ostola Residence) 6155 Rockburn Hill Road, Elkridge; HO-549, George H. Otten Farmhouse (University of Maryland Animal Husbandry Farm), 5885 Waterloo ...
The original village of Gambrills was located on Annapolis Road, 2 miles (3 km) southeast of the center of Odenton. Today, it is an unincorporated, census-designated place. [ citation needed ] It is the location of Whites Hall Farm , the birthplace and boyhood home of Maryland native Johns Hopkins .
Linthicum Walks is a historic home and farm complex at Crofton, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA.It consists of a 19th-century frame dwelling (part of which may be 18th century), a mid-19th century meathouse, a frame pre-1815 tobacco barn and a family cemetery dating to the mid 19th century.
Located at the end of Forest Beach Road on Mill Creek is Cantler's Riverside Inn, the most popular restaurant in Maryland. [3] Providence, between Mill Creek and the U.S. Naval Academy Golf Course, was first settled in 1649 by the Puritans. The lands were later abandoned for the settlement of Annapolis due to its sheltered anchorage and deep water.
Whites Hall was originally part of an 1,800-acre land grant to Colonel Jerome White in 1665. The house itself was constructed between 1780 and 1784. [1] The home was designed as a two-story, brick side passage double pile plan dwelling, and was listed on the Maryland Historic Site inventory in 1969.