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The A.E. Phillips packing plant processed seafood from many of the watermen in the region. In 1956, after a surplus season of crabs, son Brice Phillips and wife Shirley opened the first “crab shack” in Ocean City, Maryland. Brice and Shirley began building a new dining room each year at Phillips Crab House until it finally seated 1400 people.
Chesapeake City is a town in Cecil County, Maryland, United States. The population was 736 at the 2020 census. The population was 736 at the 2020 census. The town was originally named by Bohemian colonist Augustine Herman [ 3 ] the Village of Bohemia — or Bohemia Manor — but the name was changed in 1839 after the Chesapeake and Delaware ...
Although the Eastern Shore comprises a large part of Maryland's land area, it had a population of 456,815 as of the 2020 Census, representing about 7.4% of Maryland's total population. [1] [7] The most populous city in the region is Salisbury, and the most populous county is Cecil. [8] [1]
Ann Taylor: After a four-year hiatus, Ann Taylor made an anticipated return to Gardens Mall on Saturday, May 25, on its lower level near Saks Fifth Avenue. The women’s work and business-casual ...
South Chesapeake City Historic District is a national historic district at Chesapeake City, Cecil County, Maryland, United States. It reflects the town's period of greatest prosperity in the mid 19th century when the adjacent Chesapeake and Delaware Canal was an active commercial artery between major east coast waterways. Buildings from the ...
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The landmark district is part of a row of buildings at the Back Creek Mooring Basin on the south side of the basin in Chesapeake City, Maryland. The buildings were built between 1837 and 1854 of fieldstone, brick and clapboard. The oldest and easternmost building is the Old Steam House (1837), which housed the original boiler and steam engine.
Chesapeake Beach, also known as Chic's Beach or Chick's Beach, [1] is a small beach in a residential neighborhood running on the east and west sides of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel in Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States. What originated as a lookout post during war, the beach eventually turned to more recreational activities.