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St. Richard's Manor is a historic home located at Lexington Park, St. Mary's County, Maryland. It is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story Flemish bond brick dwelling, with a steeply pitched gable roof, constructed before 1750 on the Patuxent River. Also on the property are two tobacco barns built about 1935, and a small pyramid-roofed concrete block pumphouse. [2]
Maryland Route 246 (MD 246) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland.Known for most of its length as Great Mills Road, the state highway runs 3.35 miles (5.39 km) from MD 5 in Great Mills east to the entrance to Naval Air Station Patuxent River (NAS Patuxent River) just east of the highway's intersection with MD 235 in Lexington Park.
Lexington Park is a census-designated place (CDP) in St. Mary's County, Maryland, United States, and the principal community of the Lexington Park, Maryland Micropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 11,626 at the 2010 census.
Combs purchased the unit, which had Central Park views but which were later obstructed by a couple of tall buildings, in 2003 for $3.82 million. He had listed it in 2012 for $8.5 million, but sold ...
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WPTX originated as the expanded band "twin" of an existing station, with the same call sign, on the standard AM band. The original WPTX was established by Patuxent Radio, Inc., owned by World War II pilot Jack Daugherty and businessman Paul Chapman, [12] who obtained a construction permit on October 15, 1952, for the new station, initially operating daytime-only with 1,000 watts on 1570 kHz. [7]
The Patuxent River Naval Air Museum is a museum at Lexington Park, Maryland, first opened in 1978, which preserves and interprets the Naval Air Station Patuxent River history and heritage of advancing US naval aviation technology with artifacts, photographs and film, documents, and related heritage memorabilia from Patuxent River and other naval stations.
Wilson W. Wyatt, former Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky and Mayor of Louisville, Kentucky [5]; Bert T. Combs, former Governor of Kentucky [3]; Gordon B. Davidson, former Managing Partner at Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs and attorney for the "Louisville Sponsoring Group," a collaboration of business leaders who provided the funding for Muhammad Ali's launch into professional boxing [6]