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Earleville, Maryland Cherry Grove Road, 1 mile west of Stoney Battery Road 39°27′40″N 75°55′30″W / 39.46111°N 75.92500°W / 39.46111; -75.92500 ( Cherry
Location of Cecil County in Maryland. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cecil County, Maryland. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cecil County, Maryland, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many ...
Earleville is an unincorporated community in Cecil County, Maryland, United States. [1] Earleville is located at the intersection of Maryland Route 282 and Grove Neck Road west of Cecilton. Located at Earleville and listed on the National Register of Historic Places are: Bohemia Farm, Mount Harmon, Rose Hill, and St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. [2]
Maryland Route 282 (MD 282) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. The highway runs 12.43 miles (20.00 km) from Crystal Beach east to the Delaware state line in Warwick , where the highway continues east as Delaware Route 299 (DE 299).
MD 158 in Sparrows Point: I-695 in Dundalk — — MD 157 — — MD 462 near Aberdeen: Havre de Grace: 1927: 1956 MD 158: 2.35: 3.78 Riverside Drive in Sparrows Point: North Point Road in Edgemere — — MD 158 — — US 40 in Belcamp: Creswell Road near Belcamp: 1927: 1956 MD 159: 4.73: 7.61 Bush River: US 40 / MD 7 in Aberdeen: 1928: current
Franklin Point is one of Maryland's newest provincial parks, opening after long-running efforts to prevent the area from being developed. The area was originally Deep Creek Airport which closed in the 1980s, and was then purchased by a real estate developer who planned on building 300 houses on the property.
Rose Hill, also known as Chance and Wheeler Point, is a historic home located at Earleville, Cecil County, Maryland, United States.It is the product of four major building periods: a gambrel-roofed frame structure built at the end of the 18th or beginning of the 19th century; a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story brick "town house" constructed on the east in 1837; and a small frame kitchen and a one-story wing ...
The Elk River is a tidal tributary of the Chesapeake Bay on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and on the northern edge of the Delmarva Peninsula. It is about 15 miles (24 km) long. [1] As the most northeastern extension of the Chesapeake Bay estuary, it has served as one entrance to the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal since the 19th century.