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The Grand Lodge of Maryland, Ancient, Free, and Accepted Masons, [5] is located in Cockeysville on a 250-acre (1.0 km 2) campus. It includes a castle-like structure known as Bonnie Blink ("Beautiful View" in Scots), which is the retirement home for Master Masons, Eastern Star ladies and eligible family members.
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 ...
This category contains articles related to Cockeysville, Maryland, an urbanized but unincorporated area of Baltimore County, Maryland Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cockeysville, Maryland . Pages in category "Cockeysville, Maryland"
A 2,005-pound pumpkin named after the 13-year-old girl who grew it arrived at Valley View Farms. The annual fall tradition brought the giant pumpkin Miss Amelia to the Baltimore County store ...
The southern counties of the western shoreline of Chesapeake Bay are warm enough to support a tobacco cash crop zone, which has existed since early Colonial times, but declined greatly after a state government buy-out in the 1990s. [citation needed] Modern urban farms have been established in cities like Baltimore. [3]
The town is north of Baltimore along York Road (Maryland Route 45). It is bordered on the north by Cockeysville, on the south by Lutherville, on the east by Loch Raven Reservoir, and on the west by Falls Road (Maryland Route 25), with the Greenspring and Worthington Valleys beyond. Ridgely Road forms the boundary between Timonium and ...
MD-140 passes the northern end of I-795 and continues northwest as Westminster Pike, heading towards Finksburg and Westminster. The community of Glyndon is located adjacent to the northern portion of Reisterstown along Butler Road ( MD-128 ), which connects Reisterstown with the Baltimore-Harrisburg Expressway ( Interstate 83 ).
Although Sparks is unincorporated and has no official town limits, the area that is usually considered to constitute Sparks runs from several miles west of I-83 to Carroll Road to the east, and from north of Hunt Valley/Cockeysville along York Road and I-83 to Hereford. According to the 2010 US Census, 5,094 people live in the Sparks area.