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North of Cockeysville off Maryland Route 25 on Cuba Rd. 39°30′34″N 76°41′58″W / 39.509444°N 76.699444°W / 39.509444; -76.699444 ( Stone Cockeysville
Cockeysville was named after the Cockey family who helped establish the town. Thomas Cockey (1676–1737) settled in Limestone Valley in 1725 at Taylor's Hall (an area now just north of Padonia Road and east of Interstate 83). Joshua Frederick Cockey (1765–1821) built one of the first homes in the area in 1798 and built the first commercial ...
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"
ZIP codes: 21286, 21204, 21252, ... Dulaney Valley Road (MD-146) Fairmount Avenue; Goucher Boulevard; ... Cockeysville, and Hunt Valley. The school describes itself ...
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.
Oregon Ridge Park is a 1,043-acre (4.22 km 2) park in Cockeysville, Maryland. The park features walking and hiking trails, [1] nature center, picnic and recreation areas, a lodge, and cross-country skiing and sledding. [2] The park is the location of an annual Fourth of July celebration, which includes a concert by the Baltimore Symphony ...
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 ).
The New York Times reported [12] that President Franklin Pierce purchased a farm of 600 acres (2.4 km 2) in Colesville in 1855. Joseph F. Burr started purchasing Colesville-area land in 1869. By 1872, he had amassed nearly 1,000 acres (4.0 km 2) and lived in a beautiful mansion on the property known as Valley View. The mansion was located on ...