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Granite: 33: Green Spring Valley Historic District: Green Spring Valley Historic District: October 3, 1980 : Maryland Routes 25 and 140: Lutherville and Owings Mills: 34: Grey Rock Mansion: July 10, 2023
Granite Historic District is a national historic district in Granite, Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. It comprises the focus of a rural quarrying community located in the Patapsco Valley of western Baltimore County, Maryland. It includes two churches, a school, a social hall, former commercial buildings, and houses and outbuildings ...
Granite is an unincorporated community in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. [1] Originally known as Waltersville, it was renamed Granite in recognition of its principal product (the Woodstock Quartz Monzonite was quarried). The village was the center of this industry, which during its peak in the late 19th century provided building ...
Maryland Heights is a second-ring west-northwest suburb of St. Louis, located in St. Louis County, Missouri, United States. The population was 27,472 at the 2010 census. [5] The city was incorporated in 1985. Edwin L. Dirck was appointed the city's first mayor by then County Executive Gene McNary.
Sites settled prior to 1650 would have been part of St Mary's County in the Province of Maryland which was settled in 1632 by Europeans. Maryland Historical Trust properties in Howard County [2] HO-1 Cherry Grove circa 1766. HO-1, Cherry Grove, 2937 Jennings Chapel Road, Woodbine; HO-2, Oakdale, 16449 Edwin Warfield Road, Woodbine
The Griggs House was a historic home located in Granite, Maryland. It was a two-story house constructed in the mid-19th century. The home is associated with the film, The Blair Witch Project. The house was a built in the style of Federal architecture, as a two-story stucco faced post and beam wood construction house on a stone foundation. It ...
James Goodwin Batterson (February 23, 1823 – September 18, 1901) was an American designer and builder, the owner of New England Granite Works from 1845 [1] and a founder in 1863 of Travelers Insurance Company, both in Hartford, Connecticut.
The Hendler Creamery consists of two adjacent building complexes. The original 59,340-square-foot (5,513 m 2) three-story brick Richardsonian Romanesque building was constructed as a cable car powerhouse in 1892, replacing five old houses on the site in the Old Town / Jonestown neighborhood east of the downtown neighborhood and the dividing Jones Falls stream in East Baltimore. [3]