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TownMall of Westminster, formerly Cranberry Mall, is a shopping mall located in Westminster, Maryland, United States on Maryland Route 140, 30 miles northwest of Baltimore. Owned by Westminster Mall LLC, and managed by The Woodmont Company. The mall features more than 20 stores, including a food court and Movie Theater.
By 2011, the 410/443 area was once again running out of numbers because of the continued proliferation of cell phones. To spare residents another number change to a new area code, a third overlay code, area code 667, was implemented on March 24, 2012. [5] This had the effect of assigning 24 million numbers to just over four million people.
Westminster is a city in and the county seat of Carroll County, Maryland, United States. [3] The city's population was 19,960 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] Westminster is an outlying community in the Baltimore metropolitan area , which is part of the greater Washington–Baltimore combined statistical area .
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A mid-1970s expansion added a US$4.5 million, 155,000-square-foot (14,400 m 2) Woodward & Lothrop store and 60,000 square feet (5,600 m 2) of additional retail space for 40 stores. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] On March 1. 1976, longtime fugitive William Bradford Bishop bought a ball peen hammer and gas can at the mall to allegedly kill and burn his family.
White Marsh Mall is a regional shopping mall in the unincorporated and planned community of White Marsh, Maryland. It is one of the largest regional malls in the Baltimore metropolitan area , with 6 anchor stores and 134 specialty shops in 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m 2 ). [ 1 ]
Westminster's most crowned breeds tend to diverge from what the American public favors for pets. Among the five breeds that have won Best in Show the most, poodles are the most popular.
The building houses over 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m 2) of floor space flooded by light from approximately 1,000 large multi-paned, steel frame windows. It was built about 1925 as a mail order and retail warehouse for Montgomery Ward on an 11 acres (4.5 ha) site adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tracks. [ 2 ]