/items/browse?output=atom&tags=industrial%20history <![CDATA[91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ]]> 2025-08-18T11:01:29-04:00 Omeka /items/show/787 <![CDATA[Henderson’s Wharf]]> 2025-07-21T16:38:16-04:00

Dublin Core

Title

Henderson’s Wharf

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

The ghostly traces of the words “Baltimore and Ohio Railroad” painted on the brick wall give a clue to the former life of the substantial building that anchors the east end of Fell Street. Designed by architect E. Francis Baldwin in 1897 for the B&O Railroad, Henderson’s Wharf was one of the largest and most up-to-date tobacco warehouses of its day. Its subsequent renovation a century later is a fine example of how Baltimore has been a pioneer in reimagining old industrial buildings and transforming them into spaces for contemporary living.

Henderson’s Wharf was originally known as O’Donnell’s Wharf, named after Captain John O’Donnell, the founder of Canton and one of the wealthiest men in the United States at his death in 1805. In 1850, James A. Henderson, a merchant, purchased the property and made it a major steamship hub. By 1865, the Sun hailed the sendoff of the steamship Somerset from the wharf and anticipated the excitement of the community and the profit to be made: “The pioneer of the ocean line of steamships between Liverpool and Baltimore…will doubtless be witnessed by many persons, as it is an event of the greatest moment to all the various mercantile interests of Baltimore. It is understood that a number of merchants of this city have given orders to European agents to have goods sent them direct from Liverpool by the Somerset on her return trip and the gentlemen having charge of the line are also assured that she will return with a full number of steerage passengers. The prospects of the Ocean Line are altogether of an encouraging character.”

By the 1890s, a different kind of journey was available to Baltimoreans as companies like the Sassafras River Company offered steamship day excursions across the bay to destinations like Worton Manor Beach.

B&O announced their proposal to build a warehouse on Henderson’s Wharf in 1894. A Baltimore Sun headline in 1896 announced:

A BIG WAREHOUSE: To Be Erected by the B. and O. Railroad Company for Tobacco Storage HENDERSON'S WHARF THE SITE The Building Will Be the Largest Structure of Its Kind in Baltimore Its Cost Will Be About $200,000 and It Will Have Capacity for 25,000 Hogsheads--In Size It Will Be 250 by 300 Feet and Six 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵapp High--Important Addition to the City's Terminal Facilities

The warehouse boasted two-and-a-half foot thick walls with more than 30,000 sq feet of floor space divided into four sections, each with its own elevator.

Both the size and the scope of the building were designed to keep the tobacco inspection and storage industry within the state of Maryland, instead of sending Maryland tobacco out-of-state to Virginia, Ohio, and Kentucky to be processed. The B&O cited not only the capacity of their new warehouse as an advantage but praised the location as well. Railroad tracks ran into the building, the better for loading and unloading from trains. Similarly, the harbor location allowed ships carrying tobacco crops from the Eastern Shore or Southern Maryland easy access to the warehouse, and tobacco destined for foreign ports could be loaded on railroad barges to be transported to any part of the harbor to be sent abroad.

The warehouse was used for various purposes until it was abandoned in 1976. In 1984, a fire swept through, causing significant damages. The building underwent a $9.75 million renovation in 1991 that retained some of its original architectural elements including its lovely archways. Since then, Henderson’s Wharf has been used as a variety of residences, including apartments, condominiums, and currently, as a luxury hotel.

Street Address

1000 Fell St, Baltimore, MD 21231
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/items/show/679 <![CDATA[Procter & Gamble Baltimore Plant]]> 2020-10-05T08:58:27-04:00

Dublin Core

Title

Procter & Gamble Baltimore Plant

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Under Armour's world headquarters

Story

Today the site of Under Armour's world headquarters, five of these buildings used to house Procter & Gamble's Baltimore Plant: Process Building (1929), the Soap Chip Building (1929), the Bar Soap Building (1929), the Warehouse (1929), and the Tide Building (1949). The company selected this Locust Point site to build a soap manufacturing plant because of its proximity to cargo shipping routes and the city’s transportation infrastructure along the Atlantic seaboard.

The plant was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. According to the Registration Report held at the National Archives, “The size of the Procter & Gamble Plant and the timing of its opening in the early years of the Depression made the plant an important local source of employment and economic stability.” The Plant’s architectural construction and importance in industrial history were also factors in its inclusion.

Local development company Struever Bros, Eccles & Rouse transformed the Procter & Gamble campus into the Tide Point office park in 2004. Construction costs for this 15-acre adaptive reuse project totaled $66 million. Under Armour continues the legacy of Baltimore’s once-dominant garment industry, although the actual manufacturing mostly takes place overseas. Founder Kevin Plank began the company, focusing on wickable athletic shirts, from his grandmother’s rowhouse in Washington D.C. in 1996 before moving its headquarters to Baltimore in 1998. As of 2019, the company employed 14,500 staff worldwide and brought in an annual revenue of $5.3 billion.

The architecture represents only one portion of the peninsula’s significance, however. Between 1800 and the outbreak of World War I, nearly two million immigrants first stepped foot on U.S. soil from this location at Locust Point--second only to Ellis Island in New York. Immigration from Europe, and particularly Germany, rose dramatically after the B&O Railroad and the North German Lloyd Company established an agreement in 1867 that brought ship passengers to the immigration pier along the B&O Railroad. The federal government established an immigration station here in 1887, on land belonging to the railroad. The outbreak of World War I ended the heyday of Baltimore as an immigration hub. The Baltimore Immigration Memorial, located on the site of the Locust Point Immigration Depot, interprets this history today. Imagine arriving in Baltimore by steamship in the late 19th century. How might it feel to see landmarks such as Fort McHenry or Federal Hill?

Related Resources

91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City Department of Planning. “,” Master Plan, City of Baltimore, 2004. 
Bay Area Economics. “,” Executive Summary, Baltimore Development Corporation, 2003.
Bird, Betty. “,” National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, 1999).
Gunts, Edward. “.” Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), March 12, 2006.
, Baltimore Museum of Industry Collections, Baltimore, Maryland.

Street Address

1030 Hull St, Baltimore, MD 21230

Access Information

Some of the UA campus is closed to the public.
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