<![CDATA[91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ]]> /items/browse?output=rss2&tags=Inner%20Harbor Mon, 18 Aug 2025 10:43:31 -0400 info@baltimoreheritage.org (91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ) Baltimore Heritage Zend_Feed http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss <![CDATA[Mr. Trash Wheel]]> /items/show/792

Dublin Core

Title

Mr. Trash Wheel

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

In 2014, a new species appeared in the Baltimore Harbor. With 5 feet tall googly eyes, a playful persona, and a steady diet of harbor detritus, Mr. Trash Wheel is cleaning up the harbor one swallow at a time.

The brainchild of local inventor John Kellet who founded Pasadena, Maryland-based company Clearwater Mills LLC, Mr. Trash Wheel is officially known as a “waterwheel powered trash inceptor.” He was given his name and persona by the Waterfront Partnership for Baltimore as part of their Healthy Harbor initiative. Mr. Trash Wheel hit the harbor in 2014 and has picked up over 16 tons of trash and litter since then.

Mr. Trash Wheel uses the stream current and solar power to turn its giant wheels making him the world’s first sustainably powered trash interceptor. He waits for trash moving downstream to come to him, carried by the wind and rain during storms when trash flows unfiltered into our streams and into the Baltimore Harbor. The trash is then funneled by a containment boom to the front of the device where a series of rakes scoop it up and load it on to a conveyor belt. The belt moves the trash into a dumpster that sits on a floating barge in the back of the device. When the barge is filled with trash, it is removed and replaced with an empty barge so the process can continue.

Today, there is a Trash Wheel family comprised of working trash wheels in other city communities. Professor Trash Wheel works at Harris Creek in Canton. Captain Trash Wheel patrols Masonville Cove in South Baltimore. Gwynnda, the Good Wheel of West keeps the mouth of the Gywnns Falls near I-95 clean. And Mr. Trash Wheel makes his home at the mouth of the Jones Falls. The trash wheels collect over one million pounds of trash per year, including a guitar, a full-sized beer keg, and even a ball python!

Street Address

E. Falls Ave and Aliceanna St
Mr. Trash Wheel
The Trash Wheel Family
The back of Mr. Trash Wheel
]]>
Fri, 25 Jul 2025 09:59:09 -0400
<![CDATA[The Jones Falls]]> /items/show/791

Dublin Core

Title

The Jones Falls

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

In the 1660s, David Jones, a Quaker farmer, selected a location for his farm in the relatively new area of 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ County (founded in 1659), just north of what was known as Coles Harbor, and along the banks of a river that he called Pacific Brook. Today, that location is part of 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City; Coles Harbor has become the Inner Harbor; and Pacific Brook we know as the Jones Falls. The settlement that grew up around Jones’ farm is the neighborhood now called Jonestown.

The Jones Falls runs 17.9 miles, starting as a stream in northwest 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ County, near Garrison. It becomes a small river after reaching Lake Roland and ends in the Baltimore Harbor. It was once considered bucolic. One historical account reported that “for many years, it [Pacific Brook] was a source of pride for 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City and the envy of other cities. It was famous then as a fragrant and beautiful stream. At one time, the stream was pure and undefiled, a scene of many baptisms.”

Change came rapidly.

By 1711, Jonathan Hanson built a stone mill near the current day Fallsway, where the 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City Impound Lot is located. By 1726, the area was filled with tobacco houses, a store, and many residences. By middle of 1850’s, twelve mills stood on the banks of the Jones Falls, along with soap makers, tanners, and even more residences. All used the waterway to carry away their waste.

By the late 1800’s, the Jones Falls had become a source of public health concern. City leaders considered different ways of solving this problem. B&O Railroad engineer Ross Winans suggested building a series of reservoirs upstream and flushing them out occasionally to clear the Falls of detritus. Another proposal imagined diverting the river over the Back River into what is now Essex and Middle River. The third solution essentially proposed putting the Jones Falls into big pipes and running it under the city. This is what the city of Baltimore decided to do.

In 1915, Mayor Preston kicked off the campaign just north of Penn Station. Henry Barton Jacobs, the head of city’s public safety commission spoke at the event, announcing theatrically: “I have come to bury the Jones Falls, not to praise it.”

Diverting the Jones Falls into 7,000 feet of underground tunnels solved some—but not all—of its problems. In 1926, the river caught fire and exploded dramatically because it was full of hazardous materials. Glass shattered in downtown buildings. Manhole covers were propelled through the air. Near the of the entrance to the harbor, a 40-foot wall of noxious flames rushed out of the pipe and down the river.

Today, the buried stream is visible downtown near Jonestown, close to the Port Discovery Children’s Museum where a small canal-like structure runs parallel to President Street before emptying into the harbor at Aliceanna Street.

Street Address

E. Falls Ave and Aliceanna St
The Jones Falls at Centre St
The burial of the Jones Falls
Jones Falls Watershed
The Jones Falls
The Jones Falls near the Inner Harbor
]]>
Fri, 25 Jul 2025 09:53:06 -0400
<![CDATA[Silo Point]]> /items/show/789

Dublin Core

Title

Silo Point

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Of the many repurposed industrial buildings in Baltimore’s urban landscape, perhaps none is as extraordinary as Silo Point. Looming high above the brick rowhomes of Locust Point, Silo Point luxury condominiums began life as a mammoth grain elevator built by the B&O Railroad in 1924. At that time, it was both the largest and the fastest grain elevator in the world and reflected Baltimore’s important position in the grain export industry in the early to mid-twentieth century.

Designed by the engineering firm of John S. Metcalf Co. of Chicago and Montreal, the building is made up of two interconnected structures: a concrete workhouse which stands 220 feet tall and a concrete grain bin structure that rises to 105 feet. Additional structures were added later. During the grain elevator’s heyday, ten miles of conveyor belts carried 3.8 billion bushels of grain from train cars onto cargo ships annually.

The grain elevator ceased operations in 2002 and sat vacant until its conversion to Silo Point by Turner Development Group in 2009. The residential tower is now home to 24 floors of 228 condominiums. The Baltimore Sun described the new building as having “brutalist concrete walls,” in addition to a fitness center where basement catacombs used to be, outdoor sculptures constructed out of grain extracting machines, recycled circular gears given new life as lobby coffee tables. It also has commanding views of the harbor.

The B&O grain elevator was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

Street Address

1200 Steuart St, Baltimore, MD 21230
Silo Point Condominiums
The massive B&O grain elevator in Locust Point under construction
Inside the Silo Point lobby
]]>
Fri, 25 Jul 2025 09:39:49 -0400
<![CDATA[Pride of Baltimore Memorial]]> /items/show/788

Dublin Core

Title

Pride of Baltimore Memorial

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

A raked mast of a 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Clipper ship stands tall on land in Rash Field on the south end of the Inner Harbor. Accompanied by a block of pink granite inscribed with four names of lost crewmembers, the installation serves as a memorial to the Pride of Baltimore I.

The Pride was modelled after the Chausseur, a clipper ship launched from Fells Point in 1812 and captained by Thomas Boyle, a privateer, known for his highly successful acquisition of goods captured from British ships. In 1814, Boyle undertook a journey across the Atlantic, past the blockade of British ships on the Chesapeake. When he reached England, he boldly issued a proclamation stating:

I do therefore, by virtue of the power and authority in me vested (possessing sufficient force) declare all the ports, harbors, bays, creeks, rivers, inlets, outlets, islands and seacoast of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in a state of strict and rigorous blockade. And I do further declare that I consider the force under my command adequate to maintain strictly, rigorously, and effectually, the said blockade.

Boyle was incredibly successful in maintaining his blockade and returned home to Baltimore in March 1815, continuing to collect goods and evade capture. His ship was renamed “the Pride of Baltimore.”

The twentieth-century version of the Pride of Baltimore was launched in 1977 as an ambassador ship as part of the project to revitalize the inner harbor and to represent the city and state during its travels around the world. The clipper ship logged 150,000 miles before a sudden squall in the Atlantic, near Puerto Rico, capsized the ship in 1986. There was no time to send a distress signal. Eight crewmembers survived four days in a lifeboat. The captain, Armin Elsaesser, 42, and three crewmembers, Vincent Lazarro, 27, engineer; Barry Duckworth, 29, carpenter; and Nina Schack, 23, deckhand, were lost.

In 1988, a second Pride of Baltimore was launched as a memorial to Pride I and its lost crewmembers. The Pride of Baltimore II has sailed 250,000 miles and visited 40 different countries.

Street Address

201 Key Hwy, Baltimore, MD 21230
Pride of Baltimore Memorial
Close-up of Pride of Baltimore Memorial
Pride of Baltimore I
Pride of Baltimore II
Newspaper article about the sinking of Pride of Baltimore I
]]>
Tue, 22 Jul 2025 15:17:17 -0400
<![CDATA[Harbor Point]]> /items/show/786

Dublin Core

Title

Harbor Point

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

The story of Harbor Point is the story of innovation, invention, and reinvention. Harbor Point is the former home of 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Chromium Works (now AlliedSignal), a company built around Isaac Tyson’s discovery of a local source for chromium in the early 1800’s. It is also the current home to Constellation Energy, an energy company that also has roots in 19th century Baltimore.

91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Chromium Works was the brainchild of Isaac Tyson. If you’ve ever painted any walls of your home in red, yellow, or green paint, you have Tyson to thank.

In the early 1800s, Isaac Tyson was a college geology major who came home to 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ County on a break from classes when he noticed a rock used to prop open a screen door at a local country store. He recognized it as chromite, a mineral that contains iron and chromium oxides.

Tyson knew that chromium was a key ingredient in paint manufacturing: it is the magic ingredient that allows pigments to stick to paint. During the colonial era, colored paint was expensive and had to be imported from Europe and having green or red walls was a marker of wealth (think of James Madison’s house in Virginia where the walls are a vibrant color known as Miami Green); the interiors of most homes were simply painted white.

Tyson was the first to determine that specific ecosystems correlated to rich chromium veins (Soldiers Delight in western 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ County was among local areas Tyson mined for chromium). He set out and walked from Virginia to Vermont buying up farms that had chromium veins, and at one point, controlled 95% of the world’s chromium.

Tyson’s company 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Chromium Works (later Allied Chemical) was headquartered on Harbor Point. The company used this location to refine chromium, a procedure that is dirty and highly toxic. Hexavalent chromium is also a significant carcinogen (it’s the same chemical that Erin Brockovich advocated against). Waste from the refinery was dumped into the harbor, which became significantly polluted.

Harbor Point eventually became a $100 million superfund site. To clean up chromium polluted soil, a giant wall was erected around the site, and an industrial sump pump removed contaminated water 24 hours a day. Post-clean-up, the empty space was used to host Cirque du Soleil and later served as a temporary beach recreation area. Today, the area is dedicated to mixed development, including being home to the headquarters of Constellation Energy, a company whose story goes back two centuries.

Constellation is an energy supplier that provides electricity and natural gas to Baltimore Gas & Electric (BG&E), a local utility that was the first gas utility in the United States. Somewhat improbably, this utility had its origins in an art museum.

In 1816, Rembrandt Peale, son of the famous portraitist Charles Wilson Peale, used gas lighting to illuminate the Peale Museum, his gallery and museum that became the first purpose-built museum in the United States. Gas lighting was not only a novelty; it also allowed Peale to sell tickets in the evening, so people could visit the galleries after sundown. Historical records report that passersby would stand on Holliday Street in front of the Peale Museum marveling at the brightness of the light coming from its windows, which was an unprecedented sight in a world of candles and oil lamps.

Peale was an innovator and an entrepreneur, and by 1817, he had started the Baltimore Gas Company and secured the contract to supply gas streetlights throughout Baltimore, the first city in America, and among the first in the world, to be lit by gas; hence its nickname, “Light City.” Peale manufactured the gas in a shed at the back of the museum. It was supplied to the city in wooden pipes made from hollowed out logs. Two hundred years later, the business Rembrandt Peale founded at his museum continues to provide power to the city.

Street Address

1400 Point St, Baltimore, MD 21231
Harbor Point
91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Chrome Works
Allied Signal
Allied Chrome Works plant
Allied Signal plant
AlliedSignal Plant
]]>
Mon, 21 Jul 2025 16:18:25 -0400
<![CDATA[Harborplace]]> /items/show/785

Dublin Core

Title

Harborplace

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

For Baltimoreans of a certain generation, it’s hard to imagine the harbor without Harborplace. Bolstered by the enthusiastic support of Mayor William Donald Schaefer, the brainchild of urban pioneer, James Rouse brought millions of visitors to downtown Baltimore and inspired imitations around the globe. The Urban Land Institute cited Harborplace as “a model for post-industrial waterfront development around the world.” For a time, “the Inner Harbor” was synonymous with “Harborplace.”

Located within the Chesapeake Bay watershed, the Baltimore Harbor is formed at the mouth of the Patapsco River, which leads to the Chesapeake Bay and then the Atlantic Ocean. The Inner Harbor was never more than 15 feet deep, limiting its use as a seaport to shallow boats plying the Chesapeake Bay; ocean-going vessels preferred the deeper ports of Canton and Fells Point. As part of an effort to make the harbor of Baltimore Town deeper, two brothers, flour merchants Andrew and John Ellicott (Ellicott City is named after them) invented the first dredger in 1783. Also known as the Mud Machine, it removed debris, mud, and sediment from the harbor floor to increase the depth of the water.

Land around harbor was always valuable. The first big development came around 1800, when landowners just north of the harbor started filling in the marshy land just below today’s Water Street to get access to the 18-foot deep port. They built piers and docks and transformed the harbor into a Chesapeake Bay maritime hub with boats arriving daily from the Eastern Shore laden with seafood and produce. On a busy day during oyster season there may have been upwards of 100 boats docked in the harbor.

By the time of the 1904 fire, the area had become dilapidated. The Fire Commission observed: “The warehouses were in even worse condition, any of the docks being nothing more than mudholes and so narrow that no modern vessel even of moderate size could even get beyond the ends.”

After the fire, the city used its power of eminent domain to condemn the land around the harbor, take it away from private owners, and make it publicly owned and publicly managed land. New piers were built, including Piers 4, 5, and 6—probably the first reinforced concrete structures built in seawater in America. The city leased the piers to private companies like United Fruit and Standard Oil. But even then, part of Pier 4—the Public Pier--was reserved for the citizens of Baltimore.

Up until around World War II, the harbor was a hub of maritime activity in and around the Chesapeake Bay. After World War II, new highway construction and the building of the Bay Bridge in 1952 meant less reliance on ships to transport products from the Eastern Shore to Baltimore. In 1960, the large public Marsh Market, just north of the harbor, closed. In 1962, the steamer, The City of Norfolk, made its final run.

The city reacted to these changes by re-envisioning the harbor as a place for industry to a place of recreation. First, in 1963, Mayor Theodore McKeldin expanded the urban renewal zone that had been created in 1958 to guide the expansion of Charles Center to include the Inner Harbor. Subsequently, the majority of the buildings around the harbor were demolished and replaced with surface parking lots, which became magnets for fairs and festivals. Around 10,000 people attended the City Fair to take part in the festivities, as well as take in the spectacle of the harbor. In 1971, The Baltimore Sun observed: “The docks, the boats, the setting itself are the showstoppers more than the food or the booze or the rides.”

City Fair was just the beginning of the movement to bring people to the harbor as a tourist attraction. In 1976, thousands of people came to the Inner Harbor to see over 50 tall ships docked there in celebration of America’s Bicentennial. The Science Center also opened that year. The National Aquarium followed in 1980, and the Six Flags at the Power Plant launched in 1985.

In 1978, the city sponsored a ballot on the referendum of whether to lease out part of the harbor to a private developer to build what would become Harborplace. Fifty-four percent voted yes.

Harborplace opened in 1980. In the first three months, 7 million people visited. In the first year, more people visited the Inner Harbor than went to Disney World. On the opening day of Harborplace, Martin Milspaugh, head of Charles Center-Inner Harbor Management, the urban renewal agency that guided the redevelopment, said: “Harborplace is the missing ingredient of the Inner Harbor. Instead of a series of attractions, we’ll have one massive attraction on the shoreline.”

The Harborplace pavilions on Pratt and Light streets featured local merchants and restaurants and was both popular and profitable in its early years. In surveys done at the time, 20% of the people visiting Harborplace were from outside of Maryland and 80% were Marylanders.

Harborplace spawned many imitations. Over 200 harbors across the world copied Baltimore. Harbourside in Sydney, Australia is almost an exact replica that is also currently under redevelopment.

Despite its success, Harborplace changed hands several times. In 2004, it was bought by Chicago-based General Growth Properties, and in 2012, New York-based Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp bought it. In 2019, Harborplace went into a court-ordered receivership with a manager appointed from New Jersey. And in 2022 Baltimore-based MCB real estate purchased it.

In 2024, another referendum around zoning changes and use restrictions, including removing height restrictions for new buildings, allowing for residential development, and expanding the footprint of how much land the city might lease to private owners, was put before Baltimore voters. The referendum was passed to allow for a potential new development to the harbor.

Street Address

201 E Pratt St, Baltimore, MD 21202 and 301 Light St, Baltimore, MD 21202
Harborplace
A poster promoting Harborplace and the Inner Harbor
View of Harborplace
]]>
Mon, 21 Jul 2025 16:06:03 -0400
<![CDATA[The National Aquarium]]> /items/show/782

Dublin Core

Title

The National Aquarium

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

How the National Aquarium came to be in Baltimore is the story of three different aquariums that, over time, became one.

Our story begins in the middle. In the 1970s, Baltimore mayor William Donald Schaefer and his Commissioner of the city Department of Housing and Community Development, Robert C. Embry, visited Boston and became entranced with the city’s waterfront New England Aquarium. Returning home to Baltimore, Schaefer was determined to include an aquarium as part of the forthcoming inner harbor development.

In 1976, Baltimoreans voted to fund the aquarium, and ground was broken in 1978. But construction of the aquarium, with its distinctive glass pavilion and concrete turret lit with neon waves, experienced a series of setbacks, and Mayor William Donald Schaefer promised to take a swim in the new aquarium if it didn’t open on July 1, 1981. It didn’t. And on July 15, as promised, the mayor took the plunge. The Sun reported that before of a crowd of around 300 spectators:

“The Honorable William Donald Schaefer, wearing a turnoff the century bathing costume in place of his dignity, clutched a large rubber duck and stepped into the seal pool, disappearing up to the brim of his straw boater.”

The mayor chatted with three seals and reclined on a rock with a woman dressed as a mermaid. Frank A. Gunther, Jr., the chair of the aquarium board, joined him.

The cost of a ticket to the National Aquarium in Baltimore, as it became known when it opened to the public in August 1981, was $4.50—more than twice it was promised to be (and approximately a tenth of what a youth ticket costs over 40 years later).

About that somewhat confusing name. Although Congress granted the aquarium in Baltimore the right to use the title “National Aquarium,” there was already a “National Aquarium” in Washington, D.C.. Located in the basement of the Department of Commerce Building (later known as the Herbert C. Hoover Building) since the 1930s, this aquarium traced its history to the first national aquarium, founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1873. The Woods Hole aquarium moved to Washington in 1878 and remained there until 2013, first under the auspices of the federal government, then under the National Aquarium Society, before the National Aquarium in Baltimore took over the management in 2003. When the federal government decided to renovate the Hoover Building in 2013, 1,700 animals were moved to the National Aquarium in Baltimore (now known as the National Aquarium), and the National Aquarium in DC quietly closed its doors.

Today, the National Aquarium is the largest paid tourist attraction in Maryland; over 50 million people have visited since its opening in 1981. The aquarium is home to 20,000 different animals, including sloths, reptiles, and tropical birds. Its tanks hold over 2.2 million gallons of water. Over the decades, the aquarium’s footprint has expanded to include the Pavilion on Pier 4 (1990) and the Australia: Wild Extremes exhibit (2005). In 2024, the National Aquarium Harbor Wetland Project opened with plantings of over 130 shrubs and 39,000 grasses designed to attract and protect wildlife like diamondback terrapins, jellyfish, oysters, blue crabs, and river otters. This project echoes the National Aquarium’s mission to research and conservation and helps give the public a glimpse into what Baltimore looked like two hundred years ago, as well as what it might look like a few years from now.

Street Address

501 E Pratt St, Baltimore, MD 21202
The National Aquarium
The Lost Bet
The floating wetlands
]]>
Mon, 21 Jul 2025 14:48:13 -0400
<![CDATA[Gustav Brunn's Baltimore Spice Company]]> /items/show/757

Dublin Core

Title

Gustav Brunn's Baltimore Spice Company

Creator

Francesca Cohen

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

In almost every kitchen in Baltimore, and maybe Maryland, there is a tiny yellow, blue, and red tin of Old Bay seasoning. It is an essential part of local cuisine. Yet, most people are unaware of the spice’s dramatic Jewish history. Old Bay was created by Gustav Brunn, a Jewish immigrant who came to the United States after escaping from Nazi Germany.Ěý

On the night of Nov. 9, 1938, violent mobs across Nazi Germany and Austria burned and looted Jewish homes, businesses, hospitals, and synagogues in what would be known as Kristallnacht, or "The Night of Broken Glass." The Nazis also rounded up 30,000 Jewish men and sent them to concentration camps. Brunn was among those captured and sent to Camp Buchenwald.

His family helped secure Brunn’s release by paying 10,000 marks to a lawyer who bailed him out. As soon as he was released, Brunn and his children left for the United States. A spice merchant, Brunn left with very little, but he insisted on taking his hand-crank spice grinder.

In 1939, the Brunn family arrived in Baltimore and settled into an apartment at 2317 Eutaw Place. After arriving in America, Brunn wanted to re-enter the spice trade, but he had no capital. Brunn had to secure a loan from Katz American to open his spice business. Katz American was not a bank, it was another spice company. As a fellow Jewish spice merchant, Katz put profit aside to help Brunn start his business. After securing a loan from Katz American, Brunn created the Baltimore Spice Company. The company took up residence on the second floor of 26 Market Place; and, the hand-crank spice grinder began to turn once again.Ěý

Before Brunn created the Baltimore Spice Company, he had worked at McCormick until he was fired for being Jewish. Brunn’s son said that after McCormick learned Brunn was Jewish, he was promptly fired, and told to “go and see the Jewish charities.” Although Brunn experienced rampant anti-semitism in his lifetime, he continued to persevere.Ěý

The Baltimore Spice Company began developing a crab seasoning around 1940. Brunn created the famous spice after noticing local crab steamers come to his shop to buy various spices. His shop at 26 Market Place was directly across from the Wholesale Fish Market. The crab steamers would then blend the spices together to season their crabs. Brunn was inspired by the crab steamers to create his own crab seasoning--Old Bay. Brunn added tiny amounts of various spices to his crab seasoning in order to be unique in an overly saturated crab spice market. According to Brunn’s son,Ěý

“Those minor things he put in there — the most unlikely things, including cinnamon and nutmeg and cloves and all kinds of stuff that had nothing to do with crabs at all — gave a background bouquet that he couldn’t have anticipated. Old Bay, per se, was almost an accident.”

In the very beginning, Brunn had trouble selling the spice mixture that would one day become synonymous with Baltimore. However, after giving samples to the local crab steamers, business began to pick up. By this time, the spice still had no name. Brunn named the spice after the Old Bay steamship line, which used to run out of Baltimore. After getting its name, the spice mix’s popularity continued to grow. Major companies, including McCormick, began to sell a similar product in a similar can.Ěý

The rivalry between the Baltimore Spice Company and McCormick over the rights to Old Bay did not end until five years after the death of Gustav Brunn. In 1990, the company sold the rights to the original Old Bay recipe to McCormick. The spice has continued to be a mainstay in grocery stores in Baltimore and across the entire Mid-Atlantic. In recent years, the spice mix has gained an almost cult-like popularity and has helped spawn the development of things such as: Old Bay apparel, vodka, and beer.Ěý

The spice is so quintessentially Maryland that a poll by Goucher College found that “opinions toward Old Bay transcend party, age, race, gender, and ideological lines,” said Mileah Kromer, director of the Sara T. Hughes Politics Center at Goucher. “An overwhelming majority of Marylanders view it favorably.”Ěý

When Gustav Brunn created Old Bay in 1939, he thought he just created a great spice mixture. He did not know he would create a product that would become integral to the cultural fabric of Maryland.

The research and writing of this article was funded by two grants: one from the Maryland Heritage Areas Authority and one from the Baltimore National Heritage Area.

Street Address

26 Market Place, Second Floor
Baltimore, MD 21202
The original site of the Baltimore Spice Co. on Market Place
Gustav and Bianca Brunn
Old Bay seasoning
The small spice mixer that Gustav Brunn brought from Germany to America in 1938 on display at the Baltimore Museum of Industry
]]>
Thu, 18 Aug 2022 16:52:01 -0400
<![CDATA[The E. J. Codd Company]]> /items/show/698

Dublin Core

Title

The E. J. Codd Company

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Industrial Machine Shop Manufacturing, Philanthropy, and Community Involvement

Story

Edward J. Codd founded the E. J. Codd Company in the 1850s. The E. J. CoddĚý Company focused on industrial machinery and aided Baltimore’s booming shipbuilding industry by assembling boilers, propellers, and engines. At the turn of the century, Baltimore workers went on strike demanding the nine-hour work day. The E. J. Codd strikers proved victorious when in 1899, the company agreed to give workers the nine-hour work day with their former pay.

Edward Codd, like other captains of industry in Gilded Age America, was not only a man of business, but a philanthropist. According to a Baltimore Sun article published on Christmas Eve in 1905, Edward Codd gave 460 children of east Baltimore each a nickel on Christmas Eve. In addition to handing out nickels each Christmas Eve, Edward Codd reportedly gave children each a penny every other day of the year. Back in the early twentieth-century, a nickel could buy children a goodly amount of candy and one reporter even reported that children’s “bright red wheelbarrows” filled with “painted candies” dotted the street on Christmas Eve. Needless to say, Edward Codd was well-liked by the children of east Baltimore.Ěý

After World War II, the Codd family sold the company to Ray Kauffman. Kauffman expanded the company to include “Codd Fabricators and Boiler Co.” and “Baltimore Lead Burning.” Under Kauffman, the E. J. Codd Company served many local Baltimore businesses such as Bethlehem Steel, Allied Chemical, and even the American Visionary Arts Museum located right down the road from the Baltimore Museum of Industry.ĚýĚý

Today, real estate agents are leasing the once mighty machine shop as office spaces.

Related Resources

Cassie, Ron. “.” Baltimore Magazine. Last modified May 2014.
“.” Maryland Department of the Environment Voluntary Cleanup/Brownfields Division. Last modified October 2003.
“.” Baltimore Sun. August 30, 1915.
“.” Baltimore Sun. December 1906.
“.” Baltimore Sun. December 24, 1905.
Kelly, Jacques. “.” Baltimore Sun. Last Modified May 4, 2014.
“.” Baltimore Sun. April 21, 1909.
“.” Baltimore Sun. February 7, 1905.
“.” Baltimore Sun. June 6, 1899.
“.” Commercial Cafe. Last modified March 18, 2021.
Kempf, Sydney. Former E. J. Codd Company Building. March, 2021.

Street Address

700 S. Caroline Street, Baltimore, MD 21231
Sydney Kempf E J Codd Pic 1-min.jpg
WMBGE_37384A copy-min.jpg
]]>
Wed, 14 Apr 2021 13:26:32 -0400
<![CDATA[William G. Scarlett and Company]]> /items/show/697

Dublin Core

Title

William G. Scarlett and Company

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

The Eccentric Scarlett Family and the Seed Trade

Story

In 1894, William G. Scarlett founded the William G. Scarlett Seed Company. Born in Baltimore in 1873, George D. Scarlett was a true entrepreneur who chased the American dream. At twenty-one, George Scarlett began working in the seed industry by “importing seeds from various parts of the world and exporting dried apples." Under the management of George Scarlett, the company expanded its inventory; selling grass, grain, and bird seeds. A Baltimore Sun article stated that “his [George Scarlett’s] business mushroomed principally through his own efforts and at one time was the largest east of the Mississippi River." Although the William G. Scarlett Seed Company expanded opening branches in other cities, Baltimore remained the company headquarters.

The Scarlett Seed Company remained in the family as George D. Scarlett passed over the company reins to his sons Raymond G. Scarlett and William G. Scarlett. As eccentric as his father, Raymond Scarlett was not only the company president, but also a badminton champion. An adamant badminton enthusiast, Raymond Scarlett founded the junior national badminton championship tournament. William George Scarlett succeeded his brother Raymond in running the company. Following in the unique footsteps of his father and brother, in addition to managing the family business, William Scarlett joined the Army Counter Intelligence Corps, also known as the CIC, during WWII.

After the company vacated the property, in the 1980s, the site was developed into retail space, office space, and condominiums. Today, the Scarlett Seed Company Property is now known as Scarlett Place, paying tribute to the bird-seed businessmen.

Related Resources

“.” Baltimore Sun. February 6, 1957.
Gunts, Edward. “.” Baltimore Sun. December 4, 1985.
Jones, Carleton. “.” Baltimore Sun. April 12, 1981.
“.” Baltimore Sun. October 6, 1979.
“.” Baltimore Sun. December 8, 1967.
“.” Merritt Properties. 2020.
Kempf, Sydney. Scarlett Place Exterior. March, 2021.
William G. Scarlett & Co. Market Quotation: April 12, 1930. Seed catalog title page. Biodiversity Heritage Library. 1930. . Accessed April 21, 2021.

Street Address

729 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Sydney Kempf Scarlett Place Pic 3-min.jpg
William Scarlett Market Quotation1024_3.jpg
]]>
Wed, 14 Apr 2021 13:09:32 -0400
<![CDATA[The Wilson Line]]> /items/show/696

Dublin Core

Title

The Wilson Line

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Standing Up Against Segregation

Story

In the twentieth century, Pier 8 in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor and then Broadway Pier in Fells Point used to be the launching point for the steamboats of the Wilson Line. The Wilson Line extended from Philadelphia to Wilmington to Baltimore and ran a line of excursion boats out of Baltimore after WWII. The “Bay Belle,” one of the Baltimore excursion boats, carried passengers on day trips to places such as Betterton Beach.Ěý

Although the Wilson Line steamboat company advertised sunny trips to the beach and fun at resorts, this was overshadowed by the company’s practice of segregation. In July of 1944, a group of African American teenagers from Philadelphia were separated from white passengers on the Wilson Line ship the Maybelle. According to an article from the Baltimore Afro American, Wilson Line employees placed a rope across the dance floor to separate white and black passengers, and even went so far as to close their game room to prevent integration. In 1950, the company continued discriminatory practices by refusing to sell tickets to four African American patrons: Helena Haley, Charles Haley, Loncie Malloy, and Prunella Norwood. The four patrons sued the Wilson Line and as a result the company was ordered to end its discriminatory practices by the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1951.

The shadow of segregation extended from the steamboat line to the beaches. For example Ocean City, one of the most popular beach attractions today, once banned African Americans from enjoying its sunny shores. Elizabeth Carr Smith and Florence Carr Sparrow, two African American sisters, fought back against segregation by founding Carr’s Beach in 1926 and Sparrow’s Beach in 1931. Both sisters inherited pieces of land from their father on the Annapolis coast facing the Chesapeake Bay. Carr’s and Sparrow’s beaches were known for ample entertainment and hosted many famous African American performers such as Billie Holiday, James Brown, and Ray Charles. For many African Americans along the east coast, Carr’s and Sparrow’s Beaches provided a safe vacation spot.

In the face of discrimination, the African American community rallied in order to fight for their civil rights. As a result of the power of the black community, the ICC forced the Wilson Line to adopt integration and beaches desegregated.

Related Resources

“.” Arundel TV. Posted on Youtube May 17, 2019.
“.” Kent County Maryland. Last modified 2018.
Betterton Heritage. “.”
Cox, Timothy. “.” Baltimore Times. February 7, 2020.
“.” Baltimore Afro-American, August 5, 1944.
“.” Baltimore Afro-American, March 24, 1951.
“.” Baltimore Afro-American, November 24, 1951.
Jones, Erica. “â€.” NBC Washington. NBC Universal Media. Last modified February 1, 2018.
Kalish, Evan. “.” The Living New Deal. Last modified June 6, 2016.
Matthews, Ralph. “.” Baltimore Afro-American, June 9, 1945.
McAdory, Myra. “.” Chesapeake Bay Program. Last modified July 2, 2020.
Rasmussen, Frederick. “.” Baltimore Sun. May 18, 2008.
Stephens, Ronald J. “.” Blackpast. Last modified April 23, 2014.
“.” Baltimore Afro-American, August 19, 1944.
  • Bodine, A. Aubrey. The Bay Belle. Photograph. Betterton Heritage. Betterton Heritage Museum. 2004. . Accessed April 21, 2021.

Street Address

920 South Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21231
BayBelle+by+Bodine.jpg
]]>
Wed, 14 Apr 2021 13:01:31 -0400
<![CDATA[A. H. Bull & Company]]> /items/show/695

Dublin Core

Title

A. H. Bull & Company

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Steamships From New York to Puerto Rico

Story

Archibald Hilton Bull founded the A. H. Bull & Co. in 1902. The company originally ran steamship lines from New York to Florida. Eventually A. H. Bull & Co. expanded to include an office in Baltimore. In the early 1900s, when Baltimore’s steamship industry was booming, A. H. Bull & Co. faced opposition from competitors. Steamship companies vied for control over the Puerto Rican trade and in 1913 Bull accused his competitors of monopolizing the Puerto Rican steamship routes. According to Bull, his competitors were undercutting his steamship line in order to force the Bull Line out of the Puerto Rican trade.

In the early 1920s, Captain Duke Adams took over management of A. H. Bull’s Baltimore offices which the company then renamed “Adams & Co”. Although the company office name changed, “Adams & Co.” remained under the management of the A. H. Bull Company. The Bull Line continued to grow and purchase other steamship lines such as the insular line in 1914, the Puerto Rico- American steamship company in 1925, and the 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Carolina line in 1929. As a result of the company’s expansion, in 1929 A. H. Bull & Co. moved their Baltimore office to pier 5 in order to accommodate their increased business.

During the 1940s, the Bull Company bought one more steamship line known as the Clyde-Mallory Line before beginning to decline in the 1950s. The company remained a family-owned business until 1953 when the Bull family sold the company to American Coal Shipping. Manuel K. Kulukundis was the final owner of the A. H. Bull Steamship Company and in 1963 A. H. Bull went out of business.

Today the A. H. Bull & Co. steamship line no longer exists, but looking out in the inner harbor one can imagine the fleet of A. H. Bull steamships carrying passengers from as far north as New York to as far south as Puerto Rico.

Related Resources

Blume, Kenneth J. . Historical Dictionaries of Professions and Industries. Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2012.
“.” Baltimore Sun. September 15, 1929.
“.” Baltimore Sun. June 13, 1923.
“.” Baltimore Sun. January 18, 1913.
“.” Baltimore Sun. July 31, 1929.
Kempf, Sydney. View of the Inner Harbor From Pier 5. March, 2021.
Kempf, Sydney. View 2 of the Inner Harbor From Pier 5. March, 2021.

Bull Line. â€Welcome Aboard’- S.S. Puerto Rico Ad. Advertisement.The Past and Now. N.d. . Accessed April 21, 2021.

Burgert Brothers. A H Bull Steamship Company warehouse, 1135 Ellamae Avenue: Tampa, Fla. Photograph. Hillsborough County Public Library Cooperative. 1958. . Accessed April 21, 2021.

Street Address

Pier 5 Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
AH Bull Warehouse Florida.jpg
Sydney Kempf Inner Harbor Pic 1-min.jpg
Welcome Aboard SS Puerto Rico Ad.png
Sydney Kempf Inner Harbor Pic 2-min.jpg
]]>
Wed, 14 Apr 2021 12:38:29 -0400
<![CDATA[Bagby Furniture Company]]> /items/show/694

Dublin Core

Title

Bagby Furniture Company

Subject

Industry

Creator

Sydney Kempf

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

From Furniture Manufacturing to Italian Restaurants

Story

In 1879, Charles T. Bagby and A. D. Rivers founded the Bagby and Rivers Furniture Company, the predecessor to the Bagby Furniture Company. Bagby and Rivers manufactured furniture and in their 1882 furniture catalog, the company advertises mainly cabinetry.By the turn of the century, Charles T. Bagby was the sole owner of the company which was rebranded the “Bagby Furniture Company.” Charles T. Bagby ran Bagby Furniture until the 1930s, when he sold the company to his distant cousin William Hugh Bagby.

William Hugh Bagby was a man full of ambition. Before becoming president of the Bagby Furniture Company, William Hugh Bagby had actually worked for the company as a salesman. From the position of salesman, William Hugh Bagby began his own business before buying out the Bagby Furniture Company. Under the management of William Hugh Bagby, the company switched from furniture manufacturing to selling wholesale furniture in the forties. William Hugh Bagby passed away in 1988 and his son William Hugh Bagby Jr. became the company president.William Hugh Bagby Jr ran the company until 1990, when Bagby Furniture permanently closed. The furniture company could not compete with the lower prices manufacturers were offering customers if customers purchased furniture directly from the manufacturer.

After the Bagby Company closed their doors, a variety of development plans came up for the property. In 1993, a Baltimore Sun article stated that the Henrietta Corporation intended to build a luxury apartment complex on the property. In 2017, the Atlas Restaurant Group redeveloped the Bagby property into a collection of four Italian restaurants including Tagliata, Italian Disco, the Elk Room, and Monarque. The Bagby building which used to produce furniture, now serves as entertainment for patrons who want dinner and a show.

Related Resources

Bird, Betty. “.” April, 1998. Accessed March 21, 2020.
“.” Bagby and Rivers. 1882.
Cohen, Lauren. “.” Baltimore Magazine. November 8, 2019.
Gunts, Edward. “.” Baltimore Sun. July 20, 1990.
Gunts, Edward. “.” Baltimore Sun. April 24, 1993.
“.” Baltimore Sun. April 7, 1943.
Preservation Maryland. “.” November 5, 2016.
“.” Baltimore Sun. April 24, 1988.
“” Bagby Furniture Co. 1899.
Kempf, Sydney. Faded Bagby Furniture Sign. March, 2021.

Street Address

509 South Exeter Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
WMBGE_38871-p1f4soc7q51m1i11jndcu3rd1ffp-0.jpg
Sydney Kempf Bagby Pic 1.jpg
WM20140901-3 copy-min.jpg
WM20140901-4 copy-min.jpg
]]>
Wed, 14 Apr 2021 11:46:05 -0400
<![CDATA[General Ship Repair]]> /items/show/687

Dublin Core

Title

General Ship Repair

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Four generations of South Baltimore Shipbuilding

Story

General Ship Repair maintains the rich shipbuilding tradition so long associated with the South Baltimore neighborhoods of Federal Hill and Locust Point. Charles “Buck” Lynch founded the company in 1924, moved to this location in 1929, lost the company to bankruptcy during the Great Depression and managed to buy it back at auction. Today, the fourth generation of the Lynch family operates the company at one of the last remaining industrial sites along Key Highway.

General Ship has repaired a variety of vessels through the years, including schooners, steamships, paddle wheelers, and supertankers. Among the notable vessels that have been worked on recently are the Pride of Baltimore II and Mr. Trash Wheel. Workers perform maintenance work on ships in dry docks at this site in addition to sending crews out to other facilities. As of 2020 the facility, which includes a 17,300 square foot shed and two 1000-ton floating docks, repairs mostly workboats. The company serves as the tug and barge repair facility for the Port of Baltimore. The machine shop on site allows General Ship crews to weld and fabricate steel parts here.

Key Highway was once home to a variety of industries including molasses production, oil reprocessing, canning, and locomotive repair. While access to the waterfront remains more limited here than around other parts of the Inner Harbor, residential and mixed-use development has boomed in South Baltimore for the past decade. The Lynch family has considered relocating the business for the past few years, selling the waterfront property to be redeveloped into luxury housing. However, as of October 2020, General Ship Repair remains a bastion of shipbuilding in South Baltimore. What do you predict the Locust Point peninsula will be known for in the 21st century?

Related Resources

“.” Master plan, City of Baltimore Department of Planning, 2008.
McCandlish, Laura. “.” Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), June 24, 2008.
Simmons, Melody. “.” Baltimore Business Journal (Baltimore, MD), August 16, 2017
Trauthwein, Greg. “.” Maritime Reporter and Engineering News (New York, NY), August 2015.

Official Website

Street Address

1449 Key Highway, Baltimore, MD 21230
General Ship
]]>
Mon, 12 Oct 2020 09:50:46 -0400
<![CDATA[Key Highway Yards]]> /items/show/686

Dublin Core

Title

Key Highway Yards

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Once Baltimore's "largest and most important" shipyard

Story

The Key Highway Yards along the southern side of the Inner Harbor played a pivotal role in Baltimore’s shipbuilding industry from the 1820s until 1982. Passersby today see almost no traces of this industrial history at the upscale Ritz Carlton and HarborView communities. One of the only remnants of shipbuilding along this stretch of Baltimore’s waterfront lies underneath the 30-story HarborView Towers, completed in 1992: the dry docks used for ship repair were converted to become a parking garage.

Boatbuilding brothers William Skinner Jr. and Jeremiah Skinner moved from Dorchester County to Baltimore in the 1820s to establish the Skinner yard at the base of Federal Hill. William later sold his share of the company to his brother and purchased his own shipyard on Cross Street specializing in sailing ships and steamboats. The Skinners contributed greatly to the city’s prominence in American shipbuilding, with William remembered as having built the first Baltimore clipper ship. The for this site describes the Skinner yard as “the largest and most important of the period.”

William’s descendants carried on the family business and consolidated other small shipyards, eventually creating a 35-acre complex at Key Highway. Business boomed during the Civil War and continued through the turn of the century. Although World War I brought another wave of activity to these shipbuilding operations, the company went into receivership and Bethlehem Steel Company acquired this yard in 1921.Ěý

During the Bethlehem era, this was known as the “upper yard.” The “lower yard” referred to the shipyard adjacent to Fort McHenry, which is still in operation today. Workers at Bethlehem’s shipyards at Locust Point as well as Sparrows Point and Fairfield—together the largest ship repair operation in the United States—participated in the. Baltimore shipyards churned out a record-setting number of Liberty and Victory Ships between 1941-1945. The Key Highway yards repaired over 2,500 ships during WWII.Ěý

Enjoying a stroll along the harbor today, one could almost miss the fact that this place was once a hub of heavy industry, lined with massive equipment and bustling with workers. Although the shipyards are no longer visible at this location, you can experience this chapter of history at the Baltimore Museum of Industry. The 1942 Clyde Model 17 DE 90 whirley crane outside the museum, restored and painted bright green in 2019, worked on Pier 3 between the 1940s-1980s. Can you imagine the sense of awe one would have experienced seeing a whole fleet of these massive cranes hard at work along the shipyard?

Factoid

The Key Highway yards repaired over 2,500 ships during WWII.

Related Resources

Abel, Joseph. “.” Baltimore Museum of Industry (blog). September 17, 2019.
Dolan, Kevin. “.”Ěý National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, 1983).
Jones, Ken. “.” Baltimore Museum of Industry (blog). March 30, 2020.
“.” The Daily Record (Baltimore), February 10, 2016.

Street Address

326-284 Pierside Dr, Baltimore, MD 21230

Access Information

While some of this area is accessible via the pedestrian promenade and water taxi, some of the area is private property.
1968 view
Aerial view
Midcentury shipyard workers
Shipyard workers
Shipyard workers
Exterior view
]]>
Tue, 29 Sep 2020 15:35:41 -0400
<![CDATA[General Electric Apparatus Service Shop]]> /items/show/684

Dublin Core

Title

General Electric Apparatus Service Shop

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Electrical maintenance, environmental remediation, and mixed-use development

Story

The General Electric (GE) Apparatus Service Center did not support private consumers in maintaining their individual household appliances. Rather, this service center maintained large electrical transformers, electrical motors, and turbine engines which helped supply electrical energy to the city and surrounding area. From 1946-1993, these huge pieces of equipment arrived and departed the Service Center by rail.

Maintenance of this kind of equipment required all manner of industrial substances. Beginning in 1988, poor internal regulation of substance disposal caught up with the facility when a soil test confirmed polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)—a group of highly toxic carcinogens—in the surrounding soil. For the next 23 years various environmental cleanups have removed PCBs, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), chlorinated solvents, petroleum, and various toxic metals from contaminated soil and groundwater.

The original Service Center was demolished between 2002 and 2003. Three underground storage tanks of petroleum substances were removed in 2007, likely remnants from a historic gas station which occupied part of the lot during the 1950s and 1960s. GE Power Systems submitted an official Voluntary Cleanup Program application to the Maryland Department of the Environment in 2003, indicating their intention to eventually sell the land for residential development.

The land was held off the market for just under a decade for environmental cleanup until GE sold it to Solstice Partners in 2012. Solstice Partners, a development company, partnered with The Bozzuto Group and War Horse Cities to build Anthem House, a “healthy-lifestyle, luxury residential community” on the corner of E. Fort Avenue and Lawrence Street. Scott Plank, brother of Under Armour founder Kevin Plank, launched War Horse Cities in 2010. The $100 million development, which opened in 2017, includes 292 rental units as well as 20,000 square feet of street-level shops and restaurants.

GE continues to have an impact on Maryland industries. In 2017, the subsidiary GE Healthcare closed a plant in Laurel which manufactured “incubators and warmers for hospital neonatal intensive care units.” GE Aviation owned Middle River Aircraft Systems (MRAS) in Middle River until early 2019 when it was sold to ST Engineering, a Singapore-based aerospace conglomerate. MRAS has pioneered many innovations in airplane engine nacelle and thrust reverse systems.

As buildings are used and reused, remnants of a building’s former life sometimes appear. Those industrial legacies are baked into the character of a place. How do you feel that the transition from industrial to residential has changed the character of Locust Point?

Related Resources

Bay Area Economics. “,” Executive Summary, Baltimore Development Corporation, 2003.
“.” Fact Sheet, Maryland Department of the Environment, Baltimore, 2013.
“.” Press release, Department of Justice, Massachusetts, 1999. Department of Justice
Lambert, Jack. "." Baltimore Business Journal (Baltimore, MD), July 24, 2012.
Malone, David. "." Building Design + Construction (Lincolnshire, IL), August 30, 2017.
McDaniels, Andrea. "," Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD): January 26, 2017.
Simmons, Melody. “.” Baltimore Business Journal (Baltimore, MD), August 16, 2017.Ěý

Official Website

Street Address

900 E Fort Ave, Baltimore, MD 21230
Anthem House
Anthem House, rear view
Anthem House
]]>
Tue, 29 Sep 2020 15:04:24 -0400
<![CDATA[Chesapeake Paperboard Co.]]> /items/show/683

Dublin Core

Title

Chesapeake Paperboard Co.

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

From paper recycling to luxury apartments

Story

All that remains of the Chesapeake Paperboard Co. complex today is the water tower. The site is now known as McHenry Row, a 90,000 square foot mixed use development project that contains 250 luxury apartments, offices, and street level shops at the end of Woodall Avenue.

From 1910 until the company's closure in the mid-1990s, Chesapeake Paperboard was the sole recycler of paper waste from 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City's curbside recycling program, processing over 15,000 tons of paper waste annually. The company processed this paper waste into pulp, then into paperboard which it would then export to other manufacturers. Paperboard is the harder, less flexible cousin to regular printer paper. Lightweight and strong, paperboard can most easily be found in consumer product packaging. One of the most recognizable examples of paperboard are breakfast cereal boxes.

The Chesapeake Paperboard Company was acquired in 2005 by Green Bay Packaging and moved operations to Hunt Valley. Today, the Baltimore Division of Green Bay Packaging produces plain brown and color printed cardboard boxes for companies in Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia. The Baltimore Division is certified by the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and the Maryland Green Registry.

As with so many changes in technology, there are both pros and cons to recycling modernization. The loss of this local industry impacts job opportunities here in South Baltimore, but an upgraded recycling infrastructure means a cleaner, greener world for all. The give and take of advancing technology, changing consumer tastes and policy and regulation is rarely as simple as it looks at first glance.

Factoid

Chesapeake Paperboard was the sole recycler of paper waste from 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ City's curbside recycling program for most of the 20th century.

Related Resources

“.” Green Bay Packaging. 2020.
“.” Maryland Green Registry, Baltimore, MD, 2015.
Hetrick, Ross. “.” Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), May 6, 1994.
Skowronski, Will. “.” Baltimore Business Journal (Baltimore, MD), July 4, 2007.

Official Website

Street Address

1001 E Fort Ave, Baltimore, MD 21230
1965 view
1922 view
Interior view, 1922
McHenry Row
]]>
Tue, 29 Sep 2020 14:41:04 -0400
<![CDATA[Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation]]> /items/show/681

Dublin Core

Title

Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation

Subject

Industry

Creator

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

A dumping ground for toxic waste

Story

The Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation manufactured chemical components for many industrial applications. Quaker merchant Isaac Tyson Jr. established the company that became Allied Chemical in 1828, mining chromium ore and supplying chrome pigment to England which he refined at his 91ĚŇÉ«ĘÓƵ Chrome Works plant. The operation became Mutual Chemical Company in 1908, merged with Allied in 1954, and became part of Honeywell in 1999. This site, used for dumping the toxic waste produced in chemical manufacturing, is now occupied by a row of houses.

Sites across Baltimore—including this location in Locust Point as well as Harbor Point—were toxic dumping grounds for Allied and its successor company, Honeywell. Chromium, produced here, was used to make stainless steel and certain paints. Tom Pelton of the Baltimore Sun wrote that, “During the city's industrial zenith in the mid-20th century, Allied dumped tons of chrome waste and other pollutants in more than a dozen locations around Baltimore's harbor, both into the Patapsco River and along the shore, according to state records. Chrome waste was often used as landfill under buildings and parking lots.” He pointed out that its “lemon hue lurks under the parking lot of the Baltimore Museum of Industry” nearby.

The term “brownfield” refers to a formerly industrial property that requires environmental remediation for redevelopment efforts—sites tainted by toxic waste. One study by Johns Hopkins University researchers estimated that Baltimore alone has about 1,000 brownfield sites. Environmentalists at local, state, and federal levels have gone to enormous efforts to oversee the cleanup process, to ensure public health at sites such as this one.

Think about the benefits of environmental regulations as you walk through the neighborhood. Although you can’t see it, arsenic and chromium lie beneath our feet in many locations along the harbor. Cleanup efforts remain underway across Baltimore.

Factoid

Although you can’t see it, arsenic and chromium lie beneath our feet in many locations along the harbor.

Related Resources

“.” Honeywell. 2007.
Edelson, Mat. “.”Ěý Johns Hopkins Public Health Magazine (Baltimore, MD), 2007.
“.” Hazardous Waste Cleanup Report, Environmental Protection Agency, 2017.
Kelly, Jacques. “.”Ěý Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), December 2, 1992.
Pelton, Tom. “.” Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), May 7, 2007.

Street Address

1232 E Fort Ave, Baltimore, MD 21230
Present-day site
]]>
Tue, 29 Sep 2020 11:36:03 -0400
<![CDATA[Procter & Gamble Baltimore Plant]]> /items/show/679

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.Ěý
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.
Procter & Gamble Baltimore Plant
Bridge to the past
UA HQ
UA Campus
Waterfront at Tide Point
]]>
Tue, 29 Sep 2020 11:13:04 -0400
<![CDATA[Fell's Point Recreation Pier]]> /items/show/473

Dublin Core

Title

Fell's Point Recreation Pier

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

In 1912, The Baltimore Sun heralded the forthcoming construction of the Broadway commercial and recreation pier. Citing the success of similar piers in New York and Boston, the Sun declared that piers for recreation “furnish a place for mothers and children to get a breath of fresh air [and] for young people to enjoy themselves in innocent, wholesome amusement. In summer a recreation pier is a godsend to the poor housed in ill-ventilated, closely-packed rooms. The Broadway pier will fill a genuine need.”

The pier opened in 1914 as a multipurpose building for both industry and leisure. It became a focal point of the Fells Point community. The Bay Belle steamer ran from the pier to the Eastern Shore for summer outings. There were Christmas Eve dances that filled the hall with 400 persons, roller skating, and organized games for young people. Lessons in English were often held at the pier to serve the local immigrant community who hailed from Poland, Ukraine, and Bohemia.

In 1931, the USS Constitution was towed up the Chesapeake from the Charlestown Navy Yard in Massachusetts and berthed at the Rec Pier. Less than an hour after she had docked, a small crowd of 100 people gathered to see her.

The pier was extended by 90 feet in 1948 to make a home for the Harbor Police. It underwent another renovation in 1991. Over ten thousand engraved bricks, purchased by Baltimoreans for $50 each in a Buy-A-Brick campaign grace the surrounding walkways.

The pier became a national star in its own right, when it was chosen to be the site of Baltimore police headquarters in the television show, Homicide: Life on the Street (1993-1999). After the show ended, the building sat vacant until 2017 with the opening of the Sagamore Pendry, a luxury hotel owned by Under Armour CEO, Kevin Plank.

Street Address

1715 Thames Street, Baltimore, MD 21231
Recreation Pier
Broadway Recreation Pier (now the Sagamore Pendry Hotel)
The Sagamore Pendry Hotel
]]>
Tue, 03 Mar 2015 20:57:23 -0500
<![CDATA[Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse]]> /items/show/439

Dublin Core

Title

Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Seven Foot Knoll lighthouse takes its name from its original location—the rocky shoals where the mouth of the Patapsco River meets the Chesapeake Bay. The sandy, soft bottom of these shoals necessitated the construction of a screwpile-style lighthouse (as opposed to a straightpile model) where a hexagon-shaped building perches on pilings that are screwed into the bottom of the waterway. Built in 1856, Seven Foot Knoll is one of the oldest Chesapeake lighthouses still in existence and the oldest screwpile lighthouse in Maryland.

Managed by the U.S. Lighthouse Service, and later the U.S. Coast Guard, Seven Foot Knoll lighthouse served as a general aid for the navigation of ships. Keepers, therefore, had the crucial job of making sure the lighthouse was constantly functioning. Every night at sundown, keepers were responsible for lighting the beacon lamp and keeping it lit until sunrise the next morning, which required vigilance, as well as regular maintenance. Each morning, keepers cleaned the beacon lens and lamp thoroughly, so that they were ready for use in the evening. When there was fog, the fog bell had to be sounded continuously. This required winding the station's bell machine every 45 minutes until the fog lifted.

Although the Lighthouse Service did not officially permit keepers to bring their families to live in the lighthouse, at least two families did live there during the 1870s. Eva Marie “Knolie” Bowling, who was born in the lighthouse in 1875, recalled life in the lighthouse in an interview for a 1936 article in the Baltimore News. The lighthouse itself contained five rooms with space for both a library (the children were homeschooled by their mother) and a piano, she recalled. The small space underneath the lighthouse contained a hog pen and a chicken yard. During severe weather, the animals were transferred to the house for their safety. Storms also provided additional food, she added, when the family took advantage of the wildfowl who got caught in heavy winds and were dashed into the side of the lighthouse.

Conditions at Seven Foot Knoll were tough. Life in a lighthouse was isolating, and during winter months, it was challenging to heat the structure due to weather conditions and limited coal rations. In early 1900s, staff changed six times over a three-year period. In the 1970s, a report revealed that the lighthouse keeper’s position went vacant for over a year because of the remote location.

In the 1930s, the US Coast Guard considered automating Seven Foot Knoll. The shipping and maritime world protested, citing the heroic work of a lighthouse keeper who had rescued five people from drowning after a barge sank. Ultimately, however, the lighthouse was automated in 1949.

In 1997, the lighthouse was moved to Pier 5 on the Baltimore Harbor as one of the Baltimore Maritime Museum’s exhibits. Today Seven Foot Knoll lighthouse is operated by Historic Ships in Baltimore who oversee several ships in the harbor including the USS Constellation and USS Torsk.

Official Website

Street Address

Pier 5, Baltimore, MD 21202
Seven Foot Knoll Light House
Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse
Moving Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse
Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse
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Thu, 26 Feb 2015 11:30:23 -0500
<![CDATA[USS Constellation]]> /items/show/436

Dublin Core

Title

USS Constellation

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Docked in the northwest corner of the harbor, the magnificent USS Constellation is a sloop-of-war, a National Historic Landmark, and the last sail-only warship designed and built by the United States Navy.

She was built in 1854, using a small amount of material salvaged from the 1797 frigate USS Constellation, which had been disassembled the year before. Before the Civil War, the Constellation was used to intercept slaving vessels. Although the U.S. had outlawed the importation of slaves in 1808, many illegal ships still tried to transport human beings to America’s shores. At the onset of the Civil War, the Constellation was involved in the U.S. Navy's first capture on May 21, 1861, when she captured a ship known as the “Triton,” an illegal slave ship.

The USS Constellation remained in service for many years after the Civil War. She provided aid relief during the Irish famine, sailed in World War II as a flag ship, and for two decades was used as a training ship for the United States Navy. She was the last sailboat in the U.S. Naval Fleet.

In 1968, the ship was relocated to the Inner Harbor as part of the city’s urban renewal plan. Since then, the ship has undergone several multi-million dollar renovations, and today, the USS Constellation is open to tour. Visitors can walk all four decks, talk to crew members, and even participate in a cannon drill.

Official Website

Street Address

301 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
USS Constellation
USS Constellation
U.S.S. Constellation
USS Constellation
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Thu, 26 Feb 2015 11:23:38 -0500
<![CDATA[United States Coast Guard Cutter TANEY]]> /items/show/413

Dublin Core

Title

United States Coast Guard Cutter TANEY

Creator

National Park Service

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

The Last Surviving Warship from Pearl Harbor

Story

USCGC (United States Coast Guard Cutter) TANEY, a National Historic Landmark, is the last surviving warship that was present and fought at the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, December 7, 1941. Named for former Secretary of the Treasury, Roger B. Taney, the ship was one of seven cutters named for Secretaries of the Treasury.

The Treasury Class cutters represented the ultimate development of pre-World War II patrol gunboats. They were large, powerful warships designed to provide maritime law enforcement, search and rescue services, and communication and weather services on the high seas. Treasury class cutters served as convoy escorts, amphibious force flagships, shore bombardment vessels, and maritime patrol ships in World War II, the Korean War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Berlin Crisis, and the Vietnam War. TANEY was built in 1936.

Following Pearl Harbor, TANEY steamed into the Atlantic for convoy duty in 1944, then returned to the Pacific in 1945 to participate in the Okinawa campaign and the occupation of Japan. After service in Vietnam she was decommissioned in 1986.

Official Website

Street Address

Pier 5, Baltimore, MD 21202
U.S. Coast Guard Cutter TANEY
USCGC Taney
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Wed, 10 Sep 2014 16:06:47 -0400
<![CDATA[World Trade Center]]> /items/show/138

Dublin Core

Title

World Trade Center

Subject

Architecture

Creator

Mary Zajac

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Even before it opened, the anticipation around Baltimore’s World Trade Center was unmistakable. “It promises to be the handsomest building built so far in the redevelopment area, a graceful symbol for Baltimore’s renewal and an emblem of the historic economic dependence of the state and the city on the sea,” reported the Sun in December 1976.

The idea for a World Trade building for Baltimore began percolating in the mid-1960s. The center would be a grand symbol of the harbor’s renewal and a hub for maritime business. In 1966, the Maryland Port Authority sponsored Mayor Theodore McKeldin and five other port and city planning officials on a whirlwind trip to Houston and New Orleans to see other world trade centers in those cities. The mayor came back inspired, and Baltimore became one of the sixteen charter members of the World Trade Association.

Construction of the center began in 1973. The five-sided, thirty-story building was designed by the firm of architect I.M. Pei, who was responsible for the design of the glass pyramid of the Louvre in Paris, the East Wing of the National Gallery in Washington D.C., and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, among other projects. The building cost $22 million, double the cost of the original proposition. The apex of two of the walls facing the harbor meet at the shoreline and suggest the prow of a ship. It is the tallest five-sided building in the world.

One of the first tenants, The Canton Company, the parent firm of the Cottman Company, who was the operator of the Canton Marine Terminal, signed a five-year lease for 13,000 square feet of space. Over the years, the tower has also housed the headquarters of the Maryland Port Administration, the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development, and the World Trade Center Institute, a member of the World Trade Centers Association that operates as a private, non-profit international business membership organization. For many years, the Top of the World Observation Level offered spectacular city and harbor views. This level was slated to close to the public in 2025.

After the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City, security measures at the Baltimore World Trade Center changed accordingly so that boat access to the building is blocked to prevent acts of terrorism. Baltimore’s World Trade Center is also home to a 9/11 Memorial that includes three 22-foot long steel beams from the 94th to 96th floors of the north tower of the New York World Trade Center. Twisted and fused together, the steel beams and damaged limestone pieces from the Pentagon's west wall rest atop marble blocks bearing the names and birthdays of the 68 Marylanders who died in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Street Address

401 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
World Trade Center
Construction of the World Trade Center
World Trade Center
World Trade Center
The 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center
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Tue, 02 Oct 2012 11:12:07 -0400
<![CDATA[Baltimore's Inner Harbor]]> /items/show/129

Dublin Core

Title

Baltimore's Inner Harbor

Subject

Inner Harbor

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

From an Industrial Waterfront to Haborplace and More

Story

In 1985, WJZ-TV local news cameras captured the view of the Inner Harbor from above as they documented the quickly changing landscape from the back seat of a helicopter. An aerial vantage point was nearly a necessity to take in the wide range of recently completed development projects and recently announced new building sites. In 1984, developers and city officials had announced twenty projects to build new buildings or reuse existing buildings around Charles Center and the Inner Harbor.

That same year, Charles Center and the Inner Harbor won an "Honor Award" from the American Institute of Architects (AIA) recognizing the conversion of the former industrial landscape into a destination for tourists and locals as "one of the supreme achievements of large-scale urban design and development in U.S. history."

Related Resources

Street Address

201 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Harborplace and the Inner Harbor plaza
Inner Harbor
Baltimore Harbor
Inner Harbor
1914 map of the Baltimore Harbor
Baltimore harbor from Federal Hill
View from Pier 6, Inner Harbor
Oyster luggers in the habor
Pier 5, Inner Harbor
National Aquarium
Baltimore Harbor
Inner Harbor from Federal Hill
Harborplace
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Tue, 02 Oct 2012 10:46:22 -0400