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Charles Village - Abell Historic District
Located directly north of Mount Vernon Place, the Charles ...
Lovely Lane Methodist Church
During the 18th century, Methodist congregations were foun...
Fells Point Historic District
William Fell, a Quaker, settled and built his first storeh...
Old Town Friend's Meeting House and McKim's School
The Old Town Friends' Meeting House (also known as the Ais...
Lloyd Street and Chizuk Amuno Synagogues
The Lloyd Street Synagogue, constructed in 1845 with an 18...
Federal Hill Historic District
Federal Hill Historic District sits on a hill overlooking ...
Lord Baltimore Hotel
The Lord Baltimore Hotel, designed by William L. Stoddart ...
Mount Vernon Place Historic District
Mount Vernon Place Historic District is comprised of four ...
Cathedral Hill Historic District
Located at the corner of Cathedral and Mulberry Str...
Loft Historic Districts
The Loft Historic Districts (North and South) are located ...
Results for D T
Charles Village - Abell Historic District
Located directly north of Mount Vernon Place, the Charles Village-Abell Historic District is a transitional neighborhood, between the heavily urbanized neighborhoods to the south and the garden suburbs to the north. The well-landscaped front lawns are rare for Baltimore rowhouses, ...
Lovely Lane Methodist Church
During the 18th century, Methodist congregations were found only in scattered groups around the country. In 1784, representatives of these groups came together for a conference at the Lovely Lane Meeting House where they organized the Methodist Episcopal Church of ...
Fells Point Historic District
William Fell, a Quaker, settled and built his first storehouse some time before 1763, an area that later became known as Fells Point. This bustling harbor settlement was incorporated into Baltimore Town, in 1773. The Fells Point Ship Yard produced ...
Old Town Friend's Meeting House and McKim's School
The Old Town Friends' Meeting House (also known as the Aisquith Street Meeting or Baltimore Meeting), is one of Baltimore's few remaining 18th-century buildings and the oldest religious building in the city. The Meeting House is a two-story, brick, rectangular ...
Lloyd Street and Chizuk Amuno Synagogues
The Lloyd Street Synagogue, constructed in 1845 with an 1876 addition, was the first synagogue in Maryland. The Baltimore Hebrew Congregation, incorporated on January 29, 1830, worshiped at several locations until the Lloyd Street Synagogue was constructed. The synagogue, designed ...
Federal Hill Historic District
Federal Hill Historic District sits on a hill overlooking downtown Baltimore and the Baltimore Harbor. In 1788, on this hill, the citizens held a celebration honoring the state's ratification of the United States Constitution. An observatory built in 1795 signaled ...
Lord Baltimore Hotel
The Lord Baltimore Hotel, designed by William L. Stoddart and built in 1928, embodies the distinctive architectural characteristics of early 20th-century, high-rise hotels, reminiscent of such famous American hotels as New York's Vanderbilt Hotel and Chicago's Palmer House. Built in ...
Mount Vernon Place Historic District
Mount Vernon Place Historic District is comprised of four rectangular parks-- East and West Mount Vernon Place and North and South Washington Place. These garden parks, and the houses that line them, form the setting for the Washington Monument, the ...
Cathedral Hill Historic District
Located at the corner of Cathedral and Mulberry Streets, the Baltimore Basilica, officially known as the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, was the first Roman Catholic Cathedral built in the United States, and ...
Loft Historic Districts
The Loft Historic Districts (North and South) are located near the University of Maryland Campus in downtown Baltimore. The Districts are architecturally significant for their massive, brick vertical manufactories that date from 1870 to 1915 and represent the finest collection ...