/items/browse?output=atom&tags=Key%20Highway <![CDATA[Explore 91ĘÓƵ]]> 2025-03-12T11:33:38-04:00 Omeka /items/show/687 <![CDATA[General Ship Repair]]> 2020-11-24T23:38:48-05:00

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
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/items/show/686 <![CDATA[Key Highway Yards]]> 2020-09-30T16:18:33-04:00

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. 

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. 

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. “.”  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.
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/items/show/684 <![CDATA[General Electric Apparatus Service Shop]]> 2020-10-05T08:51:50-04:00

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. 

Official Website

Street Address

900 E Fort Ave, Baltimore, MD 21230
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/items/show/683 <![CDATA[Chesapeake Paperboard Co. ]]> 2020-09-29T14:41:04-04:00

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 Baltimore 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 Baltimore 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
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/items/show/681 <![CDATA[Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation]]> 2020-10-05T08:52:46-04:00

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 Baltimore 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. “.”  Johns Hopkins Public Health Magazine (Baltimore, MD), 2007.
“.” Hazardous Waste Cleanup Report, Environmental Protection Agency, 2017.
Kelly, Jacques. “.”  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
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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

Baltimore 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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/items/show/389 <![CDATA[Baltimore Museum of Industry]]> 2020-10-14T17:02:05-04:00

Dublin Core

Title

Baltimore Museum of Industry

Subject

Museums
Industry

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

In the late 1970s, Mayor William Donald Schaefer proposed the creation of a museum to tell the story of Baltimore industry across two centuries of American history. Even before they the new museum found a building, Baltimore City officials organized an exhibit at the Baltimore Convention Center, and put up a display about the museum-to-be during the Baltimore City Fair. Roger B. White, a young city employee hired under the Comprehensive Employment Training Act, led the search to find an appropriate location, acquire collections, and recruit private donors. White found a Platt & Company oyster cannery building on the 1400 block of Key Highway and began the process of turning the old factory into a museum. Once one of eighty canneries operating around Baltimore’s harbor, Platt & Company on Key Highway was one of the last canneries left. The museum developed exhibits on three major periods of Baltimore’s industrial growth: 1790-1830, 1870-1900, and 1920 up through the 1970s. White acquired equipment from the American Brewery and furnishings from the local Read’s Drug Store chain. In November 1981, after years of preparation, the doors opened to the public at the renovated oyster cannery reborn as the Baltimore Museum of Industry. By December, Baltimore City had awarded the museum $25,000 to pay for the cost of school field trips and, in 1984, the city decided to purchase the site. The museum originally leased the building for around $25,000 a year but, after the property sold to Baltimore City, the rent climbed to $85,000. The museum organized a corporate membership drive in order to cover the rising rent. At the same time, the museum sought to triple the amount of space in the facility while adding a pier and waterfront improvements. In 1996, with only half of the renovation complete, Alonzo Decker Jr., former Black & Decker chief executive, donated $1 million to the fund. With this single donation, the museum surpassed its' $3.5 million goal and finished the renovation. For his gift, the Museum inscribed Decker’s name on the wall of the main gallery. Today, the museum thrives as an immersive experience of permanent and temporary exhibits that detail and demonstrate the industrial history of Baltimore. The exhibits include machinery from a cannery, garment loft, machine shop, pharmacy and print shop and the collections include around a million artifacts. With a pier and waterfront area, the museum often hosts weddings and corporate events as well.

Watch our on this museum!

Official Website

Street Address

1415 Key Highway, Baltimore, MD 21230
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