/items/browse?output=atom&tags=Landmarks%20on%20the%20Red%20Line <![CDATA[Explore 91ÊÓƵ]]> 2025-03-12T12:08:00-04:00 Omeka /items/show/313 <![CDATA[Lockerman-Bundy Elementary School]]> 2018-11-27T10:33:53-05:00

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Title

Lockerman-Bundy Elementary School

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Lede

Despite its modern building, the history of Lockerman-Bundy Elementary School dates back to the 1890s.

Story

The school is named for Joseph Harrison Lockerman (1864-1923), a graduate of the Centenary Biblical Institute (now Morgan State University) who in 1911 became Vice Principal of the new Colored High and Training School for African American teachers (now Coppin State University). Two years later, the training school moved into the upper floors of the new Public School 100 located at 229 North Mount Street.

When the school relocated to Pulaski Street in 1976, the name expanded to honor Mrs. Walter A. Bundy (1904-1965). A graduate of Coppin State in 1918, Mrs. Bundy’s teaching career in Baltimore’s black schools spanned over four decades.

Official Website

Street Address

301 N. Pulaski Street, Baltimore, MD 21223
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/items/show/312 <![CDATA[The Bridge Theater]]> 2019-05-10T22:45:25-04:00

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Title

The Bridge Theater

Subject

Entertainment

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

One of the area’s earliest movie theaters, "The Bridge" opened in May 1915, seating seven hundred patrons and featuring Paramount Pictures films. Under the management of Edmondson Amusement Company president, Louis Schilchter, the Bridge Theater offered more than just movies. Schilchter hosted everything from song and dance shows to a community gathering to honor soldiers returning from WWI. After an explosion in 1930 damaged the side of the building, the theater rebuilt and continued to operate until 1968.

Since 1970, the building has been used as a church and is presently home to the Life Celebration Center.

Street Address

2100 Edmondson Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21223
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/items/show/292 <![CDATA[Ward Baking Company Building]]> 2018-11-27T10:33:53-05:00

Dublin Core

Title

Ward Baking Company Building

Subject

Industry

Description

Built in 1925 over the loud protests of local residents who opposed a new factory in their residential neighborhood, the Ward Baking Company is a handsome brick box, designed by C.B. Comstock, a New York-based refrigeration architect and engineer. Based in Pittsburgh, the Ward Baking Company, then known as the Ward Bread Company, also had factories in the Bronx, Buffalo, and East Orange, New Jersey. Long retired as a factory, the building has more recently been used as a church.

Creator

Eli Pousson

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Built in 1925 over the loud protests of local residents who opposed a new factory in their residential neighborhood, the Ward Baking Company is a handsome brick box, designed by C.B. Comstock, a New York-based refrigeration architect and engineer. Based in Pittsburgh, the Ward Baking Company, then known as the Ward Bread Company, also had factories in the Bronx, Buffalo, and East Orange, New Jersey. Long retired as a factory, the building has more recently been used as a church.

Street Address

2140 Edmondson Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21229
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/items/show/290 <![CDATA[American Ice Company]]> 2018-11-27T10:33:53-05:00

Dublin Core

Title

American Ice Company

Subject

Industry

Creator

Eli Pousson

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

A Former Factory on Franklin Street

Story

Constructed in 1911, the American Ice Company is an enduring reminder of West Baltimore’s industrial development with a striking brick facade on W. Franklin Street and a powerhouse that backs up to the Pennsylvania Railroad tracks. At the time of the building’s construction, West Baltimore was quickly developing beyond the 1816 city line as small builders put up new rowhouses that soon extended west out to the Gwynns Falls.

The previous decade had also witnessed significant changes in the ice industry as the business of importing natural ice from rivers and lakes in the Northeast to Mid-Atlantic and Southern cities dwindled in the face of competition from new factories that enabled businesses to supply a more regular and consistent supply of “manufactured ice.â€

The building was severely damaged in a 2004 fire. Fortunately, the current owner supported a recent nomination to the National Register of Historic Places and plans to redevelop the property while retaining the historic ice house structure.

Related Resources

Street Address

2100 W. Franklin Street, Baltimore, MD 21223
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/items/show/289 <![CDATA[St. Luke's Church]]> 2018-11-27T10:33:53-05:00

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Title

St. Luke's Church

Subject

Religion

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

A true gem of Baltimore religious architecture, the handsome Gothic Revival tower of St. Luke’s Church is matched by its richly detailed sanctuary. While architect J.W. Priest oversaw the completion of the building in 1857, five other architects also played some part. Unlike many historic congregations that left the neighborhood, St. Luke’s opened its doors on July 10, 1853 and has kept them open for over 150 years.

Official Website

Street Address

217 N. Carey Street, Baltimore, MD 21223
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/items/show/6 <![CDATA[Waverly Terrace]]> 2018-11-27T10:33:48-05:00

Dublin Core

Title

Waverly Terrace

Subject

Architecture

Description

Named after Sir Walter Scott's 1814 novel Waverly, Waverly Terrace reflects the wealth of Franklin Square’s residents in the 1850s. The Baltimore Sun praised architect Thomas Dixon’s four-story row as "much handsomer than any yet finished in this city." Matching the area’s current diversity today, residents in the early 1860s included both Confederate sympathizers (Miss Nannie, Miss Virginia, and Miss Julia Lomax, charged with disloyalty by Union troops) and African Americans (Lloyd Sutton drafted for the U.S. Colored Troops).

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Named after Sir Walter Scott's 1814 novel Waverly, Waverly Terrace reflects the wealth of Franklin Square’s residents in the 1850s. The Baltimore Sun praised architect Thomas Dixon’s four-story row as "much handsomer than any yet finished in this city."

Matching the area’s current diversity today, residents in the early 1860s included both Confederate sympathizers (Miss Nannie, Miss Virginia, and Miss Julia Lomax, charged with disloyalty by Union troops) and African Americans (Lloyd Sutton drafted for the U.S. Colored Troops).

Street Address

101-123 N. Carey Street, Baltimore, MD 21223
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