<![CDATA[Explore 91Ƶ]]> /items/browse?output=rss2&tags=Fells%20Point Wed, 12 Mar 2025 12:02:05 -0400 info@baltimoreheritage.org (Explore 91Ƶ) 91Ƶ Zend_Feed http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss <![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.

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. “‘.” 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
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Wed, 14 Apr 2021 13:01:31 -0400
<![CDATA[Budeke’s Paint]]> /items/show/659

Dublin Core

Title

Budeke’s Paint

Subject

Business

Creator

Richard F. Messick

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Storefront on Broadway Burned but Still in Business

Lede

A family-owned business has been around since 1868, Budeke’s paint products have been delivered via police car, motorcycle, bicycle, and roller skates, not to mention more conventional commercial trucks. The long-time Broadway location in Fells Point was gutted by fire in September 2018.

Story

Budeke's Paint operated in the same storefront on Broadway from 1870 up until 2018. Unfortunately, in the early morning hours of September 7, 2018 a fire broke out on the first floor and grew into a four-alarm blaze that destroyed the stock, a collection of documents and ephemera, and the building’s interior. Fortunately, the fire caused no injuries and the business has continued operations at its Timonium location. During Budeke’s long history, its paint has been used by institutions as diverse as Johns Hopkins Hospital, Bethlehem Steel, McCormick & Co, and the U.S. Coast Guard. Local governments, including Baltimore City and County, have used Budeke’s products in municipal buildings including City Hall.

George H. Budeke was born in 1846 in Hamilton, North Carolina, to a family of German immigrants. He moved to Baltimore in 1859, a year after his father’s death, and became an errand-boy at a dry goods store before moving on to manage two paint stores. Budeke founded his company in 1868 just three years after the end of the Civil War. The business has stayed in the family through five generations. Upon the death of George H., the business passed to his son, George M. Budeke, in 1909. It then passed to a son-in-law, George Gardner, who took over in 1956. Gardner passed the business on to his own son-in-law, Louis V. Koerber, in 1969. Finally, the current owner, L. Bryan Koerber, took over the business from his own father in 1996.

While most customers buy pre-mixed paint today, Budeke's originally sold the essential ingredients separately—turpentine, white or red lead, and a variety of earthen pigments—that contractors used to mix their own paints. Different ratios of the components determined whether painters used the mixture as primer or a top coat. Budeke obtained its stock regionally, including from a number of small pigment grinders who turned raw minerals into various colors out of their shops on Russell Street (near where the Horseshoe Casino now stands). In those days, lead was commonly used as the hiding agent in paint to ensure the pigment covered over the surface that was being painted, but fell out of use due to its toxicity. Lead paint was eventually banned in the United States in the 1970s and replaced with product that uses titanium dioxide instead.

The fire at the original location of Budeke’s destroyed more than a few of old buildings. It also wiped out much of the history of the business. A room on the second floor of its Fells Point shop was a little museum containing artifacts relating to its decades of operation. One noteworthy item on display was a bill from September 10, 1888, for an order by Baltimore’s health department, which consisted of a long list of items totaling $11.92. The corresponding cancelled check for this order, dated September 17, 1888, was found during renovations of City Hall in the 1970s. The contractor who was charged with disposing of old files reviewed some of what he had and realized the businesses still existed and might want the old paperwork. After presenting the old check to the shop on Broadway, Budeke's staff gave the contractor a gallon of paint for his trouble.

Official Website

Street Address

418 S. Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21231
Shelf of vintage products, Budeke's Paint
Tools and ephemera, Budeke's Paint
Budeke's Paint after the fire
Fire truck at Budeke's Paint
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Tue, 24 Jul 2018 14:39:18 -0400
<![CDATA[Meyer Seed Company of Baltimore]]> /items/show/656

Dublin Core

Title

Meyer Seed Company of Baltimore

Subject

Business
Agriculture and Gardening

Creator

Richard F. Messick

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

When this article first appeared, Meyer Seed Company was over 100 years old. Unfortunately, the business closed in 1921. The location is to be developed into an apartment/retail space.

Story

Like the countless seeds the Meyer Seed Company has sold over the past hundred years, the story of this long-running legacy business starts with water. Before he held a seed bucket or a watering can, the company’s founder, John F. Meyer, worked as a sailor, eventually becoming first officer of the schooner Katie J. Irelan. On September 22, 1897, on a voyage carrying scrap iron from Baltimore to Wilmington, North Carolina, a severe storm swamped the ship. Another ship struggling through the storm spotted the Katie J. Irelan in distress and rescued Meyer and his crewmates less than two hours before the 708-ton ship sank into the ocean. Meyer retired from sailing the next year. Later, Meyer fondly recalled the eleven years he spent on the “adventurous yet hard life” at sea before he “drifted back to Baltimore and decided to stick to dry land.”

Meyer started selling seeds for the long-established Bolgiano Seed Company at the northeast corner of Pratt and Light Streets. In September 1910, he partnered with German immigrant G.W. Stisser to form the Meyer-Stisser Seed Company initially located at 32 Light Street. After the end of World War I, Stisser returned to Germany so, in 1921, Meyer bought out his interest in the business. By 1927, the business boasted a proud motto: “Sterling quality, courteous treatment and punctuality.”

Meyer’s assistant, Webster Hurst, Sr., bought out Meyer (but kept the name) in the 1930s. Today, three successive generations of the Hurst family have continued to run the company and devote their lives to selling seeds. Apparently, the seed business is as much about cultivating people as plants. At least two of the current employees have been with the company for over thirty years. Charles Pearre, a former employee, worked for over fifty years selling and developing seeds. In addition, there are even customers who have bought Meyer Seed for multiple generations.

Meyer Seed is now located in a nondescript warehouse on Caroline Street between Harbor East and Fells Point. Stepping inside, however, offers a rare sight—hundreds of varieties of seeds displayed in big banks of wooden drawers and long rows of bins used by countless customers over the decades.The company’s wide variety of seeds for sale has helped Meyer Seed compete with “big box” stores that don’t offer nearly the same range of options for gardeners.

Meyer Seed has been around long enough to see some of their seeds rise and fall in popularity. After the “Long John” melon was developed in Anne Arundel, County, Meyer Seed was the first company to start selling the melon’s seeds in 1930. But, in the decades after World War II, very few farmers or gardeners planted what are now known as “heirloom” plant varieties like the Long John melon. Fortunately, in 2004, David Pendergrass of the New Hope Seed Company in Tennessee learned of the long defunct melon and obtained some starter seeds from the USDA. The plants grew and Pendergrass reintroduced the melon to the world in 2007. Whether it’s seeds for heirloom melons or cutting edge organic gardening seeds, for over one hundred years, Meyer Seed remains at the center of Baltimore’s seed world.

Official Website

Street Address

600 S. Caroline Street, Baltimore, MD 21231
Seed display rack, Meyer Seed Company
Framed picture of early shop, Meyer Seed Company
Seed bins, Meyer Seed Company
Bulbs, Meyer Seed Company
Sales counter, Meyer Seed Company
The Meyer-Stisser Company
Meyer Seed Co.'s Garden Book
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Tue, 24 Jul 2018 14:21:54 -0400
<![CDATA[Tochterman’s Fishing Tackle]]> /items/show/655

Dublin Core

Title

Tochterman’s Fishing Tackle

Subject

Business

Creator

Richard F. Messick

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

A Family Selling Reels, Rods, Bloodworms, and More

Story

Tochterman’s ostensibly sells fishing tackle but owners Tony and Dee Tochterman—the third generation of the Tochterman family to run this Eastern Avenue institution—are part of a hundred year long history of customer service that few other businesses could match. In the mid-1990s, a customer came into the shop carrying a gift certificate he found in his late father’s desk—dating all the way back to 1947. Tony honored it anyway. Tony even recalled sending fishing rods to a customer in Nicaragua (a delivery that had to be carried on horseback for the last few miles of the trip).

Tochterman’s Fishing Tackle got started on February 8, 1916, when Baltimore fishmonger Thomas Tochtermann, brought a load of leftover peeler crabs and spoiled fish from the Fish Market by the harbor to his house at 1925 Eastern Avenue. While the fish wasn’t good enough to cook for dinner, local fishermen heading to the harbor were happy to buy it for bait. Soon, people passing by on the Eastern Avenue trolley line started stopping by the house regularly to buy bait and home-made crab cakes from Anna Tochtermann, Thomas’ wife. Anna managed the shop during the day while Thomas worked at the fish market. The business thrived and Tochtermann’s son, Thomas, Jr. or Tommy, took over in 1936. Thomas’ own son, Tony, started working at the shop in 1958—when he was just three and a half years old. In the 1980s, Tony took over and, along with his wife and business partner, Dee Taylor, continues to run the shop today.

Tommy hasn’t left entirely, however. After his father’s death in 1998, Tony installed a small container of his father’s ashes near the front of the store in a display case featuring vintage fishing reels and a signed baseball from famed Boston Red Sox player (and Tochterman’s customer) Ted Williams.

Dee and Tony live right across the street from the store which has lured in customers with a classic neon sign of a jumping large-mouth bass since the 1930s. The store sells over seven hundred different reels and is packed full of fishing rods. In addition tobunker chum (ground Menhaden fish), chicken necks, and clam snouts, the store's live bait offerings include night crawlers, and the ever-popular bloodworms.

The bloodworms are a prized bait for sport fishing in the United States and Europe and, among Dee’s many contributions to the business, is maintaining the shop’s stock of bloodworms that she orders from diggers in Maine and Canada. Known to customers as the “Worm Lady,” Dee counts each delivery by hand and washes the thousands of worms in salt-water (shipped in to match the salinity of their native habitat). Her painstaking work is appreciated, as fishing aficionados go out of their way to get their bait and gear at Tochterman’s.

This business has always been an integral part of the lives of the family for three generations—and touched the lives of countless people heading to the water prepared with the best fishing tackle and advice in Baltimore.

Sponsor

Related Resources

Mike Klingaman, "," Baltimore Sun, February 6, 2016.
John Lewis, ": For nearly a century, the Tochtermans have been luring fishermen to an Eastern Avenue shop that’s become a local institution," Baltimore Magazine, June 2009.

Street Address

1925 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21231
Fishing pole display, Tochterman's
Display of antique reels, Tochterman's
Supplies to create fishing lures, Tochterman's
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Tue, 24 Jul 2018 14:16:40 -0400
<![CDATA[Broadway Market]]> /items/show/148

Dublin Core

Title

Broadway Market

Subject

War of 1812
Baltimore's Slave Trade

Creator

Preservation Society of Fell's Point and Federal Hill
Richard F. Messick

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Broadway Market, the first city market in Baltimore, was located near the Fells Point docks in order to take advantage of all the goods arriving regularly from the Eastern Shore and elsewhere. Like all public markets, it served as a major gathering place for shoppers, which meant a number of hotels, taverns, and other businesses filled the surrounding area.

As time passed, the events of history shaped life at the market. During the War of 1812, the British focused on the city due to the privateers out of Baltimore that had been harassing their ships. They also would blockade the transport of food and goods moving through the harbor. This caused periodic food shortages, compounded by the fact that farmers stopped coming to market out of fear of losing their horses to defense efforts.

After the war, as more and more locally enslaved people were being “sold south” and slave markets grew, the market began to see auctions of people. An auctioneer would be attracted to markets because it was easy to draw a crowd of people that would add to the excitement of a sale. At least one auctioneer, Nicholas Strike, held court-ordered auctions here to sell enslaved people. This type of auction could be held anywhere, like courthouse steps, jails, or auction houses, but a market area always guaranteed a crowd.

Official Website

Street Address

1640-41 Aliceanna Street, Baltimore, MD 21231
Broadway Market
Front, Broadway Market
South Building, Broadway Market
Interior, Broadway Market
Broadway Market
Broadway Market
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Thu, 04 Oct 2012 11:44:04 -0400