<![CDATA[Explore 91ĘÓƵ]]> /items/browse?output=rss2&tags=George%20Frederick Wed, 12 Mar 2025 11:42:10 -0400 info@baltimoreheritage.org (Explore 91ĘÓƵ) 91ĘÓƵ Zend_Feed http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss <![CDATA[Hollins Market]]> /items/show/408

Dublin Core

Title

Hollins Market

Description

Hollins Market is the oldest public market still operating in Baltimore. The market was conceived in 1835 after piano makers Joseph Newman and his brother Elias Newman were given permission by the city to erect a market on the 1100 block of Hollins Street. In 1838, winds from a severe storm destroyed the original market, which was rebuilt the following year. The market found success in the following decades and expanded in 1864 with the creation of the current Italianate building, designed by architect George Frederick.

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Subtitle

Baltimore's Oldest Operating Public Market

Story

The market was conceived in 1835 after piano makers Joseph Newman and his brother Elias Newman were given permission by the city to erect a market on the 1100 block of Hollins Street. In 1838, winds from a severe storm destroyed the original market, which was rebuilt the following year. The market found success in the following decades and expanded in 1864 with the creation of the current Italianate building, designed by architect George Frederick.

Official Website

Street Address

26 S. Arlington Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21223

Access Information

Open Monday to Saturday, 7 am – 6 pm
Hollins Market
Hollins Market
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Wed, 10 Sep 2014 15:53:41 -0400
<![CDATA[Druid Hill Park Superintendent's House]]> /items/show/332

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Title

Druid Hill Park Superintendent's House

Subject

Parks and Landscapes

Creator

Johns Hopkins

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

The Superintendent’s House in Druid Hill Park dates to 1872 and was designed by architect George Frederick (who also designed City Hall). It was built using local “Butler Stone” from Baltimore County and has wonderful Gothic decorations including decorative quoins and steep gables.

When the Parks and People Foundation acquired the building in 1995, it was in ruins. Multiple fires had destroyed the roof and almost all of the interior. Trees were even growing through the windows. The first step in the restoration process was to bring in a team of goats to chew through the Amazon-like vegetation so that human beings could actually get to the building.

The restoration was challenged by the decrepit state of the structure and lack of historic plans or records. Nonetheless, the project team did a remarkable job. They replaced stones; created a new roof and supporting structure; and, added back gutters, downspouts, chimneys, and the front porch. They even gave it an historically compatible set of paint colors.

The restored building is part of a new campus for Parks and People. It is helping revive the surrounding Auchentoroly Terrace neighborhood and tie this part of West Baltimore to Druid Hill Park.

Related Resources

Official Website

Street Address

2100 Liberty Heights Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21217
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Thu, 19 Jun 2014 15:39:31 -0400
<![CDATA[A.S. Abell Building]]> /items/show/109

Dublin Core

Title

A.S. Abell Building

Subject

Architecture
Industry

Creator

Tarin Rudloff
Theresa Donnelly

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Erected in 1879 as an investment property for Arunah Shepherdson Abell, founder of The Baltimore Sun, the Abell Building was designed by famed Baltimore architect George Frederick—architect for Baltimore's City Hall, Hollins Market, and the Old Baltimore City College. Abell spared no expense in constructing the cast-iron framed, masonry façade building and worked to ensure that tenants included multiple, prominent businesses. Though the building quickly became known for its lavish construction, its ornate exterior belied the hard reality that workers within its walls faced. The corner of West Baltimore and Eutaw Streets made an ideal location for local industry along a main streetcar line, just a few blocks from a B&O Railroad station and close to the Baltimore harbor. The grandeur of the building's construction, its two hydraulic elevators, and its imposing size invited immediate recognition and praise in local and national publications. In late nineteenth century Baltimore, as across the country, most skilled professions had declined as craftsmen were replaced by machines that could produce more goods more quickly. Wages for the masses of largely immigrant, unskilled workers who came to cities like Baltimore seeking work in industries remained low and working conditions were unregulated and woefully unsafe. One of the industries that attracted thousands of workers to Baltimore was the clothing or needle trade. In the years following the Civil War, demand for ready-to-wear garments skyrocketed and Baltimore's garment district boomed in response. Strouse Brothers, one of Baltimore's largest clothing manufacturers operated out of this building in the late nineteenth century and was a prominent player in Baltimore's growing needle trade. Strouse ran what was then called an "inside shop"—a multistory factory outfitted with new machines and the latest in manufacturing technology—where workers (largely women) worked long hours to keep the factory's machines running, often earning barely enough to survive. While larger clothing manufacturers escaped the criticism directed to sweatshops by local reformers, producers like Strouse, even when unionized (the United Garment Workers organized in Baltimore in the 1890s), often sent piecework out to sweated workers in small shops or set up their own small, outside sweatshops to avoid paying higher wages or complying with worker demands for better conditions and shorter hours. When the clothing industry slumped after WWI, many of the gains achieved by Baltimore's garment unions eroded as the pursuit of ever-shrinking profits led many manufacturers to once again increase their reliance on sweatshops. Despite the fact that union strikes eventually brought new gains, Baltimore's once thriving garment trade was in sharp decline by the 1930s. Though there are still a small number of women sewing coats and uniforms in various downtown clothing shops, Baltimore's days as a center of ready-to-wear garment production are long gone. Luckily, this handsome brick building weathered the decline of the garment industry and years of neglect. PMC property group acquired the building in 2005 and it now houses well-appointed apartments that feature high ceilings, large windows, and a bit of Baltimore history.

Watch our on this building!

Official Website

Street Address

1 S. Eutaw Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
A.S. Abell Building (1985)
Detail, A.S. Abell Building (1985)
A.S. Abell Building (2012)
Detail, A.S. Abell Building (2012)
Entrance, A.S. Abell Building (2012)
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Tue, 10 Jul 2012 14:09:09 -0400