<![CDATA[Explore 91ÊÓƵ]]> /items/browse?output=rss2&tags=Redwood%20Street Wed, 12 Mar 2025 12:37:16 -0400 info@baltimoreheritage.org (Explore 91ÊÓƵ) 91ÊÓƵ Zend_Feed http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss <![CDATA[Old St. Paul's Cemetery]]> /items/show/284

Dublin Core

Title

Old St. Paul's Cemetery

Subject

Cemeteries
War of 1812

Creator

Eli Pousson

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Old St. Paul's Cemetery opened in 1802—just a few years after Baltimore incorporated as a city—and is the final resting place of men and women that include a signatory to the Declaration of Independence, a Supreme Court Justice, and a Governor of Maryland.

Scores of storied veterans from the American Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Civil War are buried on the grounds. Among them are John Eager Howard (1752-1857), who donated the land for Lexington Market, and George Armistead (1780-1818), who commanded Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore.

Today, a high stone wall surrounds the cemetery and provides some protection from the busy traffic of Martin Luther King Boulevard, whose construction cut the grounds in half in the 1980s.

Related Resources

Official Website

Street Address

733 W. Redwood Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
Old St. Paul's Cemetery (2015)
"James  Noel Scuth" grave marker, Old St. Paul's Cemetery (2015)
Grave markers, Old St. Paul's Cemetery (2015)
Old St. Paul's Cemetery (2015)
Old St. Paul's Cemetery (2015)
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Mon, 30 Sep 2013 12:55:19 -0400
<![CDATA[Mercantile Trust and Deposit Building]]> /items/show/226

Dublin Core

Title

Mercantile Trust and Deposit Building

Subject

Architecture

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

The highly ornamented Mercantile Trust Building was constructed in 1885 by architectural firm Wyatt and Sperry. The architecture conveys a sense of impenetrability, characterized by its massive, heavy stonework and deep set windows and entrance. Ads at the time boasted that the building strong enough "to resist the invasion of armed force." The hardened building survived the 1904 Baltimore Fire, but sustained damage when bricks from the Continental Trust Building fell through the skylight, setting fire to the interior. Despite this, the building's survival reaffirmed what the bank had been saying all along in its ads. The Mercantile Trust was Baltimore's first "department store bank," a concept spearheaded by Enoch Pratt. In years before, customers had to go to different banks to get loans, access savings, or open a checking account. Mercantile Trust ended this by introducing Baltimore to one-stop banking. The bank was also involved in raising capital to rebuild many cities in the South during Reconstruction. Later, the bank acted as co-executor for the estate of Henry Walters and as a trustee for the endowment that established the Walters Art Collection. Mercantile Trust occupied the building for almost 100 years. The company left in 1983 and the building has been a nightclub, and more recently, the new location of the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

Watch our on this building! 

Official Website

Street Address

200 E. Redwood Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company (1958)
Chesapeake Shakespeare Company Theater (2014)
Stage, Chesapeake Shakespeare Company Theater (2014)
Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company (2001)
Detail, Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company (2001)
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Wed, 03 Apr 2013 12:36:50 -0400
<![CDATA[Garrett Building]]> /items/show/219

Dublin Core

Title

Garrett Building

Subject

Architecture

Description

Robert Garrett was the original owner of the thirteen-story Garrett Building. Among other things, Garrett was a banker, Olympian, collector of medieval manuscripts, and a leader in the development of recreational facilities in Baltimore. He was a participant in the first modern Olympic games in 1896. He paid for three of his Princeton classmates to make the trip and they all took home medals, much to the displeasure of the Greeks. Garrett in particular specialized in the shot put but also decided to try the discus throw for fun after realizing the discus only weighed five pounds. Unlike the Greek discus throwers who implemented the graceful throwing techniques of antiquity, Garrett appropriated the crude, brute force style of shot put throwing to the sport. Despite narrowly missing audience members on his first two throws, his final throw was spot-on and won him the gold. He also took home the gold in shot put.

Garrett built 233 East Redwood Street in 1913 with the Baltimore architecture firm Wyatt and Nolting. The limestone faced skyscraper is as striking on the inside as the outside. The lobby is donned with marble walls and columns. Garrett could never turn away from his love of athletics, not even at work. He commissioned a swimming pool and gymnasium for the upper floors. The building is now home to the Gordon Feinblatt law firm.

Creator

Nathan Dennies

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

Robert Garrett was the original owner of the thirteen-story Garrett Building. Among other things, Garrett was a banker, Olympian, collector of medieval manuscripts, and a leader in the development of recreational facilities in Baltimore. He was a participant in the first modern Olympic games in 1896. He paid for three of his Princeton classmates to make the trip and they all took home medals, much to the displeasure of the Greeks. Garrett in particular specialized in the shot put but also decided to try the discus throw for fun after realizing the discus only weighed five pounds. Unlike the Greek discus throwers who implemented the graceful throwing techniques of antiquity, Garrett appropriated the crude, brute force style of shot put throwing to the sport. Despite narrowly missing audience members on his first two throws, his final throw was spot-on and won him the gold. He also took home the gold in shot put. Garrett built 233 East Redwood Street in 1913 with the Baltimore architecture firm Wyatt and Nolting. The limestone faced skyscraper is as striking on the inside as the outside. The lobby is donned with marble walls and columns. Garrett could never turn away from his love of athletics, not even at work. He commissioned a swimming pool and gymnasium for the upper floors. The building is now home to the Gordon Feinblatt law firm.

Watch our on this building!

Street Address

233 E. Redwood Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Garrett Building (1983)
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Wed, 03 Apr 2013 12:12:39 -0400
<![CDATA[Vickers Building]]> /items/show/218

Dublin Core

Title

Vickers Building

Subject

Architecture

Creator

Nathan Dennies

Curatescape Story Item Type Metadata

Story

The Vickers Building represents a shift in downtown Baltimore architectural design that occurred directly after the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 and is one of the largest buildings to utilize brick as a primary material in the Central Business District. Most of the other buildings rebuilt in the area were made of stone. Masonry was popular after the Great Fire because of fireproofing concerns. Before the Great Fire, many buildings (including the old Vickers Building the new one replaced) were built in the ornate Second Empire style and featured sloping Mansard roofs and complex architectural details. This changed after the Great Fire. Architects took a more pragmatic approach to rebuilding the Central Business district and were pressured to create buildings that were cost-efficient, fire safe, and could be erected quickly. Because of all the national attention after the Fire, the city wanted to show the rest of the country its stability and they wanted to do it quickly. The permit for the Vickers Building was issued on May 19, 1904, only three months after the fire. Many of the building’s properties indicate fire-conscious planning: it’s made of brick; it has a flat roof because people believed spacious Mansard roof attics contributed to the spread of the Fire; and the bay windows recede into the building rather than protrude outwards. Not all ornamentation was eschewed from the construction of the Vickers Building. Stone lion heads adorn the topmost bay windows and a band of terra cotta runs along the street facing side of the roof. The interior is home to Werner’s Restaurant: a mainstay in the area since 1951.

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Street Address

219-231 E. Redwood Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Vickers Building
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Wed, 03 Apr 2013 12:09:27 -0400