Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Waverly Jumbles
Sunday, May 22, 2016
The Dairy - at Waverly and Doughoregan Manor
Gov. George Howard's (1789-1846) large stone dairy was built c1822 according to an early sketch of his "Waverly" buildings and payments to a stonemason. The second story window on the front has been changed into a door, but
the side windows look like the sketch. His wife Prudence Ridgely Howard (1791-1847) had been raised at "Hampton" (north of Baltimore) which operated a large dairy operation making over 5,000 pounds of butter in 1822. Howard's neighbor Charles Carroll's lovely dairy at "Doughoregan" was much smaller.
Monday, May 16, 2016
Morse's telegraph message went over the Thomas Viaduct
On May 24, 1844 Samuel F. B. Morse (1791-1872) sent the message "What hath God wrought?" from the Supreme Court chambers in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. to Baltimore's B&O train station. Congress had appropriated money to run a line from DC to Baltimore along the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tracks, thus going over the amazing Thomas Viaduct with its two tracks and a walkway. More on the viaduct HERE . Although not the first person to invent the electric telegraph, nor was it his first message, the line became famous, as did Morse and Morse Code.
Monday, May 9, 2016
Cotton mill heated in 1816 by a young Robert Mills
Robert Mills, the American born architect of two Washington Monuments - Baltimore in 1815 and DC in the 1830s - designed a soap stone and brick furnace for the large (100 feet by 40 feet, three story stone) cotton mill a mile down the Patapsco River from Ellicott's Mills. It was run by Edward Gray, father-in-law of John Pendleton Kennedy. More on "Patapsco" HERE
Monday, May 2, 2016
"Patapsco" - the home not the river - and the 1868 flood
Edward Gray built the home and mill complex, and lived there with his two daughters and his son-in-law John Pendleton Kennedy. Kennedy (1795-1870) was a lawyer, novelist, politician, Secretary of the Navy and kept a journal which gives fascinating accounts of his education, fighting to protect Baltimore in 1814 and his homes in Baltimore and "Patapsco" near Ellicott City. After Edward Gray died in 1856, the Kennedys continued to live between the two homes until the flood of 1868 - described below.