Someone from Ellicott's Mills - M. C. P. (Pue?) wrote a poem about Christmas for the magazine The Little Pilgrim (Phila: April, 1856)
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
Lea mills on the Brandywine
Joseph Tatnall and his son-in-law Thomas Lea, Sr. dug a mill race on the rocky north shore of the Brandywine, and by 1764 there were four mills on the shore. An 1873 article (image left) stated that the Lea mills were still in operation by the Lea family. Elizabeth Ellicott of Ellicott mills married Thomas Lea, Jr. in 1812.
Monday, December 11, 2017
Brandywine Mills in the Revolutionary War
During the Revolutionary War the Tatnall and Lea flour mills furnished flour to the American army. Washington and Lafayette visited Joseph Tatnall. Before the battle of the Brandywine, Washington ordered the top grinding stones of the mills to be removed and hidden from the British troops.
Monday, December 4, 2017
Lea's Brandywine flour mills near Wilmington Del., 1800
The famed Tatnall and Lea flour mills in Delaware were visited by many foreigners including the Duc de La Rochefoucauld [1747-1827], who left France during the beginning of the French Revolution. He described Thomas Lea - whose son married Elizabeth Ellicott (1st Md. cookbook) daughter of George Ellicott - as "a handsome, cheerful, active, man...a candid and
obliging man" and their private "flour manufactory" bought "corn" (grain) and shipped the flour to Philadelphia then exported.
Monday, November 27, 2017
Ellicott City to Clarksville turnpike milestone 9 M TO EC
The turnpike company was approved by the Maryland General Assembly in 1868 and lasted about 50 years. For some reason the 9 is backwards. The stone in Clarksville is located on the west side of Rt. 108 across from Great Star Drive in front of Clarksville Commons.
Monday, November 20, 2017
Baltimore to Frederick town turnpike milestone - 10 M to B
The 10 mile marker stone, on lower Main Street under the railroad bridge, is testament to the Ellicott brothers who built a road from Baltimore to their new settlement of Ellicott's mills. When the turnpike was financed it went from Baltimore through Ellicott Mills to Frederick to Cumberland and joined the National Road.
Monday, November 13, 2017
Covered turnpike bridge and trolley bridge at Ellicott Mills
Monday, October 30, 2017
Monday, October 23, 2017
Commodore Joshua Barney home
The Revolutionary War and War of 1812 veteran's home has been vacant and has been on the Howard County top ten endangered sites. It is hidden behind a subdivision at 7912 Guilford Road, Savage. The house was sold at auction last month. The famed naval officer was born in Baltimore and went to sea at age 12. During the War of 1812 he was assigned to protect the Chesapeake area, and he devised a fleet of shallow draft barges.
Monday, October 16, 2017
Howard County iron ore deposts; Elkridge and Savage furnaces
Elkridge Furnace (1750s-1872) and Savage Furnace (before 1835-c1839; 1864-74) are described below, as well as 6 ore banks found in Howard County. Pictured at left are the remains of Elkridge Furnace in early 1900s.
Monday, October 9, 2017
Sites on the B&O train line through Howard County in 1833
Monday, October 2, 2017
Duc de La Rochefoucauld's visit to Ellicott's mills in the 1790s
"Ellicot’s-Mill is a small village, the principal establishment of which
is a large gristmill belonging to Mr. Ellicot. This mill
has six pair of millstones, and is constructed as well as any of the mills of
Brandy wine [Lea mills]."
François Alexandre Frédéric de La Rochefoucauld, Duke of Rochefoucauld (1747-1827) escaped France during the Revolution for England then sailed to America, finally returning to France.
François Alexandre Frédéric de La Rochefoucauld, Duke of Rochefoucauld (1747-1827) escaped France during the Revolution for England then sailed to America, finally returning to France.
Monday, September 25, 2017
B&O train ride described in Harpers 1857
By 1857 the B&O railroad had a kitchen and dining car combo but the restaurant in the Relay House (in picture) still offered a breakfast of "Maryland luxuries" of "softcrabs" and "spring-chickens" which tasted like "luscious flavor of solidified cream browned over a hickory fire in clover scented butter." The article also described the stone viaducts, Bollman's iron bridge, granite and iron works.
Monday, September 18, 2017
Howard County in 1882
The second smallest county in Maryland, Howard County was described in the 1882 book Industries of Maryland, in particular Ellicott City (population 1,600) and Elk Ridge Landing (400). Among the attributes were the several "streams" providing waterpower, limestone, granite quarries, iron ore and good soil.
Monday, September 11, 2017
George Poe, artificial respirator, laughing gas and Elkridge
George Poe, Jr. (1846-1914) was born at 'Elkridge Landing', was a
cousin of Edgar Allen Poe and invented the artificial respirator (patented in 1907). He also was the first to liquefy nitrous oxide - laughing gas - for commercial use in the 1880s, and other gas 'firsts' (see below). According to his Washington Post obituary, he was mentioned for a Nobel Prize in chemistry.
Poe was the son of Elizabeth Ross Ellicott (1810-1881) and George Poe (1808, or 1807-1879).
Monday, September 4, 2017
Lafayette in Elkridge
In April 1781 the Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834) and his soldiers were guarding the Chesapeake area, but were ordered to join the forces heading south to eventually be in Yorktown for the final battle against the British in Oct. 1781. To lighten their mood and decrease desertions Lafayette had the men ride in wagons through Maryland and crossed the Patapsco River to camp at "Ridge Ferry" - Elkridge - on April 17 to 18.
"Lafayette's troops camped here April 17-18, 1781 on the way to engage Cornwallis in Virginia. George Washington passed many times." Elk Ridge Landing marker on Rt. 1.
"Lafayette's troops camped here April 17-18, 1781 on the way to engage Cornwallis in Virginia. George Washington passed many times." Elk Ridge Landing marker on Rt. 1.
Monday, August 28, 2017
Transporting the huge tobacco barrels
A previous post on 'Rolling Roads' HERE showed one way of transporting large hogsheads of tobacco to Elk-ridge and other ports. In addition to 'rolling in hoops' by hand, the large barrels were pulled by horses, put in wagons, in 'upland boats' or on two canoes.
Monday, August 21, 2017
Willow harvesting in Elkridge for baskets and furniture
Maryland was the second largest producer (NY first) of basket willow and third in
consumption (behind NY, MA), in 1919, to make willow furniture and baskets for
sale in the region. Willow cuttings (not tree, more a bush) were planted in rows, cut, sized, put in pits with a couple inches of water, put through the brakes, then peeled, dried on racks and bundled ready to ship.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Monday, August 7, 2017
Ellicott mills in 1805
"1805 8th Month, 3d. This evening I visited Ellicott's Mills, in company with J. T. and his wife. The overseer of these mills informed me they could grind and pack 300 barrels of flour per day. A barrel being 196lbs. or 14st. the annual returns, at 3s. per stone, would be nearly 200,000L. The stones were 7 feet in diameter."
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, strike, Vinegar Hill, gondola cars - Randolph Brandt Latimer remembers
Randolph B. Latimer (1821-1903) began working at age 15 in the B & O
Railroad engineering department, then started a store Randolph & Latimer
and flour commission. His father ran a stage line between Baltimore and Washington city.
Monday, July 24, 2017
First passenger car with Cooper's steam engine
The first ride of a carload of dignitaries behind the Cooper steam engine was on August 28, 1830 from Baltimore to Ellicott mills on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The open car, fashioned after a canal boat, was a "perfect jam" and whisked along the curves at 15 miles an hour - 18 when full speed!
Monday, July 17, 2017
Colonel Gassaway Watkins and "Walnut Grove" family cemetery
Gassaway Watkins (1752-1840) fought in the Revolutionary War, and later as a Colonel in the War of 1812. He lived at "Richland" until his father-in-law Capt John Dorsey died and with wife Ruth (Dorsey) Watkins moved to the nearby Dorsey lands and built their home "Walnut Grove". He and his third wife are buried on a hill by their home (right side of photo), which was cleared, sodded and the site of July 15 Boy Scout Eagle Project commemoration. Links with more info at end of post.
Monday, July 10, 2017
Winans friction wheel for the new railroads
Ross Winans (1796-1877) was born
in NJ and moved to Md in the late 1820s as the B&O railroad was starting. He invented the friction wheel with ‘outside bearing’ in 1828, sold his
locomotives also to the Russian Czar during his highly successful business
1843-1863, was arrested as a southern sympathizer, designed cigar boats 1859 (submarines)
with son Thomas and although invented by Charles S. Dickinson in 1860 in
Boston, the 'Winans Steam Gun' was worked on in his shop.
Monday, July 3, 2017
The Baltimore or Winans Steam Gun - Civil War
At the start of the Civil War, a bullet proof "steam gun" was patented by Charles Dickinson and worked on in Ross Winans foundry in Baltimore. Dickinson was on his way to sell it to the Confederacy, when it was captured in Ellicott City by Col. Jones and the 6th Mass. It was kept at Relay to guard the Thomas Viaduct. The muzzle of the gun/cannon protruded from the slit of the cone (see below) and it was dragged by a team of horses. A large replica can be seen at Elkridge.
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
Reip Bake Oven and Roaster, 1825 patent
A Reip metal wall oven still exists in a privately owned historic home, Hickory Ridge, in Howard County. Elizabeth Ellicott Lea, daughter George Ellicott, had the Baltimore oven in her Sandy Spring home. Henry Reip obtained a patent for a 'Bake Oven and Roaster' in
1825, which he and his sons manufactured and sold for about forty
years. The oval oven, left, now at Hampton NHS (the birthplace of the wife of Gov. George Howard of Waverly) was made by the eldest son, Alfred Reip.
If you have an old home with a metal oven... keep it intact! If you try to use it, do not make it too hot (not meant for pizza) or it will warp. Contact me with any questions.
If you have an old home with a metal oven... keep it intact! If you try to use it, do not make it too hot (not meant for pizza) or it will warp. Contact me with any questions.
Monday, June 19, 2017
Rebecca Garrett 'freed', then retaken 20 years later
Rebecca Garrett's mother was freed by Sarah (Cord) Anderson in her 1805 will. Later, Rebecca spent about 20 years living free in Baltimore with her freedman husband William Garrett and ten children. Thomas Anderson and son Isaac reclaimed Rebecca and some of her children in 1849. She was freed by a Baltimore County court, but on appeal, was returned to the Andersons.
Monday, June 12, 2017
Daily summer commute from Ellicott City to Baltimore in 1889-90
Summer homes outside of Baltimore gave respite from the "inferno in Summer" but the ride on the B & O railroad train was "regarded as heroic" leaving them "hot, dusty and worn-out" revived by the mint juleps on the front porch. H. L. Mencken (1880-1856) spent two summers at "Vineyard" on the hill by the Patapsco Institute.
Monday, June 5, 2017
Menchen at "Vineyard" in Ellicott City from 1889 to 1890
The Baltimore writer H. L. Mencken (1880-1954) spent a couple of summers as a child in a Civil War era home on the hill across from the Patapsco Institute. His father and uncle commuted to Baltimore during the week, as Mencken explored the grounds. He wrote his remembrances in his book Happy Days: 1880-1892.
Monday, May 29, 2017
Decatur Dorsey - slave to Medal of Honor recipient
Decatur Dorsey (1836-1891) was an enslaved African American in Howard County when he signed up in 1864. He would become a Sergeant in the 39th US Colored Troops and earned the Medal of Honor.
Monday, May 22, 2017
Videos of working 18th century mills
Union Mills just north of Westminster, Md. was built in 1797 on Oliver
Evans plans, which incorporated details from the Ellicotts mill workings. Evans had visited Ellicotts mills several times, and a brother of the founders wrote a lengthy section with sketches in Evan's book. The Shriver family owned
and operated the mill for almost 200 years until the 1950s. George Washington also had a Oliver Evans
style mill at Mount Vernon, which has been reconstructed and working.
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Conestoga wagon deliveries to Lea flour mills in Delaware
Before the first railroads in the 1830s, huge Conestoga wagons hauled by 6 horse teams brought wheat from Pennsylvania to the Lea mills along the Brandywine River by Wilmington Del. A convoy of 20-30 "inland ships" would approach a mill, with the others waiting in line, blocking roads, as the first unloaded. The physical activity of unloading and the loud noise from "rumbling wheels, clattering [horse] hoofs...shoutings and clamorings of the Dutch drivers" contrasted with the railroad and barges that replaced the Conestogas.
Elizabeth Ellicott Lea (daughter of George Ellicott) married Thomas Lea and lived in Brandywine (Wilmington) after their 1812 marriage and returned to Maryland in 1823.
Elizabeth Ellicott Lea (daughter of George Ellicott) married Thomas Lea and lived in Brandywine (Wilmington) after their 1812 marriage and returned to Maryland in 1823.
Monday, May 8, 2017
Oliver Evans 'peculiar accidents' causing flour mill fires
Monday, May 1, 2017
Baltimore the "greatest flour market" with trains and wagons
Thousands of barrels of flour passed through Baltimore by large Conestoga wagons and railroad cars then onto ships to American and foreign ports. The following excerpt is from an 1848 children's history book.
Monday, April 24, 2017
Lime kilns at Marriottsville
Two kilns remain in the woods to the west of Marriottsville Road between the B&O railroad and the bridge over the Patapsco. The front wall of the one on the left had collapsed, but the 20 foot tall kiln to the right (west) is fairly intact and part of Patapsco Park. The limestone was quarried nearby. During the colonial and federal period, lime was used with sand to make
mortar and plaster, whitewash, and as a fertilizer. A lime kiln can be seen on Browns Bridge Road, Highland
Monday, April 17, 2017
George Ellicott Jr. home becomes part of St. Mary's College
The Ilchester Hotel/Home/Tavern that Ellicott built in the early 1830s was sold
in 1866 to the Redeptorists for $15,000. The walls had weakened by the coal trains and had to have pipes to stabilize the old stone structure. The main
'upper house' was built in 1868, and a large wooden addition was built
beside and behind the 4 story granite building. The first chapel with long windows was attached to the granite hotel and used into at least 1895.
Monday, April 10, 2017
Ellicott quarry granite for Baltimore Cathedral
Gray granite from 'Ellicott and Company' quarry was taken by large wagons with "nine yolk of oxen" on the Frederick road to Baltimore to build the first Cathedral in the new nation. Designed by famed architect Benjamin Latrobe (the US Capitol), started in 1806-1812, War of 1812, 1817-1821. Now the Cathedral is called the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and a co-cathedral was completed in 1959.
Monday, April 3, 2017
Quarries near Ellicott City
The Catholic Cathedral and many homes and business in early Ellicott's mills were built with Ellicott City granite from nearby quarries along the Patapsco River. The following excerpts describe the slight difference of the rock found on either side of the river and the quarries in 1811, 1834, 1898 and 1910.
Monday, March 27, 2017
Ann Tonge and Tonge Row
Tonge or Tongue Row was built in the 1840s, with one duplex completed each year by a widow, Ann Tonge. The three lovely stone buildings reportedly have appeared in movies, such as the TV film Les Miserables in 2000 and the Pied Piper of Hamlin.
Monday, March 20, 2017
Lilly (Tyson) Manly Elliott turned the Patapsco Female Institute into a 60 room home, then hotel
Lily or Lilly Tyson (1852-1924) was a descendant of two
prominent Quaker milling and merchant families – the Tysons of Jericho Mills
north of Baltimore and the Ellicott founders of Ellicott
City. Martha Ellicott Tyson, her grandmother, helped found Swathmore College, wrote a biography of
Benjamin Banneker and was the daughter of George Ellicott. Lilly bought the old hilltop girls school in 1891.
Benjamin Banneker and was the daughter of George Ellicott. Lilly bought the old hilltop girls school in 1891.
Monday, March 13, 2017
"Wilde Lake" - Laura Littman's Columbia sites photos: Old Oakland Farm, People's Tree and Wilde Lake
Once part of the vast lands of Charles Sterrett Ridgely's Oakland mansion HERE , the stone home "Old Oakland" was the farm complex for the estate. It is extremely close to the stone slave house, blacksmith building and other outbuildings HERE . It must be the inspiration for the Laura Littman mystery "Wilde Lake"
Monday, March 6, 2017
Edith Clarke - first female electrical engineer
Edith Clarke (1883-1959), a gifted mathematician, was raised in the John R. Clarke home “Arlington”. She attended numerous colleges including
Vassar (1908) and MIT (1919) and had a variety of jobs with the longest at
General Electric 1919-1945. Her abilities were finally recognized and she was
advanced to an engineer – a job previously closed to women. She invented the
Clarke calculator, patented in 1921. After retiring, she taught for ten years
at the University of Texas in Austin, then returned to Maryland.
Monday, February 27, 2017
Benjamin Banneker's almanac and the Ellicotts
George Ellicott, his brother Elias Ellicott and their cousin Major Andrew Ellicott each helped to get Banneker's first almanac published in 1792. The previous post HERE on the biography of Benjamin Banneker has other details of his life and accomplishments. George taught interested neighbors astronomy using his celestial globe and telescope, and gave some of his books and tools to his friend Benjamin. Andrew, a famous surveyor who did at least thirteen years of almanacs, passed on Benjamin's well-written letter, and it is preserved in the Historical Society of Pa. Elias who had moved to Baltimore was also a Quaker, joined the newly formed Md Abolition Society and wrote numerous letters about the almanac.
Monday, February 20, 2017
Oliver Cromwell Gilbert : a run-a-way slave's success story and 2 Walnut Groves
Oliver Cromwell Kelly was born in 1832 on "Walnut Grove" (owned by Gassaway Watkins), to Cynthia Snowden, the enslaved cook and freedman Joseph Kelly. Later he escaped from nearby "Richland" plantation in Clarksville, Howard County. Gilbert wrote an account of his flight to Philadelphia and his name change, then to several other cities as far north as Walnut Grove Quaker School in Lee, New Hampshire before returning to Philadelphia where he died in 1912.
Monday, February 13, 2017
Margaret Jane Blake bought her freedom, her life in a book
"Margy" Blake (1811-1880) was the daughter of Charlotte and Perry Blake - he was a free African-American and a Marine during the War of 1812. She was born a slave of Jesse and Sarah Levering and looked after one of
their daughters, Sarah Levering. Blake bought her freedom
in the 1850s, and was the subject of a book by Levering in 1897. Although Jesse Levering had a successful business in Baltimore, he died suddenly of cholera when Sarah was 7 years old, and his widow moved her young family to Ellicott City, and Margaret was sent to work for other families.
Monday, February 6, 2017
Sarah Jane Dorsey freed in 1850, given land in 1869
Sarah Jane Powells (or Powell) Dorsey was born in Lisbon MD in 1828 (or 1832) and was freed in the 1850s by Thomas and Sarah Hood. "Sarah Hood desires to manifest her regard for
Sarah Jane Dorsey, colored, late their slave for her unwavering fidelity and
general moral worth as a servant” and Hood purchased over an acre of land in 1869 where the Dorsey family would live for over a century at the home on Rt. 97, Cooksville, MD.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Patapsco Hotel as railroad station
Interestingly, this hotel had a side balcony at track level and used as the passenger station for the new train. Then the train crossed Main Street/turnpike on the Oliver Viaduct to get to the freight station. The train service began on May 24, 1830, arriving at 9AM, 1 and 6PM for 75 cents. Its many owners have used the building as hotel, apartments and even an ice plant.
Monday, January 23, 2017
The B & O 'riots' of 1829 - the first railroad strike
In August 1829 workers building one section of the new railroad line (the most difficult), wouldn't work then "severely wounded" Thomas Ellicott the 'contractor' of that section and broke up his home. The site where the fighting began was dubbed "Vinegar Hill" after a battle during the Irish Rebellion of 1798.
Monday, January 16, 2017
Tom Thumb steam engine vs a horse
Did Peter Cooper's steam locomotive "Tom Thumb" race a horse drawn train car, as told by John Latrobe years later? He said Cooper's new steam engine was winning until "the band which
drove the pulley, which drove the blower, slipped from the drum." The daughter of one of the B&O directors, was on that "trial trip" and often related how Mr. Jenifer's horse on the turnpike won due to the "slipping of a belt on the
engine." She also remembered how
their "clothes and umbrellas were ruined by sparks thrown from the smokestack." So, maybe it did happen...or not.
Monday, January 9, 2017
B & O horse-powered train ... treadmill 1830
During the first years of railroads, the train cars were propelled by sail HERE, horse, and then, steam engines. Initially horses were on the track pulling the train like a wagon, but for a short trial, horses were riding along, walking on "an endless apron or belt" connected to the wheels. Another sketch shows passengers riding beside the horse. The B&O horse car did not last long, especially an early trip with the "cowed editors" of various newspapers. How were they cowed? The train hit a cow, the car rolled down the embankment and "after countless bad jokes being perpetrated on the cowed editors, passed out of existence, and probably out of mind."
Monday, January 2, 2017
Sailing on the B & O railroad in 1830
The sail in a basket rail-car was created by Evan Thomas (1781-1863), who with his brother Philip, promoted the building of a railroad from Baltimore. He traveled to Europe and studied a new railroad in UK. Upon Evan's return, John Eager Howard hosted a dinner at Belvidere in 1825 (or 1826) to discuss the possibility of a railroad. In Feb, 1827, 25 merchants and influential men met at the home of George Brown to form the B&O.