Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Fire Museum of Maryland, founded in 1971, is located in Lutherville, Maryland near Baltimore, Maryland. With a collection of over forty pieces of firefighting apparatus, the Fire Museum of Maryland explains and interprets the history of the urban fire service in the U.S. for visitors and through school programming. The museum began as the ...
HO-61 Firehouse Museum. HO-61, The Firehouse Museum (Old Howard Co. Fire Department Building, Old Howard Co. Public Library), 3829 Church Road, Ellicott City; HO-62, The Town Hall (Opera House, Rhodey's Emporium), 8044-8046 Main Street (MD 144), Ellicott City; HO-63, Patterson Viaduct, Ilchester Road & River Road, Catonsville
Engine House #8, Baltimore City, including photo from 1990, at Maryland Historical Trust; Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. MD-354, "Engine Company Number 8 Firehouse, 323 Mulberry Street, Baltimore, Independent City, MD", 2 data pages
Engine House No. 6 is a historic fire station located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. This two-story brick building features a 103-foot Italian-Gothic tower at the apex of its truncated triangular shape. It was built in 1853–54, and the tower is said to be a copy of Giotto's campanile in Florence, Italy. [2]
Old City Hall and Engine House, Annapolis, Maryland, NRHP-listed; Engine House No. 6 (Baltimore, Maryland), NRHP-listed [15] Engine House No. 8 (Baltimore, Maryland), NRHP-listed, [15] now partly restored at Fire Museum of Maryland, Lutherville, MD; Paca Street Firehouse, Baltimore, MD, NRHP-listed [15] Poppleton Fire Station, Baltimore, MD ...
Fire Museum of Maryland; ... Michigan Firehouse Museum; Museum of Flight and Aerial Firefighting; N. National September 11 Memorial & Museum; New York City Fire Museum;
The Canada Hose Company Building is a historic firehouse in Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland, United States.It is a two-story gable-front brick structure.Above the doors used for the fire engines is a sign which reads "Cumberland Hose Co. No. 1."
Paca Street Firehouse, also known as Truck House No. 2, is a historic fire station located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. The architect of Paca Street Firehouse is John E. Lafferty. It is a 1909 two-story brick structure with a highly detailed stone Renaissance Revival façade.