Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Oakland or Oakland Manor is a Federal style stone manor house commissioned in 1810 by Charles Sterrett Ridgely in the Howard District of Anne Arundel County, Maryland (now Howard County). The lands that became Oakland Manor were patented by John Dorsey as "Dorsey's Adventure" in 1688 which was willed to his grandson Edward Dorsey.
Location of Howard County in Maryland. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Howard County, Maryland. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Howard County, Maryland, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for ...
HO-304, Paul Perkins House, 3821 Old Columbia Pike (MD 987), Ellicott City; HO-305, Esther Rettger's Two-Part House, 3801-3803 Old Columbia Pike (MD 987), Ellicott City; HO-306, Friends Meeting House Historic Marker, Old Columbia Pike (MD 987), Ellicott City; HO-307, David Myer's House, 3786-3790 Old Columbia Pike (MD 987), Ellicott City
Oakland Historic District is a national historic district in Oakland, Garrett County, Maryland. It is an L-shaped area in the central and older section of Oakland containing 206 buildings. They reflect the evolution of this rural county seat from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries.
Today, an inn and wedding venue: Dungeness: 1886: Queen Anne: Cumberland Island: Built for Thomas M Carnagie. Destroyed by fire in 1959: Plum Orchard: 1898: Classical Revival: Peabody and Stearns: Cumberland Island: Built for George Lauder Carnagie. The estate is now part of Cumberland Island National Seashore. Rhodes Hall: 1904 Richardson ...
The Belmont Estate, now Belmont Manor and Historic Park, [4] is a former plantation located at Elkridge, Howard County, Maryland, United States. Founded in the 1730s and known in the Colonial period as "Moore's Morning Choice", [ 5 ] it was one of the earliest forced-labor farms in Howard County, Maryland .
A concrete footbridge was built over Route 29 in 1982 to connect Oakland Mills to the neighboring Columbia Town Center. In 2005, the county held a charrette to discuss redevelopment of the Rouse Planned Community beyond its initial 100,000 population design requiring the developer to conduct a study on the benefits of the footbridge.
Town Center is one of the ten villages in Columbia, Maryland, United States, first occupied in 1974. [2] The Town Center is a non-contiguous, diverse area, and the most urban-like, ranging from multi-level high density apartments, homes and office buildings to single family homes.