Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bowie (/ ˈ b uː i /) is a city in Prince George's County, Maryland, United States. [3] Per the 2020 census, the population was 58,329. [4] Bowie has grown from a small railroad stop to the largest municipality in Prince George's County, and the fifth most populous city [5] and third largest city by area in the U.S. state of Maryland.
Bowie was born in Scotland in 1688 and died in Maryland in April 1759. [1] He was the first of the Bowie family to arrive in colonial Maryland, emigrating from Scotland between 1705 and 1706 and settling near Nottingham, Prince George's County, Maryland on the Patuxent River. [2]
Mattaponi, also known as the John Bowie Jr. House, is a historic home in Croom, Maryland, built c. 1820 on the foundation of an earlier house dating to the 1730s, [1] three miles northwest of Nottingham, Prince George's County, Maryland. [2] John Bowie, Sr., who emigrated to colonial Maryland in 1705 from Scotland, purchased a large tract of ...
The Bowie family had extensive landholdings in the county and were important politically. [3] Bowieville was built in 1819-20 [2] by Mary Wooton Bowie, daughter of Robert Bowie, Governor of Maryland, on property she inherited from her father, and is very similar in styling to his home, Mattaponi, which is also of brick covered with stucco. [3]
In 1826, Bowie was elected to the New York Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa. [citation needed] He graduated from Union College in Schenectady, New York in 1827. [1] While at Union College, Bowie helped found the Sigma Phi fraternity on March 4, 1827. [2] He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1829, and commenced practice in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. [1]
The Bowie family was one of the colonial families of the U.S. state of Maryland with John Bowie, Sr. being the first member of the family to arrive in the state. Pages in category "Bowie family" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
During the American Revolutionary War, Bowie served as captain and later major of a Prince George's County company. He was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from 1780 to 1800 and served in the Maryland State Senate from 1800 to 1802.
The city of Bowie, Maryland, was founded as Huntington in 1870 at a junction of the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad. The town was renamed Bowie in the 1880s after Governor Oden Bowie. [15] Odenton, Maryland, began as a junction of the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad and the Annapolis and Elk Ridge Railroad, named after Oden Bowie in 1872. [16]