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Jones Falls Area in Baltimore, Maryland — The American Northeast (Mid-Atlantic)
 

Falls Rd

— Ghost Rivers —

 
 
Falls Rd Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Devry Becker Jones (CC0), February 2, 2025
1. Falls Rd Marker
Inscription.
Hidden streams, hidden stories.

Just steps from where you stand, the buried stream Sumwalt Run spills out from concealed, underground culverts. Its waters join the Jones Falls, briefly seeing the sun, before plunging back into tunnels under I-83. Walking along the river you can spy other ghost streams pouring into the Jones Falls from their own culverts.

Over millions of years, these waterways carved deep valleys through the Baltimore landscape, exposing layers of prized stone. Into these rocky cliffs along the Jones Falls and Stony Run, men chiseled quarries. The hard, gray gneiss rock would become the foundations of Baltimore’s churches, bridges, and rowhouses.

The Jones Falls also powered mills along its path, its waters spinning great wheels that ground grain into flour, and later driving machines that wove vast sheets of sailcloth and other fabrics. By 1900, Mount Vernon Mills, Hoopers Mill, and others were producing most of the world’s cotton duck, making Baltimore a global industrial hub. Railroads hugged the banks of these rivers, carrying raw materials and finished goods to and from the city.

In the late 1800s waves of Irish and Italian immigrants and Black families moved to the area to work the mills, quarries, and railroads of a rapidly-growing city. These workers
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were typically given the most backbreaking and dangerous jobs, including digging the tunnels for railroads, water mains, and the storm sewers that carry Baltimore’s buried streams.

The short street Glen Edwards Avenue once ran north from Falls Road under a viaduct (still partly visible in the hillside). The block was known as "Good Husbands Row" because the men labored seasonally in the quarries, staying home to watch the kids while their wives worked in the textile mills. Multiple families crowded together in these tenement houses, wedged into a sooty depression behind the railroad tracks. Glen Edwards Avenue backed up to Sumwalt Run, not-yet-fully buried, but polluted by overflowing outhouses and industrial waste. In the 1930s, the street and remaining stream were both buried, and the last trace of Sumwalt Run disappeared from Remington.

"​​[They called it Good Husbands Row] because all the women worked up in the mills and their husbands stayed home. you’d see the women walking up from the mills… cotton flying off of them."
— Fenton L. Hoshall, resident of Remington and Hampden (interviewed in 1979 by Baltimore Neighborhood Heritage Project)

 
Erected by Greater Remington Improvement Association.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists:
Falls Rd Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Devry Becker Jones (CC0), February 2, 2025
2. Falls Rd Marker
ImmigrationIndustry & CommerceWaterways & VesselsWomen. A significant historical year for this entry is 1900.
 
Location. 39° 18.778′ N, 76° 37.345′ W. Marker is in Baltimore, Maryland. It is in the Jones Falls Area. It is on Falls Road 0.4 miles south of West 28th Street, on the left when traveling north. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 2001 Falls Rd, Baltimore MD 21211, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Central Maryland. It is also in the American Mid-Atlantic and in the Chesapeake Bay Region. Globally, it is in the North Atlantic Region, North America, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once one of the original Thirteen Colonies and also the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker: A Relic of Baltimore's Cable Car Era (about 400 feet away, measured in a direct line); 23rd St (approx. 0.2 miles away); Memorial to Marylanders Killed in War with Mexico (approx. Ό mile away); 24th St (approx. Ό mile away); Gloria Victis (approx. 0.3 miles away); Garry Moore (approx. 0.3 miles away); Jacob Epstein (approx. 0.3 miles away); Thomas J. O’Neill (approx. 0.3 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Baltimore.
 
Another marker is no longer nearby. Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument (was approx. 0.3 miles away but has been confirmed missing).
 
Falls Rd Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Devry Becker Jones (CC0), February 2, 2025
3. Falls Rd Marker
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on February 2, 2025. It was originally submitted on February 2, 2025, by Devry Becker Jones of Washington, District of Columbia. This page has been viewed 303 times since then and 34 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3. submitted on February 2, 2025, by Devry Becker Jones of Washington, District of Columbia.
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Jun. 7, 2026