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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Frederick County, Maryland

 
Clickable Map of Frederick County, Maryland and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Frederick County, MD (558) Carroll County, MD (210) Howard County, MD (143) Montgomery County, MD (748) Washington County, MD (875) Adams County, PA (1436) Franklin County, PA (228) Loudoun County, VA (345)  FrederickCounty(558) Frederick County (558)  CarrollCounty(210) Carroll County (210)  HowardCounty(143) Howard County (143)  MontgomeryCounty(748) Montgomery County (748)  WashingtonCounty(875) Washington County (875)  AdamsCountyPennsylvania(1436) Adams County (1436)  FranklinCounty(228) Franklin County (228)  LoudounCountyVirginia(345) Loudoun County (345)
Frederick is the county seat for Frederick County
Adjacent to Frederick County, Maryland
      Carroll County (210)  
      Howard County (143)  
      Montgomery County (748)  
      Washington County (875)  
      Adams County, Pennsylvania (1436)  
      Franklin County, Pennsylvania (228)  
      Loudoun County, Virginia (345)  
 
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101 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Korean War Memorial
In honor of the men and women of Emmitsburg who served in the Korean WarMap (db m130251) WM
102 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Monsignor Hugh J. Phillips
Dedicated in memory of Monsignor Hugh J. Phillips Former President of nearby Mount Saint Mary's College and Seminary (now University) and longtime Chaplain of the National Shrine Grotto of Lourdes for his tireless efforts to have a Maryland . . . Map (db m217373) HM
103 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Mother Seton's Rock1809 - 1821
Here on Sunday afternoons Mother Seton "seated on a rock known as Hers," taught Christian Doctrine to the children of The Mountain Parish. "They that instruct many to Justice shall Shine as the Stars for all Eternity." - Daniel XII, 3.Map (db m19031) HM
104 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Mount Saint Mary's College Reported missing
1808 - 1983 Dedicated to Mount Saint Mary's College Quote from Helmans History of Emmitsburg: "- The great fire occurred June 15th, 1863 it originated in the livery stable of Guthrie & Beam, consuming over fifty buildings in all; the fire . . . Map (db m9619) HM
105 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — National Shrine of Our Lady of LourdesMount St. Mary’s College, Emmitsburg, Maryland — Built 1875 —
Proclaimed a Public Oratory, December 8, 1965 by His Eminence, Lawrence Cardinal Shehan, Archbishop of Baltimore. The faithful who out of devotion visit the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes may gain the following special indulgences: A Plenary . . . Map (db m92525) HM
106 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Operation Just Cause Memorial
In honor of the men and women of Emmitsburg who served in PanamaMap (db m130255) WM
107 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Operation Urgent Fury and Lebanese Civil War Memorial
In honor of the men and women of Emmitsburg who served in Grenada/LebanonMap (db m130254) WM
108 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Pangborn Memorial CampanileNational Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes
Ave Maria This monument is dedicated to the glory of God and His Blessed Mother. It is erected on the site of the “Old Church on the Hill,” which was built in 1805 Father John Dubois, founder of Mount Saint Mary’s . . . Map (db m17360) HM
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109 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Persian Gulf Memorial
In memory of the men and women of Emmitsburg who served in the Persian GulfMap (db m130257) WM
110 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton
Describing the conversion of her sister-in-law, Harriet: Harriet left the log house on the evening of Friday, July 21, 1809, between 10 and 11 o'clock to seek the solitude of the Old Church on the Hill... "Harriet stealing up to the church by the . . . Map (db m19034) HM
111 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton (1774-1821)
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton (1774-1821) Mother + Convert + Educator + Foundress [Plaque near the base of the statue:] Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Foundress Sisters of Charity of Saint Joseph's 31 July 1809 . . . Map (db m147285) HM
112 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati
. . . Map (db m147287) HM
113 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth
. . . Map (db m147290) HM
114 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Sisters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul
. . . Map (db m147289) HM
115 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Sisters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul of New York
. . . Map (db m147286) HM
116 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill
. . . Map (db m147291) HM
117 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Site of Father Dubois House
This cross marks the site of Father Dubois house in which Mother Seton and her associates lived from Jun 21, to July 31, 1809. "Blessed be God in His Angels and in His Saints."Map (db m19033) HM
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118 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Site of St. Joseph's College
On this site St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, the first U.S. native to be canonized, founded an academy for girls in 1809. A high school was later added and in 1902 St. Joseph's College was chartered as a three year institution for women. In 1914 the . . . Map (db m9474) HM
119 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — St. Elizabeth Ann SetonFounder of the Sisters of Charity
Born Aug. 28, 1774, in New York, she came to Emmitsburg from Baltimore June 24, 1809, occupying stone house on these grounds July 31. The following year, in White House visible from here, she organized nation's first Roman Catholic Parochial . . . Map (db m9473) HM
120 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — St. Joseph's Valley Camp"I did not see it multiplied, but saw it there!" — Gettysburg Campaign — Reported permanently removed
About 80,000 Union troops settled here in Saint Joseph's Valley as June 1863 drew to a close, "until the grounds around were actually covered with Soldiers." Emmitsburg was placed under martial law, and the Vincentian priests at Saint Joseph's . . . Map (db m9485) HM
121 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — St. Joseph's Valley Camp"The poor fellows looked half-starved" — Gettysburg Campaign —
About 38,000 Union troops from three corps passed through Saint Joseph's Valley during the five days before the Battle of Gettysburg, until it seemed to the sisters that "the grounds around were actually covered with Soldiers." Emmitsburg was . . . Map (db m204242) HM
122 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Bells of St. Joseph's Valley
Bells pealed throughout Saint Joseph's Valley with the joyful news of Mother Seton's beatification March 17, 1963 The Academy Bell, cast by George Harley of Philadelphia (n.d.), summoned boarding and day pupils of Saint Joseph's Academy to . . . Map (db m147288) HM
123 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Carriage House Inn200 South Seton Avenue
The Carriage House Inn has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior circa 1857 Map (db m147282) HM
124 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Emmit House1879 — 663 West Main Street —
The Emmit House 1879 The present architectural configuration Listed on the National Register of Historic Places Previously known as: Black's Tavern circa - 1850 Old Farmer's Inn circa - 1863 . . . Map (db m130248) HM
125 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The First Statue of Mother Seton Erected in the United States
This is the first statue of Mother Seton erected in the United States. It was blessed on September 27, 1950, by Bishop John M. McNamara, Auxiliary Bishop of Washington, and unveiled by Francesca Senese - Santoponte of Leghorn, great-great . . . Map (db m147293) HM
126 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The John Hughes Cabin
John Hughes, class of 1826, fourth bishop (1838) and first archbishop of New York (1850-1864), born in County Tyrone Ireland (1797), immigrated in 1817. A gardener and mason, Hughes was employed the 10th of November, 1819, by Fr. John DuBois . . . Map (db m9621) HM
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127 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Spirit of the American Doughboy
1917 1918 Emmitsburg In The Great War This memorial erected and dedicated in honor of those from Emmitsburg District who served in The World War The Supreme Sacrifice Made By Bentzel, Arthur H*         Hahn, Martin . . . Map (db m44058) HM WM
128 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Stone House
June 21, 1809 Mother Seton and her companions removed from Baltimore to Emmitsburg. For a few weeks the little company were domiciled in the mountain house placed at their disposal by · Rev. John Dubois, S. S. · President . . . Map (db m147284) HM
129 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Town of Emmitsburg, Maryland
For more than 200 years, people have journeyed to Emmitsburg for inspiration, enlightenment, and remembrance. Located just south of the Mason-Dixon Line on one of America's Scenic Byways, the town is the site of two internationally-recognized . . . Map (db m147281) HM
130 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The Town of Emmitsburg, Maryland
For more than 200 years, people have journeyed to Emmitsburg for inspiration, enlightenment, and remembrance. Located just south of the Mason-Dixon Line on one of America's Scenic Byways, the town is the site of two internationally-recognized . . . Map (db m217371) HM
131 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — The White House
This reconstruction log building, faced with clapboard and painted white, was occupied by Mother Seton and her little community in February 1810. At the close of the year the school numbered thirty boarders and forty day pupils. In 1817 this . . . Map (db m9617) HM
132 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — This Cavalry Group
This calvary group replaces the "old wooden cross" erected by John Dubois of which Mother Seton writes in her journal for the year 1815 --- "Quiet dinner at the Grotto before the old cross, yet standing after winter storms", memorializes forever the . . . Map (db m19036) HM
133 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — ThurmontGateway to the Mountain — Catoctin Mountain Towns & Communities —
Beginning in the 1730's, German and Swiss immigrants would traverse this area, coming from the eastern Pennsylvania en-route to the Shenandoah Valley. Many would settle on, and beside, Catoctin Mountain. Family farms were quick to sprout up . . . Map (db m159915) HM
134 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — ThurmontVisitor Services — Catoctin Mountain Towns & Communities —
Each year, thousands of visitors come to the Thurmont area to enjoy the Great Outdoors. Uniquely positioned amidst a cavalcade of authentic recreational experiences, the Maryland Main Street designee of over 6,000 residents proudly caters to . . . Map (db m159918) HM
135 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Town Square
Emmitsburg's Town Square has been the center of commercial and social activity since William Emmit laid out the town in 1785 on a grid of lots and divided by a four-way intersection. Originally the site of the town water pump, the Town Square was . . . Map (db m147279) HM
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136 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — Viet Nam Conflict Memorial
In honor of the men and women of Emmitsburg who served in the Viet Nam ConflictMap (db m130253) WM
137 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — White Ash Tree
The tree was a Maryland State Champion White Ash approximately 175 years old when on July 10, 2001 a storm with tornado-like winds took off one of the major limbs and decay was discovered inside the remaining limbs. The Maryland Department of . . . Map (db m19025) HM
138 Maryland, Frederick County, Emmitsburg — William Elder, Sr.
William Elder, Sr., named this land Mount Saint Mary's & established (ca. 1743) his home "Pleasant Level" and the Elder Cemetery on the plain below. His family deeded (October 24, 1793) this mountain land for a church. In respect for the living God . . . Map (db m17389) HM
139 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — “Frederick's Other City”
When Frederick Town was laid out in 1745, founder Daniel Dulany provided lots to different faith denominations to build churches. These would serve as centers of religious, educational and social life for the new settlers in Maryland's colonial . . . Map (db m104185) HM
140 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — “South Magnetic”
The compass Meridian Stones of Frederick County. One of two stones set in 1896 by USC&GS to establish a true meridian line. Used by surveyors to check compass variations pursuant to Article 25, Code of MD ──── . . . Map (db m89631) HM
141 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — “The Great Baby Waker”
On April 22, 1783, this historic cannon announced the end of the American Revolution here on the western frontier of the new nation Cast at the Mount Aetna forge near Hagerstown, this iron fortification gun entered service at the New Frederick . . . Map (db m103370) HM
142 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 10th Vermont Monument
This monument was erected by the State Of Vermont to designate the position of the Tenth Vermont Infantry during the battle fought here on the ninth day of July 1864 to save Washington, "and we saved it." Seven companies occupied the Washington . . . Map (db m170755) HM
143 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 14th New Jersey Infantry Regiment
Erected by the State of New Jersey to commemorate the heroic services of the 14th Regiment New Jersey Volunteer Infantry 1st Brigade, 3rd Division, 6th Corps Army of the Potomac, at the Battle of Monocacy, MD July 9th 1864. ********* The . . . Map (db m13301) HM
144 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 173 West All Saints Street
In this property At 173 West All Saints Street Dr. Ulysses G. Bourne and Dr. Charles Brooks Operated a 15-Bed Hospital for African Americans from 1919 to 1928 This Plaque Erected By The Kiwanis Club of Frederick June . . . Map (db m107230) HM
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145 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 1862 Antietam CampaignLee Invades Maryland
Fresh from victory at the Second Battle of Manassas, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia crossed the Potomac River on September 4–6, 1862, to bring the Civil War to Northern soil and to recruit sympathetic Marylanders. Union Gen. George . . . Map (db m18382) HM
146 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 1862 Antietam CampaignLee Invades Maryland
Fresh from victory at the Second Battle of Manassas, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia crossed the Potomac River on September 4–6, 1862, to bring the Civil War to Northern soil and to recruit sympathetic Marylanders. Union Gen. . . . Map (db m97907) HM
147 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 1862 Antietam CampaignLee Invades Maryland
Fresh from victory at the Second Battle of Manassas, Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia crossed the Potomac River on September 4-6, 1862, to bring the Civil War to Northern soil and to recruit sympathetic Marylanders. Union Gen. George . . . Map (db m194555) HM
148 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — 1862 Antietam CampaignLee Invades Maryland
Fresh from victory at the Second Battle of Manassas, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia crossed the Potomac River on September 4–6, 1862, to bring the Civil War to Northern soil and to recruit sympathetic Marylanders. Union Gen. George . . . Map (db m236181) HM
149 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Bold Plan Reported permanently removed
In June 1864, with Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant intent on destroying Confederate General Robert E. Lee's army, Lee developed a bold plan to capture Washington, D.C. He sent Lieutenant General Jubal A. Early with 15,000 troops to invade . . . Map (db m78623) HM
150 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Bold Plan Reported permanently removed
In June 1864, with Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant intent on destroying Confederate General Robert E. Lee's army, Lee developed a bold plan to capture Washington, D.C. He sent Lieutenant General Jubal A. Early with 15,000 troops to invade . . . Map (db m104162) HM
151 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Bold PlanMonocacy National Battlefield — National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior —
In June 1864, Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant was intent on destroying Confederate General Robert E. Lee's army at Petersburg, Virginia. Lee saw an opportunity to capture undefended Washington, D.C. He sent Lieutenant General Jubal A. . . . Map (db m213591) HM
152 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Bold PlanMonocacy National Battlefield — National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior —
In June 1864, Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant was intent on destroying Confederate General Robert E. Lee's army at Petersburg, Virginia. Lee saw an opportunity to capture undefended Washington, D.C. He sent Lieutenant General Jubal A. . . . Map (db m213593) HM
153 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Crossroads of American HistoryThe Frederick Square Corner — The Historic National Road - The Road That Built The Nation —
The Square Corner, at the intersection of Patrick and Market Streets, has long been the commercial and financial heart of Frederick. It is here that the National Road meets several important north-south roads that lead to Pennsylvania, Virginia, and . . . Map (db m2748) HM
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154 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Good Night's RestFrederick's Hotel Block — The Historic National Road - The Road That Built The Nation — Reported permanently removed
This part of downtown Frederick has long been a place of lodging and hospitality for travelers along the National Road. Kimball's Inn, Talbott's Tavern, the City Hotel and the Francis Scott Key Hotel have occupied this site for over two hundred . . . Map (db m104243) HM
155 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — A Good Night's RestFrederick's Hotel Block — The Road That Built The Nation —
This part of downtown Frederick has long been a place of lodging and hospitality for travelers along the National Road. Kimball's Inn, Talbott's Tavern, the City Hotel and the Francis SCott Key Hotel have occupied this site for over two hundred . . . Map (db m243565) HM
156 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Ambush
On the morning of July 9, 1864, John T. Worthington sent his family to safety in the cellar. From an upstairs window he watched Confederate General McCausland lead his cavalry brigade of 1,400 men into an ambush. Concealed behind a fence and waist . . . Map (db m89982) HM
157 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Arts & Entertainment
Learn to paint at the Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center or catch outrageous improve and other stage productions at the Maryland Ensemble Theatre. Dance on your toes at the Cultural Arts Center or ponder the trompe l'oeil elements of the . . . Map (db m129735) HM
158 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — B & O Railroad Station"No malice in my heart" — Antietam Campaign —
At this intersection, President Abraham Lincoln spoke from a railroad car platform to Frederick residents assembled in the street on October 4, 1862. He had just returned from viewing the battlefields of South Mountain and Antietam and had called on . . . Map (db m60166) HM
159 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Barbara Fritchieby John Greenleaf Whittier
Up from the meadows rich with corn, Clear in the cool September morn, The clustered spires or Frederick stand Greenwalled by the hills of Maryland Round about them orchards sweep, Apple and peach tree fruited deep. Fair as . . . Map (db m213586) HM WM
160 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Barbara Fritchie Cabins & Tea Room
Site of Barbara Fritchie Cabins 1933 - 1987 erected by Charles A. Faust Barbara Fritchie Tea Room 1938 - 1987Map (db m107063) HM
161 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Barbara Fritchie House“Shoot if you must this old gray head, but spare your country’s flag.” — Antietam Campaign 1862 —
As the Confederate army marched through Frederick on September 10, 1862, feisty local Unionists—mostly women—showed their defiance by waving the Stars and Stripes. The poet John Greenleaf Whittier immortalized one of them in “The Ballad of Barbara . . . Map (db m2693) HM
162 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Barbara Fritchie: Civil War Heroine
"Over Barbara Frietchie's grave, Flag of Freedom and Union, wave!John Greenleaf Whittier From the poem, entitled “Barbara Frietchie,” Atlantic Monthly magazine, October, 1863 Barbara . . . Map (db m127719) HM
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163 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Battle BeginsMonocacy National Battlefield
About 8 o'clock a dash was made by the enemy under cover of artillery fire, to drive us from out position, hoping to gain the pike, and proceed on their way to Washington. — Private Daniel B. Freeman, Company G, 10th Vermont Infantry . . . Map (db m78507) HM
164 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Battle of Frederick"Best little battle of the war" — Early's 1864 Washington Raid — Reported missing
(preface) Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early drove Union Gen. David Hunter into West Virginia after the Battle of Lynchburg, Va., clearing the Shenandoah Valley of Federal forces. To draw Union troops from Petersburg, Early launched a . . . Map (db m167015) HM
165 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Battle of FrederickBuying Vital Time — Early's 1864 Attack on Washington —
(preface) In June 1864, Confederate Gen. Robert E Lee sent Gen. Jubal A. Early's corps from the Richmond battlefields to the Shenandoah Valley to counter Union Gen. David Hunter's army. After driving Hunter into West Virginia, Early . . . Map (db m232188) HM
166 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Battle of MonocacyThe Battle that saved Washington
Here along the Monocacy River on July 9, 1864, was fought the battle between Union forces under General Lew Wallace and Confederate forces under General Jubal A. Early. The battle, although a temporary victory for the Confederates, delayed their . . . Map (db m3218) HM
167 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Best Family Farm8:30 a.m. July 9, 1864 — Monocacy National Battlefield, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior — Reported permanently removed
The John T. Best family was going about its chores of tending cows, hogs, chickens, and fields of wheat, oats, and corn. The Bests were used to working amid soldiers, for Union and Confederate troops had camped here on the South Hermitage farm . . . Map (db m194537) HM
168 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Birthplace of William Tyler Page
Birthplace William Tyler Page Oct. 19, 1868 Author of The American's Creed Placed by Frederick, Chapter, D.A.R.Map (db m89037) HM
169 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Braddock, Washington, and Franklin
On April 23, 1755 At a Tavern located near this spot General Edward Braddock Colonel George Washington and Benjamin Franklin Met to plan the British assault on Ft. Dusquesne During the French & Indian War This plaque erected by the Kiwanis Club . . . Map (db m2725) HM
170 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Burning of the Bridge12:00 noon July 9, 1864 — Monocacy National Battlefield — Reported missing
Confederates wearing captured blue uniforms had killed or wounded several Union skirmishers who had been sent across the Monocacy River to hold the Georgetown Turnpike and B&O Railroad bridges "at all hazards." The two sides traded shots all . . . Map (db m194546) HM
171 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Burning the Bridge — Monocacy National Battlefield —
On July 9, 1864, a wooden covered bridge spanned the Monocacy River where you see the present-day Urbana Pike Bridge. The covered bridge provided easy movement for the Confederates, intent on speeding 15,000 troops with their horses, wagons, and . . . Map (db m194547) HM
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172 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Bush Creek Crossing Reported permanently removed
A wagon road crossed Bush Creek at this location connecting the Georgetown Pike with roads to Baltimore. As Federal troops withdrew from the battlefield, they passed Gambrill's Mill and followed this road toward Baltimore, leaving the field to the . . . Map (db m194553) HM
173 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Capital For A SummerFoiling Maryland Secession
The building in front of you, Kemp Hall, was the capitol of Maryland during the spring and summer of 1861, as the state came perilously close to leaving the Union. Because secession would have placed the U.S. capital, Washington, D.C. between the . . . Map (db m67247) HM
174 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Caught in the Crossfire
Since the war's onset John T. Best had grown accustomed to seeing Union and Confederate soldiers on his farm, but the morning of July 9, 1864, was different. Shots rang out on the farm and a battle ensued. Confederate artillery moved into the . . . Map (db m194539) HM
175 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Chuck Foreman FieldDedicated to Walter Eugene "Chuck" Foreman — September 22, 2014 —
Frederick High School alumnus Chuck Foreman excelled at track, basketball, and football. He played defensive back, wide receiver, and running back positions for the University of Miami Hurricanes before being drafted by the Minnesota Vikings in . . . Map (db m137815) HM
176 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — City HallFormer Frederick County Courthouse — Antietam Campaign 1862 —
Connections with the Civil War abound around this Courthouse Square, where the first official act of defiance against the British crown - the 1765 Stamp Act Repudiation - occurred almost a century earlier. In 1857, Roger Brooke Taney, Chief Justice . . . Map (db m2815) HM
177 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Civil War Children's Memorial
Dedicated to the memory of the children who served and died in the Civil War 1861-1865Map (db m103206) WM
178 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Civil War Hospital Center
Frederick County's ties to the American Civil War run deep, so it should come as no surprise that it is part of Maryland's Heart of the Civil War Heritage Area and The Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area/National Scenic Byway. . . . Map (db m119144) HM
179 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Civilians Under SiegeMonocacy National Battlefield
On the morning of July 9, 1864, C. Keefer Thomas hosted two Union officers at his breakfast table, talking about the impeding battle. Later that morning as the battle drew near, the Thomas family, with several houseguests, neighbors, enslaved . . . Map (db m89983) HM
180 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Clustered Spires of Frederick
John Greenleaf Whittier immortalized Barbara Fritchie and the town of Frederick in his poem about the elderly Frederick resident who supposedly displayed the Union flag as Southern soldiers marched by on September 10, 1862. On July 9, 1864, . . . Map (db m3290) HM
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181 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Commemoration
On July 9, 1907, 43 years after the battle of Monocacy, 180 veterans of the 14th New Jersey Regiment returned to dedicate this monument in honor of their comrades and their sacrifices. Most of the men wore a memorial pin on their lapel, given to . . . Map (db m82291) HM
182 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Company A, 1st Battalion, 115th Infantry Regiment Memorial
In special tribute to those who participated in the "D" Day Invasion-Normandy France, June 6, 1944 Since 1775 Dedicated to all those past and present who have served in peace and war as members of Company A, 1st Bn, 115th Infantry . . . Map (db m103364) WM
183 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Confederate Row
Frederick County was central to the Civil War military campaigns of 1862, 1863, and 1864, while Frederick City served as a major hospital center for soldiers of both armies. Hundreds of men died here, prompting the need for local Burial. Many . . . Map (db m103169) HM
184 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Confederate Sentinel
Erected A.D. 1880. By the Ladies Monumental Association of Frederick County In honor of the soldiers of the Confederate Army who fell in the battles of Antietam, Monocacy, and elsewhere and are here buried. Honor To the Brave . . . Map (db m103172) WM
185 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Confederates Invade Maryland Reported permanently removed
7:00 a.m, July 9, 1864 Confederate troops under Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early streamed through the gaps of South Mountain and the Catoctins and headed south past Frederick. Bound for Washington, D.C., they were stopped here at the Best family farm by . . . Map (db m194536) HM
186 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — CPL Kirk J Bosselmann
USMC Iraq Campaign Killed In Action 11-27-04Map (db m213592) WM
187 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Cultures Meet
Two tides of immigration met at Frederick Town, the westernmost settlement in Maryland at the time of its founding in 1745. English people came primarily from southern Maryland, the oldest and first developed section of the colony. Germans came . . . Map (db m152364) HM
188 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Daniel HughesFeb. 3, 1774 - Feb. 12, 1854 — War of 1812 Soldier —
Major who served as a Captain in the 2nd Regt. of Infantry, U.S. Army, under General Andrew Jackson's staff at the Battle of New Orleans in 1814. Promoted to 2nd Lieut 2nd Regt. on Feb. 12, 1801, and Major on Feb. 21, 1814.Map (db m213570) HM
189 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Desperate Escape
After Union General Wallace ordered the covered bridge burned, the railroad bridge became the only route of escape for Lieutenant Davis and his men, who were seperated from the rest of the Union forces by the river. His troops fought bravely all . . . Map (db m194549) HM
190 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Diehl Memorial Fountain
The original memorial, unveiled on August 17, 1911, was dedicated to the humane efforts of Marie Diehl (1855-1907), a founder of the Frederick Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, now the Frederick County Humane Society. The . . . Map (db m119143) HM
191 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Edgewood
The success of miller James H. Gambrill became apparent when he built Edgewood, the grand house on the hill. When it was constructed around 1872, the brick, three-story Second Empire style house was one of the largest single-family residences in . . . Map (db m90479) HM
192 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Elizabeth Hughes Potts
1st wife of Richard Potts Revolutionary War Patriot-MD Born 1762 Died 28 October 1793Map (db m213567) HM
193 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Enoch Louis Lowe
The Home of Enoch Louis Lowe Aug. 10, 1820 — Aug. 23, 1892 Governor of Maryland 1851 — 1854 Marked by the Historical Society of Frederick County March 25, 1956Map (db m103320) HM
194 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Evangelical Lutheran Church
This tablet is erected to the Glory of God and in grateful recognition of those who organized this congregation and have maintained it for two hundred years 1738   Congregation organized. 1743   Log church built on the Monocacy. . . . Map (db m14022) HM
195 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Federal Retreat4:30-5:00 p.m. July 9, 1864 — Monocacy National Battlefield — Reported permanently removed
The Northerners held, then lost, then retook the Thomas house grounds as the fighting ebbed and flowed in the stifling heat. Casualties mounted quickly on both sides. Union Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace could see that his numbers were dwindling and that . . . Map (db m194544) HM
196 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Federals Take a Stand7:00 a.m., July 9, 1864 — Monocacy National Battlefield, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior —
After skirmishing on July 8 with Confederates west of Frederick, MD, Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace’s 5,800 Union troops—many of them “raw and untried”—took a stand at the Monocacy River. Wallace carefully chose this critical intersection of the river, . . . Map (db m3247) HM
197 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Final Attack
Come on, Georgians, follow me and we will show these (Confederate) cavalrymen how to fight. Confederate General Clement Evans (As heard by Private N. Harris, 16th Virginia Cavalry) After the failed cavalry attacks on Thomas Farm, . . . Map (db m194545) HM
198 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Final Resting PlaceFrancis Scott Key
In the final months of his life Francis Scott Key enjoyed visits to Terra Rubra farm, his boyhood home not far from Frederick Town. He thought and wrote about the end of life and his hopes of immortality in a life to come. Key died at his . . . Map (db m75758) HM WM
199 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — Final StandMonocacy National Battlefield
The Union troops held the Confederates at bay for most of the day. Around 4:30 p.m. the Union front collapsed and fell back to the Georgetown Pike, where they used the protection of the road bank in their final stand. The Union soldiers fronted . . . Map (db m78505) HM
200 Maryland, Frederick County, Frederick — First Black High School in Frederick County1921
Founded by Mr. John W. Burner Supervisor of All Black Schools in Frederick County Principal Mr. Maurice Reid Sponsor Frederick Chapter NAACPMap (db m107198) HM

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Apr. 23, 2024