134 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 134 are listed here. ⊲ Previous 100
Historical Markers and War Memorials in Calvert County, Maryland
Adjacent to Calvert County, Maryland
▶ Anne Arundel County (435) ▶ Charles County (142) ▶ Dorchester County (102) ▶ Prince George's County (524) ▶ St. Mary's County (269) ▶ Talbot County (117)
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | After encountering superior British naval forces, Commodore Barney retreated into the relative safety of St. Leonard Creek, which was easily defendable because of its narrow entrance and high banks. One June 8th, 9th, and 10th, the British sent wave . . . — — Map (db m81004) WM |
| | Here, where St. Leonard Creek meets the Patuxent River, people lived and events took place that helped shape the region’s — and America’s — history.
Look downriver towards Solomons and see the Governor Thomas Johnson Bridge in the . . . — — Map (db m94695) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Emphasizing functional requirements as well as traditional Chesapeake Tidewater architecture, Gertrude Sawyer designed 26 Colonial Revival buildings for Patterson’s Point Farm from 1932 to 1955. A graduate of the first class (1919) of the Cambridge . . . — — Map (db m80972) HM |
| On Parran Road at Solomons Island Road (Maryland Route 2/4), on the right when traveling west on Parran Road. |
| | Birthplace of Thomas Johnson (1732–1819), member of Continental Congress 1774. Nominated Washington as Commander-in-Chief Continental Army 1775. First elected Governor of Maryland 1777. Associate Justice United States Supreme Court 1791. — — Map (db m3467) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | For more than 300 years, farmers have grown crops in this field. In the 1980s, archaeologists noticed historic objects on the surface in one area of the plowed field. To learn more about early rural life in Maryland, they carefully collected the . . . — — Map (db m80921) HM |
| On Parran Road at Solomons Island Road (Maryland Route 2/4), on the right when traveling west on Parran Road. |
| | Town of St. Leonard was originally, in 1663, at mouth of St. Leonard Creek. By 1706, when chartered by Maryland General Assembly as a port of entry, it had been moved to head of creek near here. British forces burned its wharves and warehouses July . . . — — Map (db m3464) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Information about the people who lived here comes from the items that they left behind, such as objects discarded or lost. People also leave behind the remains of their buildings, as well as evidence of some of their daily activities. Archaeologist . . . — — Map (db m80904) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Before excavations began, archaeologist collected artifacts from the surface of the plowed field to determine the site’s size and age. Based on the location of these objects, researchers developed a plan to gain the maximum amount of information . . . — — Map (db m80915) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Some of the fiercest fighting of the war occurred here, where St. Leonard Creek meets the Patuxent River. During the summer of 1814, the British navy tried to flush out and destroy Commodore Joshua Barney’s Chesapeake Flotilla—a rag-tag . . . — — Map (db m80899) HM |
| Near Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | The Chesapeake has long been a place to enjoy. This small waterside bath house came complete with men's and ladies' changing rooms, electricity and plumbing, Unusual for any structure in this part of Calvert County in the early 1930s. This was Mr. . . . — — Map (db m95138) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Were There Indians in Calvert County? This is a common question. In the early 1600s A.D., there were several small, closely-related Indian chiefdoms in the area. The most influential group called itself “Patuxent,” a name we now use for . . . — — Map (db m80902) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Enter another world one that had existed in the Chesapeake Bay region long before Europeans came to settle here. Follow this trail to a re-created Native American Village, where you will learn about the Eastern Woodland people who lived . . . — — Map (db m80922) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Welcome to Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum (JPPM), State Museum of Archaeology, where we explore the changing cultures and environment of the Chesapeake Bay region over the past 12,000 years.
You can investigate the thousands of years of human . . . — — Map (db m80923) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | “Ruffian, Patriot, and Philanthropist…” John Quincy Adams. Born in Calvert County, by 1813 John Stuart Skinner was a Purser for the U.S. Navy, in charge of purchases and accounts for the United States Chesapeake Flotilla. When the . . . — — Map (db m81064) HM |
| | Instead of this peaceful scene in front of you, imagine the air. hazy with smoke brightened by the flare of gunfire and rockets. Hear booming cannons, screaming rockets, yelling and shouting. Right here at the mouth of St. Leonard Creek is' where . . . — — Map (db m95871) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | As wooden building posts decay in the ground, they form distinctly-colored soils that archaeologists call post molds. The location and spacing of post molds provide important clues about the size of a building, the arrangements of its rooms, and how . . . — — Map (db m80906) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | In 2000, archaeologists at Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum examined three areas, including the hill directly ahead. The research was funded by the National Park Service’s American Battlefield Protection Program.
None of the artifacts found on . . . — — Map (db m81032) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | During the Battles of St. Leonard Creek, the United States Chesapeake Flotilla consisted of the sloop Scorpion armed with four cannon, 13 barges with two cannon each, the one-gun row galley Vigilant, and a lookout boat and two gunboats, each armed . . . — — Map (db m80932) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Between 1767 and 1773, two neighbors-Thomas Johnson (father of Maryland’s first state governor) and Walter Smith-twice went to court to settle a dispute about the boundary of Smith’s plantation of St. Leonard. Many local residents were called to . . . — — Map (db m80954) HM |
| On Parran Road at Solomons Island Road (Maryland Route 2/4), on the right when traveling west on Parran Road. |
| | In June, 1814, Maryland's Commodore Joshua Barney commanded American flotilla of barges, gunboats and a sloop in attacks on superior British forces in Patuxent River and its tributary, St. Leonard Creek. After flotilla moved up Patuxent and was . . . — — Map (db m3463) HM |
| On St. Leonard Road (Maryland Route 765) 0.1 miles south of Calvert Beach Road, on the right when traveling south. |
| | This polling house was built in 1926 and residents voted here until 1974. The Garden of Remembrance honors all those held dear in the hearts of area residents. It also honors First Ladies Mrs. John Quincy Adams and Mrs. Zachary Taylor, who were . . . — — Map (db m3469) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | JPPM archaeologists had long known that a stone house foundation, overgrown with weeds, sat in the woods in front of you. But who had lived there was a mystery. Then in 1996, two former local residents---Daniel and Minnie Octavia Gross Brown---were . . . — — Map (db m81090) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | You are now standing on the house site of Richard Smith, Sr., who in 1657 was appointed to fill the newly created office of Attorney General for Maryland.
The following year, this plantation---“St. Leonard’s---was used by the colonial General . . . — — Map (db m80970) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | Underwater archaeology is often more difficult than terrestrial archaeology, especially when visibility is poor because of salty water. Side scan sonars and magnetometers (sophisticated metal detectors) are employed in the search for underwater . . . — — Map (db m80987) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | At Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum, living history is an important way to educate visitors about the museum’s important role in the War of 1812. Recognizing the importance of making history come to life, Richard Fischer, Jr. has been instrumental . . . — — Map (db m80951) HM |
| | The original St. Leonard’s Town, at the head of St. Leonard Creek, served as the Chesapeake Flotilla’s base in June 1814. The flotilla moved out after intense fighting on June 26, exposing the town to destructive British raids.
The town site . . . — — Map (db m80893) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | “One of the enemy’s rockets fell on board one of our barges, and, after passing through one of the men (one of only three Americans to die from a British rocket during the entire war in Maryland) set the barge on fire…a barrel of powder and . . . — — Map (db m81057) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | The largest naval engagement in Maryland took place in St. Leonard Creek in June 1814. Americans prevailed in a series of skirmishes June 8-10, but the British ultimately trapped them in the creek. The first battle had little effect.
On June 26, . . . — — Map (db m80898) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | The replica 18-pounder cannon located on the hill is similar to the type used by American forces during the Battle of St. Leonard Creek. “18-pounder” refers to the weight of the cannonballs, which were approximately five inches in . . . — — Map (db m80929) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | The Maryland Archaeological Conservation (MAC) Laboratory is a state-of-the-art archaeological research, conservation and collections facility. Opened in 1998, the Lab holds the State’s archaeological artifact collections. In the labs, the often . . . — — Map (db m81091) HM |
| On Jefferson Patterson Park Road. |
| | The main house probably had two rooms on the first floor, a sleeping loft upstairs, a chimney made of mud and brick, and a shed facing the river. Archaeologists speculate that a room for storing dairy foods was located off the north side. By looking . . . — — Map (db m80913) HM |
| On Solomons Island Road (Maryland Route 2) at Southern Maryland Boulevard (Maryland Route 4), on the right when traveling south on Solomons Island Road. |
| | All Saints, one of the original parishes of Maryland, included all the land north of Hunting Creek in Calvert County. The present church was started in 1774 by exchange of tobacco under the rectorship of Reverend Thomas John Clagett, later the first . . . — — Map (db m3470) HM |
| On Solomons Island Road (Maryland Route 2) at Pushaw Station Road, on the right when traveling north on Solomons Island Road. |
| | During the period of racially segregated education, elementary school teacher Brown enlisted the N.A.A.C.P. and attorney Thurgood Marshall to challenge the inequity of separate salary scales for public school teachers based on race. Her case was . . . — — Map (db m5573) HM |
| On Lower Marlboro Road (Maryland Route 262) 0.2 miles from Southern Maryland Boulevard (Maryland Route 4), on the right when traveling east. |
| | Authorized in 1692 by the Maryland Assembly the first All Saints (log) Church was built near this site "at the cross-roads of the Severn Ridge Path and the road leading to Coxtown" on land donated by early French Huguenot settler Thomas Hilleary . . . — — Map (db m3471) HM |
134 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 134 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100