Historical Marker Search

You searched for City|State|Country: , md us

Page 30 of 37 — Showing results 291 to 300 of 367
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18A_ramsey-house_Frederick-MD.html
In this housePresident Abraham LincolnOctober 4, 1862 visitedGeneral George L. HartsuffWounded In the Battle of Antietam Placed by Frederick Chapter DAR&Cdr. & Mrs. D.M. Page, USN1975
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM189_roger-brooke-taney_Frederick-MD.html
Chief JusticeOf the United States1836-1864 Secretary of the Treasury1833-1834 Attorney GeneralOf the United States1831-1833 Attorney GeneralOf Maryland1827-1831 Citizen of FrederickAnd lawyer practicingin the Frederick County Court1801…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM188_the-congregation-in-frederick_Frederick-MD.html
circa 1745 - Founded by German Reformed settlers led by schoolmaster John Thomas Schley, the Founder of Frederick City. 1934 - Became part of the The Evangelical and Reformed Church a Merger of the Evangelical Synod and German Reformed Church …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM187_city-hall_Frederick-MD.html
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 Justic…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM186_north-market-street_Frederick-MD.html
On June 28, 1863, Gen. John F. Reynolds rode into Federick to visit his cousin Catherine Reynolds Cramer and her sisters near the intersection of North Market and Second Streets. She would have much to write the rest of her family on July 1 about …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM17Z_market-patrick-streets_Frederick-MD.html
Frederick found itself occupied alternatively by Confederate and Union armies during the Civil War. Citizens who frequented this "Square Corner" of Market and Patrick Streets saw Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia march west from here …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM17Y_1862-antietam-campaign_Frederick-MD.html
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…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM17X_hospitals-in-frederick_Frederick-MD.html
In this building, soldiers who died in one of the many area hospitals following the battles of South Mountain, Antietam, Gettysburg, and Moncacy were embalmed and prepared for interment at nearby Mount Olivet Cemetery or for shipment home. James W…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM17W_frederick_Frederick-MD.html
Frederick Town was founded in 1745 when Daniel Dulany the Elder carved out an eastern portion of his 7,000 acre parcel patented as "Tasker's Chance." The town was then laid out in an orderly grid with Patrick Street designated as the east-west tho…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM17U_rose-hill-manor_Frederick-MD.html
You are on the grounds of Rose Hill Manor, the final home of Maryland's first governor, Thomas Johnson. During its stay near Frederick, the Army of the Potomac's large Artillery Reserve occupied these grounds. Created after the Battle of Chancello…
PAGE 30 OF 37