Red Roof Inn Annapolis keeps you close to your next flight out of the Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. Only miles away from downtown Annapolis, Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, St. John’s College, the Maryland State House and the United States Naval Academy.
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Just North of Baltimore's Inner Harbor. This hotel is 1 mi from Padonia Park Shopping Center and 2 mi from downtown Timonium, Maryland. It features a restaurant and rooms with a 32-inch flat-screen TV. Free WiFi is offered. A microwave, refrigerator and coffee maker are standard in every room at the Holiday Inn Timonium
Expert kayak instructors and mountain guides provide fun learning adventures that teach outdoor skills and reconnect families to nature. Wide range of year round tours, activities and team building programs in the parks and forests of western Maryland. Kayaking, hiking, snowshoeing and more outside the wild and scenic Youghiogheny River Corridor.
When Douglass visited Talbot County in 1878, he stayed here. The hotel was one of the earliest buildings in the center of Easton. When Douglass was imprisoned in Easton in 1836 for his attempted escape, the hotel was the main view from his cell. Slave traders often stayed at the hotel. On Maryland's Frederick Douglass Driving Tour.
Only remaining toll gate on National Road in Maryland. The toll house is a historical site that is open to visitors at all times. Interpretive signage available on site and guests can peer inside the toll house to sneak a peek of eras ago. Historic plaque indicates fees for wagons, animals and pedestrians to use road.
Captain Sam Gotsis is ready to greet your group and take you out on the Bay for a memorable fishing trip to spots near Deale, Chesapeake Beach and Solomons. His vessels seek out rockfish, bluefish, and Spanish Mackerel. Max charter size is 30 people. A recognized Chesapeake Bay Storyteller, trained by the Maryland Office of Tourism.
Two, 74ft schooners offer a real Chesapeake Bay sailing experience for public sails and private events. Buy a ticket or privately charter the entire boat. Learn about sailing, the ecology of the Bay as you sit back and relax with a cold beverage. A recognized Chesapeake Bay Storyteller, trained by the Maryland Office of Tourism.
Douglass's attempted escape in April 1836 ended here. The building you see was built in 1878 and replaced the county jail. Douglass was left for a week in jail and then retrieved by Thomas Auld who, rather than sell Douglass South, sent him back to his brother in Fells Point. On Maryland's Frederick Douglass Driving Tour.
Skipjack Kathryn is restored as a fully operational dredge boat that offers sailing tours during the off-season. Discover the traditions of Chesapeake Bay watermen and the art of catching oysters under sail. Enjoy mother nature at her finest, see the sunsets, seabirds and marine life up close. A recognized Chesapeake Bay Storyteller, trained by the Maryland Office of Tourism.
Three buildings relocated to the square showcase the life of typical working families in the mid-19th century. See the "Frederick Douglass: His World 1818-1895" exhibit. The museum also hosts a half-mile walking tour entitled “Frederick Douglass, a Slave in St. Michaels 1833-36." On Maryland's Frederick Douglass Driving Tour.