Federal-period restored 1810 Colonial home with a Colonial basement kitchen; 19th-century wooden water tower moved to this site in the 1980s. Donations accepted.
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The 44-acre park features a carillon, band shell, tennis courts; Culler Lake, a public swimming pool and playgrounds. Concerts in summer and events throughout year.
Enjoy special events, work parties and great dining at Maryland's oldest harness-racing facility.
Award-winning late-18th-century/early 19th-century authentic farmstead. On the National Register of Historic Places and Star-spangled Banner National Historic Trail.
This is the Motherhouse for the Oblate Sisters of Providence, founded in 1829 in Baltimore, as the oldest religious congregation for women of African descent.
Cruise aboard the 1899 log-built bugeye "Wm. B. Tennison," the oldest Coast Guard-licensed, log-hulled vessel in the United States.
One of Maryland's oldest schools organized and maintained by an African-American community, now a museum.
Two-hundred-year-old neoclassical brick mansion; a 10,000-sq-foot American villa style house.
Offering a variety of food from breakfast to dinner.
Museum is one-of-a-kind in the United States. At least 50 different life size artworks that are made to go on real humans are on display. Photographs and stories of creating the artwork fill the museum. Sculptures are made from all types of materials.