Third-oldest college in United States, formerly King William's School in 1696. Annapolis and Sante Fe campuses. Liberal arts college known for distinctive "great books" curriculum.
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Federal-period manor home and interpretive garden offering tours, programs and special events. A National Park Service National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom site.
Built in 1828, one of the oldest continuously working lighthouses in Maryland. On the National Register of Historic Places. Tours provided by Calvert Marine Museum
Built on remains of a British Colonial fort; beneath floor of the church are the cellars, magazines and earthworks of Ft. Cumberland (c. 1755); three large Tiffany windows.
Built in 1797, now powered by electricity, the mill produces flours, meals and mixes for sale.
Eighteenth-century Georgian architecture, boasts a reproduction kitchen and an original 18th-century summerhouse. Stroll the grounds with over 70 acres of fields and wooded paths - an oasis of tranquility in a bustling world.
One-room cabin used by George Washington while an aide to General Braddock. Built 1754-1755, it is the only remaining structure of Ft. Cumberland.
The National Road Museum takes visitors on a journey through the history of the important Historic National Road, the first federally constructed roadway in the United States which helped build the nation and is today a national scenic byway.
Built in 1875 by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (B&O)–the charming Victorian station is on the National Register of Historic Places. Today it is used by MARC passenger trains.
This is the homesite of Jacob Jackson, a free black farmer and noted veterinarian, who received a coded letter from Tubman and arranged the escape of her three brothers from the area in 1854. A National Park Service Network to Freedom site.