Guilford, Maryland

For the historic site in Frederick County, Maryland, see Guilford (Frederick, Maryland).
Guilford
Neighborhood
Country United States
State Maryland
County Howard
CDP Jessup, Columbia
Established December 31, 1874
Named for Guilford Factory
Government
  Councilman Calvin Ball, III [1]
District 2
Time zone Eastern (UTC-5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 20794, 21046
Area code 410, 443, and 667

Guilford is a unincorporated community located in Howard County in the state of Maryland in the United States of America.[2] The location is named primarily for the Guilford Factory and quarry. Developers of Columbia, The Rouse Company renamed the area Kings Contrivance as one of its seven "villages". Southeastern sections are also known as Savage-Guilford.

For United States Census Bureau statistics, it is included within the Census-designated place of Savage-Guilford, Maryland. See also: Savage, Maryland.

History

The Christ Church of Guilford rebuilt in 1809.

The area around Guilford was settled before it was called by the name of its factory. In 1711, the Log Chapel of ease, now called Christ Church Guilford was founded in Northern Guilford on a piece of land surveyed as "New Year's Gift" by Charles Carrol of Carrolton. The first full-time rector was James Magill, who lived at Athol.[3] The church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.[4]

Guilford Factory was situated on the northern branch of the Patuxent River, known as the Little Patuxent River. The first industrial settlement of the site occurred in 1750 when slavery was commonplace and Howard County had yet to be formed from Northwestern Anne Arundell County. Charles Alexander Warfield and Elizabeth Ridgley built a joint mill on land patended as "Wincopin Neck". Gristmill operations were underway by 1760.[5][6] Later owners of the factory included Richard Ridgley.[7] The factories were built along one of Maryland's early "rolling roads" that provided access to the tobacco markets in Annapolis town.[8] By 1792 the site consisted of a gristmill, sawmill, blacksmith and a stable. In 1830 a granitequarry was started. Just north of the quarry, Charles Worthington built a stone home with walls two feet thick named "Moundview" that would stand until 1990 when the South Columbia Baptist Church was built on its site.[9][10][11] Peter Gorman purchased the southern portion of "Wincopian Neck" from Dr. Charles Griffith Worthington, establishing the "Fairview" estate.[12] By 1860, Henry A Penny built a house onsite in 1860 and worked as a hauler, he would become county commissioner in the early 1900s. From 1863 to 1890 when slave labor was unavailable the quarries were mostly stagnant. On December 31, 1874 the Guilford Post office opened and remained in operation until June 30, 1920.[13] In 1876, Guilford School opens on Guilford and Oakland Mills roads, and Guilford Colored School opens on land given by Williams, Clark and Rodgers near Guilford and Mission roads.[14]

As the quarry started production again, it was known as one of the best paying jobs for African American labor who were not allowed to work in the nearby town of Savage. Many laborers from out of town would stay in a hotel for workers and get supplies from the company store.[15] In 1901, the "Maryland Granite Company" purchased the quarry followed by spur line construction between Savage and Guilford in 1902. The steel pratt-truss bridge crossing the little Patuxent built that year remains onsite today. By 1905 Guilford Road was Macadmized with loads being pulled by six-horse teams. During this time, the quarry was now operated by the "Granite Company of Baltimore". A community with two churches and two dozen buildings was formed around the present Guilford and Oakland Mills road intersections.[16] The First Baptist Church of Guilford was formed by Reverend Willis Carter in a tennant house and has grown to its fourth new building.[17] By 1908 the large quarry was 100 feet deep producing monument stone and building stone. The smaller quarry to the southeast owned by the Guilford and Watersville Granite company operated from 1887 to 1893.[18] The town joint mill ran as a cotton factory that operated from 1895 to 1916.[19] By 1908 operations ceased at the Guilford Granite and Stone Company Quarry on the western river bank, and the Penny Quarry which was later filled in for an office complex.[20] In February 1928 the B&O discontinued its Patuxent rail spur service downstream to Savage, Maryland.[21] In 1954 the 11 room Guilford Colored School was built and remains in operation as Howard Countys oldest formerly segreated school.[14]

From 1963 to 1966, The Rouse Company worked with family members of the County Commissioner to purchase 14,000 acres of Howard county farms using multiple shell companies. The properties around Guilford were bought by Howard Research and Development and 95-32LLC.[16]

Present Guilford

In a 1900s accounting of the Guilford Factory site, author Joshua Dorsey Warfeild accounts of "enduring stone homes made of Granite found there, they will stand for centuries".[5] A 1978 survey of the property performed prior to additional development stated that the buildings were in use until the 1950s, but were "demolished long ago" without explanation.[16]

Modern Guilford road spans from Northeastern Columbia, through Savage and Annapolis Junction to Fort Meade. The road is bisected by modern route 29, 32, I-95, and 295 leaving a mix of historical original road and newly allinged roads. The road crosses between the most heavily populated sections of the county reminding residents of a place that is still there, but claimed as part of Savage and marketed as Columbia. The towns of Simpsonville (Columbia), Waterloo (Jessup), Magnolia (Jessup), and Pierceland (Annapolis Junction) have been taken over by their larger counterparts as well.

Of the three large remaining farms that occupied Wincopian Neck, Overlook Farm and Fairlands remain well preserved, but the 124 acre Ponsettia producing Wincopia Farms was purchased for development after Gourley and Gourley LLC foreclosed on a $3 million high interest sustainment loan reselling the property for $41 million to build 220 homes on the site.[22][23]

Education

The Guilford area currently is home to one public school, Guilford Elementary School on Oakland Mills Road in Columbia. Future plans call for a new elementary school and high school to be built on land adjacent to the Savage Stone Quarry in between Washington Boulevard and Mission Road.[24]

See also

References

  1. "Howard County - Council District Two News and Information". Cc.howardcountymd.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
  2. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Guilford (Populated Place
  3. "Christ Church of Guilford" (PDF). Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  4. National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  5. 1 2 Joshua Dorsey Warfield. The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland. p. 377.
  6. "Maryland State Archives Wincopian Neck". Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  7. Maryland State Archives Volume 426. p. 689.
  8. Maryland Geological Survey (1899). Report on the Highways of Maryland, Volume 1. p. 124.
  9. Norris P. West (10 December 1990). "the Church, historic house vie as good vs. good". The Baltimore Sun.
  10. "HO-40 Moundview" (PDF). Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  11. "Historic Homes on Tour". The Washington Post. 15 October 1958.
  12. "HO-153 Fairview Howard House" (PDF). Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  13. "Checklist of Maryland Post Offices" (PDF). Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 17 May 2014.
  14. 1 2 Ivan Penn (18 November 1994). "Desegregation Recalled in Schools Celebration". The Baltimore Sun.
  15. Alice Cornelison; Silas E. Craft Sr.; Lillie Price. History of Blacks In Howard County.
  16. 1 2 3 "HO-349 Guilford Quarry Pratt Truss Bridge" (PDF). Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  17. "First Baptist Church of Guilford". Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  18. Maryland Geological Survey. Maryland Geological Survey, Volume 2. p. 157.
  19. Barbara W Feaga. Howard's Roads to the Past. p. 85.
  20. Bulletin, Issues 426-429. p. 55.
  21. Herbert H. Harwood. Impossible challenge: the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in Maryland. p. 497.
  22. June Arney (14 April 2008). "A family fights for farm, legacy Howard County residents hope to regain 124-acre property lost in foreclosure sale". The Baltimore Sun.
  23. "Howard County farm fetches $41M in deferred compensation deal that could reach 'eight figures'". Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  24. https://www.howardcountymd.gov/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=82RmKbVmqAg%3d&portalid=0
  25. "Worthingtons Quarters (1755), Iris Hill, White Hall" (PDF). Retrieved 16 September 2014.

Coordinates: 39°10′11″N 76°49′51″W / 39.16972°N 76.83083°W / 39.16972; -76.83083

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.