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Historic Sites pp.081-140 PDF

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68-061-07 A. A. Randall House 68-061-11 North Brentwood A.M.E. 4504 41st Avenue Zion Church North Brentwood 4037 Webster Street North Brentwood Built in 1895 for the family of African-American Augustus A. Randall, who was the son of Henry Built in 1920, the North Brentwood A.M.E. Zion Randall, this single-family two-and-one-half-story Church is a stucco-covered brick, Gothic Revival style frame dwelling is one of the oldest houses in North building, with a pyramidal-roof corner entry tower. It Brentwood. It was constructed for the first purchaser was built in 1920, under the leadership of the Reverend of lots in the area known as Randalltown, which would Chesterfield Jackson, to house the community’s later become North Brentwood. Methodist congregation that had been meeting in private residences and in the Firemen’s Hall. As one of the two original places of worship in the African- American community of North Brentwood, it has been an important element in the development of the town. 81 68-061-19 Garland-Palmer House 68-061-20 Sandy P. Baker House 4510 40th Street 4512 40th Street North Brentwood North Brentwood Built circa 1917, this is a vernacular single-family frame Built circa 1917, this is a vernacular single-family frame dwelling that was constructed for the Reverend James L. dwelling that was constructed for the Reverend James Jasper, a prominent Baptist minister who helped found L. Jasper, a prominent Baptist minister. The house was the First Baptist Church of North Brentwood in 1912. later occupied by his son-in-law Sandy P. Baker, who The property was conveyed to Squire and Rosa Garland served as the mayor of North Brentwood from 1937 to in 1924; Garland served as Police Justice and Justice 1943. Baker’s grandson, Sandy Johnson, a later owner, of the Peace in the newly incorporated town of North also served as mayor from 1989–1992. Brentwood. The property is still owned by the same family. The house was bequested to William E. Palmer in 1962; Palmer was the adopted son of the Garlands. 82 68-061-22 Quander-Dock House 68-061-37 Peter Randall House 4033 Webster Street 4508 Rhode Island Avenue North Brentwood North Brentwood Built circa 1926, this is a vernacular single-family Built in 1893, the Peter Randall House is a two-and- dwelling of Craftsman bungalow form with a facade- one-half-story, side-gabled dwelling of wood-frame wide front porch and a large dormer. It was constructed construction, covered with stucco, with a two-story, by Richard Quander, the first black mail carrier in semi-octagonal projecting bay lighting one gable end. Prince George’s County. Quander was a prominent It was built for Peter Randall in 1893, immediately local citizen and distinguished veteran; he is buried at adjacent to the house of his father, Henry Randall, Arlington National Cemetery. The house was purchased which had been built the year before. The first five in 1971 by Arthur J. Dock, a principal and teacher houses in this African-American community were built in local schools who also later served as the mayor of for members of the Randall family, and during its early North Brentwood. years, the community was known as Randalltown. Randalltown was incorporated as North Brentwood in 1924. Henry Randall’s house was damaged by fire and demolished in 1895, leaving the Peter Randall House as the oldest surviving dwelling in North Brentwood. 83 68-076 Paxton House 68-077 Dorr House 6122 42nd Avenue 4525 Buchanan Street Hyattsville Hyattsville Built in 1912, the Paxton House is a front-gabled, Built circa 1908 for William A. Dorr, whose family frame Victorian vernacular dwelling with ornamental operated a commercial laundry facility, the Dorr shingle decoration in the principal gable. It stands on House is a two-and-one-half-story, hip-roof dwelling of a large town lot together with a small, concrete block American Foursquare form. The house is constructed of office and studio with a stepped parapet and decorative a decorative combination of brick and molded concrete columns. The house was completed in 1912 by Donald block, with brick laid to form a decorative quoin R. Paxton, who made it his home for 15 years. In 1942, pattern around each opening. Members of the Dorr the property was acquired by Dr. Harold Sharpes, who family were also involved in the development of the is believed to have constructed the small accessory town of Hyattsville. building that he used as his office. 84 68-079-01 Poppleton-Roberts House 68-096-20 Rural Cottage at the Highlands 5104 Emerson Street, Hyattsville 4203 Bunker Hill Road Cottage City Built in1901, this one-and-a-half-story, five-bay, single- family dwelling reflects the ornamentation and materials Perhaps the only surviving example of an early suburban of the Queen Anne style, while its steep double- house with Second Empire features in Prince George’s pitched roof and integral porch show French Colonial/ County, this mansard roofed cottage was built circa West Indies influence. The roof is finished with deep, 1867. Sold by the Creecy Company of Washington, overhanging eaves that shelter an integrated porch D.C., who developed the Highlands, to Harriet on the south, east and west elevations. The house was Williamson, it subsequently became the home of the constructed for A. D. Poppleton; in 1928, it was sold Worch, Magie, and Swindler families. After 1939, it was to James A. and Edna F. Roberts, whose family retained for many years a rental property owned by the city. ownership for more than 75 years. It is one of the earliest dwellings constructed in Edmonston. 85 PLPALNANNINNIGN GAR AERAE #A 69 69-005-02 George Washington House (NR) 4302 Baltimore Avenue Bladensburg Built circa 1760 by Jacob Wirt as part of a commercial complex which included a store (this structure), a billiard hall, tavern, and blacksmith shop, this is a two- and-one-half-story, side-gabled brick structure with a two-story porch and a rear wing of frame construction. The building earned its name through an assumption that “George Washington slept here;” however, the extant structure was never a tavern during Washington’s lifetime. (Washington’s diary does, however, record a visit to the nearby Hilleary-Magruder House; see Historic Site 69-005-07.) The building received its present name before 1878 when it was being used as a hotel. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, it is protected by an easement held by the Maryland Historical Trust. 86 69-005-06 St. Paul’s Baptist Church 69-005-07 Hilleary-Magruder House (NR) 4107 47th Street 4703 Annapolis Road Bladensburg Bladensburg Built in 1818 to house the Presbyterian congregation Built for William Hilleary soon after the Town of of Bladensburg, this church was sold to a black Baptist Bladensburg was established in 1742, the house’s stone congregation established by Sarah Miranda Plummer, walls were at some time stuccoed and scored to resemble and was enlarged and remodeled after 1908 in the masonry. George Washington’s diary records his visit to Romanesque Revival style. The Plummers were once the gambrel-roofed structure in 1787. After the Battle enslaved laborers for the Calvert family at Riversdale of Bladensburg in August 1814, the house was used as a (see Historic Site 68-004-05.) A front-gabled brick hospital. Among the later occupants of this house were church with a later bell tower and lower front-gabled five physicians, including Dr. Archibald Magruder in addition, its entrance is centered in the base of the the late nineteenth century. The house is one of four tower and flanked by brick pilasters, above which pre-Revolutionary buildings surviving in Bladensburg. is an octagonal belfry with a steep pyramidal roof. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in St. Paul’s Church is the only surviving historic structure 1978, it was restored in the early 1980s and serves in a densely developed industrial area and is the as an office. The house is protected by a preservation only remaining resource associated with the historic easement held by the Maryland Historical Trust. African-American community in Bladensburg. 87 69-005-08 Market Master’s House (NR) 69-005-09 Bostwick (NR) 4006 48th Street, Bladensburg 3901 48th Street Bladensburg Built c. 1765 by Christopher Lowndes of Bostwick on (Town of Bladensburg) the lot overlooking the adjoining market space, this dwelling is believed to have housed the market manager Built in 1746 for Christopher Lowndes, merchant and in the busy port town of Bladensburg. This unique Town Commissioner, and later the home of Lowndes’ structure remained in Lowndes family possession son-in-law, Benjamin Stoddert, first Secretary of the for 118 years, and is one of four pre-Revolutionary Navy, Bostwick is a two-and-one-half-story Georgian buildings surviving in Bladensburg, which was once brick house, with a flared gable roof and bracketed one of the busiest ports in Maryland, exporting more cornice. An unusual high buttress reinforces the south tobacco than any other port on the western shore. gable end, and there is a kitchen wing to the north. Traditionally, the house is also known as the “Ship The earliest surviving building in Bladensburg, Bostwick Ballast House” and, although its type of stone is not stands high on a terraced lawn. Southeast of the house found in the county, no evidence has been found to are several nineteenth century outbuildings and a barn. support that the material arrived by ship. The gable- Bostwick was listed in the National Register of Historic roof Market Master’s House was listed in the National Places in 1975, and is protected by a preservation Register of Historic Places in 1990, and is protected by easement held by the Maryland Historical Trust. an easement held by the Maryland Historical Trust. 88 69-005-16 Peace Cross 69-012 Riverdale Baptist Church Annapolis Road and Route 1 6200 Riverdale Road Bladensburg Riverdale Park (M-NCPPC) Built in 1928, the Riverdale Baptist Church (now the Built from 1919–1925 and constructed of cast concrete chapel of the Refreshing Spring Church) is a one-and- with exposed aggregate, the Peace Cross is tan in color one-half-story frame building with hip and gable roofs and composed of chipped flint material. Its arms extend and a two-story bell tower. Two pairs of windows, five feet from the center on each side and are supported filled with stained-glass memorials, light the east gable by unadorned, arched concrete brackets; the arms also front, and the entrance is through a small projecting have arched brackets on top, suggesting the form of wing on the south side. The small frame church was a Celtic cross. The cross is significant as a prominent built in 1928, and the bell tower was added after public monument to county residents who lost their 1937. Although newer brick buildings constructed in lives in the line of duty during World War I; the design the 1950s and 1960s are now attached to this small of the Peace Cross is the work of master craftsman frame chapel on the west, the original frame church and contractor John J. Earley, developer of the Earley exemplifies the social and religious heritage of the Process of concrete construction. (See Historic Site county. 68-004-62.) 89 69-019 Browning-Baines House 69-021 Cherry Hill Cemetery 5601 57th Avenue 6821 Ingraham Street Riverdale vicinity Riverdale (M-NCPPC) Built in 1896, the Browning-Baines House is a two- Active from 1884-1940, this graveyard has many and-one-half-story, hip-roof frame dwelling with sandstone grave markers. It was part of Josiah Adams’ projecting bays, bracketed cornice, and wraparound farm and is a rare surviving example of a nineteenth- porch with turned posts and jigsawn fan brackets. It was century burial ground for local free blacks. The built by the Browning family, and became the home cemetery was established by Adams, a free African- of their associate, James E. Baines, an officer of the American farmer in 1884, and served the free and Browning and Baines Coffee Company. formerly enslaved African-Americans of the Riverdale- Bladensburg-Hyattsville communities. Cherry Hill is the only remaining cemetery belonging to what was a thriving African-American community in the Bladensburg area following the Civil War. The cemetery is significant for its character, interest, and cultural characteristics as part of the development of Riverdale, Bladensburg and Hyattsville. 90

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Built in 1928, the Riverdale Baptist Church (now the chapel of the . “Alhambra” model in Prince George's County. (See also .. house was designed by African-American architect. John A. model dairy Enterprise Farm. The land
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