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Fell's Point, Baltimore

Fell's Point is a historic waterfront neighborhood in southeastern Baltimore, Maryland. It was established around 1763 along the north shore of the Baltimore Harbor and the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River. The area has many antique, music, and other stores, restaurants, coffee bars, a municipal markethouse with individual stalls, and over 120 pubs. Located 1.5 miles east of Baltimore's downtown central business district and the Jones Falls stream (which splits the city, running from northern Baltimore County), Fells Point has a maritime past and the air of a seafaring town.

Fell's Point
The Fell's Point waterfront at sunset
Nickname: 
Fell's
CountryUnited States
StateMaryland
CityBaltimore
Settled1670
Incorporated1729
Founded1732
Named forWilliam Fell
Fells Point Historic District
Storefronts along the Belgian blocks of Thames Street
LocationBounded on the north by Eastern Avenue, on the east by Chester Street, on the south by the Patapsco River and Harbor, and on the west by Central Avenue; southeastern Baltimore, Maryland
Coordinates39°16′59″N 76°35′34″W / 39.28306°N 76.59278°W / 39.28306; -76.59278
Area75 acres (30 ha)
Built1763
ArchitectMultiple
Architectural styleItalianate, Greek Revival
NRHP reference No.69000319[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 28, 1969

The neighborhood has also been historically the home of large immigrant populations of Irish, Germans, Jews, Poles and other Eastern European nationalities such as Ukrainians, Russians, Czechs, and Slovaks, throughout its 250-year-old history. Since the 1970s, a steadily increasing number of middle- to upper-middle-income residents has moved into the area, restoring and preserving historic homes and businesses. Upper Fell's Point to the north along Broadway has gained a sizable Latino population, primarily from waves of Mexican and Central American immigrants since the 1980s, and is sometimes now called "Spanish Town".

This Fells Point waterfront is an upscale residential area and tourist destination featuring first rate hotels and restaurants. It can be reached by water taxi barges, on foot as it is a very short walk from the Inner Harbor, and by bus or car. Fells Point is one of several areas in and around Baltimore that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, (maintained by the National Park Service), the first designated from Maryland, and is one of the first registered historic districts in the United States to combine two separate waterfront communities (along with Federal Hill to the southwest across the Patapsco River and the Harbor on the "Old South Baltimore" peninsula of "Whetstone Point" at Fort McHenry).[2][3]

History edit

 
The waterfront of the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River, the old Basin, at Fells Point
 
Eat Bertha's Mussels tavern and restaurant in Fells Point

First described by a European seafarer as "Long Island Point" in 1670, the area later to be known as Fells Point was a thin little peninsula jutting out southwestward between the streams of Jones Falls and Harford Run (later covered over by Central Avenue) to the west and Harris Creek to the east (now culverted beneath the community of Canton) and further east to Colgate Creek (now surrounded by the Dundalk and Sea Girt Marine Terminals). Later land was patented with the title of "Copus Harbor". Nearby Baltimore Town to the west at the headwater of the Patapsco River's Northwest Branch was land patented under the name of "Cole's Harbor" and "Todd's Range" to William Cole and later sold to Charles and Daniel Carroll. This area was later established as a "port of entry" by the General Assembly of the Province of Maryland in 1706. After several local farmers and plantation owners originally planning to establish a town on the northeastern shores of the Middle Branch of the Patapsco (also known as "Ridgeley's Cove") were stymied by the objections of local owner William Moale, who thought the land was too valuable as a site of iron ore deposits. So the new town site was moved further to the northeast to the head of the Northwest Branch. Established as a town by the authority of the Colonial Assembly on July 30, 1729, (and signed by Governor Benedict Leonard Calvert on August 8), several streets were laid out in the "Original Survey" of January 12, 1730, with the main one going east-to-west called "Long Street" (later by the 1760s as "Market Street", then renamed East and West Baltimore Streets) and several others intersecting from north-to-south such as Forrest (later Charles), Calvert, running north from "The Basin" (today's Inner Harbor) in 1730.

Joined in 1732, to the northeast along the banks of the stream "Jones Falls" (which originates in northern Baltimore County near the Pennsylvania border) by the laying out of several streets on a northwest to southeast angle by David Jones and named "Jones's Town" with streets such as Front, High, and Low. Founded by William Fell, who was attracted by its deep water and proximity to agriculture and thick forests,[citation needed] Fell's Point became a shipbuilding and commercial center. About 1763, William's son Edward Fell laid out streets and began selling plots for homes. The waterfront village port grew quickly, and eventually incorporated with nearby Baltimore Town to the west and Jones Town to the northwest (which had merged in 1745) in 1773 to form a new Town of Baltimore and later beginning in 1796 and taking effect in January 1797, becoming incorporated by the State of Maryland's act of the General Assembly to become the City of Baltimore (under the title of "the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore").

In 1784, the combined town's market house system was expanded from the original first Centre Market (later known as "Marsh Market") on Market Place (between East Pratt Street to the south and Long Street (later called Market Street, then East Baltimore Street) to the north from 1767. Two additional market areas were established shortly after the end of the American Revolutionary War in 1784. Known first as the "Western Precincts Market" and renamed later as the Lexington Market (by future West Lexington and North Eutaw Streets) on land donated by Continental Army Col. John Eager Howard (1752-1827), an influential Baltimore citizen with a large estate named "Belvidere" surrounding the town to the west and north). To the east borders of the town in that same year was the new "Eastern Precincts Market", also later renamed Fells Point Market or Broadway Market which was located for several blocks length between Fleet Street and Thames Street at the harborside. Later the municipal market system extended to include 12 markets spread throughout the center city by the early 20th century. All became focal point and gathering places for their neighborhoods and attracted customers from the entire city and metropolitan area. The area grew wealthy on the tobacco, flour, and coffee trades overseas through the 18th and 19th centuries.[4]

Fell's Point shipyards became best known for producing topsail schooners, sometimes called "Baltimore clippers", renowned for their great speed and handling. They were excellent blockade runners, and were frequently used as armed privateers. The schooner "Pride of Baltimore II" is based on the "Chasseur", built by Thomas Kemp, which was one of the most successful privateers built in Fell's Point during the War of 1812.[5]

During the War of 1812 (1812-1815), Fells Point's yards built and supported dozens of privateers which preyed on British shipping vessels. Between 1810 and 1815, the yards produced over 150 schooners.[6] Consequently, Baltimore became a principal target of the British during the war, which eventually led to the attack on the city and the bombardment of Fort McHenry in September 1814. Because of this, many people have claimed the British referred to Baltimore as a "nest of pirates," citing Hezekiah Niles' "Niles' Weekly Register", the famous nationally circulated newspaper. However, no such reference has ever been found to support that claim.

It has been an immigrant neighborhood since the 19th century, in part because it was a major point of entry into the United States,[7] but mainly because jobs were available in Baltimore's industries and on the waterfront. In the era before mass transportation, immigrants crowded into the cheap housing near the shipbuilding yards, warehouses and factories of Fells Point. This added to the multicultural fabric of the area, but also caused the more affluent to move into other parts of the city.

In 1835, the later famous abolitionist, writer/author, public speaker/orator, agitator and minister/ambassador Frederick Douglass (1818-1895), while still enslaved, was hired out to the shipbuilder John A. Robb as a caulker at the Fells Point shipyard.[8][9] In his autobiography, Douglass recounts that, years earlier, the first time he had been sent to Baltimore, the Fells Point neighborhood was where he taught himself to read and write, copying the letters with which the men in the shipyard labeled boards and "making friends of all the little white boys whom I met in the street. As many of these as I could, I converted into teachers."[10]

Fells Point remained a shipbuilding center until the Civil War, when it could no longer handle the larger ships (also now built with steam power and paddle wheels/screw propellers) then coming into use. Likewise, the shipping industry slowly moved away to larger facilities, some of the newer shipyards further downriver with deeper waters close to shore on the outer Patapsco River, and the Fells Point area became a manufacturing center, with innovations in canning, along with nearby Canton to the east, which was an early commercial/industrial and residential development by the Canton Company of the O'Donnell family and Pattersons in the early 1800s.[11] and packing. The neighborhood escaped serious damage[12] during the Great Baltimore Fire of February 1904, which destroyed the downtown financial area further west. Eventually, much of the manufacturing left the city by the 1980s, resulting in urban decay until preservationists in the 1960s, 1970s and late 20th century organized to save the area's historic buildings and neighborhood waterfront fabric along with Federal Hill on the other western side of the newly renamed with proposed redevelopment of the Inner Harbor (formerly called "The Basin") from a proposed East-West Highway of Interstate 95 which was to run north to south down the East Coast states, begun in the mid-1960s.

After World War II (1939/41-1945), many out-migrants from rural Appalachia settled in Fell's Point. In the 1960s, following the civil rights movement, many African Americans settled in the neighborhood.[13]

In 1965, city, state and some federal transit planners proposed to link Interstate 83 (Jones Falls Expressway going north from downtown since 1962), with Interstate 70 (a cross-country highway stretching west to east - from Baltimore to Sacramento, California, but would be designated here as I-70 West) and Interstate 95, (the main East Coast, Maine to Florida super-highway) by building an elevated highway along the north shore of the Baltimore Harbor and Port. This project would have entailed extensive demolition within Fells Point, and across the river in Federal Hill/South Baltimore and the highway would have cut off the remainder of the neighborhood from the waterfront. An "expressway revolt" against the proposals was raised by local residents and derailed the project. Another proposal had I-83 going under the harbor in an alignment that completely avoided Fells Point, but that was scrapped as well. Fells Point's addition to the National Register of Historic Places (supervised by the National Park Service of the United States Department of the Interior) prevented the use of federal funds for the road project, and contributed to the project's cancellation.[14] One of the leaders of the revolt was social worker Barbara Mikulski, who was later elected a City Council member and later a U.S. Representative followed by as a U.S. Senator from Maryland, one of the first women elected to that upper chamber of the United States Congress and by 2014, one of the longest serving when she retired.

Fells Point achieved some fame as the central setting for the 1990s NBC TV network police drama Homicide: Life on the Street, (based on the book Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets by David Simon of the Baltimore Sun, the city's longtime daily newspaper) and has been the site of many films shot in Baltimore.

Fells Point, located to the east of the Inner Harbor, suffered extensive flooding during Hurricane Isabel in September 2003,[15] with water as high as 10 feet.[16]

Architecture edit

Fells Point includes a diversity of historic architecture. Flemish bond brick is used in some of the earliest homes, while row housing is prominent of nineteenth and early twentieth century construction. Gabled roof buildings and Victorian homes are also interspersed with other housing and use types.[17][18]

Historic buildings include:

Awards edit

In 2012, Fells Point was selected by the American Planning Association as one of the Great Places in America (neighborhood category),[19] which "celebrates places of exemplary character, quality, and planning".[22]

Annual festivals edit

 
Fish statue in Fells Point

Fell's Point Fun Festival started in 1966 in response to the proposed I-95 freeway that was to run through the neighborhood. The original purpose of the festival was to raise money to help save Fell's Point and to raise awareness of the historical significance of the neighborhood and its plight. The weekend-long Fun Festival, celebrated in October, has an estimated attendance of over 700,000. The event includes entertainment, arts and crafts vendors, and cultural and culinary offerings.[23]

Fell's Point Privateer Festival is an annual weekend-long festival in April celebrating the privateer and maritime history of Fell's Point. Activities include educational demonstrations, a pub crawl, pet costume contest, and pyrate's ball.[24]

Halloween in Fell's Point occurs annually on October 31 celebrating Halloween. The informal gathering takes place in and around Broadway Square and Thames Street. As the evening goes on, hundreds of individuals come dressed in costume and participate in taking photos, trick-or-treating, and pub crawling.[25]

Fell's Point Olde Tyme Christmas Festival is held during the first weekend in December and includes a traditional Christmas market, pet costume contest, and a Reindeer Run pub crawl.[26]

Demographics edit

At the census[27] of 2010, 3,168 people resided in the neighborhood, 61% white, 24.9% Hispanic, 7.4% African American, and 6.7% other. 37.0% of occupied housing units were owner-occupied, and 17.4% vacant.

83.7% of the working-age population were employed, 4.0% were unemployed, and 13.1% were not in the labor force.[28] 7.5% of families and 12.6% of the population were below the poverty line. The median household income was US$46,167.

In popular culture edit

Several films and television shows have been filmed in Fell's Point.

Some fictional works make reference to Fell's Point.

  • The Doctor Who character Peri Brown portrayed by English actress Nicola Bryant is from Fell's Point, according to some novels. This detail was never stated on-screen during the character's original run on the program (1984-1986), though it was confirmed in Tales of the Tardis, a spin off marking the 60th anniversary of the program (2023).[29]

Notable residents and former residents edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ Greff 2005, p. 52
  3. ^ Scherr, Andrew. . Urbanite Baltimore. Archived from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
  4. ^ Christopher T. George. "Fells Point: The Port of Early Baltimore". Baltimore A Link To The City. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  5. ^ . Pride of Baltimore II. Pride of Baltimore, Inc. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  6. ^ "Privateer History – Pride of Baltimore". Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  7. ^ Greff 2005, pp. 32–33
  8. ^ Knoblock, Glenn A. (2014). The American Clipper Ship, 1845-1920 A Comprehensive History, with a Listing of Builders and Their Ships. p. 353. ISBN 9780786471126. Retrieved May 22, 2021. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Ashmead, Henry Graham (1907). "Descendants of Joseph and Mary Dodge Campbell in America". Chester Times Print. pp. 28–29. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  10. ^ Douglass, Frederick (1845). Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave. p. 48.
  11. ^ Greff 2005, p. 34
  12. ^ Rukert 1976, p. 72
  13. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
  14. ^ Greff 2005, pp. 51–55
  15. ^ MacGillis, Alec; Guy, Chris; Dewar, Heather (September 19, 2003). "Isabel leaves a wet mess". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved January 15, 2007.
  16. ^ Greff 2005, p. 70
  17. ^ "Historical & Architectural Preservation / Historic Districts / Maps Of Historic Districts / Fells Point". Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  18. ^ Priscilla M. Thompson and Franklyn Thompson (November 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Fell's Point Historic District" (PDF). Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  19. ^ a b . Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  20. ^ Palmer, Matt (February 23, 2012). "St. Patrick in Fells Point re-opens after six months". Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  21. ^ . August 23, 2011. Archived from the original on September 7, 2014. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  22. ^ "Great Places in America". www.planning.org.
  23. ^ "The 46th Annual Fell's Point Fun Festival". Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on September 7, 2014. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  25. ^ "Top Picks for Halloween in Baltimore".
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on February 2, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  27. ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
  28. ^ "American Community Survey" (PDF). American Community Survey. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  29. ^ https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p0ggxrs1/tales-of-the-tardis-vengeance-on-varos
  30. ^ Britto, Brittany. "Upper Fells home said to have housed Billie Holiday for sale".

Bibliography edit

  • Rukert, Norman G. (1976). The Fells Point Story. Bodine & Associates. ISBN 0-910254-11-7.
  • Greff, Jacqueline (2005). Images of America: Fell's Point. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-1845-X.

External links edit

  • FellsPoint.com
  • Fell's Point Web Site
  • Fell's Point Preservation Society Web Site
  • Demographics from Neighborhood Indicators Alliance
  • Baltimore, Maryland, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary
  • Fell's Point Historic District, Baltimore City, including undated photo and boundary map, at Maryland Historical Trust

fell, point, baltimore, fell, point, historic, waterfront, neighborhood, southeastern, baltimore, maryland, established, around, 1763, along, north, shore, baltimore, harbor, northwest, branch, patapsco, river, area, many, antique, music, other, stores, restau. Fell s Point is a historic waterfront neighborhood in southeastern Baltimore Maryland It was established around 1763 along the north shore of the Baltimore Harbor and the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River The area has many antique music and other stores restaurants coffee bars a municipal markethouse with individual stalls and over 120 pubs Located 1 5 miles east of Baltimore s downtown central business district and the Jones Falls stream which splits the city running from northern Baltimore County Fells Point has a maritime past and the air of a seafaring town Fell s PointNeighborhood of BaltimoreThe Fell s Point waterfront at sunsetNickname Fell sCountryUnited StatesStateMarylandCityBaltimoreSettled1670Incorporated1729Founded1732Named forWilliam FellFells Point Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtStorefronts along the Belgian blocks of Thames StreetShow map of BaltimoreShow map of MarylandShow map of the United StatesLocationBounded on the north by Eastern Avenue on the east by Chester Street on the south by the Patapsco River and Harbor and on the west by Central Avenue southeastern Baltimore MarylandCoordinates39 16 59 N 76 35 34 W 39 28306 N 76 59278 W 39 28306 76 59278Area75 acres 30 ha Built1763ArchitectMultipleArchitectural styleItalianate Greek RevivalNRHP reference No 69000319 1 Added to NRHPMarch 28 1969The neighborhood has also been historically the home of large immigrant populations of Irish Germans Jews Poles and other Eastern European nationalities such as Ukrainians Russians Czechs and Slovaks throughout its 250 year old history Since the 1970s a steadily increasing number of middle to upper middle income residents has moved into the area restoring and preserving historic homes and businesses Upper Fell s Point to the north along Broadway has gained a sizable Latino population primarily from waves of Mexican and Central American immigrants since the 1980s and is sometimes now called Spanish Town This Fells Point waterfront is an upscale residential area and tourist destination featuring first rate hotels and restaurants It can be reached by water taxi barges on foot as it is a very short walk from the Inner Harbor and by bus or car Fells Point is one of several areas in and around Baltimore that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places maintained by the National Park Service the first designated from Maryland and is one of the first registered historic districts in the United States to combine two separate waterfront communities along with Federal Hill to the southwest across the Patapsco River and the Harbor on the Old South Baltimore peninsula of Whetstone Point at Fort McHenry 2 3 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Awards 4 Annual festivals 5 Demographics 6 In popular culture 7 Notable residents and former residents 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp The waterfront of the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River the old Basin at Fells Point nbsp Eat Bertha s Mussels tavern and restaurant in Fells PointFirst described by a European seafarer as Long Island Point in 1670 the area later to be known as Fells Point was a thin little peninsula jutting out southwestward between the streams of Jones Falls and Harford Run later covered over by Central Avenue to the west and Harris Creek to the east now culverted beneath the community of Canton and further east to Colgate Creek now surrounded by the Dundalk and Sea Girt Marine Terminals Later land was patented with the title of Copus Harbor Nearby Baltimore Town to the west at the headwater of the Patapsco River s Northwest Branch was land patented under the name of Cole s Harbor and Todd s Range to William Cole and later sold to Charles and Daniel Carroll This area was later established as a port of entry by the General Assembly of the Province of Maryland in 1706 After several local farmers and plantation owners originally planning to establish a town on the northeastern shores of the Middle Branch of the Patapsco also known as Ridgeley s Cove were stymied by the objections of local owner William Moale who thought the land was too valuable as a site of iron ore deposits So the new town site was moved further to the northeast to the head of the Northwest Branch Established as a town by the authority of the Colonial Assembly on July 30 1729 and signed by Governor Benedict Leonard Calvert on August 8 several streets were laid out in the Original Survey of January 12 1730 with the main one going east to west called Long Street later by the 1760s as Market Street then renamed East and West Baltimore Streets and several others intersecting from north to south such as Forrest later Charles Calvert running north from The Basin today s Inner Harbor in 1730 Joined in 1732 to the northeast along the banks of the stream Jones Falls which originates in northern Baltimore County near the Pennsylvania border by the laying out of several streets on a northwest to southeast angle by David Jones and named Jones s Town with streets such as Front High and Low Founded by William Fell who was attracted by its deep water and proximity to agriculture and thick forests citation needed Fell s Point became a shipbuilding and commercial center About 1763 William s son Edward Fell laid out streets and began selling plots for homes The waterfront village port grew quickly and eventually incorporated with nearby Baltimore Town to the west and Jones Town to the northwest which had merged in 1745 in 1773 to form a new Town of Baltimore and later beginning in 1796 and taking effect in January 1797 becoming incorporated by the State of Maryland s act of the General Assembly to become the City of Baltimore under the title of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore In 1784 the combined town s market house system was expanded from the original first Centre Market later known as Marsh Market on Market Place between East Pratt Street to the south and Long Street later called Market Street then East Baltimore Street to the north from 1767 Two additional market areas were established shortly after the end of the American Revolutionary War in 1784 Known first as the Western Precincts Market and renamed later as the Lexington Market by future West Lexington and North Eutaw Streets on land donated by Continental Army Col John Eager Howard 1752 1827 an influential Baltimore citizen with a large estate named Belvidere surrounding the town to the west and north To the east borders of the town in that same year was the new Eastern Precincts Market also later renamed Fells Point Market or Broadway Market which was located for several blocks length between Fleet Street and Thames Street at the harborside Later the municipal market system extended to include 12 markets spread throughout the center city by the early 20th century All became focal point and gathering places for their neighborhoods and attracted customers from the entire city and metropolitan area The area grew wealthy on the tobacco flour and coffee trades overseas through the 18th and 19th centuries 4 Fell s Point shipyards became best known for producing topsail schooners sometimes called Baltimore clippers renowned for their great speed and handling They were excellent blockade runners and were frequently used as armed privateers The schooner Pride of Baltimore II is based on the Chasseur built by Thomas Kemp which was one of the most successful privateers built in Fell s Point during the War of 1812 5 During the War of 1812 1812 1815 Fells Point s yards built and supported dozens of privateers which preyed on British shipping vessels Between 1810 and 1815 the yards produced over 150 schooners 6 Consequently Baltimore became a principal target of the British during the war which eventually led to the attack on the city and the bombardment of Fort McHenry in September 1814 Because of this many people have claimed the British referred to Baltimore as a nest of pirates citing Hezekiah Niles Niles Weekly Register the famous nationally circulated newspaper However no such reference has ever been found to support that claim It has been an immigrant neighborhood since the 19th century in part because it was a major point of entry into the United States 7 but mainly because jobs were available in Baltimore s industries and on the waterfront In the era before mass transportation immigrants crowded into the cheap housing near the shipbuilding yards warehouses and factories of Fells Point This added to the multicultural fabric of the area but also caused the more affluent to move into other parts of the city In 1835 the later famous abolitionist writer author public speaker orator agitator and minister ambassador Frederick Douglass 1818 1895 while still enslaved was hired out to the shipbuilder John A Robb as a caulker at the Fells Point shipyard 8 9 In his autobiography Douglass recounts that years earlier the first time he had been sent to Baltimore the Fells Point neighborhood was where he taught himself to read and write copying the letters with which the men in the shipyard labeled boards and making friends of all the little white boys whom I met in the street As many of these as I could I converted into teachers 10 Fells Point remained a shipbuilding center until the Civil War when it could no longer handle the larger ships also now built with steam power and paddle wheels screw propellers then coming into use Likewise the shipping industry slowly moved away to larger facilities some of the newer shipyards further downriver with deeper waters close to shore on the outer Patapsco River and the Fells Point area became a manufacturing center with innovations in canning along with nearby Canton to the east which was an early commercial industrial and residential development by the Canton Company of the O Donnell family and Pattersons in the early 1800s 11 and packing The neighborhood escaped serious damage 12 during the Great Baltimore Fire of February 1904 which destroyed the downtown financial area further west Eventually much of the manufacturing left the city by the 1980s resulting in urban decay until preservationists in the 1960s 1970s and late 20th century organized to save the area s historic buildings and neighborhood waterfront fabric along with Federal Hill on the other western side of the newly renamed with proposed redevelopment of the Inner Harbor formerly called The Basin from a proposed East West Highway of Interstate 95 which was to run north to south down the East Coast states begun in the mid 1960s After World War II 1939 41 1945 many out migrants from rural Appalachia settled in Fell s Point In the 1960s following the civil rights movement many African Americans settled in the neighborhood 13 In 1965 city state and some federal transit planners proposed to link Interstate 83 Jones Falls Expressway going north from downtown since 1962 with Interstate 70 a cross country highway stretching west to east from Baltimore to Sacramento California but would be designated here as I 70 West and Interstate 95 the main East Coast Maine to Florida super highway by building an elevated highway along the north shore of the Baltimore Harbor and Port This project would have entailed extensive demolition within Fells Point and across the river in Federal Hill South Baltimore and the highway would have cut off the remainder of the neighborhood from the waterfront An expressway revolt against the proposals was raised by local residents and derailed the project Another proposal had I 83 going under the harbor in an alignment that completely avoided Fells Point but that was scrapped as well Fells Point s addition to the National Register of Historic Places supervised by the National Park Service of the United States Department of the Interior prevented the use of federal funds for the road project and contributed to the project s cancellation 14 One of the leaders of the revolt was social worker Barbara Mikulski who was later elected a City Council member and later a U S Representative followed by as a U S Senator from Maryland one of the first women elected to that upper chamber of the United States Congress and by 2014 one of the longest serving when she retired Fells Point achieved some fame as the central setting for the 1990s NBC TV network police drama Homicide Life on the Street based on the book Homicide A Year on the Killing Streets by David Simon of the Baltimore Sun the city s longtime daily newspaper and has been the site of many films shot in Baltimore Fells Point located to the east of the Inner Harbor suffered extensive flooding during Hurricane Isabel in September 2003 15 with water as high as 10 feet 16 Architecture editFells Point includes a diversity of historic architecture Flemish bond brick is used in some of the earliest homes while row housing is prominent of nineteenth and early twentieth century construction Gabled roof buildings and Victorian homes are also interspersed with other housing and use types 17 18 Historic buildings include The Robert Long House at 812 South Ann Street built in 1765 is the oldest surviving home in Baltimore 19 Lloyd Street Synagogue at Lloyd and Watson Streets in adjacent Jonestown Old Town neighborhood an 1845 Greek Revival styled architecture building Baltimore architects Robert Cary Long Jr and William Reasin designed the historic building It is the third oldest Jewish synagogue building still standing in the United States The Saint Patrick Catholic Church founded in 1792 current building on Broadway completed in 1898 one of the first parishes in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore was unfortunately damaged in the 2011 Virginia earthquake While the building was condemned and the steeple sustained significant damage the building reopened for Mass on Ash Wednesday in 2012 20 21 Awards editIn 2012 Fells Point was selected by the American Planning Association as one of the Great Places in America neighborhood category 19 which celebrates places of exemplary character quality and planning 22 Annual festivals edit nbsp Fish statue in Fells PointFell s Point Fun Festival started in 1966 in response to the proposed I 95 freeway that was to run through the neighborhood The original purpose of the festival was to raise money to help save Fell s Point and to raise awareness of the historical significance of the neighborhood and its plight The weekend long Fun Festival celebrated in October has an estimated attendance of over 700 000 The event includes entertainment arts and crafts vendors and cultural and culinary offerings 23 Fell s Point Privateer Festival is an annual weekend long festival in April celebrating the privateer and maritime history of Fell s Point Activities include educational demonstrations a pub crawl pet costume contest and pyrate s ball 24 Halloween in Fell s Point occurs annually on October 31 celebrating Halloween The informal gathering takes place in and around Broadway Square and Thames Street As the evening goes on hundreds of individuals come dressed in costume and participate in taking photos trick or treating and pub crawling 25 Fell s Point Olde Tyme Christmas Festival is held during the first weekend in December and includes a traditional Christmas market pet costume contest and a Reindeer Run pub crawl 26 Demographics editAt the census 27 of 2010 3 168 people resided in the neighborhood 61 white 24 9 Hispanic 7 4 African American and 6 7 other 37 0 of occupied housing units were owner occupied and 17 4 vacant 83 7 of the working age population were employed 4 0 were unemployed and 13 1 were not in the labor force 28 7 5 of families and 12 6 of the population were below the poverty line The median household income was US 46 167 In popular culture editSeveral films and television shows have been filmed in Fell s Point Several scenes in the 2009 movie He s Just Not That Into You were filmed on the Fells Point waterfront David Simon s Homicide Life On The Street used the former City Rec Pier now The Sagamore Pendry as police headquarters throughout the series The 1993 film Sleepless in Seattle had several scenes of Annie s house filmed in Fells Point Some fictional works make reference to Fell s Point The Doctor Who character Peri Brown portrayed by English actress Nicola Bryant is from Fell s Point according to some novels This detail was never stated on screen during the character s original run on the program 1984 1986 though it was confirmed in Tales of the Tardis a spin off marking the 60th anniversary of the program 2023 29 Notable residents and former residents editFrederick Douglass abolitionist Billie Holiday Jazz singer 30 Melissa Leo Academy Award winning actress Edith Massey actress known for her appearances in films by John Waters Michael Phelps Olympic gold medal winning swimmer former residentSee also edit nbsp Baltimore portalReferences edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 Greff 2005 p 52 Scherr Andrew Spanish Town Urbanite Baltimore Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved December 4 2011 Christopher T George Fells Point The Port of Early Baltimore Baltimore A Link To The City Retrieved April 4 2011 The War of 1812 Pride of Baltimore II Pride of Baltimore Inc Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved April 4 2011 Privateer History Pride of Baltimore Retrieved March 23 2021 Greff 2005 pp 32 33 Knoblock Glenn A 2014 The American Clipper Ship 1845 1920 A Comprehensive History with a Listing of Builders and Their Ships p 353 ISBN 9780786471126 Retrieved May 22 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Ashmead Henry Graham 1907 Descendants of Joseph and Mary Dodge Campbell in America Chester Times Print pp 28 29 Retrieved May 22 2021 Douglass Frederick 1845 Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass an American Slave p 48 Greff 2005 p 34 Rukert 1976 p 72 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form PDF National Register of Historic Places Retrieved March 5 2019 Greff 2005 pp 51 55 MacGillis Alec Guy Chris Dewar Heather September 19 2003 Isabel leaves a wet mess Baltimore Sun Retrieved January 15 2007 Greff 2005 p 70 Historical amp Architectural Preservation Historic Districts Maps Of Historic Districts Fells Point Retrieved September 7 2014 Priscilla M Thompson and Franklyn Thompson November 1985 National Register of Historic Places Registration Fell s Point Historic District PDF Maryland Historical Trust Retrieved April 1 2016 a b Great Places in America Neighborhoods Archived from the original on August 13 2018 Retrieved September 7 2014 Palmer Matt February 23 2012 St Patrick in Fells Point re opens after six months Retrieved September 7 2014 St Patrick Church in Fells Point Damaged by Earthquake August 23 2011 Archived from the original on September 7 2014 Retrieved September 7 2014 Great Places in America www planning org The 46th Annual Fell s Point Fun Festival Retrieved September 7 2014 Fell s Point MD Privateer Festival Archived from the original on September 7 2014 Retrieved September 7 2014 Top Picks for Halloween in Baltimore Olde Tyme Christmas in Fells Point 2012 Archived from the original on February 2 2013 Retrieved March 7 2013 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 American Community Survey PDF American Community Survey Retrieved March 23 2019 https www bbc co uk iplayer episode p0ggxrs1 tales of the tardis vengeance on varos Britto Brittany Upper Fells home said to have housed Billie Holiday for sale Bibliography edit Rukert Norman G 1976 The Fells Point Story Bodine amp Associates ISBN 0 910254 11 7 Greff Jacqueline 2005 Images of America Fell s Point Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 1845 X External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fell s Point Baltimore nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Baltimore Fells Point FellsPoint com Fell s Point Web Site Fell s Point Preservation Society Web Site Demographics from Neighborhood Indicators Alliance Baltimore Maryland a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary Fell s Point Historic District Baltimore City including undated photo and boundary map at Maryland Historical Trust Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fell 27s Point Baltimore amp oldid 1185831771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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