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Point of Rocks, Maryland

Point of Rocks is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Frederick County, Maryland. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 1,466.[3]

Point of Rocks, Maryland
U.S. Route 15 crossing the Potomac River at Point of Rocks
Location of Point of Rocks in Maryland
Coordinates: 39°16′33″N 77°32′21″W / 39.27583°N 77.53917°W / 39.27583; -77.53917
Country United States
State Maryland
County Frederick
Area
 • Total1.13 sq mi (2.92 km2)
 • Land1.13 sq mi (2.92 km2)
 • Water0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)
Elevation
250 ft (80 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total1,886
 • Density1,674.96/sq mi (646.99/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Code
21777
Area code(s)301, 240
FIPS code24-62575
GNIS feature ID0591032[2]

Point of Rocks is named for the striking rock formation on the adjacent Catoctin Mountain, which was formed by the Potomac River cutting through the ridge in a water gap, a typical formation in the Appalachian Mountains. The formation is not visible from the town and can only be seen from boats on the river, or from the southern bank of the river in Virginia.

History Edit

Pre-settlement Edit

 
An aerial view of Point of Rocks
 
Historic St. Paul's Episcopal Church, built in 1841 by enslaved men and women of the Duval Plantation and consecrated in 1843, is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Indigenous peoples inhabited the Point of Rocks regions for centuries prior to European colonization. The Piscataway were one of the indigenous cultures to live in Point of Rocks, inhabiting an island in the Potomac River known today as Heater's Island. Eventually, conflicts with neighboring tribes and European settlers forced the migration of the Piscataway from their ancestral homelands of Prince George's County to Heater's Island around 1699, though their population was severely decreased by an outbreak of smallpox in 1704.

The Piscataways remained on the island for a few more years before migrating north into Pennsylvania and New York.[4]

About a decade after the Piscataway abandoned their settlement on Heater's Island, the first European settler in Point of Rocks, Arthur Nelson, received a patent for a tract of land called "Nelson's Island."[5] The Nelson Family retained their status as prominent landholders in Point of Rocks in the early-18th century, developing several plantations on which tobacco was grown. Commercial interests in the region led the Nelsons to petition for a road to be built connecting Frederick and "Nelson's Ferry," the first English-language name assigned to the village that became Point of Rocks.[6] This road was eventually constructed and became known as Ballenger Creek Pike.

19th and 20th centuries Edit

In the early-19th century, the arrival of the Chesapeake and Ohio (C&O) Canal and the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad led to an increase in settlement and industry in the Point of Rocks area. The village became a temporary terminus for both the C&O Canal and the B&O Railroad in 1828 when the companies went to court to determine which would control the right of way through the narrow passage between the Potomac River and Catoctin Mountain immediately west of Point of Rocks. After six years of court battles, the companies agreed to compromise and share the right of way, the B&O Railroad eventually constructing a tunnel through the mountain to broaden its lines through the narrow water gap.[7]

With the construction of the C&O Canal and the B&O Railroad and its strategic location on the Potomac River, Point of Rocks was poised to become a regional transportation hub and center of industrial activity. In 1835, Charles Johnson, the owner of the land on which Point of Rocks was built, had lots surveyed and streets laid out for a new town.[8]

From the earliest days of European settlement in Point of Rocks, forced labor through indentured servitude and enslavement of African Americans drove the local economy. Tobacco plantations in the fertile lands of the lower Monocacy Valley were operated based on the labor of enslaved men and women. The plantation owners also used their slaves to build houses, places of business, and public buildings, such as St. Paul's Episcopal Church, completed in 1841 using the labor of enslaved men and women from the Duval Plantation. Nearby Licksville, a small community located near Noland's Ferry crossing the Potomac River was the site of an active slave market.[9]

American Civil War Edit

 
Captain Samuel C. Means, who organized the Union Army-aligned Loudoun Rangers
 
Point of Rocks railroad station, built by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in 1873

Situated on the state line between Maryland and the seceded state of Virginia, Point of Rocks was the site of several small skirmishes and military actions during the Civil War. The B&O Railroad and C&O Canal were important targets for Confederate raiders across the Potomac River. In 1861, then Colonel Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson led a raid at Point of Rocks, shutting off the rail lines east of the town and capturing 56 locomotives and 300 rail cars.[10]

Neighboring Loudoun County, Virginia, was home to several small pockets of Union supporters, including Quakers who lived in villages like Waterford and Lincoln who did not support secession or the Confederate cause for defending the institution of slavery. Point of Rocks became a haven for those families who were forced to flee Virginia.

In 1862, Captain Samuel C. Means, a native of Waterford, Virginia but then living in Point of Rocks where he was a merchant and B&O Railroad station manager, raised a cavalry unit called the Loudoun Rangers, the only organized unit from Virginia to fight for the Union.[11] The Loudoun Rangers spent most of 1862 and 1863 fighting alongside Cole's Maryland Cavalry (the First Potomac Home Brigade) to protect the C&O Canal and the B&O Railroad from frequent Confederate raids. Cole's Maryland Cavalry encamped at Point of Rocks, occupying St. Paul's Episcopal Church where they burned the interior furnishings.[12]

Lt. Col. John S. Mosby and his 43rd Battalion of Virginia Cavalry, known as "Mosby's Raiders", crossed the Potomac and attached Union garrison forces at Point of Rocks in 1864 in a brief campaign called the "Calico Raid."[10] The area was also the scene of military maneuvers and brief skirmishes during Valley Campaigns of 1864 and the Battle of Monocacy on July 9, 1864.

After the Civil War, Point of Rocks remained a place of conflict. In 1879, James Carroll was lynched in Point of Rocks after being accused of breaking into the home of Richard Thomas and raping his wife. Having fled down the C&O Canal towpath to Georgetown, Carroll was apprehended on April 16, 1879. While being transported to Frederick for trial, a mob swarmed the train as it approached the station in Point of Rocks, removed Carroll from police custody, and hanged him in an adjacent field. The death of Carroll, whose alleged crimes have never been proven or disproven, was one of three recorded lynchings to take place in Frederick County.[13]

In 1873, the B&O Railroad opened its Metropolitan Branch, connecting Washington D.C. to its Old Main Line in a junction at Point of Rocks. A new station, which has become a noted town landmark, was erected the same year. The Gothic Revival styled brick building was designed by E. Francis Baldwin and is situated in the center of the junction of the two lines.

Several other prominent structures were built in the town during the Victorian era, including the town's Methodist Church (1894), Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (1887, replaced in 1912), St. Luke's Lutheran Church (1889), and Masonic Temple (1898).[14]

21st century Edit

In 2001, Duke Energy filed an application with the Maryland Public Service Commission to construct a power plant on the north edge of town. In November 2002, however, Duke officially canceled its proposal, though it retains property in the area.[15]

The Point of Rocks railroad station was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and St. Paul's Episcopal Church was listed in 1978.[16]

Flooding Edit

Older portions of the town are on the Potomac River floodplain and have been repeatedly inundated. An ongoing Federal Emergency Management Agency program to reduce flood insurance payouts has resulted in the purchase and demolition of a large portion of structures on the lowest-lying properties.

Geography Edit

Point of Rocks is located in southern Frederick County, on the north bank of the Potomac River, and is bordered to the west by U.S. Route 15, which here runs along the eastern base of Catoctin Mountain. Via US 15 it is 13 miles (21 km) north to Frederick, the county seat, and 12 miles (19 km) south across the Potomac River to Leesburg, Virginia. Maryland Route 28 leads east from Point of Rocks through rural Frederick County and Montgomery County 29 miles (47 km) to Rockville. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Point of Rocks has a total area of 1.10 square miles (2.85 km2), all land.[3]

Demographics Edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
20201,886
U.S. Decennial Census[17]

Infrastructure Edit

Transportation Edit

The community contains the Point of Rocks Bridge of U.S. Route 15 over the Potomac River into Virginia. The bridge is the first such crossing of the river upstream of the American Legion Memorial Bridge on I-495 in Montgomery County. The only other crossing between them is White's Ferry.

Rail service through Point of Rocks began with the 1834 opening of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's main line, which ended at the next stop in Sandy Hook, Maryland, before the Harpers Ferry Crossing across the Potomac and into Virginia opened in 1839.

Point of Rocks is a passenger station stop on the MARC Brunswick Line. The station, designed by Ephraim Francis Baldwin, was built by the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad and completed in 1876. Marking the junction between CSX's Metropolitan Subdivision (the current main line) and the Old Main Line Subdivision, it remains one of the former B&O's signature landmarks, and is a popular subject of railroad photography.

Notable person Edit

  • Craig Davis, author and international development expert

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  2. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Point of Rocks
  3. ^ a b "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Census Summary File 1 (G001), Point of Rocks CDP, Maryland". American FactFinder. U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 13, 2020. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  4. ^ Curry, Dennis C. (April 24, 2015). "Heater's Island and the Piscataway Indians". Our History, Our Heritage. The Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  5. ^ Tracey, Grace; Dern, John (1987). Pioneers of Old Monocacy: The Early Settlement of Frederick County, Maryland. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. p. 59. ISBN 0-8063-1183-5.
  6. ^ Tracey, Grace; Dern, John (1987). Pioneers of Old Monocacy: The Early Settlement of Frederick County, Maryland. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. p. 62. ISBN 0-8063-1183-5.
  7. ^ Williams, T.J.C.; McKinsey, Folger (1997). History of Frederick County, Maryland (1910). Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. p. 234. ISBN 0-8063-7973-1.
  8. ^ Williams, T.J.C.; McKinsey, Folger (1997). History of Frederick County, Maryland (1910). Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. p. 322. ISBN 0-8063-7973-1.
  9. ^ "Nolands Ferry". C&O Canal Trust. C&O Canal Trust.
  10. ^ a b "Point of Rocks during the Civil War". The Historical Marker Database. Maryland Civil War Trails. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  11. ^ Crouch, Richard. "The Loudoun Rangers". The History of Loudoun County, Virginia. Waterford Foundation. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  12. ^ "History of St. Paul's Parish". St. Paul's Point of Rocks, Maryland. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  13. ^ Ashbury, John (1997). ...and all our yesterdays: A Chronicle of Frederick County, Maryland. Frederick, MD: Diversions Publications, Inc. p. 133. ISBN 0-9661278-0-3.
  14. ^ Davis, Janet. "Point of Rocks Survey District" (PDF). Maryland Inventory of Historic Places. Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  15. ^ Maryland Public Service Commission. Baltimore, MD. "In the Matter of the Application of Duke Energy Frederick, LLC for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to Construct a 640-MW Generating Facility in Frederick County, Maryland." 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine Case No. 8891. June 18, 2001ff.
  16. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  17. ^ "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2016.

External links Edit

  • Community website
  • Point of Rocks, Maryland at Curlie


point, rocks, maryland, point, rocks, unincorporated, community, census, designated, place, frederick, county, maryland, 2010, census, population, census, designated, placeu, route, crossing, potomac, river, point, rockslocation, point, rocks, marylandcoordina. Point of Rocks is an unincorporated community and census designated place CDP in Frederick County Maryland As of the 2010 census it had a population of 1 466 3 Point of Rocks MarylandCensus designated placeU S Route 15 crossing the Potomac River at Point of RocksLocation of Point of Rocks in MarylandCoordinates 39 16 33 N 77 32 21 W 39 27583 N 77 53917 W 39 27583 77 53917Country United StatesState MarylandCountyFrederickArea 1 Total1 13 sq mi 2 92 km2 Land1 13 sq mi 2 92 km2 Water0 00 sq mi 0 00 km2 Elevation250 ft 80 m Population 2020 Total1 886 Density1 674 96 sq mi 646 99 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Code21777Area code s 301 240FIPS code24 62575GNIS feature ID0591032 2 Point of Rocks is named for the striking rock formation on the adjacent Catoctin Mountain which was formed by the Potomac River cutting through the ridge in a water gap a typical formation in the Appalachian Mountains The formation is not visible from the town and can only be seen from boats on the river or from the southern bank of the river in Virginia Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre settlement 1 2 19th and 20th centuries 1 2 1 American Civil War 1 3 21st century 1 3 1 Flooding 2 Geography 3 Demographics 4 Infrastructure 4 1 Transportation 5 Notable person 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditPre settlement Edit nbsp An aerial view of Point of Rocks nbsp Historic St Paul s Episcopal Church built in 1841 by enslaved men and women of the Duval Plantation and consecrated in 1843 is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places Indigenous peoples inhabited the Point of Rocks regions for centuries prior to European colonization The Piscataway were one of the indigenous cultures to live in Point of Rocks inhabiting an island in the Potomac River known today as Heater s Island Eventually conflicts with neighboring tribes and European settlers forced the migration of the Piscataway from their ancestral homelands of Prince George s County to Heater s Island around 1699 though their population was severely decreased by an outbreak of smallpox in 1704 The Piscataways remained on the island for a few more years before migrating north into Pennsylvania and New York 4 About a decade after the Piscataway abandoned their settlement on Heater s Island the first European settler in Point of Rocks Arthur Nelson received a patent for a tract of land called Nelson s Island 5 The Nelson Family retained their status as prominent landholders in Point of Rocks in the early 18th century developing several plantations on which tobacco was grown Commercial interests in the region led the Nelsons to petition for a road to be built connecting Frederick and Nelson s Ferry the first English language name assigned to the village that became Point of Rocks 6 This road was eventually constructed and became known as Ballenger Creek Pike 19th and 20th centuries Edit In the early 19th century the arrival of the Chesapeake and Ohio C amp O Canal and the Baltimore and Ohio B amp O Railroad led to an increase in settlement and industry in the Point of Rocks area The village became a temporary terminus for both the C amp O Canal and the B amp O Railroad in 1828 when the companies went to court to determine which would control the right of way through the narrow passage between the Potomac River and Catoctin Mountain immediately west of Point of Rocks After six years of court battles the companies agreed to compromise and share the right of way the B amp O Railroad eventually constructing a tunnel through the mountain to broaden its lines through the narrow water gap 7 With the construction of the C amp O Canal and the B amp O Railroad and its strategic location on the Potomac River Point of Rocks was poised to become a regional transportation hub and center of industrial activity In 1835 Charles Johnson the owner of the land on which Point of Rocks was built had lots surveyed and streets laid out for a new town 8 From the earliest days of European settlement in Point of Rocks forced labor through indentured servitude and enslavement of African Americans drove the local economy Tobacco plantations in the fertile lands of the lower Monocacy Valley were operated based on the labor of enslaved men and women The plantation owners also used their slaves to build houses places of business and public buildings such as St Paul s Episcopal Church completed in 1841 using the labor of enslaved men and women from the Duval Plantation Nearby Licksville a small community located near Noland s Ferry crossing the Potomac River was the site of an active slave market 9 American Civil War Edit nbsp Captain Samuel C Means who organized the Union Army aligned Loudoun Rangers nbsp Point of Rocks railroad station built by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in 1873Situated on the state line between Maryland and the seceded state of Virginia Point of Rocks was the site of several small skirmishes and military actions during the Civil War The B amp O Railroad and C amp O Canal were important targets for Confederate raiders across the Potomac River In 1861 then Colonel Thomas J Stonewall Jackson led a raid at Point of Rocks shutting off the rail lines east of the town and capturing 56 locomotives and 300 rail cars 10 Neighboring Loudoun County Virginia was home to several small pockets of Union supporters including Quakers who lived in villages like Waterford and Lincoln who did not support secession or the Confederate cause for defending the institution of slavery Point of Rocks became a haven for those families who were forced to flee Virginia In 1862 Captain Samuel C Means a native of Waterford Virginia but then living in Point of Rocks where he was a merchant and B amp O Railroad station manager raised a cavalry unit called the Loudoun Rangers the only organized unit from Virginia to fight for the Union 11 The Loudoun Rangers spent most of 1862 and 1863 fighting alongside Cole s Maryland Cavalry the First Potomac Home Brigade to protect the C amp O Canal and the B amp O Railroad from frequent Confederate raids Cole s Maryland Cavalry encamped at Point of Rocks occupying St Paul s Episcopal Church where they burned the interior furnishings 12 Lt Col John S Mosby and his 43rd Battalion of Virginia Cavalry known as Mosby s Raiders crossed the Potomac and attached Union garrison forces at Point of Rocks in 1864 in a brief campaign called the Calico Raid 10 The area was also the scene of military maneuvers and brief skirmishes during Valley Campaigns of 1864 and the Battle of Monocacy on July 9 1864 After the Civil War Point of Rocks remained a place of conflict In 1879 James Carroll was lynched in Point of Rocks after being accused of breaking into the home of Richard Thomas and raping his wife Having fled down the C amp O Canal towpath to Georgetown Carroll was apprehended on April 16 1879 While being transported to Frederick for trial a mob swarmed the train as it approached the station in Point of Rocks removed Carroll from police custody and hanged him in an adjacent field The death of Carroll whose alleged crimes have never been proven or disproven was one of three recorded lynchings to take place in Frederick County 13 In 1873 the B amp O Railroad opened its Metropolitan Branch connecting Washington D C to its Old Main Line in a junction at Point of Rocks A new station which has become a noted town landmark was erected the same year The Gothic Revival styled brick building was designed by E Francis Baldwin and is situated in the center of the junction of the two lines Several other prominent structures were built in the town during the Victorian era including the town s Methodist Church 1894 Holy Trinity Episcopal Church 1887 replaced in 1912 St Luke s Lutheran Church 1889 and Masonic Temple 1898 14 21st century Edit In 2001 Duke Energy filed an application with the Maryland Public Service Commission to construct a power plant on the north edge of town In November 2002 however Duke officially canceled its proposal though it retains property in the area 15 The Point of Rocks railroad station was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 and St Paul s Episcopal Church was listed in 1978 16 Flooding Edit Older portions of the town are on the Potomac River floodplain and have been repeatedly inundated An ongoing Federal Emergency Management Agency program to reduce flood insurance payouts has resulted in the purchase and demolition of a large portion of structures on the lowest lying properties Geography EditPoint of Rocks is located in southern Frederick County on the north bank of the Potomac River and is bordered to the west by U S Route 15 which here runs along the eastern base of Catoctin Mountain Via US 15 it is 13 miles 21 km north to Frederick the county seat and 12 miles 19 km south across the Potomac River to Leesburg Virginia Maryland Route 28 leads east from Point of Rocks through rural Frederick County and Montgomery County 29 miles 47 km to Rockville According to the U S Census Bureau Point of Rocks has a total area of 1 10 square miles 2 85 km2 all land 3 Demographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 20201 886 U S Decennial Census 17 Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit The community contains the Point of Rocks Bridge of U S Route 15 over the Potomac River into Virginia The bridge is the first such crossing of the river upstream of the American Legion Memorial Bridge on I 495 in Montgomery County The only other crossing between them is White s Ferry Rail service through Point of Rocks began with the 1834 opening of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad s main line which ended at the next stop in Sandy Hook Maryland before the Harpers Ferry Crossing across the Potomac and into Virginia opened in 1839 Point of Rocks is a passenger station stop on the MARC Brunswick Line The station designed by Ephraim Francis Baldwin was built by the Baltimore and Ohio B amp O Railroad and completed in 1876 Marking the junction between CSX s Metropolitan Subdivision the current main line and the Old Main Line Subdivision it remains one of the former B amp O s signature landmarks and is a popular subject of railroad photography Notable person EditCraig Davis author and international development expertSee also EditLoudoun County in the American Civil WarReferences Edit 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 26 2022 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Point of Rocks a b Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 G001 Point of Rocks CDP Maryland American FactFinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved June 2 2016 Curry Dennis C April 24 2015 Heater s Island and the Piscataway Indians Our History Our Heritage The Maryland Historical Trust Retrieved July 25 2017 Tracey Grace Dern John 1987 Pioneers of Old Monocacy The Early Settlement of Frederick County Maryland Baltimore MD Genealogical Publishing Co Inc p 59 ISBN 0 8063 1183 5 Tracey Grace Dern John 1987 Pioneers of Old Monocacy The Early Settlement of Frederick County Maryland Baltimore MD Genealogical Publishing Co Inc p 62 ISBN 0 8063 1183 5 Williams T J C McKinsey Folger 1997 History of Frederick County Maryland 1910 Baltimore MD Genealogical Publishing Co Inc p 234 ISBN 0 8063 7973 1 Williams T J C McKinsey Folger 1997 History of Frederick County Maryland 1910 Baltimore MD Genealogical Publishing Co Inc p 322 ISBN 0 8063 7973 1 Nolands Ferry C amp O Canal Trust C amp O Canal Trust a b Point of Rocks during the Civil War The Historical Marker Database Maryland Civil War Trails Retrieved July 25 2017 Crouch Richard The Loudoun Rangers The History of Loudoun County Virginia Waterford Foundation Retrieved July 25 2017 History of St Paul s Parish St Paul s Point of Rocks Maryland Retrieved July 25 2017 Ashbury John 1997 and all our yesterdays A Chronicle of Frederick County Maryland Frederick MD Diversions Publications Inc p 133 ISBN 0 9661278 0 3 Davis Janet Point of Rocks Survey District PDF Maryland Inventory of Historic Places Maryland Historical Trust Retrieved July 25 2017 Maryland Public Service Commission Baltimore MD In the Matter of the Application of Duke Energy Frederick LLC for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to Construct a 640 MW Generating Facility in Frederick County Maryland Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Case No 8891 June 18 2001ff National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2016 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Point of Rocks Maryland Community website Point of Rocks Maryland at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Point of Rocks Maryland amp oldid 1169890455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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