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Towson, Maryland

Towson (/ˈtsən/)[2] is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. The population was 55,197 as of the 2010 census. It is the county seat[3] of Baltimore County and the second-most populous unincorporated county seat in the United States (after Ellicott City, the seat of nearby Howard County, southwest of Baltimore).[4]

Towson, Maryland
Motto: 
Location within Baltimore County
Coordinates: 39°23′35″N 76°36′34″W / 39.39306°N 76.60944°W / 39.39306; -76.60944Coordinates: 39°23′35″N 76°36′34″W / 39.39306°N 76.60944°W / 39.39306; -76.60944
Country United States
State Maryland
County Baltimore
Area
 • Total14.29 sq mi (37.01 km2)
 • Land14.15 sq mi (36.66 km2)
 • Water0.14 sq mi (0.35 km2)
Elevation
463 ft (141 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total59,553
 • Density4,207.80/sq mi (1,624.62/km2)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP codes
21286,21204,21252,21212 (county)
Area code(s)410, 443, and 667
FIPS code24-78425
GNIS feature ID0591420

History

 
The historic 1854 Baltimore County Courthouse located in Towson, Maryland

1600s

The first inhabitants of the future Towson and central Baltimore County region were the Susquehannock people, who hunted in the area. Their region included all of Baltimore County, though their primary settlement was farther northeast along the Susquehanna River.[5]

1700s

Towson was settled in 1752 when Pennsylvania brothers, William and Thomas Towson, began farming an area of Sater's Hill, northeast of the present-day York and Joppa Roads.[6] William's son, Ezekiel, opened the Towson Hotel to serve the growing number of farmers bringing their produce and livestock to the port of Baltimore. He built the hotel at current-day Shealy Avenue and York Road, near the area's main crossroads.[7] The village became known as "Towsontown".[4][8] The property in West Towson came from two land grants: 400-acre Gott's Hope in 1719, and Gunner's Range in 1706.[9]

In 1790, businessman Capt. Charles Ridgely completed the Hampton Mansion just north of Towsontown, the largest private house in America at the time. The Ridgelys lived there for six generations, until 1948.[10] It is now preserved as the Hampton National Historic Site and open to the public.

1800s

Grafton Marsh, a surgeon during the War of 1812, and his brother Josiah Marsh settled their families in a collection of early houses known as Gott's Hope that was part of a group along Joppa Road. They consolidated four of the structures into a larger dwelling that they called "Marshmont". The brothers went into business together as medical practitioners. Neither had any heirs but were joined in practice later by their nephew, Dr. Grafton Marsh Bosley, who eventually inherited the medical practice, the Marshmont compound, and a 140-acre farm. The farm extended west of York Road, south of Joppa Road, north of the Sheppard Pratt Hospital, and east of Woodbine Avenue.[11] In 1869,[12] Bosley and his wife Margaret Nicholson then built a new home in an area of the property known as "Highlands"[13] or "Highland Park", which they named "Uplands".[9]

The ratification of the second Maryland Constitution of 1851 provided for the jurisdictional separation of the former Baltimore Town, founded in 1729. Baltimore Town had served as the county seat since 1767, now the City of Baltimore, since its incorporation in 1796–97 by the General Assembly of Maryland. Several tortured sets of negotiations occurred to divide the various assets of the city and the county, such as the downtown courthouse of 1805, the city/county jail of 1801 along the Jones Falls (at East Madison Street) and the almshouse, which was also jointly owned. After a series of elections and referendums, on February 13, 1854, Towson became, by popular vote, the choice of the remaining, now mostly rural, eastern, northern and western portions of the county as the new county seat of Baltimore County.[14]

The Baltimore County Courthouse, still in use by 2015, with its various annexes (and the separate county courts and administrative building), was originally designed by the local city architectural firm of Dixon, Balbirnie and Dixon.[15] It was completed within a year, constructed of limestone and marble donated by the well-known Ridgely family of nearby Hampton Mansion, on land donated by Towson doctor Grafton Marsh Bosley.[8][11][14] The courthouse was subsequently enlarged in 1910 through additional designs for north and south wings by well-known and regarded city architects, Baldwin & Pennington. Additional expansions later in 1926 and 1958 eventually created an H-shaped plan for the courthouse. An additional modernistic Baltimore County Courts Building, with room for the new charter government since 1956 and administration of a county executive and county council, plus administrative and executive departments, was erected in 1970–71 across a plaza to the west of the older historic courthouse.[16]

The old Baltimore County Jail was built in 1855, and was later replaced in the 1980s by a new modern Baltimore County Detention Center, north of the town on Kenilworth Drive, with an addition constructed in the 2010s.

From 1850 to 1874, another notable land owner, Amos Matthews, had a farm of 150 acres (0.61 km2) that—with the exception of the 17-acre (69,000 m2) largely natural parcel where the Kelso Home for Girls (currently Towson YMCA), was later erected —was wholly developed into the neighborhoods of West Towson, Southland Hills and other subdivisions, beginning in the middle 1920s.[9]

 
The former Grafton Bosley estate "Uplands",[17] Towson Maryland, which later became the Presbyterian Home of Maryland (photo c. 1930)

During the Civil War, Towson was the scene of two minor engagements. Many local citizens were sympathetic to the Southern Confederate cause, so much so that Ady's Hotel (later named the Towson Hotel) and the current site of the 1920s-era Towson Theatre (later the Recher Theatre), flew the Southern flag.[18][19][20] The Union Army found it necessary to overtake the town by force on June 2, 1861.[21] During the raid, the Union Army seized weapons from citizens at Ady's Hotel.[21] A local paper, in jest, refers to the "strongly fortified and almost impregnable city of Towsontown" and downplays the need for the attack, stating, "the distinguished Straw, with only two hundred and fifty men, has taken a whole city and nearly frightened two old women out of their wits."[21]

The second engagement took place around July 12, 1864, between Union and Confederate forces. On July 10, 1864, a 135-man Confederate cavalry detachment attacked the Northern Central Railway to the north in nearby Cockeysville, under orders from Gen. Bradley T. Johnson, of Frederick, Maryland. The First and Second Maryland Cavalry, led by Baltimore County native and pre-war member of the Towson Horse Guards, Maj. Harry W. Gilmor, of Glen Ellen, attacked strategic targets throughout Baltimore and Harford counties, including cutting telegraph wires along Harford Road, capturing two trains and a Union general, and destroying a railroad bridge in Joppa, Maryland. Following what became known as Gilmor's Raid, the cavalry encamped in Towson overnight at Ady's Hotel, where his men rested and Gilmor met with friends.[18][22]

The next day, a large federal cavalry unit was dispatched from Baltimore to overtake Gilmor's forces. Though outnumbered by more than two to one, the Confederate cavalry attacked the federal unit, breaking the federal unit and chasing them down York Road to around current-day Woodbourne Avenue, within Baltimore city limits.[18][23][24] Gilmor's forces traveled south along York Road as far south as Govans, before heading west to rejoin Gen. Johnson's main force.[25]

Following the war, Gilmor served as the Baltimore City Police Commissioner in the 1870s.

The Towson fire of 1878 destroyed most of the 500 block along the York Turnpike, causing an estimated $38,000 in damage.[26][27]

During the summer of 1894, the Towson Water Company laid wooden pipes and installed fire hydrants connected to an artesian well near Aigburth Vale. On November 2, 1894, Towson was supplied with electric service through connection with the Mount Washington Electric Light and Power Company.[28]

1900s

At the beginning of the century, Towson remained largely a rural community. Land continued to be sold by the acre, rather than as home parcels. Most residences lay within Towson proper: no houses existed west of Central Avenue along Allegheny or Pennsylvania Avenues, and there were only three homes along the West Chesapeake Avenue corridor.[29]

In the 1910s, the Maryland State Normal School (MSNS) (now known as Towson University) was relocated to Towson. The Maryland Legislature had established the MSNS in 1865 as Maryland's first teacher-training school, or normal school.[30] The institution officially opened its doors on January 15, 1866,[31] however as time passed enrollment in the school grew exponentially, which rendered the facilities inadequate. In 1910, the General Assembly formed a committee to oversee site selection, budget, and design plans for a new campus. It settled on an 80-acre (320,000 m2) site in Towson. The General Assembly financed the $600,000 move in 1912.[30] Construction then began in 1913 on the Administration Building, now known as Stephens Hall. In September 1915, the new campus, comprising Stephens Hall, Newell Hall, and the power plant, began classes.[32] The college underwent numerous name changes, settling on Towson University in 1997.

As the growth of Baltimore's suburbs became more pronounced after World War II, considerable office development took place in Towson's central core area. Many of the large Victorian and colonial-style residences in the vicinity of the Court House were demolished in the 1980s and 1990s to make way for offices and parking.

 
Towson United Methodist Church

In 1839, Epsom Chapel became the first Christian house of worship in Towson, used by various denominations.[4] Due to population growth in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, several churches were built to serve the community, such as Calvary Baptist Church, Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, Trinity Episcopal Church, First Methodist Church, and Towson Presbyterian Church. Epsom Chapel was demolished in 1950 when Goucher College sold a portion of its property for development of the Towson Plaza shopping center, now Towson Town Center. First Methodist Church moved in 1958 to land also acquired from Goucher College, and is now Towson United Methodist Church.[8]

Author Robert Coston, who grew up in the area of Towson now called "Historic East Towson", recalled in an interview the unique African-American history of that area during the mid-century:

I think that the Towson, Maryland area that I am familiar with differs from other parts of Maryland because of the proximity to one of the largest slave plantations in the country. The Ridgely Plantation which owned all of the property from Baltimore County to Baltimore City and other surrounding areas. ... This was a very unique place of which I have never heard of any equal to it. Every African American school age child in Baltimore County had to attend school at some point at Carver in East Towson. ... I realize now that as a youngster the older African Americans avoided talking about slavery or the nearby Ridgely Plantation because they themselves were not too far removed from slavery itself.[33]

Geography

Towson is located at 39°23′35″N 76°36′34″W / 39.39306°N 76.60944°W / 39.39306; -76.60944 (39.392980, −76.609562).[34]

According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 14.2 square miles (37 km2), of which 14.0 square miles (36 km2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km2) (1.06%) is water.

The community is located immediately north of Baltimore City, inside the Beltway (I-695), east of I-83 and along York Road. Its census boundaries include Pikesville to the west, Lutherville and Hampton to the north, Parkville to the east, and Baltimore to the south.

Major neighborhoods in Towson include: Anneslie, Idlewylde, Greenbriar, Southland Hills, Rodgers Forge, Stoneleigh, Wiltondale, Towson Manor Village, Hunt Crest Estates, Knollwood-Donnybrook, East Towson, Loch Raven Village and West Towson. Ruxton, which lies to the west, is sometimes considered a part of Towson. Eudowood is a Towson neighborhood named after Eudocia, the wife of Dr. John T. Stansbury, on whose former estate it is situated.[35]

Climate

The climate in this area is characterized by hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system Towson has a humid subtropical climate, abbreviated "Cfa" on climate maps.[36]

Government

The Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services is headquartered at Suite 1000 at 300 East Joppa Road in the Towson CDP.[37] In addition, both the Baltimore County Public Schools,[38] and the Baltimore County Police Department possess headquarters that are located in the Towson CDP.[39]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
196019,090
197077,768307.4%
198051,083−34.3%
199049,445−3.2%
200051,7934.7%
201055,1976.6%
202059,5537.9%
Census Boundaries in 1970 extended
beyond the community proper

As of the census[40] of 2000, there were 51,793 people, 21,063 households, and 11,331 families residing in the CDP. The population density was 3,688.7 inhabitants per square mile (1,424.2/km2). There were 21,997 housing units at an average density of 1,566.6 per square mile (604.9/km2). The racial makeup of the CDP was 86.9% White, 7.53% African American, 0.10% Native American, 3.7% Asian, and 1.9% Hispanic.

There were 21,063 households, out of which 23.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 43.6% were married couples living together, 7.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 46.2% were non-families. 36.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 17.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.16 and the average family size was 2.87.

In the CDP, the population was spread out, with 17.4% under the age of 18, 17.5% from 18 to 24, 24.9% from 25 to 44, 20.1% from 45 to 64, and 20.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females, there were 82.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 78.8 males.

The median income for a household in the CDP was $53,775, and the median income for a family was $75,832 (these figures had risen to $64,313 and $98,744 respectively as of a 2007 estimate[41]). Males had a median income of $49,554 versus $38,172 for females. The per capita income for the CDP was $32,502. About 2.5% of families and 7.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 3.8% of those under age 18 and 4.7% of those age 65 or over.

Transportation

Roads

Major roads in Towson include:

Public transportation

 
The Baltimore Light Rail provides service at the Lutherville Station.

The Towson area has several bus lines operated by the Maryland Transit Administration. These include:

  • Route 3, which serves the Loch Raven Boulevard corridor, with selected trips along Joppa Road
  • Route 8, which operates along York Road to Lutherville and downtown Baltimore (formerly the #8 streetcar line)
  • Route 11, which serves Towsontown Boulevard, the Charles Street corridor, and GBMC hospital
  • Route 12, which operates along York and Dulaney Valley Roads to Stella Maris Hospice at the times needed for the facility's change of shift.
  • Route 48 QuickBus, which operates between Towson Town Center and downtown Baltimore along the same route as #8, except with limited stops for a speedier trip
  • Route 55, which operates cross-county service to Parkville, Overlea, Rosedale, and Essex

Towson also has light rail service to downtown Baltimore and BWI Airport along its periphery via the Lutherville and Falls Road stops, though there are no stops actually in Towson.

Towson University and Goucher College also operate bus services for their students, and the has several stops in the area.

Pedestrians and bicycles

The Towson Bike Beltway opened in September 2014. It includes the addition of bicycle lanes on several major streets encircling the downtown area.[42] The main loop includes Bosley Avenue (which is part of Maryland Route 45 Bypass), Fairmount Avenue, and Goucher Boulevard; these three roads will receive full bike lanes. The rest of the loop, utilizing Hillen Road and Towsontown Boulevard, will receive signage alerting motorists to expect an increase in bicycle traffic on those roads. After this initial construction, several spurs are envisioned to branch from the main loop, with several reaching as far south as the Baltimore city line.[43]

"Ma and Pa" Railroad

 
"Ma & Pa" train crossing York Road, Towson, in the 1950s — the bridge was removed in 1959
 
The remaining bridge abutments in 2014
 
Ma and Pa Abutment Commemorative Plaque in Towson

Railroad service began to Towson on April 17, 1882, with construction of the Baltimore & Delta Railway Company, soon renamed the Baltimore & Lehigh Railroad, and later reorganized as the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad. The "Ma and Pa", as it was affectionately known locally, formerly operated between Baltimore and York, Pennsylvania, through Towson. Its passenger station was located just west of York Road on Susquehanna Avenue. Passenger service was discontinued on August 31, 1954, and the railroad line through Towson was finally abandoned altogether on June 11, 1958, leaving only the stone abutments where the tracks crossed York Road on a steel girder bridge.[44] One passenger on the last passenger train recalled that many riders came from as far away as Boston and Washington, D.C., to participate in the historic event, along with members of the National Railway Historical Society.[45] Historic Towson, a local group of history buffs, installed a bronze plaque on the west abutment in 1999, commemorating the defunct railroad's place in Towson's history.[46]

Shopping and other attractions

 
The Hampton Plaza

Towson features some of Baltimore County's largest shopping centers as well as other popular venues of interest. These include:

Hampton Mansion

Hampton National Historic Site is operated by the U.S. National Park Service. The home and grounds were formerly the core of the vast Ridgely estate. The site includes the Ridgely's 18th-century Georgian manor house, gardens, grounds, and the original stone slave quarters. The National Park Service offers free admission and guided tours.

Towson Town Center

Towson Town Center is Baltimore County's largest indoor mall, with four stories of shops and a parking garage. Nearby is Allegheny Avenue, the main street of downtown Towson, with a variety of eateries and stores.

Towson Square

A new outdoor mall, Towson Square, was under construction in 2013. After quick construction, the Square opened in October 2014.

The Shops at Kenilworth

The Shops at Kenilworth, formerly known as Kenilworth Park and also as Kenilworth Bazaar, is a small indoor mall located on Kenilworth Drive.

Towson Place

Towson Place is a major shopping area near Joppa Road, Goucher Boulevard, and Putty Hill Avenue. Built on the site of the Eudowood Sanatarium, the original Eudowood Plaza shopping center was an open mall anchored by Montgomery Ward. Renovated in the early 1980s to an indoor mall and renamed Towson Marketplace, the location was then redeveloped in 1998 as an open-air collection of big box stores and other stores and restaurants,[47] including a Walmart, Target, Marshall's and Bed Bath & Beyond. Towson Place is next to Calvert Hall College High School, a Roman Catholic Lasallian Christian Brothers secondary school which moved in 1960 to its suburban location from its original site, founded 1845 in the city's Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood on Cathedral Street at West Mulberry Street.

SECU Arena and Unitas Stadium

Towson University's arena Towson Center and stadium Johnny Unitas Stadium are both main venues for Towson Tiger athletics and other events. SECU Arena, which opened in Spring 2013, now hosts the Towson Tiger Men's and Women's Basketball teams, Women's Gymnastics and Women's Volleyball teams.

Education

Colleges and universities

Towson University is a public school in southern Towson. Its student population is greater than 20,000, making it the second largest institution in the University System of Maryland. TU is home to the largest business school in the state, with 2,500 students. It was founded in 1866 as the Maryland State Normal School for the training of teachers. Originally the school was located at several sites in the city. It underwent several name changes before moving in 1915 to an expansive campus just south of Towson on the west side of York Road. The administration and classroom structure, later named Stephens Hall, has a cupola in red brick with limestone trim in English Tudor/Elizabethan/Jacobethan architecture style, and was by several other similar campus buildings to the northeast in similar style.

Also located in Towson is Goucher College, a small private liberal arts school that was founded in 1885.[48] Goucher was a women's college until it went coeducational in 1986. It was established as the Women's College of Baltimore, and its founders, pastors John Goucher, who would later become its namesake, and John B. Van Meter were closely affiliated with Methodist Episcopal Church. The school was originally based in Baltimore city and moved to its current campus in Towson in 1953.[49] The old campus in Baltimore, which the school no longer owns or occupies, is now known as Old Goucher and is a registered historic district. The current 287-acre campus of the school in Towson was also notably registered as a historic district and in 2007 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places for its unique and innovative architecture.[50]

Public schools

Towson is served by the Baltimore County Public Schools district, and the Baltimore County Board of Education headquarters is also located there. There are three high schools. Towson High School, founded in 1873, was the first secondary school provided. It is the second oldest in the school system, and Towson's largest, with its most recent stone structure constructed in 1949. Loch Raven High School dates from 1972. The Carver Center for Arts and Technology is a local magnet school and vocational-technical secondary school in a newly constructed building. It was established in 1992 and known as the Central Technical High School. It was renamed for the African-American scientist George Washington Carver (1864–1943), and to remember the previous Carver High School in Towson. That school had served black residents of the county for several decades in the previously racially segregated public school system before the early 1960s, when the suburban county lagged behind fully integrating after the 1954 landmark Brown vs. Board of Education decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Towson is served by seven public elementary schools in the school district.: Rodgers Forge, Stoneleigh, Riderwood, Hampton, West Towson, Pleasant Plains and Cromwell Valley Regional Magnet School of Technology, which serves students from all over Baltimore County.

Towson is served by two public middle schools, Dumbarton Middle School and Loch Raven Technical Academy. Some students are also zoned to attend Ridgely Middle School in Lutherville further north.

Also located in Towson is Ridge Ruxton School, a special education school serving the central area of Baltimore County, including Reisterstown, Owings Mills, Parkville, Cockeysville, and Hunt Valley. The school describes itself as offering "programs for students from three to twenty-one years of age who have been identified as developmentally delayed, intellectually limited, autistic-like, and/or multi-handicapped".[51]

Private schools

The Towson area has a number of long-established private schools at the secondary school level, including Loyola Blakefield, Calvert Hall College High School, Concordia Preparatory School, and Notre Dame Preparatory School.

Notable people

Medical facilities

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  2. ^ "Definition of Towson". merriam-webster.com. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  3. ^ "NACo County Explorer". National Association of Counties.
  4. ^ a b c . Towson Chamber of Commerce. 2006. Archived from the original on February 12, 2008. Retrieved January 11, 2008.
  5. ^ "Towson: A Pictorial History of a Maryland Town", page 13, by Henry George Hahn, Carl Behm, 1977, Donning Company, ISBN 0-915442-36-1
  6. ^ "International Students & Scholars". Towson University.
  7. ^ "History on Tap: Recher Owners Revive Towson Tavern". patch.com. August 3, 2011. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c Brook Gunning and Molly O'Donovan (1999). Towson and the Villages of Ruxton and Lutherville. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-0226-X.
  9. ^ a b c d A Brief History of West Towson, by David A. Loizeaux . Archived from the original on February 17, 2006. Retrieved February 17, 2006.
  10. ^ Ann Milkovich McKee (2007). Images of America — Hampton National Historic Site. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-4418-2.
  11. ^ a b The Jeffersonian, Towson MD, Friday, November 16, 1945 (Vol. XXXV - No. 4)
  12. ^ Baltimore County Union March 20, 1869
  13. ^ OTHER SUBURBAN ESTATES, Jun 23, 1890; ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The Baltimore Sun pg. 4
  14. ^ a b Historical marker, Towson Courthouse, Baltimore County Historical Society.
  15. ^ The Architecture of Baltimore an Illustrated History, Hayward & Shivers, 2004 ISBN 0-8018-7806-3, p. 142
  16. ^ Baltimore County Panorama, Brooks & Parsons, ISBN 0-937076-03-1, p. 29
  17. ^ https://mht.maryland.gov/secure/medusa/PDF/BaltimoreCounty/BA-97.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  18. ^ a b c Baker, Gary. . Civil War Interactive. Archived from the original on March 15, 2008. Retrieved November 1, 2009.
  19. ^ Baltimore County Library July 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Wang, Claire. "Civil War sites keep Maryland history alive". chicagotribune.com.
  21. ^ a b c "Seizure of arms at Towsontown". The Daily Dispatch. June 6, 1861. Retrieved November 1, 2009.
  22. ^ Hall, Clayton (1912). Baltimore: History, Page 198. Baltimore: History. Lewis Historical Publishing Company. p. 198. Retrieved November 1, 2009.
  23. ^ Background History of Harry Gilmor's Raid August 21, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Bruce, Philip (1916). The Dash on Baltimore. Brave Deeds of Confederate Soldiers. G. W. Jacobs. p. 283. Retrieved November 1, 2009.
  25. ^ Daniel Carroll Toomey (1983). The Civil War in Maryland. Baltimore, Md.: Toomey Press. pp. 127–129. ISBN 0-9612670-0-3.
  26. ^ A History of Baltimore County, Neal A. Brooks and Eric J. Rockel, ISBN 0-9602326-1-3, p. 293
  27. ^ Maryland Journal, Sept. 14, 1867, Feb., 2 1878; (Towson) Union News, June 9, 1917.
  28. ^ A History of Baltimore County, Neal A. Brooks and Eric J. Rockel, ISBN 0-9602326-1-3, p. 297
  29. ^ A History of Baltimore County, Neal A. Brooks and Eric J. Rockel, ISBN 0-9602326-1-3, p. 298
  30. ^ a b . Towson University. Archived from the original on January 7, 2008. Retrieved September 11, 2007.
  31. ^ "Towson University". Maryland Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 11, 2007.
  32. ^ . Towson University. Archived from the original on June 8, 2010. Retrieved September 11, 2007.
  33. ^ Coston, Robert G. "Interview with the author Robert G. Coston". To Scotland and Back, January 2010
  34. ^ "US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990". United States Census Bureau. February 12, 2011. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
  35. ^ A History of Baltimore County, Neal A. Brooks and Eric J. Rockel, ISBN 0-9602326-1-3, p. 292
  36. ^ "TOWSON, MARYLAND". weatherbase.com. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  37. ^ "DPSCS Contact List by Agency". dpscs.state.md.us. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  38. ^ "Contact Us - BCPS". www.bcps.org. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  39. ^ Colbert, Ivena. "Contact the Police Department - Baltimore County". www.baltimorecountymd.gov. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  40. ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
  41. ^ Bureau, U. S. Census. "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  42. ^ "Towson Bike Beltway officially open to riders". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  43. ^ "Towson Bike Beltway to double in size". September 27, 2013. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  44. ^ George W. Hilton (1963). The Ma & Pa — A History of the Maryland & Pennsylvania Railroad. Berkeley, CA: Howell-North Books. LCCN 63017444.
  45. ^ John R. Eicker (August 30, 1964). "The Ma and Pa's Last Run from Baltimore to York". The Baltimore Sun.
  46. ^ Loni Ingraham (May 26, 1999). "'Ma and Pa' railroad abutments get HTI plaque". The Towson Times.
  47. ^ Kaiser, Rob (December 22, 1997). "Towson Marketplace undergoing a rebirth". Baltimore Business Journal. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  48. ^ https://archive.org/details/historyofgoucher00knip page 10
  49. ^ Musser, Frederic O. (1990). The History of Goucher College, 1930-1985. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 70. ISBN 0-8018-3902-5.
  50. ^ . goucher.edu. Archived from the original on March 29, 2012. Retrieved February 10, 2015.
  51. ^ "School Profile". Ridge Ruxton School. Baltimore County Public Schools. Archived from the original on July 13, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2010.
  52. ^ Baltimore County, Its History Progress and Opportunities, by T. Scott Offutt and Elmer R. Haile, The Jeffersonian Publishing Company inc. 1916 - Enoch Pratt Library REF XF Md. 182.1.03
  53. ^ Withay, Justyn. "Think Baltimore Music Is Weird? In The '90s, Towson And Glen Arm Music Was Even Weirder". bandwidth.wamu.org. Retrieved May 11, 2018.

External links

  • Towson Town Center
  • Towson Chamber of Commerce
  • Towson Junior Chamber
  • The Greater Towson Committee
  • A Short History of the WTNA, by Richard Parsons
  • Eudowood Sanatarium (Hospital for Consumptives of Maryland)[2][permanent dead link]

towson, maryland, towson, redirects, here, other, uses, towson, disambiguation, towson, unincorporated, community, census, designated, place, baltimore, county, maryland, united, states, population, 2010, census, county, seat, baltimore, county, second, most, . Towson redirects here For other uses see Towson disambiguation Towson ˈ t aʊ s e n 2 is an unincorporated community and a census designated place in Baltimore County Maryland United States The population was 55 197 as of the 2010 census It is the county seat 3 of Baltimore County and the second most populous unincorporated county seat in the United States after Ellicott City the seat of nearby Howard County southwest of Baltimore 4 Towson MarylandCensus designated placeMotto Location within Baltimore CountyCoordinates 39 23 35 N 76 36 34 W 39 39306 N 76 60944 W 39 39306 76 60944 Coordinates 39 23 35 N 76 36 34 W 39 39306 N 76 60944 W 39 39306 76 60944Country United StatesState MarylandCountyBaltimoreArea 1 Total14 29 sq mi 37 01 km2 Land14 15 sq mi 36 66 km2 Water0 14 sq mi 0 35 km2 Elevation463 ft 141 m Population 2020 Total59 553 Density4 207 80 sq mi 1 624 62 km2 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP codes21286 21204 21252 21212 county Area code s 410 443 and 667FIPS code24 78425GNIS feature ID0591420 Contents 1 History 1 1 1600s 1 2 1700s 1 3 1800s 1 4 1900s 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Government 4 Demographics 5 Transportation 5 1 Roads 5 2 Public transportation 5 3 Pedestrians and bicycles 5 4 Ma and Pa Railroad 6 Shopping and other attractions 6 1 Hampton Mansion 6 2 Towson Town Center 6 3 Towson Square 6 4 The Shops at Kenilworth 6 5 Towson Place 6 6 SECU Arena and Unitas Stadium 7 Education 7 1 Colleges and universities 7 2 Public schools 7 3 Private schools 8 Notable people 9 Medical facilities 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory Edit The historic 1854 Baltimore County Courthouse located in Towson Maryland 1600s Edit The first inhabitants of the future Towson and central Baltimore County region were the Susquehannock people who hunted in the area Their region included all of Baltimore County though their primary settlement was farther northeast along the Susquehanna River 5 1700s Edit Towson was settled in 1752 when Pennsylvania brothers William and Thomas Towson began farming an area of Sater s Hill northeast of the present day York and Joppa Roads 6 William s son Ezekiel opened the Towson Hotel to serve the growing number of farmers bringing their produce and livestock to the port of Baltimore He built the hotel at current day Shealy Avenue and York Road near the area s main crossroads 7 The village became known as Towsontown 4 8 The property in West Towson came from two land grants 400 acre Gott s Hope in 1719 and Gunner s Range in 1706 9 In 1790 businessman Capt Charles Ridgely completed the Hampton Mansion just north of Towsontown the largest private house in America at the time The Ridgelys lived there for six generations until 1948 10 It is now preserved as the Hampton National Historic Site and open to the public 1800s Edit Grafton Marsh a surgeon during the War of 1812 and his brother Josiah Marsh settled their families in a collection of early houses known as Gott s Hope that was part of a group along Joppa Road They consolidated four of the structures into a larger dwelling that they called Marshmont The brothers went into business together as medical practitioners Neither had any heirs but were joined in practice later by their nephew Dr Grafton Marsh Bosley who eventually inherited the medical practice the Marshmont compound and a 140 acre farm The farm extended west of York Road south of Joppa Road north of the Sheppard Pratt Hospital and east of Woodbine Avenue 11 In 1869 12 Bosley and his wife Margaret Nicholson then built a new home in an area of the property known as Highlands 13 or Highland Park which they named Uplands 9 The ratification of the second Maryland Constitution of 1851 provided for the jurisdictional separation of the former Baltimore Town founded in 1729 Baltimore Town had served as the county seat since 1767 now the City of Baltimore since its incorporation in 1796 97 by the General Assembly of Maryland Several tortured sets of negotiations occurred to divide the various assets of the city and the county such as the downtown courthouse of 1805 the city county jail of 1801 along the Jones Falls at East Madison Street and the almshouse which was also jointly owned After a series of elections and referendums on February 13 1854 Towson became by popular vote the choice of the remaining now mostly rural eastern northern and western portions of the county as the new county seat of Baltimore County 14 The Baltimore County Courthouse still in use by 2015 with its various annexes and the separate county courts and administrative building was originally designed by the local city architectural firm of Dixon Balbirnie and Dixon 15 It was completed within a year constructed of limestone and marble donated by the well known Ridgely family of nearby Hampton Mansion on land donated by Towson doctor Grafton Marsh Bosley 8 11 14 The courthouse was subsequently enlarged in 1910 through additional designs for north and south wings by well known and regarded city architects Baldwin amp Pennington Additional expansions later in 1926 and 1958 eventually created an H shaped plan for the courthouse An additional modernistic Baltimore County Courts Building with room for the new charter government since 1956 and administration of a county executive and county council plus administrative and executive departments was erected in 1970 71 across a plaza to the west of the older historic courthouse 16 The old Baltimore County Jail was built in 1855 and was later replaced in the 1980s by a new modern Baltimore County Detention Center north of the town on Kenilworth Drive with an addition constructed in the 2010s From 1850 to 1874 another notable land owner Amos Matthews had a farm of 150 acres 0 61 km2 that with the exception of the 17 acre 69 000 m2 largely natural parcel where the Kelso Home for Girls currently Towson YMCA was later erected was wholly developed into the neighborhoods of West Towson Southland Hills and other subdivisions beginning in the middle 1920s 9 The former Grafton Bosley estate Uplands 17 Towson Maryland which later became the Presbyterian Home of Maryland photo c 1930 During the Civil War Towson was the scene of two minor engagements Many local citizens were sympathetic to the Southern Confederate cause so much so that Ady s Hotel later named the Towson Hotel and the current site of the 1920s era Towson Theatre later the Recher Theatre flew the Southern flag 18 19 20 The Union Army found it necessary to overtake the town by force on June 2 1861 21 During the raid the Union Army seized weapons from citizens at Ady s Hotel 21 A local paper in jest refers to the strongly fortified and almost impregnable city of Towsontown and downplays the need for the attack stating the distinguished Straw with only two hundred and fifty men has taken a whole city and nearly frightened two old women out of their wits 21 The second engagement took place around July 12 1864 between Union and Confederate forces On July 10 1864 a 135 man Confederate cavalry detachment attacked the Northern Central Railway to the north in nearby Cockeysville under orders from Gen Bradley T Johnson of Frederick Maryland The First and Second Maryland Cavalry led by Baltimore County native and pre war member of the Towson Horse Guards Maj Harry W Gilmor of Glen Ellen attacked strategic targets throughout Baltimore and Harford counties including cutting telegraph wires along Harford Road capturing two trains and a Union general and destroying a railroad bridge in Joppa Maryland Following what became known as Gilmor s Raid the cavalry encamped in Towson overnight at Ady s Hotel where his men rested and Gilmor met with friends 18 22 The next day a large federal cavalry unit was dispatched from Baltimore to overtake Gilmor s forces Though outnumbered by more than two to one the Confederate cavalry attacked the federal unit breaking the federal unit and chasing them down York Road to around current day Woodbourne Avenue within Baltimore city limits 18 23 24 Gilmor s forces traveled south along York Road as far south as Govans before heading west to rejoin Gen Johnson s main force 25 Following the war Gilmor served as the Baltimore City Police Commissioner in the 1870s The Towson fire of 1878 destroyed most of the 500 block along the York Turnpike causing an estimated 38 000 in damage 26 27 During the summer of 1894 the Towson Water Company laid wooden pipes and installed fire hydrants connected to an artesian well near Aigburth Vale On November 2 1894 Towson was supplied with electric service through connection with the Mount Washington Electric Light and Power Company 28 1900s Edit At the beginning of the century Towson remained largely a rural community Land continued to be sold by the acre rather than as home parcels Most residences lay within Towson proper no houses existed west of Central Avenue along Allegheny or Pennsylvania Avenues and there were only three homes along the West Chesapeake Avenue corridor 29 In the 1910s the Maryland State Normal School MSNS now known as Towson University was relocated to Towson The Maryland Legislature had established the MSNS in 1865 as Maryland s first teacher training school or normal school 30 The institution officially opened its doors on January 15 1866 31 however as time passed enrollment in the school grew exponentially which rendered the facilities inadequate In 1910 the General Assembly formed a committee to oversee site selection budget and design plans for a new campus It settled on an 80 acre 320 000 m2 site in Towson The General Assembly financed the 600 000 move in 1912 30 Construction then began in 1913 on the Administration Building now known as Stephens Hall In September 1915 the new campus comprising Stephens Hall Newell Hall and the power plant began classes 32 The college underwent numerous name changes settling on Towson University in 1997 As the growth of Baltimore s suburbs became more pronounced after World War II considerable office development took place in Towson s central core area Many of the large Victorian and colonial style residences in the vicinity of the Court House were demolished in the 1980s and 1990s to make way for offices and parking Towson United Methodist Church In 1839 Epsom Chapel became the first Christian house of worship in Towson used by various denominations 4 Due to population growth in the late 19th and early 20th centuries several churches were built to serve the community such as Calvary Baptist Church Immaculate Conception Catholic Church Trinity Episcopal Church First Methodist Church and Towson Presbyterian Church Epsom Chapel was demolished in 1950 when Goucher College sold a portion of its property for development of the Towson Plaza shopping center now Towson Town Center First Methodist Church moved in 1958 to land also acquired from Goucher College and is now Towson United Methodist Church 8 Author Robert Coston who grew up in the area of Towson now called Historic East Towson recalled in an interview the unique African American history of that area during the mid century I think that the Towson Maryland area that I am familiar with differs from other parts of Maryland because of the proximity to one of the largest slave plantations in the country The Ridgely Plantation which owned all of the property from Baltimore County to Baltimore City and other surrounding areas This was a very unique place of which I have never heard of any equal to it Every African American school age child in Baltimore County had to attend school at some point at Carver in East Towson I realize now that as a youngster the older African Americans avoided talking about slavery or the nearby Ridgely Plantation because they themselves were not too far removed from slavery itself 33 Geography EditTowson is located at 39 23 35 N 76 36 34 W 39 39306 N 76 60944 W 39 39306 76 60944 39 392980 76 609562 34 According to the United States Census Bureau the CDP has a total area of 14 2 square miles 37 km2 of which 14 0 square miles 36 km2 is land and 0 2 square miles 0 52 km2 1 06 is water The community is located immediately north of Baltimore City inside the Beltway I 695 east of I 83 and along York Road Its census boundaries include Pikesville to the west Lutherville and Hampton to the north Parkville to the east and Baltimore to the south Major neighborhoods in Towson include Anneslie Idlewylde Greenbriar Southland Hills Rodgers Forge Stoneleigh Wiltondale Towson Manor Village Hunt Crest Estates Knollwood Donnybrook East Towson Loch Raven Village and West Towson Ruxton which lies to the west is sometimes considered a part of Towson Eudowood is a Towson neighborhood named after Eudocia the wife of Dr John T Stansbury on whose former estate it is situated 35 Climate Edit The climate in this area is characterized by hot humid summers and generally mild to cool winters According to the Koppen Climate Classification system Towson has a humid subtropical climate abbreviated Cfa on climate maps 36 Government EditThe Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services is headquartered at Suite 1000 at 300 East Joppa Road in the Towson CDP 37 In addition both the Baltimore County Public Schools 38 and the Baltimore County Police Department possess headquarters that are located in the Towson CDP 39 Demographics EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2018 Historical populationCensus Pop 196019 090 197077 768307 4 198051 083 34 3 199049 445 3 2 200051 7934 7 201055 1976 6 202059 5537 9 Census Boundaries in 1970 extended beyond the community properAs of the census 40 of 2000 there were 51 793 people 21 063 households and 11 331 families residing in the CDP The population density was 3 688 7 inhabitants per square mile 1 424 2 km2 There were 21 997 housing units at an average density of 1 566 6 per square mile 604 9 km2 The racial makeup of the CDP was 86 9 White 7 53 African American 0 10 Native American 3 7 Asian and 1 9 Hispanic There were 21 063 households out of which 23 1 had children under the age of 18 living with them 43 6 were married couples living together 7 8 had a female householder with no husband present and 46 2 were non families 36 4 of all households were made up of individuals and 17 3 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 16 and the average family size was 2 87 In the CDP the population was spread out with 17 4 under the age of 18 17 5 from 18 to 24 24 9 from 25 to 44 20 1 from 45 to 64 and 20 1 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 38 years For every 100 females there were 82 8 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 78 8 males The median income for a household in the CDP was 53 775 and the median income for a family was 75 832 these figures had risen to 64 313 and 98 744 respectively as of a 2007 estimate 41 Males had a median income of 49 554 versus 38 172 for females The per capita income for the CDP was 32 502 About 2 5 of families and 7 7 of the population were below the poverty line including 3 8 of those under age 18 and 4 7 of those age 65 or over Transportation EditRoads Edit Major roads in Towson include Allegheny Avenue Auburn Drive Bellona Avenue Bosley Avenue Burke Avenue Charles Street MD 139 Chesapeake Avenue Cromwell Bridge Road Dulaney Valley Road MD 146 Fairmount Avenue Goucher Boulevard Hillen Road Joppa Road Loch Raven Boulevard Osler Drive Pennsylvania Avenue Providence Road Putty Hill Avenue Stevenson Lane Towsontown Boulevard Washington Avenue York Road MD 45 Public transportation Edit The Baltimore Light Rail provides service at the Lutherville Station The Towson area has several bus lines operated by the Maryland Transit Administration These include Route 3 which serves the Loch Raven Boulevard corridor with selected trips along Joppa Road Route 8 which operates along York Road to Lutherville and downtown Baltimore formerly the 8 streetcar line Route 11 which serves Towsontown Boulevard the Charles Street corridor and GBMC hospital Route 12 which operates along York and Dulaney Valley Roads to Stella Maris Hospice at the times needed for the facility s change of shift Route 48 QuickBus which operates between Towson Town Center and downtown Baltimore along the same route as 8 except with limited stops for a speedier trip Route 55 which operates cross county service to Parkville Overlea Rosedale and EssexTowson also has light rail service to downtown Baltimore and BWI Airport along its periphery via the Lutherville and Falls Road stops though there are no stops actually in Towson Towson University and Goucher College also operate bus services for their students and the Collegetown Shuttle has several stops in the area Pedestrians and bicycles Edit The Towson Bike Beltway opened in September 2014 It includes the addition of bicycle lanes on several major streets encircling the downtown area 42 The main loop includes Bosley Avenue which is part of Maryland Route 45 Bypass Fairmount Avenue and Goucher Boulevard these three roads will receive full bike lanes The rest of the loop utilizing Hillen Road and Towsontown Boulevard will receive signage alerting motorists to expect an increase in bicycle traffic on those roads After this initial construction several spurs are envisioned to branch from the main loop with several reaching as far south as the Baltimore city line 43 Ma and Pa Railroad Edit Ma amp Pa train crossing York Road Towson in the 1950s the bridge was removed in 1959 The remaining bridge abutments in 2014 Ma and Pa Abutment Commemorative Plaque in Towson Railroad service began to Towson on April 17 1882 with construction of the Baltimore amp Delta Railway Company soon renamed the Baltimore amp Lehigh Railroad and later reorganized as the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad The Ma and Pa as it was affectionately known locally formerly operated between Baltimore and York Pennsylvania through Towson Its passenger station was located just west of York Road on Susquehanna Avenue Passenger service was discontinued on August 31 1954 and the railroad line through Towson was finally abandoned altogether on June 11 1958 leaving only the stone abutments where the tracks crossed York Road on a steel girder bridge 44 One passenger on the last passenger train recalled that many riders came from as far away as Boston and Washington D C to participate in the historic event along with members of the National Railway Historical Society 45 Historic Towson a local group of history buffs installed a bronze plaque on the west abutment in 1999 commemorating the defunct railroad s place in Towson s history 46 Shopping and other attractions EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Hampton Plaza Towson features some of Baltimore County s largest shopping centers as well as other popular venues of interest These include Hampton Mansion Edit Main article Hampton National Historic Site Hampton National Historic Site is operated by the U S National Park Service The home and grounds were formerly the core of the vast Ridgely estate The site includes the Ridgely s 18th century Georgian manor house gardens grounds and the original stone slave quarters The National Park Service offers free admission and guided tours Towson Town Center Edit Main article Towson Town Center Towson Town Center is Baltimore County s largest indoor mall with four stories of shops and a parking garage Nearby is Allegheny Avenue the main street of downtown Towson with a variety of eateries and stores Towson Square Edit Main article Towson Square A new outdoor mall Towson Square was under construction in 2013 After quick construction the Square opened in October 2014 The Shops at Kenilworth Edit Main article The Shops at Kenilworth The Shops at Kenilworth formerly known as Kenilworth Park and also as Kenilworth Bazaar is a small indoor mall located on Kenilworth Drive Towson Place Edit Main article Towson Place Towson Place is a major shopping area near Joppa Road Goucher Boulevard and Putty Hill Avenue Built on the site of the Eudowood Sanatarium the original Eudowood Plaza shopping center was an open mall anchored by Montgomery Ward Renovated in the early 1980s to an indoor mall and renamed Towson Marketplace the location was then redeveloped in 1998 as an open air collection of big box stores and other stores and restaurants 47 including a Walmart Target Marshall s and Bed Bath amp Beyond Towson Place is next to Calvert Hall College High School a Roman Catholic Lasallian Christian Brothers secondary school which moved in 1960 to its suburban location from its original site founded 1845 in the city s Mount Vernon Belvedere neighborhood on Cathedral Street at West Mulberry Street SECU Arena and Unitas Stadium Edit Main articles Towson Center Unitas Stadium and SECU Arena Towson University s arena Towson Center and stadium Johnny Unitas Stadium are both main venues for Towson Tiger athletics and other events SECU Arena which opened in Spring 2013 now hosts the Towson Tiger Men s and Women s Basketball teams Women s Gymnastics and Women s Volleyball teams Education EditColleges and universities Edit Towson University is a public school in southern Towson Its student population is greater than 20 000 making it the second largest institution in the University System of Maryland TU is home to the largest business school in the state with 2 500 students It was founded in 1866 as the Maryland State Normal School for the training of teachers Originally the school was located at several sites in the city It underwent several name changes before moving in 1915 to an expansive campus just south of Towson on the west side of York Road The administration and classroom structure later named Stephens Hall has a cupola in red brick with limestone trim in English Tudor Elizabethan Jacobethan architecture style and was by several other similar campus buildings to the northeast in similar style Also located in Towson is Goucher College a small private liberal arts school that was founded in 1885 48 Goucher was a women s college until it went coeducational in 1986 It was established as the Women s College of Baltimore and its founders pastors John Goucher who would later become its namesake and John B Van Meter were closely affiliated with Methodist Episcopal Church The school was originally based in Baltimore city and moved to its current campus in Towson in 1953 49 The old campus in Baltimore which the school no longer owns or occupies is now known as Old Goucher and is a registered historic district The current 287 acre campus of the school in Towson was also notably registered as a historic district and in 2007 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places for its unique and innovative architecture 50 Public schools Edit Towson High School Towson is served by the Baltimore County Public Schools district and the Baltimore County Board of Education headquarters is also located there There are three high schools Towson High School founded in 1873 was the first secondary school provided It is the second oldest in the school system and Towson s largest with its most recent stone structure constructed in 1949 Loch Raven High School dates from 1972 The Carver Center for Arts and Technology is a local magnet school and vocational technical secondary school in a newly constructed building It was established in 1992 and known as the Central Technical High School It was renamed for the African American scientist George Washington Carver 1864 1943 and to remember the previous Carver High School in Towson That school had served black residents of the county for several decades in the previously racially segregated public school system before the early 1960s when the suburban county lagged behind fully integrating after the 1954 landmark Brown vs Board of Education decision by the U S Supreme Court Towson is served by seven public elementary schools in the school district Rodgers Forge Stoneleigh Riderwood Hampton West Towson Pleasant Plains and Cromwell Valley Regional Magnet School of Technology which serves students from all over Baltimore County Towson is served by two public middle schools Dumbarton Middle School and Loch Raven Technical Academy Some students are also zoned to attend Ridgely Middle School in Lutherville further north Also located in Towson is Ridge Ruxton School a special education school serving the central area of Baltimore County including Reisterstown Owings Mills Parkville Cockeysville and Hunt Valley The school describes itself as offering programs for students from three to twenty one years of age who have been identified as developmentally delayed intellectually limited autistic like and or multi handicapped 51 Private schools Edit The Towson area has a number of long established private schools at the secondary school level including Loyola Blakefield Calvert Hall College High School Concordia Preparatory School and Notre Dame Preparatory School Notable people EditSpiro Agnew 1918 1996 Vice President of the United States 1969 1973 All Time Low pop punk band Albert Cassell 1895 1969 architect William Purington Cole Jr 1889 1957 U S Congressman for Maryland s 2nd District 1927 1929 and 1931 1942 Mel Kiper Jr born 1960 ESPN draft analyst Divine 1945 1988 actor the drag persona of Harris Glenn Milstead Jean Marie Jeff Donnell 1921 1988 film and TV actress Charles S Dutton actor who attended Towson University F Scott Fitzgerald 1896 1940 writer Jane Frank Jane Schenthal Frank 1918 1986 artist Sally Lucas Jean 18 June 1878 5 July 1971 Health educator and nurse Dorothy Lamour 1914 1996 film actress G E Lowman 1897 1965 radio evangelist Gino Marchetti Hall of Fame NFL defensive end Dallas Texans Baltimore Colts Kimmie Meissner figure skater and last US world figure skating champion Ana Montes Defense Intelligence Agency Senior Analyst convicted of spying for Cuba Anita Nall born 1976 1992 Summer Olympics gold medalist swimmer Thomas W Offutt land owner president and director of the Second National Bank Towson 9 52 Michael Phelps born 1985 swimmer holds record for most gold Olympic medals most gold medals in individual events and most career Olympic medals Capt Charles Ridgely III 1733 1790 Hampton estate founder and ironworks owner Charles Carnan Ridgely 1760 1829 Governor of Maryland 1815 1818 Eliza Ridgely of Hampton 1803 1867 The Lady with a Harp Thomas Roberts dayside anchor and occasional prime time fill in on MSNBC Don Shula 1930 2020 head coach and player with the Baltimore Colts led the Miami Dolphins to the only perfect season in NFL history holds NFL record for most wins as a head coach Major General Nathan Towson 1784 1854 distinguished officer of the War of 1812 former Paymaster of the US Army namesake of Fort Towson Oklahoma Johnny Unitas 1933 2002 Hall of Fame NFL quarterback Baltimore Colts San Diego Chargers Ricky Van Veen owner and co founder of CollegeHumor website John Waters filmmaker and activist Bill Kramer executive CEO of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and SciencesMedical facilities EditGreater Baltimore Medical Center St Joseph Medical Center Sheppard Pratt HospitalIn popular culture EditIn the 1990s Towson was the center of the Towson Glen Arm music and art collective 53 The fictional character Elaine Benes of the 1990s NBC sitcom Seinfeld is from Towson The fictional character Sam Fisher of the Splinter Cell video game series by Ubisoft was born in Towson as well as residing in a townhouse as stated in the novelizations of the series by Raymond Benson Tom Clancy s fictional CIA analyst character Jack Ryan was born in Towson See also EditStoneleigh Rodgers Forge a former census designated place located within Towson during the 1960 census Early Drinking Straws and Swizzle Sticks by Glassips Inc invented and manufactured in Towson 1930 1979 United States Post Office Towson BranchReferences Edit 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 26 2022 Definition of Towson merriam webster com Retrieved September 9 2018 NACo County Explorer National Association of Counties a b c Towson Maryland A Great Place to Live Work amp Play A Synopsis of Towson MD Towson Chamber of Commerce 2006 Archived from the original on February 12 2008 Retrieved January 11 2008 Towson A Pictorial History of a Maryland Town page 13 by Henry George Hahn Carl Behm 1977 Donning Company ISBN 0 915442 36 1 International Students amp Scholars Towson University History on Tap Recher Owners Revive Towson Tavern patch com August 3 2011 Retrieved September 9 2018 a b c Brook Gunning and Molly O Donovan 1999 Towson and the Villages of Ruxton and Lutherville Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 0226 X a b c d A Brief History of West Towson by David A Loizeaux BCPL History and Genealogy A Brief History of West Towson Archived from the original on February 17 2006 Retrieved February 17 2006 Ann Milkovich McKee 2007 Images of America Hampton National Historic Site Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 4418 2 a b The Jeffersonian Towson MD Friday November 16 1945 Vol XXXV No 4 Baltimore County Union March 20 1869 OTHER SUBURBAN ESTATES Jun 23 1890 ProQuest Historical Newspapers The Baltimore Sun pg 4 a b Historical marker Towson Courthouse Baltimore County Historical Society The Architecture of Baltimore an Illustrated History Hayward amp Shivers 2004 ISBN 0 8018 7806 3 p 142 Baltimore County Panorama Brooks amp Parsons ISBN 0 937076 03 1 p 29 https mht maryland gov secure medusa PDF BaltimoreCounty BA 97 pdf bare URL PDF a b c Baker Gary Gilmor s Ride Around Baltimore Civil War Interactive Archived from the original on March 15 2008 Retrieved November 1 2009 Baltimore County Library Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Wang Claire Civil War sites keep Maryland history alive chicagotribune com a b c Seizure of arms at Towsontown The Daily Dispatch June 6 1861 Retrieved November 1 2009 Hall Clayton 1912 Baltimore History Page 198 Baltimore History Lewis Historical Publishing Company p 198 Retrieved November 1 2009 Background History of Harry Gilmor s Raid Archived August 21 2008 at the Wayback Machine Bruce Philip 1916 The Dash on Baltimore Brave Deeds of Confederate Soldiers G W Jacobs p 283 Retrieved November 1 2009 Daniel Carroll Toomey 1983 The Civil War in Maryland Baltimore Md Toomey Press pp 127 129 ISBN 0 9612670 0 3 A History of Baltimore County Neal A Brooks and Eric J Rockel ISBN 0 9602326 1 3 p 293 Maryland Journal Sept 14 1867 Feb 2 1878 Towson Union News June 9 1917 A History of Baltimore County Neal A Brooks and Eric J Rockel ISBN 0 9602326 1 3 p 297 A History of Baltimore County Neal A Brooks and Eric J Rockel ISBN 0 9602326 1 3 p 298 a b History Towson At a Glance Towson University Archived from the original on January 7 2008 Retrieved September 11 2007 Towson University Maryland Online Encyclopedia Retrieved September 11 2007 Chronology of Towson University History Towson University Archived from the original on June 8 2010 Retrieved September 11 2007 Coston Robert G Interview with the author Robert G Coston To Scotland and Back January 2010 US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau February 12 2011 Retrieved April 23 2011 A History of Baltimore County Neal A Brooks and Eric J Rockel ISBN 0 9602326 1 3 p 292 TOWSON MARYLAND weatherbase com Retrieved September 9 2018 DPSCS Contact List by Agency dpscs state md us Retrieved September 9 2018 Contact Us BCPS www bcps org Retrieved January 22 2019 Colbert Ivena Contact the Police Department Baltimore County www baltimorecountymd gov Retrieved January 22 2019 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Bureau U S Census U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved March 2 2019 Towson Bike Beltway officially open to riders baltimoresun com Retrieved September 9 2018 Towson Bike Beltway to double in size September 27 2013 Retrieved April 26 2014 George W Hilton 1963 The Ma amp Pa A History of the Maryland amp Pennsylvania Railroad Berkeley CA Howell North Books LCCN 63017444 John R Eicker August 30 1964 The Ma and Pa s Last Run from Baltimore to York The Baltimore Sun Loni Ingraham May 26 1999 Ma and Pa railroad abutments get HTI plaque The Towson Times Kaiser Rob December 22 1997 Towson Marketplace undergoing a rebirth Baltimore Business Journal Retrieved October 5 2013 https archive org details historyofgoucher00knip page 10 Musser Frederic O 1990 The History of Goucher College 1930 1985 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 70 ISBN 0 8018 3902 5 National Historic Register Goucher College goucher edu Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved February 10 2015 School Profile Ridge Ruxton School Baltimore County Public Schools Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved January 25 2010 Baltimore County Its History Progress and Opportunities by T Scott Offutt and Elmer R Haile The Jeffersonian Publishing Company inc 1916 Enoch Pratt Library REF XF Md 182 1 03 Withay Justyn Think Baltimore Music Is Weird In The 90s Towson And Glen Arm Music Was Even Weirder bandwidth wamu org Retrieved May 11 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Towson Maryland Historic Towson Inc Towson Town Center Towson Chamber of Commerce Towson Junior Chamber The Greater Towson Committee Towsontown Spring Festival A Short History of the WTNA by Richard Parsons 1 Eudowood Sanatarium Hospital for Consumptives of Maryland 2 permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Towson Maryland amp oldid 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