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Sudbrook Park

Baltimore County, Maryland Registered Historic Place stubsBaltimore County, Maryland landmarksHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in MarylandNRHP infobox with nocatNational Register of Historic Places in Baltimore County, Maryland
Shingle Style architecture in MarylandUse mdy dates from August 2023
SUDBROOK PARK, BALTIMORE COUNTY, MD
SUDBROOK PARK, BALTIMORE COUNTY, MD

Sudbrook Park is a historic neighborhood near Pikesville, Maryland located just northwest of the Baltimore City limits in Baltimore County. The community dates to 1889 when it was designed by American landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. (1822–1903) and developed by the Sudbrook Company. Known most for designing well-known urban projects like Central Park in New York City, Olmsted conceived this "suburban village" with curved roads and open green spaces, traits that set the community apart from its contemporaries. Two homes in the district were designed by architect George Archer in the Colonial Revival style.Sudbrook Park was registered on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and from 1993 to 1999 portions of Sudbrook Park became listed as Baltimore County Historic Districts. Today, the community continues to uphold Olmsted's vision through community association regulations. It is a tight-knit community and holds several annual events and neighborhood activities.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sudbrook Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sudbrook Park
Sudbrook Lane,

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Wikipedia: Sudbrook ParkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.366111111111 ° E -76.730277777778 °
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Address

Sudbrook Lane 505
21208
Maryland, United States
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SUDBROOK PARK, BALTIMORE COUNTY, MD
SUDBROOK PARK, BALTIMORE COUNTY, MD
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Nearby Places

Druid Ridge Cemetery
Druid Ridge Cemetery

Druid Ridge Cemetery is located in Pikesville, Maryland, just outside the city of Baltimore. Among its monuments and graves are several noted sculptures by Hans Schuler and the final resting places of: Felix Agnus, American Civil War general and newspaper publisher Frederick Bauernschmidt (1864–1933), brewer and philanthropist Alfred Blalock, pioneering cardiovascular surgeon Patricia Breslin, actress Howard Bryant (1861–1930), Maryland state delegate and law professor Dorothy Benjamin Caruso, widow of tenor Enrico Caruso William Bullock Clark (1860–1917), American geologist William Jones "Boileryard" Clarke, baseball player and coach Claribel Cone, physician and art collector Etta Cone, famous art collector along with her sister who together helped establish the Baltimore Museum of Art Walter Dandy, one of the fathers of neurosurgery Samuel K. Dennis Jr. (1874–1953), Maryland politician and judge Anthony Hastings George, British Consul-General. Jennis Roy Galloway, Baltimore-born World War II Commander, later Managing Director of Union Carbide India, Ltd Elisabeth Gilman, daughter of Daniel Coit Gilman and prominent Maryland socialist and civil liberties advocate John F. Goucher, namesake of Goucher College Virginia Hall, Baltimore-born World War II spy for the British Special Operations Executive Eli Jones Henkle, U.S. Congressman, 5th District of Maryland William Henry Howell (1860–1945), American physiologist He was buried at Druid Ridge Cemetery. John Charles Linthicum, U.S. Congressman, 4th District of Maryland John Mays Little (died 1950), Maryland state delegate Adolf Meyer (1866–1950), Swiss-American psychiatrist Art Modell, owner of professional football teams Curt Motton, professional baseball player Rosa Ponselle, celebrated soprano Thomas Rowe Price, Jr. (1898-1983), investment banker and founder of T. Rowe Price Carl Vernon Sheridan, World War II Medal of Honor recipient George A. Solter (1873–1950), American judge and lawyer Hugh H. Young, pioneering urologist