place

McCormick Road station

1997 establishments in MarylandBaltimore Light Rail stationsHunt Valley, MarylandMaryland railway station stubsRailway stations in Baltimore County, Maryland
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1997Tram stubs
Train at McCormick Road station, August 2014
Train at McCormick Road station, August 2014

McCormick Road station is a Baltimore Light Rail station located in an industrial park in Hunt Valley, Maryland. It is named after the adjacent road, itself named for McCormick & Company, whose offices are nearby. The station was opened in 1997 as part of the system's northern extension. It has a single side platform serving a single track.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article McCormick Road station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

McCormick Road station
Schilling Circle,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: McCormick Road stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.489555555556 ° E -76.658972222222 °
placeShow on map

Address

McCormick Road

Schilling Circle 265
21031 , Hunt Valley
Maryland, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q6800581)
linkOpenStreetMap (844179415)

Train at McCormick Road station, August 2014
Train at McCormick Road station, August 2014
Share experience

Nearby Places

DigiBarn Computer Museum
DigiBarn Computer Museum

The DigiBarn Computer Museum, or simply DigiBarn, is a computer history museum in Boulder Creek, California, United States. The museum is housed in a 90-year-old barn constructed from old-growth Redwood in the Santa Cruz Mountains, which is adjacent to Silicon Valley. It was co-founded by Bruce Damer and Allan Lundell on May 7, 2001. The primary focus of the museum's collection is on the birth and evolution of personal, interactive computing, starting with the LINC (1962), considered by some to be the first true personal computer, and leading on up through the homebrew microcomputer revolution of the 1970s, the propagation of personal computing to homes and businesses in the 1980s and the spread of networked computing in the 1990s. The Digibarn does have a few large machines on display such as a Cray-1 supercomputer. One notable point is that a large number of the Digibarn artifacts are available to visitors in a hands-on fashion, allowing them to boot up, load software and interact with the machines. The Digibarn collection has mainly been donated by individuals and companies in nearby Silicon Valley and around the world. The Digibarn has a major focus on the legacy of Xerox and the birth of the graphical user interface with a large collection of Apple products, although other historic computer systems are featured, including the Atari 400, Osborne 1, Kaypro II and the IBM 5150 (IBM PC). As of December 2021, most of the collection is on a long-term loan at the System Source Computer Museum.