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Stewart's Department Store

1899 establishments in MarylandBaltimore Registered Historic Place stubsBuildings and structures in BaltimoreCommercial buildings completed in 1899Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Baltimore
Defunct companies based in BaltimoreDefunct department stores based in MarylandDepartment stores on the National Register of Historic PlacesDowntown BaltimoreItalian Renaissance Revival architecture in the United StatesRenaissance Revival architecture in MarylandRetail companies disestablished in 1983Retail companies established in 1901
Stewart Co Baltimore
Stewart Co Baltimore

Stewart's Department Store, also known as the Posner Building, is a historic department store building located on Howard Street at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Catholic Relief Services is currently headquartered there.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stewart's Department Store (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Stewart's Department Store
West Lexington Street, Baltimore Downtown

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Wikipedia: Stewart's Department StoreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.291944444444 ° E -76.619444444444 °
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Address

West Lexington Street 228
21201 Baltimore, Downtown
Maryland, United States
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Stewart Co Baltimore
Stewart Co Baltimore
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Nearby Places

Ford's Grand Opera House

Ford's Grand Opera House was a major music venue in Baltimore, Maryland, located on West Fayette Street between North Howard and Eutaw Streets. It was founded by theatre manager John T. Ford (also the owner of infamous Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. where President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, April 14, 1865) and designed by architect James J. Gifford. The opera house/theatre opened to the public on October 2, 1871, with a show that included readings from Shakespeare's "As You Like It" as well as vocal and orchestral performances. Then owned by 1950s–60s era theatre magnate Morris A. Mechanic, it closed almost 93 years later with its last Broadway show from New York City, "Something Funny Happened on the Way to the Forum" in 1964. It was replaced three years later as the prime site for Baltimore live theatre patrons with the opening in the landmark of the new downtown redevelopment project of Charles Center, the starkly modernistic "Brutalist" architecture of the Morris A. Mechanic Theatre at the southwest corner of Charles and Baltimore Streets, four blocks to the east.The Ford Opera house was later the site of newspaper publisher of the New York Tribune, Horace Greeley's nomination as the Liberal Republican Party candidate from a split Republican Party for the 1872 American Presidential election versus regular Republican Party candidate, incumbent 18th President, Ulysses S. Grant and Democratic candidate Seymour, who was reelected.