place

Public School No. 25

1892 establishments in MarylandBaltimore Registered Historic Place stubsDefunct schools in MarylandFell's Point, BaltimorePublic schools in Baltimore
Romanesque Revival architecture in MarylandSchool buildings completed in 1892School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in BaltimoreVictorian architecture in Maryland
Public School No. 25, S. Bond St, Baltimore City, Maryland
Public School No. 25, S. Bond St, Baltimore City, Maryland

Public School No. 25, also known as Captain Henry Fleete School, named for one of the earliest and most influential colonizers of Maryland, Henry Fleete Sr., and Primary School No. 25, is a historic elementary school located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a late Victorian brick structure with an imposing Romanesque tower. It is a two-story, brick structure with a ground-level basement and features a central three-story tower capped by a pyramidal roof. It served a school for nearly 75 years.Public School No. 25 was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Public School No. 25 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Public School No. 25
South Bond Street, Baltimore

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Public School No. 25Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.285 ° E -76.595277777778 °
placeShow on map

Address

South Bond Street 525
21231 Baltimore
Maryland, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Public School No. 25, S. Bond St, Baltimore City, Maryland
Public School No. 25, S. Bond St, Baltimore City, Maryland
Share experience

Nearby Places

Fell's Point, Baltimore
Fell's Point, Baltimore

Fell's Point is a historic waterfront neighborhood in southeastern Baltimore, Maryland. It was established around 1763 along the north shore of the Baltimore Harbor and the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River. The area has many antique, music, and other stores, restaurants, coffee bars, a municipal markethouse with individual stalls, and over 120 pubs. Located 1.5 miles east of Baltimore's downtown central business district and the Jones Falls stream (which splits the city, running from northern Baltimore County), Fells Point has a maritime past and the air of a seafaring town. It also has the greatest concentration of drinking establishments and restaurants in the city.The neighborhood has also been historically the home of large immigrant populations of Irish, Germans, Jews, Poles and other Eastern European nationalities such as Ukrainians, Russians, Czechs, and Slovaks, throughout its 250-year-old history. Since the 1970s, a steadily increasing number of middle- to upper-middle-income residents has moved into the area, restoring and preserving historic homes and businesses. Upper Fell's Point to the north along Broadway has gained a sizable Latino population, primarily from waves of Mexican and Central American immigrants since the 1980s, and is sometimes now called "Spanish Town". This Fells Point waterfront is an upscale residential area and tourist destination featuring first rate hotels and restaurants. It can be reached by water taxi barges, on foot as it is a very short walk from the Inner Harbor, and by bus or car. Fells Point is one of several areas in and around Baltimore that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, (maintained by the National Park Service), the first designated from Maryland, and is one of the first registered historic districts in the United States to combine two separate waterfront communities (along with Federal Hill to the southwest across the Patapsco River and the Harbor on the "Old South Baltimore" peninsula of "Whetstone Point" at Fort McHenry).