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Howard Park P.S. 218

1908 establishments in MarylandBaltimore Registered Historic Place stubsBuildings and structures in BaltimoreDefunct schools in MarylandNorthwest Baltimore
School buildings completed in 1908School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Baltimore
Howard School PS 218 Bmore MD
Howard School PS 218 Bmore MD

Howard Park P.S. 218, also known as School 7, is a historic elementary school located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is an early 20th-century brick school building located in the intact historic west Baltimore neighborhood of Howard Park. The earliest school building was constructed in 1908 and enlarged in 1913, 1936, and in 1957. The older sections are built of brick and accented with limestone details. It continued to function as a school until 1980.Howard Park P.S. 218 was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

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Howard Park P.S. 218
Liberty Heights Avenue, Baltimore Forest Park

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Wikipedia: Howard Park P.S. 218Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.331388888889 ° E -76.698333333333 °
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Address

Oaks at Liberty Senior Apartments

Liberty Heights Avenue 4801
21207 Baltimore, Forest Park
Maryland, United States
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Howard School PS 218 Bmore MD
Howard School PS 218 Bmore MD
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Wabash Avenue (Baltimore, Maryland)
Wabash Avenue (Baltimore, Maryland)

Wabash Avenue is a six-lane boulevard in northwest Baltimore, Maryland, that runs from Patterson Avenue to Hilton Street, mostly through the Arlington community, crossing over Northern Parkway and Cold Spring Lane along the way. The road starts near the Reisterstown Plaza Metro Subway Station and continues to just past the West Coldspring Metro Subway Station, where it narrows and becomes a one-way pair with Dorithan Road, which ends several blocks later at Hilton Street. Wabash Avenue actually begins as a stub near the Reisterstown Road Plaza. The stub exists where a longer road was intended as part of the original plans of Interstate 795. This portion of I-795, which would have run through historic Sudbrook Park before reaching the city, was fought and ultimately cancelled as a result of complaints from Sudbrook Park residents. This led to the cancellation of all parts of I-795 within the city, and its truncation to I-695 (the Baltimore Beltway) near the suburb of Pikesville. Still, the road was constructed as a Boulevard, and the Metro Subway was constructed along an overhead track directly parallel to the road. Three stations of the Metro system (Reisterstown Plaza, Rogers Avenue and West Coldspring) are located along Wabash Avenue. A second street, which also carries the Wabash Avenue name, branches north off Liberty Heights Avenue near Mondawmin Mall before coming to a dead end at an apartment complex situated near the Metro tracks south of the West Coldspring Station; it does not connect to the other Wabash Avenue. South of Liberty Heights Avenue, the road continues as Dukeland Street. A third street that carries the Wabash Avenue name is located in the suburb of Reisterstown, Maryland, and acts as a connector between Butler Road (MD 128) and Chatsworth Avenue, coming to a dead end beyond the latter road.