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Evergreen on the Falls

Baltimore Registered Historic Place stubsHampden, BaltimoreHouses completed in 1860Houses in BaltimoreHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Baltimore
Italianate architecture in MarylandNeoclassical architecture in Maryland
Evergreen on the falls
Evergreen on the falls

Evergreen on the Falls, also known as the Snyder-Carroll House, is an historic 19th century home overlooking the Jones Falls valley and located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a 2+1⁄2-story, brick mansion in a rural version of the Victorian Italianate style. A serious fire in the early 1970s destroyed the furnishings and most of the interior. It was built about 1860 and was the home of the supervisor of the Mount Vernon Mills, Albert H. Carroll. It is headquarters of the Maryland Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.Evergreen on the Falls was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Evergreen on the Falls (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Evergreen on the Falls
Clipper Mill Road, Baltimore

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Wikipedia: Evergreen on the FallsContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.326944444444 ° E -76.635 °
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Address

Clipper Mill Road

Clipper Mill Road
21211 Baltimore
Maryland, United States
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Evergreen on the falls
Evergreen on the falls
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Wyman Park, Baltimore
Wyman Park, Baltimore

The community of Wyman Park is a border community that links Hampden to Roland Park. All of the Wyman Park areas were annexed to Baltimore City in 1888. The general boundaries consist of the area from south to north between 33rd Street and 40th Streets and west to east from Keswick Road to Wyman Park, which includes the southern portion of the Stony Run Trail. South of 40th Street, garden apartments, multi-story apartment buildings, and single-family residences have been built. People here tend to relate to the north along 40th Street and University Parkway and Johns Hopkins University. Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, this land remained attached to large rural estates, and the only settlement of note occurred in the adjacent Stony Run valley. Here, along the stream's west bank, two flour mills once operated. It is believed that one mill, Ensor's, was located opposite 36th Street. In the 1870s, the Swan Lake Narrow Gauge Railroad (later called the Baltimore and Lehigh Railroad, and in 1901, the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad) was built along Stony Run. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, a popular tavern, known as Biddy Rice's Saloon, operated along the tracks opposite Bottle Hill, upon which sits the present-day Tudor Arms Apartments. Most construction took place in the 1920s and continued into the 1960s with several small garden apartments. In addition, Keswick Nursing Home north of 40th Street has expanded, while next door Roland Park Place has replaced the Roland Park Country School. To the east Johns Hopkins University has slowly expanded into Wyman Park, and some of the open space has disappeared.