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Bowie Town Center

2001 establishments in MarylandBuildings and structures in Bowie, MarylandShopping malls established in 2001Shopping malls in MarylandShopping malls in the Washington metropolitan area
United States shopping mall stubsWashington Prime Group
Bowie Town Center 01
Bowie Town Center 01

Bowie Town Center is an outdoor shopping mall located in Bowie, Maryland that opened in November 2001. The mall is located on Emerald Way near the interchange of US Route 301 and US Route 50. Bowie Town Center has 79 stores including Macy's, Safeway, and LA Fitness.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bowie Town Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bowie Town Center
Emerald Way, Bowie

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.943888888889 ° E -76.735277777778 °
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Address

Quickway Japanese Hibachi

Emerald Way 15548
20716 Bowie
Maryland, United States
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Website
quickwayhibachi.com

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Bowie Town Center 01
Bowie Town Center 01
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Mullikin Elementary School (Mitchellville, Maryland)
Mullikin Elementary School (Mitchellville, Maryland)

Mullikin Elementary School was an early- to mid-20th century primary/grade school (Grades 1-6) located on Mt. Oak Road in Mitchellville, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA. The school, which served the local community from in or about 1919 until the end of the 1963-64 school year when pupils were transferred to the then new Woodmore Elementary School. Mullikin Elementary School is historically notable, locally and regionally. It was named after the Mullikin Family--James and his five succeeding generations--who owned the Mullikin's Delight plantation. Mullikin's Delight comprised the general area long ago known as Mullikin and in which Mullikin Elementary School once stood in Mitchellville, Prince George's County, Maryland USA. The significance of Mullikin's Delight is that it is listed as a Prince George's County historical site, with references to the family name and the fact that it was a slaveholding plantation, by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission and noted in other historical pieces. Tying the history of the Mullikin family and Mullikin's Delight with Mullikin Elementary School, Washington Post newspaper columnist Eugene Meyer described in his April 6, 1996 article, "In a tale of two Mitchellvilles, similarities end with the name," a family currently living in "...Mullikin, [named] after the family for which a nearby school was named." Mullikin Elementary was a three-story, concrete building with two stories above ground and one partially below ground level. On the upper two floors, the building housed six classrooms--one for each of the six grades--as well as the administrative office (e.g. principal, secretary). There was a basement that ran the full length of the building. In 1945, Federal Works Agency funds were used to build out the basement into an auditorium and cafeteria. The basement floor also housed a small school library, girls' and boys' restrooms, and a mechanical room. Outside, there was a playground and large open area. Mullikin Elementary was a successor school to the one-room Cherry Hill School that served local pupils from 1874 to 1919. When Mullikin Elementary School replaced the Cherry Hill School, the school bell which rang from Cherry Hill’s bell tower was installed on the second floor ceiling of the northern stairwell of Mullikin Elementary (left side of the photograph), where it rang until replaced by an electric bell to call pupils, who were outside of the building, to come inside. Many of the students from Mullikin, upon completing grade 6, matriculated to Frederick Sasscer High School in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. Close by the school stood a small post office; an American Railway Express station next to a railroad track and, earlier, a hotel, a blacksmith shop, and a meeting hall/polling place. In the early 1970s, a fire broke out in what had been the Mullikin Elementary building, leading to its eventual demolition. The land where Mullikin Elementary, the post office and other buildings stood is now a Prince George's County school bus lot with no markers showing the history of the school.