Moundland

Moundland
Location of Moundland in Maryland
Location 8814 Guilford Road Columbia, Maryland
Coordinates 39°16′00″N 76°50′00″W / 39.26667°N 76.83333°WCoordinates: 39°16′00″N 76°50′00″W / 39.26667°N 76.83333°W
Built 1846
Architectural style(s) Stone

Moundland is a historic plantation home located between Simpsonville and Guilford, Howard County, Maryland, now part of the Columbia land development.

The stone manor home Moundland was built by Thomas Stewart in 1846 for his daughter and her husband Charles Griffith Worthington Jr., who served in the first team of Howard County Commissioners. The English imported locks on the house are dated to 1830. The 22 inch thick walls were quarried onsite and the original floors remained intact.[1] The house neighbored Granite Park manor home.[2]

In 1966, 245 acres of property surrounding the 10 acre Moundland site were purchased by Howard Research and Development for the creation on the Rouse Company project Columbia. In 1970, nearby Trinity Episcopal and most of its land were sold by its pastor in 1970 to form the South Columbia Baptist Church in Guilford.[3][4] The remainder of the Trinity Church property was converted to a waste transfer station, followed by a mulching facility, and later the Blue Stream Housing development.[5] The pastor W Stephen Neel elected to demolish Moundland to build the new facility, "To serve our community as a church, rather than save an old building", and was granted permission to develop by the Howard County Board of Appeals.[6][7]

See Also

References

  1. "Historic Homes on Tour In Howard County Today". The Washington Post. 15 October 1958.
  2. "HO-40 Moundland" (PDF). Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  3. Norris P. West (10 December 1990). "Church, historic house vie as good vs. good". The Baltimore Sun.
  4. "HO-40 Moundland" (PDF). Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  5. Shanon D. Murra (3 February 1997). "Trash plan embroils church Trinity Episcopal flatly denies rumor about renovations 'It's a big lie' Residents oppose company proposal for transfer facility". Baltimore Sun.
  6. Noam Neusner (11 March 1991). "Preservationists battle loss of Maryland historic sites". The Baltimore Sun.
  7. Laura Beck (11 May 1991). "Preservation a Growing Issue in Md.: Rural Historic Groups Are Often Too Late With Too Little". The Washington Post.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 03, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.