Skip to main content

Categories

 


 

The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Haefner, Dick. "Dining and Discovery." Annapolis Quarterly (Spring 1996): 86-89.

"Happy Birthday, Annapolis?" A Briefe Relation 16 (Winter 1994): 6.

Harp, David W., and Tom Horton. Water's Way: Life Along the Chesapeake. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000.
Notes: A photo essay on the environmental plight of the Eastern Shore, special attention is paid to the area's natural history and the life of the watermen.

Hauswald, Nancy C. "Eastport." Annapolis 8 (March 1994): 14-16, 57.

Hodges, Allen A., and Carol A. Hodges, eds. Washington on Foot: 25 Walking Tours of Washington, DC, Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, and Historic Annapolis, Maryland. Rev. ed. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1977.

Holland, Jeffrey. "Eastport: A Loving Portrait." Annapolitan 2 (March 1988): 33-39, 49-53.

Hurst, Harold W. "The Northernmost Southern Town: A Sketch of Pre-Civil War Annapolis." Maryland Historical Magazine 76 (Fall 1981): 240-49.
Notes: Hurst argues that in 1860 Annapolis was the only culturally southern town in Maryland. While Baltimore was developing during the nineteenth century, Annapolis, in many ways, remained static, keeping its earlier essence. Hurst's description of Annapolis includes the economy, the citizens, the places, and the churches.

Hutchings, Kristin E. "Annapolis: City of Traditions." Mid-Atlantic Country 15 (May 1994): 82-87.

Jensen, Ann. "All Aboard for Odenton." Annapolitan 7 (March 1993): 36-41.

Jensen, Ann. "Annapolis at War." Annapolitan 5 (June 1991): 36-41, 86.

Jensen, Ann. "'The Annapolis I Remember'." Annapolitan 4 (November 1990): 42-49.

Jensen, Ann. "Bay Ridge on the Chesapeake." Annapolis Quarterly (Spring 1996): 92-95.

Jones, Carleton. Streetwise Baltimore: The Story Behind Baltimore Street Names. [Baltimore?]: Bonus Books, 1991.
Notes: Brief, quick descriptions of street and neighborhoods names, including some surrounding communities in other counties. Includes a history of the city's development.

Keith, Ruth. "The General's Highway." Anne Arundel County Historical Society History Notes 8 (July 1977): [2-3].

Kelbaugh, Jack. "'What If' and Gibson's Island." Anne Arundel County History Notes 21 (April 1990): 7.

Kelbaugh, Jack. "Portland: One of Anne Arundel's Vanished Villages." Anne Arundel County History Notes 22 (January 1991): 7-8.

Kelbaugh, Jack. "Shipley's Choice: A Community Name with Historical Significance; Part I: The Shipley Clan." Anne Arundel County History Notes 20 (January 1989): 3-5.

Kelbaugh, Jack. "The Shipley's Choice Tract; Part II: More Than Three Centuries of Fascinating History." Anne Arundel County History Notes 20 (April 1989): 1-3.

Kelly, Jacques. Anne Arundel County: A Pictorial History. Norfolk, VA: Donning Company, 1989.
Notes: Kelly, a leader of Maryland's photohistory genre, divides the County into five regions -- Glen Burnie, Severna Park, Annapolis, South Count, and Fort Meade and Oddnton. He also includes a chapter on transportation.

Kenah, Elizabeth F. "Good Times at Hard Bargain Farm." Maryland 13 (Summer 1980): 40-43.

Kercheval, Nancy. "Civic Pride." Annapolis 7 (July 1993): 38-40, 42-47.
Notes: Crofton.

Kryder-Reid, Elizabeth Bradner. Landscape as Myth: The Contextual Archaeology of an Annapolis Landscape. Ph.D. diss., Brown University, 1991.

Love, Richard. "Brunswick's 'Blessed Curse': Surviving an Industrial Legacy." Maryland Historical Magazine 88 (Summer 1993): 133-49.
Notes: Brunswick was a community tied together and given its identify by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. When the railroad left in the late twentieth century the town lost its identify and underwent a drastic change. It experienced a period of crisis where the whole concept of community was called into question.

McCabe, Carol. "Annapolis Christmas." Early American Life 23 (December 1992): 20-27.

McWilliams, Jane W., and Carol C. Patterson. Bay Ridge on the Chesapeake. Annapolis, MD: Brighton Editions, 1986.

Back to Top