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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Marzio, Peter. "Carpentry in the Southern Colonies during the Eighteenth Century with Emphasis on Maryland and Virginia." Winterthur Portfolio 7 (1972): 229-250.

"Rock Run Mill at Havre de Grace, MD, to undergo restoration." Old Mill News 23 (Summer 1995): 11.

Silverman, Sharon H. "The Spencer-Silver Mansion." Maryland 27 (May/June 1995): 50-53, 55.

Ware, Donna M. Green Glades & Sooty Gob Piles: The Maryland Coal Region's Industrial and Architectural Past. Crownsville, MD: Maryland Historical and Cultural Publications, 1991.
Notes: Some 6,000 bridges, iron furnaces, log schoolhouses, company offices and stores, miner's houses, mill buildings, banks, churches, mansions, inns, resort cottages, and other structures associated with the extractive, manufacturing, and transportation industries of Garrett and western Allegany counties are surveyed and described here, with photographs, and contributions by Orlando Ridout, V, Geoffey B. Henry, and Mark R. Edwards. The largest project to date conducted by the Maryland Historical Trust is essential to an understanding of the unique remains of Maryland's historic resort area and coal and iron district.

Weeks, Christopher. An Architectural History of Harford County, Maryland. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "The Rogers House." Harford Historical Bulletin 24 (Spring 1985): 13-16.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Shandy Hall." Harford Historical Bulletin 27 (Winter 1986): 9-11.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "The Hays House." Harford Historical Bulletin 25 (Summer 1985): 50-57.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "An Early Dwelling Near Aberdeen." Harford Historical Bulletin 7 (Spring 1974): 27.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Baker Houses, Aberdeen." Harford Historical Bulletin 16 (Spring 1983): 8-11.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Smith House - Spesutia Island." Harford Historical Bulletin 8 (Summer 1974): 31-32.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "St. Ignatius' Church, Hickory." Harford Historical Bulletin 9 (Fall 1974):35-36.

Wollon, James T.,Jr. "Aquila Scott House." Harford Historical Bulletin 10 (Winter 1975): 39-40.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Officers' Houses at Aberdeen Proving Ground." Harford Historical Bulletin 49 (Summer 1991): 80-86.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Harford County Architectural Notes-Fair Meadows." Harford Historical Bulletin 53 (Summer 1992): 81-90.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "The American Legion Building--Havre de Grace." Harford Historical Bulletin 30 (Fall 1986): 100-103.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Harford County Architectural Notes: The Land of Promise." Harford Historical Bulletin 70 (Fall 1996): 132-38.

Wollon, James T., Jr. "Bush Hotel." Harford Historical Bulletin 11 (Spring/Summer 1977): 46.
Notes: Architectural history of the 18th century hotel.

Anderton, Esther. "Application for Distillers' Licenses 1798-1801." Anne Arundel Speaks 4 (September 1978): 4-5; (December 1978): 3-4.

Armstrong, Kimberly. "Vindex: A Maryland Ghost Town." Journal of the Alleghenies 31 (1995): 119-24.

Arnold, Joseph L. "The Neighborhood and City Hall: The Origins of Neighborhood Associations in Baltimore, 1880-1911." Journal of Urban History 6 (November 1979): 3-30.

Baltz, Shirley V., ed. A Chronicle of Belair. Bowie, MD: Bowie Heritage Committee, 1984.

Barnett, Todd H. "Tobacco, Planters, Tenants, and Slaves: A Portrait of Montgomery County in 1783." Maryland Historical Magazine 89 (Summer 1994): 184-203.
Notes: Using the Maryland State Assessment of 1783, this study evaluates the condition of the Montgomery County community. Montgomery was the western most of Maryland's tobacco counties. This economy left Montgomery with exhausted farmland, as well as a poor, landless, and unstable population. Comparison is made with Frederick where the soil was essentially the same but had not been damaged by tobacco farming.

Bataller, Neal. "Ednor and Norwood-Quiet Reminders of the Past." Legacy 19 (Fall 1999): 1, 5.

Beirne, D. Randall. "Hampden - Woodberry: The Mill Village in an Urban Setting." Maryland Historical Magazine 77 (Spring 1982): 6-26.
Notes: Although this Baltimore neighborhood is no longer a mill town, the area's geographic and social isolation has allowed it, in many ways, to preserve its mill town character. It is a largely homogenous community, predominantly working class.

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