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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Carmer, Carl. The Susquehanna. New York: Rinehart, 1955.
Notes: One of the prestigious "Rivers of America" series, and for Marylanders a book-end volume to Frederick Gutheim's <em>The Potomac</em>. This is popular history at its best: powerfully-written, anecdotal--and what anecdotes! The story of Thomas Cresap is alone worth checking the book out of the library. Covers the downriver ark traffic and the attempts of steamboats to conquer the rocky and unruly Susquehanna.

Chappell, Helen. "Bridging the Bay." Chesapeake Bay Magazine 24 (June 1994): 44-49.

The Chesapeake, and Potomac Telephone Company of Maryland. The Telephone in Maryland. Baltimore: n.p., 1974.

Chevalier, Michel. Histoire et description des voies de communication aux États Unis et des travaux d'art qui en dépendent [History and Description of the Channels of Communication of the United States...]. Paris: 1841.
Notes: A good deal of important early information on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is contained in two volumes, one of text and the other of maps and illustrations, by the French economist and advocate of industrial development as the key to social progress. Other railroads and canals are also given extensive treatment.

Colburn, Zerah. The Locomotive Engine: Including a Description of its Structure, Rules for Estimating its Capabilities, and Practical Observations on its Construction and Management. Philadelphia: Henry Carey Baird, 1854.
Notes: Railroad historian John H. White, Jr. describes the author as "a leading authority on locomotive engineering and one of the most gifted technical writers of the nineteenth century," and his book as "a small but valuable manual." It includes material on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and its greatest early locomotive builder, Ross Winans.

Colburn, Zerah. Locomotive Engineering, and the Mechanism of Railways: a Treatise on the Principles and Construction of the Locomotive Engine, Railway Carriages, and Railway Plant. London: Glasgow, W. Collins, sons, and company, 1871.
Notes: No-one wrote better about the steam locomotive than Colburn, who was also a founder and editor of American engineering journals. This last of his great works was published a year after his suicide.

Cole, Merle T. "89 CG/OLC: The Davidsonville Transmitter Station." Anne Arundel County History Notes 25 (January 1994): 7-8, 19.

Cox, Harold E. Electric Cars of Baltimore. Forty Fort, PA: Published by the author, 1979.

Cusimano, William. "Bridgework." Chesapeake Bay Magazine 19 (September 1989): 41-45.
Notes: Construction of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

Davis, Milton A., and Charles S. Roberts. B&O Salute. Baltimore: Barnard, Roberts & Co., 1987.

Davis, Timothy Mark. Mount Vernon Memorial Highway and the Evolution of the American Parkway. Ph.D. diss., University of Texas at Austin, 1997.

Dilts, James D. "Baltimore's Bridges." Baltimore Sun Magazine, 19 July, 1981.

Dilts, James D. The Great Road: The Building of the Baltimore and Ohio, the Nation's First Railroad, 1828-1853. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993.

Dohan, Mary Helen. Mr. Roosevelt's Steamboat; the First Steamboat to Travel the Mississippi. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1981.

Edson, William D. "Steam Locomotives of the Western Maryland." Railroad History 155 (Autumn 1986): 87-110.

Ellenberger, William J. "History of the Street Car Lines of Montgomery County." Montgomery County Story 17 (May 1974): 1-10.

Farrell, Michael J. History of Baltimore's Streetcars. Sykesville, MD: Greenberg Publishing Co., 1992.

Farrell, Michael J. Who Made All Our Streetcars Go? The Story of Rail Transit in Baltimore. Baltimore: Baltimore National Railway History Society Pubs., 1973.

Franklin, William M. "The Tidewater End of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal." Maryland Historical Magazine 81 (Winter 1986): 288-304.

Garrett, Jerre. "The Automobile in Cecil County." Bulletin of the Historical Society of Cecil County 64 (April 1993): 1, 3-4.

Gerstner, Franz Anton Ritter von. Early American Railroads. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1997.
Notes: Von Gerstner, an Austrian engineer, spent two years studying railroads and canals in the United States. His monumental two-volume work, with its wealth of technological and general information and magnificent illustrations, was published posthumously in 1843. This is the first English translation. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad figures prominently in the account.

Harwood, William B. Raise Heaven and Earth: the Story of Martin Marietta People and their Pioneering Achievements. New York: Simon & Schuster, ca. 1993.

A History of Road Building in Maryland. Baltimore: State Roads Commission of Maryland, 1958.
Notes: A good summary with many interesting references.

Jacobs, David, and Anthony E. Neville. Bridges, Canals, and Tunnels; the Engineering Conquest of North America. New York: American Heritage, 1968.
Notes: This readable general discussion of the subject with fine illustrations includes material on Maryland. Robert M. Vogel, former curator of mechanical and civil engineering at the Smithsonian Institution was the consultant.

Jacobs, Timothy, ed. Great Rails: Baltimore & Ohio. Great Rails Series. New York: Smithmark Publishers, 1994.

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