The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
18th century
- 1729 - Town of Baltimore founded.
- 1752 - 25 houses and 200 inhabitants.[1]
- 1763 - Mechanical Fire Company organized.[2]
- 1767 - Baltimore designated county seat.[1]
- 1770 - Henry Fite House built.
- 1773 - Maryland Journal, and the Baltimore Advertiser newspaper begins publication.[3]
- 1775 - Population: 5,934
- 1776 - December - Second Continental Congress meeting begins.
- 1782 - Lexington Market founded.
- 1784 - Christmas Conference (Methodism)
- 1787 - 1,955 dwellings in town.[4]
- 1790 - Population: 13,503 people.[5]
- 1794 - James Calhoun becomes mayor.
- 1795 - Holliday Street Theater opens.
- 1796
- City of Baltimore incorporated.
- Library Company of Baltimore founded.[6]
19th century
- 1800 - Population: 26,504 people.[7]
- 1803
- Fort McHenry built.[8]
- Dispensary incorporated.[5]
- 1806 - St. Mary's College and Theological Seminary incorporated.
- 1807
- University of Maryland founded.
- Baltimore Museum established.[9]
- Baltimore Circulating Library in business.[10]
- 1809 - Joseph Robinson's Circulating Library in business.[10]
- 1810
- Population: 46,535 people.[7]
- Alex. Brown & Sons incorporated.
- 1814
- September - Battle of Baltimore
- Peale Museum opens.
- 1815
- Battle Monument erected.[1]
- Baltimore Exchange opens.[11]
- 1816
- Asbury College founded.
- Delphian Club founded.[12]
- 1819 - Independent Order of Odd Fellows founded.
- 1820 - Population: 62,738 people
- 1821
- 1822 - Adelphi Theatre opens.[13]
- 1823 - Athenaeum founded.[14]
- 1826 - Maryland Institute for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts founded.
- 1827
- Washington Medical College established.
- Franklin Lyceum active.[11]
- 1829
- Mount Clare Station built.
- George Washington monument erected.[1]
- Circus building constructed.[5]
- 1830
- Baltimore and Ohio Railroad begins operating.
- Population: 80,620 people
- 1832
- Cholera epidemic.[5]
- 1832 Democratic National Convention
- 1835
- 1837
- Baltimore Sun newspaper begins publication.[3]
- Washington Hall opens.[13]
- Orchard Street United Methodist Church built.
- 1839
- High School opens.
- Mercantile Library Association established.[6]
- Green Mount Cemetery dedicated.
- Municipal Record Office of Baltimore built.
- 1840
- Madison Lyceum active.[11]
- 1840 Democratic National Convention
- Population: 102,313 people
- 1844
- Maryland Historical Society incorporated.
- Western High School (Baltimore) opens.
- 1844 Democratic National Convention
- 1844 Whig National Convention
- Baltimore-Washington telegraph line opens.
- 1845 - Newton University established.[15]
- 1848
- Howard Athenaeum and Gallery of Arts opens.[13]
- Olympic Theatre opens.[13]
- Concordia Club founded.
- 1848 Democratic National Convention
- 1849 - Baltimore Female College in operation.[15]
- 1850
- President Street Station built.
- Population: 169,054 people
- 1851
- Baltimore becomes independent city.
- New Assembly-Rooms open.[13]
- Baltimore Wecker newspaper begins publication.
- 1852
- Loyola College established.[1]
- Apollo Hall opens.[13]
- 1852 Democratic National Convention
- 1852 Whig National Convention
- 1853 - Baltimore Police Department established.
- 1856
- 1857 - Peabody Institute founded.
- 1859 - City Fire Department formed.
- 1860
- 1860 Constitutional Union Convention
- Population: 212,418
- 1861 - Pratt Street Riot.
- 1864
- 1865 - Concordia Opera House opens.[13]
- 1867
- Concordia Hall is founded.
- Morgan College established.
- Normal school opens.[1]
- 1870 - Population: 267,354
- 1871 - Ford's Grand Opera-House opens.[13]
- 1872
- Mount Auburn Cemetery established.
- 1872 Democratic National Convention
- 1873 - Leadenhall Street Baptist Church built.
- 1875
- City Hall built.
- Academy of Music opens.[13]
- Free Summer Excursion Society incorporated.[13]
- 1876
- Johns Hopkins University founded.
- The Maryland Zoo opens.
- 1877 - Railroad Strike.
- 1878 - George Peabody Library opens.
- 1880
- Woman's Industrial Exchange founded.
- Celebration of 150th anniversary of city.[16]
- Population: 332,313
- 1881 - Faultless Pajama Company in business.
- 1882 - Enoch Pratt Free Library established.
- 1883
- Baltimore Manual Training School founded.
- Colored High and Training School founded.
- Baltimore Young Women's Christian Association founded.
- 1885 - Goucher College established.[1]
- 1890
- Post office built.[1]
- Population: 434,439 people.[1]
- Riverview Park opens.
- 1891 - Union Park baseball field opens.
- 1892 - Baltimore Afro-American begins publication.
- 1894 - Lyric Opera House opens.
- 1895 - Clifton Park opens (approximate date).[1]
- 1896
- Electric Park opens.
- Colored Young Women's Christian Association founded.
- 1898 - Sharp Street Memorial United Methodist Church and Community House built.
20th century
- 1900
- Population: 508,957 people.[1]
- City courthouse dedicated.
- Baltimore Morning Herald newspaper begins publication.
- 1903 - Belvedere Hotel opens.
- 1904 - Great Baltimore Fire.
- 1908 - Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway begins operating.
- 1910 - Population: 558,485
- 1911 - Pennsylvania Station (Baltimore) built.
- 1912
- 1914
- Baltimore Museum of Art founded.
- Hippodrome Theatre built.
- 1916
- Baltimore Symphony Orchestra formed.
- Baltimore Black Sox baseball team formed.
- 1917
- Fort Holabird established.
- Lithuanian Hall opens.
- 1918
- William Frederick Broening was elected mayor.[17]
- 1920 - Population: 733.826
- 1922
- Memorial Stadium built.
- Royal Theatre opens.
- 1923 - Howard W. Jackson becomes mayor.
- 1925 - University of Baltimore founded.
- 1930
- Baltimore Colored Symphony Orchestra organized.
- U.S. Post Office and Courthouse built.
- Population: 804,874
- 1934 - Walters Art Museum established.
- 1940 - Population: 859,100
- 1949 - Edgar Allan Poe House opens.
- 1950
- Baltimore Civic Opera Company established.
- Population: 949,708
- 1953 - B&O Railroad Museum opens.
- 1954
- Orioles baseball team relocates to Baltimore.
- Cylburn Wildflower Preserve and Garden Center formed.
- 1955 - Civil rights protest at Read's Drug Store.
- 1956 - Desegregation of the Baltimore City Public School System
- 1960 - Population: 939,024
- 1962 - CFG Bank Arena opens.
- 1963 - Center Stage (theater) opens.
- 1964 - Baltimore News-American newspaper begins publication.
- 1968
- Baltimore riot of 1968
- Baltimore American Indian Center is established.
- 1970 - Population: 905,787
- 1971 - William Donald Schaefer becomes mayor.
- 1974 - Baltimore municipal strike of 1974
- 1976 - Maryland Science Center opens.
- 1977 - Baltimore World Trade Center opens.
- 1979
- Baltimore Convention Center opens.
- Baltimore School for the Arts founded.
- 1980
- Harborplace opens.
- Baltimore Area Convention & Visitors Association formed.
- Population: 786,741
- 1981
- National Aquarium in Baltimore opens.
- Baltimore Museum of Industry opens.
- 1982 - Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall opens.
- 1983
- Baltimore Metro Subway begins operating.
- Great Blacks in Wax Museum established.
- 1986 - National Association for the Advancement of Colored People headquarters relocates to Baltimore.[18]
- 1987 - Kurt Schmoke becomes mayor.
- 1989 - Contemporary Museum Baltimore founded.
- 1990 - Population: 736,016
- 1992
- Baltimore Light Rail begins operating.
- Oriole Park at Camden Yards opens.
- 1996 - Baltimore Ravens football team established.
- 1998 - Ravens Stadium opens.
- 1999 - Martin O'Malley becomes mayor.
21st century
- 2000
- National Katyń Memorial is constructed.
- Population: 651,154
- 2002 - The Portal (community center) opens.
- 2005 - Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture opens.
- 2006 - The Baltimore Examiner begins publication.
- 2008 - Hilton Baltimore built.
- 2009 - Sheila Dixon trial.
- 2010
- Stephanie Rawlings-Blake becomes mayor.
- Population: 620,961 people.
- 2011
- Occupy Baltimore begins.
- Lyric Opera Baltimore established.
- 2015 - Freddie Gray protests
- 2016 - Catherine Pugh becomes mayor.
- 2019 - Jack Young becomes mayor.
- 2020
- Brandon Scott becomes mayor.
- Population: 585,708
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 289–291.
- ↑ John Calvin Colson (Winter 1986). "The Fire Company Library Associations of Baltimore, 1838-1858". Journal of Library History. 21.
- 1 2 "US Newspaper Directory". Chronicling America. Washington DC: Library of Congress. Retrieved September 15, 2012.
- ↑ Jedidiah Morse (1797), "Baltimore", The American gazetteer, Boston: At the presses of S. Hall, and Thomas & Andrews, OL 23272543M
- 1 2 3 4 5 Charles Varle (1833), A complete view of Baltimore, Baltimore: S. Young, OL 19370655M
- 1 2 Charles Coffin Jewett (1851), Notices of public libraries in the United States of America, Washington D.C: Smithsonian
- 1 2 William Fry (1812), Fry's Baltimore directory, for the year 1812, Baltimore: Printed by B.W. Sower, & Co. for the publisher, OL 24653908M
- ↑ "History of Fort McHenry". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved September 15, 2012.
- ↑ C. Keenan (1822), The Baltimore directory for 1822 & '23, Baltimore: Printed by R.J. Matchett, OL 23411032M
- 1 2 Davies Project. "American Libraries before 1876". Princeton University. Retrieved September 15, 2012.
- 1 2 3 Joseph Lawrence Yeatman (Fall 1985). "Literary Culture and the Role of Libraries in Democratic America: Baltimore, 1815-1840". Journal of Library History. 20.
- ↑ Uhler, John Earle (December 1925). "The Delphian Club: A Contribution to the Literary History of Baltimore in the Early Nineteenth Century". Maryland Historical Magazine. 20 (4): 305.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 J. Thomas Scharf (1881), History of Baltimore city and county, from the earliest period to the present day: including biographical sketches of their representative men, Philadelphia: L.H. Everts, OL 24157798M
- ↑ Eugene Fauntleroy Cordell (1903), "Chronology", The medical annals of Maryland, 1799-1899, Baltimore: [Press of Williams & Wilkins company], OL 6966537M
- 1 2 The Baltimore city directory, for 1858-59, Baltimore, Md: John W. Woods, 1858, OL 17860479M
- ↑ Baltimore (1881), 1730-1880: Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Settlement of Baltimore, Baltimore: Printed by order of the Mayor and City Council, OL 19368892M
- ↑ Wroth, Lawrence Counselman (1922). . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 30 (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. p. 395.
- ↑ Paul T Hellmann (2004). Historical Gazetteer of the United States. Taylor & Francis.
Bibliography
- Published in the 19th c.
- Henry Schenck Tanner (1837), "Map of Baltimore", The American traveller (3rd ed.), Philadelphia: The author, OL 23337218M
- Henry Schenck Tanner (1841), "Baltimore", A geographical, historical and statistical view of the central or middle United States, Philadelphia: H. Tanner, Jr., OCLC 1525712, OL 24649753M
- J. Thomas Scharf (1874), The chronicles of Baltimore: being a complete history of "Baltimore town" and Baltimore city from the earliest period to the present time, Baltimore: Turnbull Bros., OCLC 11971847, OL 13489724M
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (9th ed.). 1878. pp. 298–299. .
- Published in the 20th c.
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 289–291. .
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 30 (12th ed.). 1922. p. 395. .
External links
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