Worthington's Quarters, White Hall, Iris Hill
Worthington's Quarters is located in Maryland
Worthington's Quarters
Location of Worthington's Quarters, White Hall, Iris Hill in Maryland
Nearest cityColumbia, Maryland
Coordinates39°10′30″N 76°48′00″W / 39.17500°N 76.80000°W / 39.17500; -76.80000
Built1755
Architectural style(s)Stone

Worthington's Quarters, White Hall, Glen Burnie, Iris Hill, is a historic forced-labor farm in Columbia in Howard County, Maryland, United States.

The stucco-covered brick plantation house resides on a 150-acre tract, "Wincopin Neck", surveyed for Richard and Benjamin Warfield. The land tract "Worthington's Addition" was also considered part of the estate when started as early as 1710.[1] Richard Warfiled II (??-1755) hired out the property (called "Warfield's Contrivance") and house to Alexander Warfield and Elizabeth Ridgely in 1755, who had opened and operated a mill in 1750, downstream from the site at Guilford, Maryland. Rezin and Honor (Howard) Warfield lived onsite next. Their daughter Anne Warfield and Revolutionary War Major Richard Lawrance settled there next, calling the manor "White Hall". Dr. Charles Griffith Worthington purchased the lands and manor, passing it to his son Brice Worthington, and later his nephew Dr. William Henry Worthington (1812-1886). By 1858, five generations of the family were buried in the onsite family graveyard.[2]

The site is located along the Middle Patuxent River, which once stood two bridges leading to Laurel. In 1936, the vacant estate was known as the Hegemen House.[3]

See also

References

  1. Stein, Charles Francis (1972). Origin and History of Howard County Maryland (First ed.). Charles Francis Stein, Jr. p. 255.
  2. Joshua Dorsey Warfield. The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland. p. 369.
  3. "Worthington's Quarters" (PDF). Retrieved 19 September 2014.
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