Birmingham Manor (Maryland)

Birmingham Manor
Location of Birmingham Manor in Maryland
Location Laurel, Maryland
Coordinates 39°04′32″N 76°49′33″W / 39.07556°N 76.82583°W / 39.07556; -76.82583Coordinates: 39°04′32″N 76°49′33″W / 39.07556°N 76.82583°W / 39.07556; -76.82583
Built 1690
Architectural style(s) Stone

Birmingham Manor was a historic slave plantation home located in Anne Arundel County, Maryland

The manor served the Snowden family for five generations. The property resided on the "Robinhood's Forest" land patent. The manor built by Richard Snowden Jr. was brick construction with shingle siding. A central hall was surrounded by fireplaces. A semicircle of barns held tobacco crops. A boxwood garden led to the cemetery. By 1790 the estate composed 10,000 acres.[1] During William Snowden's ownership, the house burned on 20 August 1891.[2] The fire broke open a hidden wood panel above a mantle that contained hidden family parchments just before they burned.[3] A large tract of the estate became the Fort George G. Meade and the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center The Baltimore Washington Parkway was built over the plantation site next to a general aviation airport. The family cemetery remains mostly inaccessible.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. Lawrence Buckley Thomas. The Thomas Book: Giving the Genealogies of Sir Rhys Ap Thomas. p. 508.
  2. "History of New-Birmingham Manor Lately Burned". The Baltimore Sun. 23 August 1891.
  3. Annie Middleton Leakin Sioussat. Old manors in the colony of Maryland, Volume 2. p. 50.
  4. "Birmingham Manor". Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  5. Clayton Colman Hall. Baltimore: Biography. p. 468.
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