Maryland Historical Trust Inventory No
Capsule Summary Newcomb Survey District T-1180 Newcomb, Talbot County, MD c.1890-1931 The Newcomb Survey District contains a collection of residences, a commercial building, and a structure within the boundary of the Village of Newcomb, located in Talbot County, Maryland. These resources date from c. 1890 to c.1930 and reflect the growth of this bayside settlement during the railroad period and the when the Eastern Shore of Maryland was a booming center of seafood processing and export. It is discontiguous district with one main cluster: the village’s early residential area along Back Street and Station Street and the area on the north side of Route 33/St. Michaels Road. Six resources are isolated from the cluster on the south side of the village. The district is primarily characterized by frame dwellings, which are set on narrow lots in the village’s early residential area and on varied-sized lots in the outlying areas. The buildings follow various types of vernacular, bungalow, Dutch Colonial, and Cape Cod-style designs. The most common vernacular design is the I-House. The survey district is in good condition and only a few historic resources are vacant. The residents continue general maintenance of their buildings, which has helped maintain the survey district’s visual cohesion. The Newcomb Survey District is historically and architecturally significant for several reasons. It is significant under NRHP Criterion A as an example of a small, rural, waterside village which grew and developed at the turn of the twentieth century as a result of the arrival of the railroad, agriculture, and the Chesapeake Bay’s maritime industries of shipbuilding, seafood harvesting and processing.
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