A Publication of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum W in T E R 20 18

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Publication of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum W in T E R 20 18 CHESAPEAKE LOG WINTER 2018 A PUBLICATION OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY MARITIME MUSEUM CBMM STAFF MISSION STATEMENT The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is PRESIDENT’S OFFICE BOARD OF dedicated to preserving and exploring the Kristen L. Greenaway, President, 4955 history, environment, and people of the Kathi Ferguson, Executive Assistant, 4955 GOVERNORS Chesapeake Bay. COMMUNICATIONS 2017–2018 CBMM VALUES Tracey Johns, Vice President of Communications, 4960 James P. Harris D. Bruce Rogers RELEVANCE. We provide meaningful and Izzy Mercado, Communications & Art Director, 4943 accessible experiences to everyone who Chair Lelde Schmitz Bethany Ziegler, Content Creator & Strategist, 4995 cares about our Mission—all of our Diane J. Staley John L. Seidel Vice Chair communities and constituencies. DEVELOPMENT & MEMBERSHIP Richard C. Tilghman, Jr. Richard J. Johnson AUTHENTICITY. We seek genuinely to Liz LaCorte, Director of Development, 4956 Enos T. Throop, V Treasurer represent the people and cultures whose Carly Faison, Development Coordinator, 4950 Susan E. Wheeler Richard W. Snowdon stories we preserve and tell. Nancy Wells, Membership Coordinator, 4991 Secretary Carolyn H. Williams STEWARDSHIP. We value the priceless Kristen L. Greenaway FACILITIES MANAGEMENT assets entrusted to us and accept their Schuyler Benson President Bill Gilmore, Vice President of Facilities Management, 4949 Pat Bilbrough preservation and enhancement as our John Ford, Facilities Manager, 4970 paramount responsibility—our collections, David C. Blitzer EMERITI Sam Fairbank, Facilities Management, 4969 Richard T. Allen our campus and facilities, our financial Joseph Redman, Facilities Maintenance, 4969 William C. Boicourt CG Appleby resources, and the volunteers and staff who Chloe Tong, Facilities Maintenance, 4969 Simon F. Cooper perform our Mission and make CBMM the Alan R. Griffith William S. Dudley rich enterprise it is. FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION Duane H. Ekedahl Margaret D. Keller M. Branden Meredith, Vice President of Finance, 4958 Len N. Foxwell Richard H. Kimberly , Controller, 4957 Howard Parks Howard S. Freedlander Charles L. Lea, Jr. Sign up to receive Navy Point News, Trish See, Staff Accountant & Human Resources D. Ted Lewers, MD featuring announcements and news about our Manager, 4985 Leeds Hackett Fred C. Meendsen programs, festivals, exhibitions, and more. Joe-Ann Hanna, Staff Accountant & GSS Manager, 4954 Robert N. Hockaday, Jr. Francis Hopkinson, Jr. John C. North II Email [email protected] to be added to OPERATIONS Deborah Lawrence Sumner Parker our mailing list, or sign up online at Steven Byrnes, Vice President of Operations, 4959 Kathleen Linehan Robert A. Perkins cbmm.org. Sara McCafferty, Museum Store & Admissions Manager, 4963 Frank C. Marshall Joseph E. Peters BOATYARD Donald L. Martin Norman H. Plummer Michael Gorman, Boatyard Manager, 4968 Patrice Miller John J. Roberts Jennifer Kuhn, Boatyard Program Manager, 4980 Elizabeth C. Moose Tom D. Seip Joe Connor, Shipwright, 4968 Talli Oxnam Henry H. Spire James DelAguila, Shipwright, 4967 Editors: Izzy Mercado, Bethany Ziegler Bruce A. Ragsdale Henry H. Stansbury Joshua Richardson, Marine Mechanic, 4967 Creative Director: Izzy Mercado David W. Reager Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr. Michael Allen, RPM Foundation Shipwright Apprentice, 4967 Charles A. Robertson Joan Darby West Copy Editors: Tracey Johns, Jodie Littleton Spencer Sherwood, Seip Family Foundation Shipwright Apprentice, 4967 Contributing Writers: Dick Cooper, Kristen Greenaway, Pete Lesher, Kate Livie, CHARITY BOAT DONATION PROGRAM Bethany Ziegler Todd Taylor, Charity Boat Donation Program Director, 4990 FRIENDS BOARD Joshua Mills, Charity Boat Donation Program Associate, 4997 Production: Pixel, Print & Post Karen Walpole, Charity Boat Donation Program 2017–2018 Administrative Assistant, 4997 The Chesapeake Log is a publication of Martha Austin Bill Lane the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. SPECIAL EVENTS Kathy Bosin Trish Payne ©2018 CBMM. All rights reserved. Shannon Mitchell, Director of Events, 4953 Mike Cottingham Matthew Peters Liz Cowee, Wedding & Events Coordinator, 4944 Jaime Fontanazza Heather Pickens PRESERVATION & INTERPRETATION Frank Garahan Estela Vianey Ramirez (Exhibitions, Curatorial, Education and Volunteer) Robbie Gill Spence Stovall Pete Lesher, Chief Curator, 4971 Lauren Greer Jay Tawes Richard Scofield, Assistant Curator of Watercraft, 4966 Jay Hudson Cassandra Vanhooser Jenifer Dolde, Collections Manager, 4996 Sherri Marsh Johns Jaime Windon 213 North Talbot Street Lee Olson, Exhibitions Specialist, 4973 Pat Jones Brenda Wooden St. Michaels, MD 21663 Jill Ferris, Director of Education, 4986 410-745-2916 | cbmm.org Allison Speight, Volunteer & Education Programs Manager, 4941 To reach staff members directly, dial 410-745-xxxx. HOURS: Matt Engel, Lead Educator, 4974 Use each staff member’s four-digit extension to complete the call. May to October, 9am–5pm To email, use staff member’s first initial and full last name @cbmm.org November to April, 10am–4pm CONNECT WITH US: 2 WINTER 2018 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG contents winter 2017 4 PRESIDENT’S LETTER 8 by Kristen L. Greenaway 5 CURRENTS CBMM makes campus upgrades; Annual Festivals and Special Events; Upcoming Exhibitions 9 LIFELINES Volunteer Profile: Audrey Brown by Bethany Ziegler 10 10 CURATOR'S CORNER The Prize for a Most Innovative Canoe by Pete Lesher 12 FEATURE Edna E. Lockwood: A Witness to History by Dick Cooper 18 FEATURE Lila Line’s Waterwomen: 35 Years Later 18 by Kate Livie 22 ON THE RAIL Shipwrights start next phase of Edna E. Lockwood restoration; Pintail launched, for sale 23 CALENDAR Member Nights, Programs, and Special Events ON THE COVER: A middle school student takes part in a Girls Woodshop program in the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum Boatshop this fall. The workshop was held through CBMM’s Rising Tide After-School Boatbuilding Program. To learn about upcoming Rising Tide classes and events, visit cbmm.org/risingtide. THE CHESAPEAKE LOG WINTER 2018 3 president’s letter ’VE RECENTLY RETURNED from this year’s biennial conference for ICMM, the International Council of Maritime Museums. This 18th ICMM conference was hosted by the National Maritime Museum of Chile, in Valparaiso. What a stunning city! I was honored to have been appointed Programme Committee Chair two years ago. And, at this year’s conference, I was equally honored to be elected for an eight-year term to ICMM’s executive council. The academic program took a full year to organize and brought together 43 speakers from 22 countries, all presenting maritime museum-related content over five days. I had the opportunity to present on the complementary relationship between traditional boatbuilding methods and technology, to help Creating achieve maritime museum ship or small craft restoration goals, using the restoration of our historic 1889 bugeye Edna Lockwood the thrill of as an example. discovery is Our theme this year was Discoveries! ‘Discovery’ has rich and suggestive meanings; it can mean to survey, to explore and fundamentally examine, to display, to expose, to view, to be the first to find or observe something, to understand how something works. inherent in The word was particularly apt for Valparaiso—one of the most everything we beautiful and important ports on the Pacific coast of South America—and the starting point for many historical voyages of are working exploration and discovery. to achieve at The trip brought its own personal discoveries for me. Exploring historic Valparaiso was fascinating. But at the end of the CBMM. conference, I had an unplanned opportunity to fly to Rapa Nui— Easter Island—for a couple of days. Many of you may feel the same hope I did as a child—perhaps one day to personally see the moai that mark the heritage of the world’s most isolated inhabited island. The experience was everything I could have imagined, and brought KRISTEN L. GREENAWAY a great discovery to me about a sense of authentic place. President Creating the thrill of discovery, and points of access—another key theme that arose from the conference—is fundamentally inherent in everything we are working to achieve at CBMM. Via our education programming for all, our floating fleet, our working Boatyard, and our exhibitions & collections, we strive to give you the opportunity to explore and examine, to find or observe something you may not have noticed before, to understand how something related to the heritage of the Bay works that you may not have encountered or understood before. In short, to discover! At the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Your place to discover! 4 WINTER 2018 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG currents CBMM makes campus Above: CBMM campus, November 2016. upgrades, Photo by JJ Aerial Productions | jjaerialproductions.com continues Master year’s Community Day celebration. Upcoming priorities Plan process include expansion of our shipwright apprentice program, the completion of various additional deferred maintenance projects, and a push to double the number of K–12 students visiting campus over the next five years. In 2015, we launched a comprehensive campaign to support museum improvements and grow our endowment, NGOING UPGRADES to the Chesapeake Bay with a goal of securing the future of CBMM, and thus the Maritime Museum’s campus, and plans history and culture of the Chesapeake Bay. The campaign for its future growth, continue with CBMM aims to solve challenges in dealing with older facilities completing a number of improvement projects and while creating new opportunities to engage with our
Recommended publications
  • Footing the Bill
    MARYLAND 1 Research, Education, Outreach September-October 1994 SPOTLIGHT ON ENVIRONMENTAL FINANCE ffiECOSTOFC_ • FOOTING THE BILL hether flowing off the decision makers alike have turned Chesapeake's vast water­ their attention to a nagging question: THE ISSUE AT A GLANCE shed or falling from the how much will these efforts cost, and Wsky in rain and snow, too how will we pay for them? • THE GoAL: To reduce the many nutrients find their way into Throughout the summer and early flow of nutrients into the Chesa­ the Bay's rivers and mainstem. Ac­ autumn, a Blue Ribbon Panel, peake Bay by 400A> and to hold it cording to most researchers, these chaired by Eileen Rehrmann, County there. unwanted nutrients, mostly nitrogen Executive of Harford County, has • THE CHAllENGE: To raise and phosphorus, fuel unwanted algal struggled with this funding issue, an estimated $60-90 million a growth and loss of vital oxygen in trying to rise above the normal de­ year to pay for new or expanded the estuary. Because of these conse­ bate about raising or cutting taxes. Tributary Strategies programs to quences, nutrients - from sewage, Appointed by Maryland Governor accomplish this goal. from fertilizer, from air pollution - William Donald Schaefer, the Panel • T HE PROBLEM: How to pay have come to represent the estuary's has wrestled with charts and graphs the bill, if current taxes do not most significant systemic problem. and a pile of information about waste cover the shortfall. States in the Bay region, joined by treatment plants, stormwater runoff, the federal government, have com­ agricultural programs and resource mitted themselves to reducing that protection.
    [Show full text]
  • 17Th Nationalcatalog.Pdf
    C A M A The 17th National Exhibition of the American Society of Marine Artists Jennifer Holmes i CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART John Barber For more information visit the ASMA website: www.americansocietyofmarineartists.com Copyright © 2016 by the American Society of Marine Artists Published by the American Society of Marine Artists Designed and Edited by Len Tantillo Printed in the USA All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the American Society of Marine Artists. Cover painting: “A Spanking Breeze on a Starboard Tack," by David Bareford ISBN - 13: 978-1534729292 ISBN - 10: 15344729291 ii iii CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART C A M A The 17th National Exhibition of the American Society of Marine Artists William Davis Officers Board of Directors Kim Shaklee, President Del-Bourree Bach Anne Brodie Hill, Vice President Lisa Egeli Michael Killelea, Secretary Russ Kramer Sheri Farabaugh, Treasurer Len Mizerek Daven Anderson, Managing Director Ann Mohnkern Tom Nielsen Sergio Roffo Len Tantillo Museums and Exhibition Dates: Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William & Mary Williamsburg, Virginia • September 9 - December 2, 2016 Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels, Maryland and the Academy Art Museum, Easton, Maryland co-hosting the exhibition • December 5 - April 1, 2017 Quinlan Visual Arts Center, Gainesville, Georgia • April 13 - June 3, 2017 Minnesota Marine Art Museum, Winona, Minnesota • June 26 - September 23, 2017 Mystic Seaport, Mystic, Connecticut • October 14 - January 26, 2018 ii iii CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART Darrell Davis iv v CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN MARINE ART T A S M A e American Society of Marine Artists (ASMA) has been around for nearly forty years.
    [Show full text]
  • Footner Accounts for ‘Our’ War, and Perfidious Adm
    Monthly Publication of the Fell’s Point Citizens on Patrol 8 March 2014 4HHEE&ELLSS0OIINTERNTER Volume 16 Number 3 Footner Accounts for ‘Our’ War, And Perfidious Adm. Cochrane Just in time for this summer’s climactic cel- ebrations of the 200th anniversary of Baltimore’s War, Fell’s Point maritime historian Geoffrey Foot- ner has delivered “A Bungled Affair: Britain’s War in the United States--The Final Years 1814-1815.” It delivers as much about this neighborhood’s role in the conflict as us new-age readers are apt to absorb. And as a bonus, it offers a devastatingly detailed account of how His Majesty’s command- ing admiral on the Chesapeake not only failed to subdue this city but brought shame to the Royal Navy--by dealing freed American slaves in Carib- bean flesh markets instead of devastating New Orleans as ordered. Along the way, the curmudgeon of Fell St. covers the Canadian theater and walks us through the Treaty of Ghent diplomacy. But he is saltiest at sea, starting in 1812 when Joshua Barney “ac- cepted command of the privateer Rossie,” built by Thomas Kemp at the foot of Washington St., and took the war to Britain’s shipping lanes with Canada. “The Baltimore schooner seized 15 ships of great value . plus 166 British prisoners.” And so it went, until by 1814 “the Surprise, with double or more burden,” and other bigger versions of the speedy Chesapeake Bay pilot schooners carried the war to Britain’s home waters. Plank Vows Pier’s Rescue Happenings Footner’s “Tidewater Triumph” in 1998 is the A new development team determined to Services for Hepner and Carlson definitive study of these gaudy boats, but the save Rec Pier, financed entirely by Under Armour’s Local services are planned for chapters devoted to them in his new book offer founder Kevin Plank, made a dramatic presentation Jean Hepner, late of Fell St., and a lively reprise.
    [Show full text]
  • Characterization of the Fishing Practices and Marine Benthic Ecosystems of the Northeast U.S
    NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-NE-181 Characterization of the Fishing Practices and Marine Benthic Ecosystems of the Northeast U.S. Shelf, and an Evaluation of the Potential Effects of Fishing on Essential Fish Habitat U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Marine Fisheries Service Northeast Fisheries Science Center Woods Hole, Massachusetts January 2004 Recent Issues in This Series 164. An Overview of the Social and Economic Survey Administered during Round II of the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Disaster Assistance Program. By Julia Olson and Patricia M. Clay. December 2001. v + 69 p., 3 figs., 18 tables, 2 app. NTIS Access. No. PB2002-105406. 165. A Baseline Socioeconomic Study of Massachusetts’ Marine Recreational Fisheries. By Ronald J. Salz, David K. Loomis, Michael R. Ross, and Scott R. Steinback. December 2001. viii + 129 p., 1 fig., 81 tables, 4 app. NTIS Access. No. PB2002-108348. 166. Report on the Third Northwest Atlantic Herring Acoustic Workshop, University of Maine Darling Marine Center, Walpole, Maine, March 13-14, 2001. By William L. Michaels, editor and coconvenor, and Philip Yund, coconvenor. December 2001. iv + 18 p., 14 figs., 2 app. NTIS Access. No. PB2003-101556. 167. Assessment and Characterization of Salt Marshes in the Arthur Kill (New York and New Jersey) Replanted after a Severe Oil Spill. By David B. Packer, ed. December 2001. x + 228 p., 54 figs., 58 tables, 6 app. NTIS Access. No. PB2004-106067. 168. U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal Stock Assessments – 2001. By Gordon T. Waring, Janeen M. Quintal, and Steven L. Swartz, eds., Phillip J.
    [Show full text]
  • United States National Museum, Washington, D
    GREAT INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES EXHIBITION. LONDON, 1883. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. I. CATALOGUE OF THE COLLECTION ILLUSTRATING THE FISHING VESSELS AND BOATS, AND THEIR EQUIPMENT; THE ECONOMIC CONDITION OF FISHERMEN; ANGLERS' OUTFITS, ETC. CAPTAIN J. W. COLLINS, Assistant, U. S. Fish Commission. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1 8 S 4 . 645 : — TABLE OF CONTENTS. A. Introduction. Page. Statistics and history of fishing vessels 7 Statistics and history of fishing boats 12 Apparatus accessory to rigging fishing vessels 14 Fishermen and their apparel 19 Food, medicine, and shelter 21 Fishermen's log-books 22 Fishermen's widows and orphans aid societies 22 B.—Fishing craft. VESSELS. Rigged models 1. Fishing steamers 26 2. Fishing ketches 26 3. Fishing schooners 27 Builders' models: 4. Fishing schooners . 37 BOATS. 5. Sloop, cutter, and cat-rigged square-stern boats 45 6. Schooner-rigged square-stern boats 49 7. Square-stern row-boats 50 8. Sharp-stern round-bottom boats 50 9. Flat-bottom boats 54 10. Portable boats 58 11. Sportsmen's boats 61 12. Bark canoes 62 13. Skin boats and canoes 62 14. Dug-outs 63 SKETCHES AND PHOTOGRAPHS OF VESSELS AND BOATS. 15. General views of fishing fleets 65 16. Fishing steamers 66 17. Square-rigged vessels 67 18. Fishing schooners 67 Pinkeys 67 Mackerel-fishing vessels 66 Cod-fishing vessels 70 Fresh-halibut vessels „ 71 Herring catchers 72 Fishing schooners, general 72 [3] 647 — 648 CONTENTS. [4] 19. Sloops 73 20. Cutters 73 21. Quoddy and Block Island boats , 74 22. Seine-boats 74 23; Sharpies... , ... , , 74 24. Dories 75 25.
    [Show full text]
  • CAMP CRUISING Key West to the Dry Tortugas
    The AshBreezeJournal of the Traditional Small Craft Association CAMP CRUISING Key West to the Dry Tortugas IN THIS ISSUE FOUR-WEEK BOAT BUILDING INTERNSHIPS SPOTLIGHT ON CBMM’S JOHN FORD DO-IT-YOURSELF BEACH BOATYARDS VOLUME 33, Number 3 • Fall 2012 • $4.00 The Member Letter Pleased to see the article on the San Ash Francisco Bay Pelican. I started building Ash Breeze, my first Pelican back in 1967. It was a Breeze I just launched my version of John wonderful addition to my family. My Gardner’s version of the 17-foot youngest was two and she grew up with The Ash Breeze (ISSN 1554-5016) is Herreshoff rowboat. I went with the Pelicans and the wonderful members the quarterly journal of the Traditional wider version, 4-foot beam, to get a of Fleet 1. We cruised through the San Small Craft Association, Inc. It is little bit more initial stability as the boat Juan’s, (American and Canadian) as well published at Mariner Media, Inc., 131 will be used by all and sundry. as the California Delta in the boat. Back st West 21 Street, Buena Vista, VA 24416. The photo shows my friend, Ralph when we all were younger, the annual Communications concerning Elliot, who rowed it over to the cabin race across SF Bay in mid-summer high membership or mailings should be while I drove the Boston Whaler. He winds was the thing to do. Now age and addressed to: PO Box 350, Mystic, CT was pleased with its performance. wisdom prevail. 06355. www.tsca.net I was in a hurry to get it built for this I have a Shutterfly page with photos of summer so am not too proud of my building my super light Pelican.
    [Show full text]
  • Living Classrooms Foundation Economic Impact Analysis
    Living Classrooms Foundation Economic Impact Analysis Submitted by: Sage Policy Group, Inc. Submitted to: Living Classrooms December 2016 Living Classrooms Foundation Economic Impact Analysis Table of Contents Executive Summary .......................................................................................................................3 Introduction ....................................................................................................................................4 Economic Impacts .........................................................................................................................9 Implications .................................................................................................................................. 15 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 17 Appendix ....................................................................................................................................... 18 List of Exhibits Exhibit E1: Annual Baltimore City and State of Maryland Fiscal Impacts ..............................3 Exhibit 1. Living Classrooms Foundation, Statement of Activities, 2015 ................................9 Exhibit 2. Living Classrooms Foundation, Breakdown of Program Expenses, 2015 ........... 10 Exhibit 3. Measurable Economic Impacts ............................................................................... 11 Exhibit 4. Reduced Taxpayer Burden from Foundation
    [Show full text]
  • CHESAPEAKE Style After Selling Cosmetics for Nine Years, I Thought I Knew All There Was Editor, Publisher the Mission of Chesapeake Style to Know About Selling
    CHESAPEAKE PRICELESS Volume XVIII • Issue 3 • Spring 2015 www.chesapeakestyle.com © Style Serves and Celebrates the Chesapeake Bay Region and its People, Past, Present and Future 2 Spring 2015 Fast Times on the Rivers CHESAPEAKE Style After selling cosmetics for nine years, I thought I knew all there was Editor, Publisher The mission of Chesapeake Style to know about selling. I was a young mother, and sold cosmetics, as a Janet Abbott Fast is to serve and celebrate the wholesale distributor. We had weekly rah rah meetings, I created a weekly Writers & Photographers Chesapeake Bay Region and its newsletter and my sales oce was among the top in the country. Regina Baylor, Corinne Anthony people, past, present and future. When it became clear that the company was not going to Becker, Carol J. Bova, Betty Letters to the editor are welcome. promote me to a higher level—not the rst or last time that Bridgeman, Jennifer Britt, Kathey The editor reserves the right to happened—I answered a blind ad. I thought it was time to enter Brodtman, Joy B. Burch, Joseph T. edit all submissions for clarity, the real world of sales and make real money. It was early 1980. Buxton III, Esq., Ellen Dugan, Jean lousy spelling or any other I was introduced to the world of selling a piece of paper you didn’t M. Duggan, Terry Dutcher, RuthE reason that strikes her fancy. Forrest, George W. Frayne, Betty Anne Chesapeake Style is a free circulation need, until you couldn’t get it. ink about that. Life insurance.
    [Show full text]
  • 75 YEARS with PRESERVATION MARYLAND
    ✦ 75 YEARS with PRESERVATION MARYLAND SAVING the PAST SHAPING the FUTURE ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ 75 YEARS with PRESERVATION MARYLAND ✦ SAVING the PAST SHAPING the FUTURE A Publication of Preservation Maryland in Celebration of its Diamond Jubilee, 1931 ~ 2006 copyright © preservation maryland 2007 MISSION STATEMENT Preservation Maryland is dedicated to preserving Maryland’s Donors historic buildings, neighborhoods, landscapes, and archaeological Hon. and Mrs. Walter E. Black, Jr. sites through outreach, funding, and advocacy. Ms. Lisa Burcham Mr. David Chase ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Cox II 75 Years with Preservation Maryland is made possible through Ms. Virginia A. Cox a matching grant from the France-Merrick Foundation and the Dr. Julia A. King and Mr. Ray Cannetti following generous contributors: The Hon. Julian L. Lapides Ms. Linda B. Lyons Matching funds provided by Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust Company Mr. and Mrs. William D. Waxter III Ms. Kathryn Washburn Niskanen and Mr. Gregory K. Oyler The Middendorf Foundation Mr. and Mrs. W. Peter Pearre, AIA The Dorothy and Henry A. Rosenberg, Jr., Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Diane Savage Hon. William Donald Schaefer Substantial support provided by Somerset County Historical Trust, Inc. Mr. Joel D. Cohn Mrs. Ann Carter Stonesifer Mr. and Mrs. George R. Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Frank. K. Turner, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Gearhart Mr. and Mrs. Guy Warfield Ms. Louise Hayman Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Kameen Ms. Nancy Schamu Whitmore Group CREDITS Written by Roger W. Friskey, Jr. Edited by Louise Hayman Designed by Lynne Menefee Printed by Whitmore Group cover photos: From clockwise: Redwood Street, Baltimore; interior staircase, Patterson Park Pagoda, Baltimore; Tilghman Island skipjacks; B&O Railroad Building, Baltimore; Easton Historic District; Burnside Bridge, Antietam; Frederick Historic District; tobacco barn, St.
    [Show full text]
  • Management Profile for Gulf of Mexico Cobia
    Management Profile for Gulf of Mexico Cobia Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission March 2019 Pub Number 287 Commissioners and Proxies ALABAMA Senator R.L. “Bret” Allain, II Chris Blankenship 600 Main Street, Suite 1 Alabama Department of Conservation Franklin, LA 70538 and Natural Resources 64 North Union Street John Roussel Montgomery, AL 36130-1901 1221 Plains Port Hudson Road Proxy: Zachary, LA 70791 Scott Bannon, Director ADCNR, Marine Resources Division MISSISSIPPI P.O. Box 189 Joe Spraggins, Executive Director Dauphin Island, AL 36528 Mississippi Department of Marine Resources 1141 Bayview Avenue Representative Steve McMillan Biloxi, MS 39530 P.O. Box 337 Bay Minette, AL 36507 Read Hendon USM/Gulf Coast Research Lab Chris Nelson 703 East Beach Drive Bon Secour Fisheries, Inc. Ocean Springs, MS 39564 P.O. Box 60 Bon Secour, AL 36511 TEXAS Carter Smith, Executive Director FLORIDA Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Eric Sutton 4200 Smith School Road FL Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Austin, TX 78744 620 South Meridian Street Proxy: Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600 Robin Riechers/Lance Robinson Proxy: Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Dan Ellinor 4200 Smith School Road FL Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Austin, TX 78744 620 South Meridian Box 4B2 Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600 Troy Bello Williamson, II P.O. 967 Representative Jay Trumbull Corpus Christi, TX 78403 317 House Office Building 402 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-1100 LOUISIANA Jack Montoucet, Secretary Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries P.O. Box 98000 Baton Rouge, LA 70898-9000 Proxy: Patrick Banks Louisiana Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries P.O. Box 98000 Baton Rouge, LA 70898-9000 Management Profile for Gulf of Mexico Cobia by the Cobia Technical Task Force edited by Steven J.
    [Show full text]
  • 14 Outcome a Sculptor and Her Art -- After All These Years Emissions
    Monthly Publication of the Fell’s Point Citizens on Patrol 9 June 2012 4HHEE&ELLSS0OIINTERNTER Volume 14 Number 6 A Sculptor and Her Art Happenings -- After All These Years House Tour Draws Major Crowd The Preservation Society’s 41st By Lew Diuguid Historic Harbor House Tour on Stephanie Scuris came to Connecticut from Mothers’ Day turned out such a Greece in 1947 when she was 16, learned English crowd that 500 tickets were not well enough to graduate with MFA honors from the enough, so Long & Foster, long a real estate supporter of the event, Yale School of Fine Art in 1959 and was featured printed enough to cover 66 more among young artists in a show at New York’s Mu- seekers. The weather was crisp seum of Modern Art. Time Magazine described her and the publicity had been unusu- Brass Column submittal as having “assembled rods ally forthcoming--a spread in The more handsomely than any TV aerial manufacturer Sun, Baltimore Magazine and spots has yet managed to do.” The Groton News, with on four television and four radio a photo of the lovely sculptress, noted, perhaps stations. Several of the 10 open presciently, that she financed her schooling “by houses--plus the perennial Robert working nights, mostly in restaurants.” Long House, Palace on Dallas and the musical Tomas Lambdin House Scuris, now 81, has spent most of her years Tall Ships to Salute 1812 of Laura and Tony Norris--received since then with her brother Theodore, a writer and A veritable armada of 23 tall ships and naval more than 400 visitors.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form 1
    FHR-8-300 (11-78) United States Department of the Interior Thematic Group Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries complete applicable sections______________ 1. Name historic Chesapeake Bay Skipjack Fleet and/or common Chesapeake Bay Skipjack Fleet 2. Location street & number See individual inventory forms n/a not for publication city, town __ vicinity of congressional district state code county code 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district X occupied agriculture museum building(s) X private unoccupied X commercial park structure both work in progress X educational private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment religious _1_ object s in process X yes: restricted government scientific being considered yes: unrestricted industrial X transportation X not applicable no . military other: 4. Owner of Property name See individual inventory forms street & number city, town vicinity of state 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. n/a street & number city, town state 6. Representation in Existing Surveys Survey of Surviving Traditional title Chesapeake Bay Craft has this property been determined elegible? yes X no date 1983-1984 federal .X_ state county local depository for survey records Maryland Historical Trust, 21 State Circle city, town Annapolis state Maryland 21401 Thematic Group Covidition Check one Check one excellent deteriorated unaltered EL/a original site X good ruins x altered moved date n/a fair unexposed Describe the present and original (iff known) physical appearance DESCRIPTION SUMMARY; This thematic nomination comprises the fleet of 35 Chesapeake Bay skipjacks, the last active commercial sailing boats in the United States.
    [Show full text]