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Moving Destinations in Maryland
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Moving - Frederick County, Maryland
Are you looking for a reputable moving
company to relocate you into or out of Frederick
County County, MD? We at Movers USA pride our selves on our
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I hope you enjoy reading this brief
history of Frederick County, MD.
A Brief History of Frederick County,
Maryland
Several famous people in Maryland history
came from Frederick County, including Thomas Johnson, the
state's first elected governor, and John Hanson, America's
first president under the Articles of Confederation. Francis
Scott Key, author of "The Star-Spangled Banner," was born in
Frederick and shared a law practice with his brother-in-law,
Roger Brooke Taney. Taney later became Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court. Visitors can see where he spent his early
years at the Roger Brooke Taney Home and Francis Scott Key
Museum in the city of Frederick, the county seat.
The first settlers were Pennsylvania
Germans who came to Frederick in 1730 and named the county
and county seat in 1748 for Frederick Calvert, the sixth and
last Lord Baltimore. The oldest building in the county is a
German farm house in Frederick now called the Schifferstadt
Architectural Museum.
Frederick County, located in both the
Appalachian Mountain and Piedmont Plateau regions, has more
farms than any other county in Maryland. Several vineyards
and covered bridges dot the countryside. Lilypons Water
Gardens in Buckeystown is the largest water garden in the
United States and the little town of New Market is "the
antiques capital of Maryland." Emmitsburg is the home of the
National Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, the first
American-born saint.
Frederick also has a wealth of Civil War
history. The Barbara Fritchie House and Museum is a replica
of the house where 96-year-old Barbara Fritchie reportedly
confronted General Stonewall Jackson when Confederate forces
marched into Frederick in early September 1862. The event
was immortalized by poet John Greenleaf Whittier. "Shoot if
you must this old gray head, but spare your country's flag,'
she said." According to Whittier's account, Jackson was
impressed and spared the flag and the town of Frederick. The
National Museum of Civil War Medicine has exhibits on
medical techniques used during the war. Just outside of
town, Monocacy National Battlefield was the site of a battle
which played a pivotal role in defending Washington D.C. in
1864.

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