Hampden-Woodberry Hampden-Woodberry
Images of America

Hampden-Woodberry

    • 8,49 €
    • 8,49 €

Descripción editorial

The urban Baltimore neighborhood of Hampden-Woodberry began as a mill village in rural Baltimore County, where the swift-flowing waters of Jones Falls provided the power for early gristmills. As the nearby city grew into a major international port, the flour mills gave way to cloth mills that turned out cotton duck for sails. At their peak, the mills of Hampden-Woodberry turned out 80 percent of the world's cotton duck. Thousands of men, women, and children were employed in what was, in the late 19th century, the United States' largest concentration of factory labor. Fortunes were made by such men as Robert Poole and the Hooper, Carroll, and Gambrill families, who owned the mills. When it was annexed to Baltimore in 1888, Hampden-Woodberry was a thriving industrial community. The last of the mills closed in 1972, but many of these historic structures are now being reused for a variety of purposes. More importantly, Hampden-Woodberry still survives as a community with deep roots in America's industrial past.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2006
16 de octubre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
128
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Arcadia Publishing Inc.
TAMAÑO
50,9
MB

Otros libros de esta serie

Historic Grant Park Historic Grant Park
2011
Fort Worth Fort Worth
2019
Los Angeles's Central Avenue Jazz Los Angeles's Central Avenue Jazz
2014
Silicon Valley Silicon Valley
2009
Long Island Aircraft Crashes Long Island Aircraft Crashes
2004
Manhattan Street Scenes Manhattan Street Scenes
2006