Search Results

Please note: These search results do not contain links to electronic articles hosted by the University of Maryland Libraries, although some may be available online. Please contact the University of Maryland Libraries for assistance in obtaining copies of any of the articles cited in this bibliography.

Your search in the category "Howard County" returned 127 results in 7 pages.

Showing results 1 through 20.

1)
"Ellicott City Public High School--Classes of 1922 & 1933 in Action." The Legacy, 37 (February 1994): 6-7.

2)
"Friends of the Patapsco Female Institute Announce Grand Opening." In Context, 4 (Fall 1995): 11.
Category: Education | Women | Howard County

3)
"History of the Howard County Seal." Howard County Historical Society, Inc. Newsletter 30 (September 1987): 2.

4)
"Howard County...Where Planned Growth & Quality of Life Meet." Baltimore 87 (February 1994): 68-69, 72-75.

5)
"Maryland's Best Kept Humanities Secrets: Civil War Museums and Sites in Maryland." Maryland Humanities (Spring 1998): 27.

6)
"Thomas Viaduct Monument a Disgrace." The Sentinel 18 (Spring 1996): 28.

7)
A Guide to Maryland State Archives Holdings of Howard County Records on Microfilm. Annapolis: Maryland State Archives, 1989.

8)
Atlas of Howard County, Maryland, 1878. Ellicott City, MD: Howard County Bicentennial Commission, Inc., 1975.
Annotations / Notes: Originally part of G. M. Hopkins atlas.

9)
“32nd Annual Howard County Historical Society House Tour.” The Legacy, 46 (Winter 2008): 1, 3.

10)
“A Brief History of Lisbon, Maryland.” The Legacy, 46 (February 2008): 4-5.

11)
“Ellicott City Colored School to Serve as Research and Education Center.” In Context, 10 (February 2002): [4].

12)
“First Presbyterian Church Building, (Howard County Historical Society Museum), 8328 Court Avenue, Ellicott City, Maryland.” The Legacy, 46 (February 2008): 3.
Category: Religion | Howard County

13)
“Howard County Historical Society Board Approves Flag for Society.” The Legacy, 43 (Fall 2002): 3.

14)
“Howard County Historical Society Celebrates Fifty Years of Service to the Community.” The Legacy, 46 (February 2008): 1-2.

15)
“Laurel Life.” Maryland Life, 6 (March/April 2010): 57-63.

16)
“The Warfields of Bushy Park.” The Legacy, 43 (Spring 2005): 3.

17)
“Usher in the Holiday Season by joining the HCHS for the 2007 Holiday House Tour.” The Legacy, 45 (November 2007): 1.

18)
Adams, Cheryl, and Art Emerson. Religion Collections in Libraries and Archives: A Guide to Resources in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia. Washington: Humanities and Social Sciences Division, Library of Congress, 1998.
Annotations / Notes: Institutional level descriptions for nineteen Maryland libraries and archives holding significant religious collections. A tremendous level of detail is given. Subject headings are assigned to each institution. This guide is also available online at http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/main/religion.

19)
Arnold, Joseph L. The New Deal in the Suburbs: A History of the Greenbelt Town Program, 1935-1954. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1971.
Annotations / Notes: Considering the variety of Maryland's various planned communities - Columbia, Bowie, Greenbelt and Roland Park - it is important to appreciate how each was distinctive. At its conception, Greenbelt, along with several other communities planned and built by Rexford Guy Tugwell's Resettlement Administration, represented the social experimentation associated with New Deal. According to the author: "the greenbelt towns were built to demonstrate that urban expansion by the construction of complete new towns would provide superior safety, convenience, beauty, and a deep sense of community spirit - all at a new low cost. These new suburban towns would therefore provide a superior environment for families heretofore condemned to live in urban slums. New towns would stop urban decay and end economic segregation of the suburbs." (p. xii) What was radical was the comprehensive scope of the enterprise, the creation of co-operative businesses to serve the community, and the fact that the federal government maintained ownership. This study ends with the implementation of Public Law 65 (1949) which transferred ownership of most of the houses to a private co-operative.

20)
Arrington, Nellie, ed. Elk Ridge: A Bicentennial Journal. [Elkridge]: Elkridge Bicentennial Committee, 1976.