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TOURS: Behind the Scenes Walking Tours
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Walking Tours  

A Walk Through Baltimore's Historic Neighborhoods
Our Spring Walking Tour series provides thought-provoking guided strolls that uncover the buildings, stories and places that weave the cultural fabric of Baltimore's historic neighborhoods.  Tours are held every spring in April and May, and are announced a month ahead of time.  

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How to sign up for information on upcoming walking tours.

Space is limited on all of our walking tours, and Baltmiore Heritage members receive an announcement of tours by mail each spring.  To receive announcements, and to help support historic preservation in Baltimore, please join Baltimore Heritage.  Click here for information on how to join.

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Baltimore by Foot - Spring 2008
Presented by Baltimore Heritage, Inc. Celebrating 47 years in preservation

Have you ever wondered what’s behind those 5000 square-foot Victorian row houses in Patterson Park?  Along many streets in East Baltimore, 800 square-foot two-story “alley houses” sit behind the grand dames of Butcher’s Hill, Fell’s Point and other neighborhoods in East Baltimore.  These 19th century treasures are packed into tiny streets and offer an old-world charm of their own.  Join Joshua Philips, Director of Preservation Services at Preservation Maryland, on a stroll to discover the inner block streets and charming alley houses that occupy them.

Meet at the corner of Patterson Park and Eastern Avenues.  Park on the street.

 

Meet at the corner of Mount Royal Terrace and Lennox Street.  Park on the street.

The Institute of Notre Dame moved to its present location in north Baltimore just after the Civil War.  Today, the College of Notre Dame of Maryland campus features Federal, Art Deco, Spanish Renaissance and Beaux-Arts buildings designed by J. Crawford Neilsen, Thomas C. Kennedy, Baldwin & Pennington, and Frederick V. Murphy. The Marikle Chapel of the Annunciation stands as the college’s crown jewel. A master plan by Robert A.M. Stern has guided Notre Dame’s growth and renewal over the last decade.  Join architect Jim Suttner, AIA, and Mary Beth Lennon, Notre Dame alumna, on an insider’s tour of one of Baltimore’s most charming and distinctive campuses.

 Meet on the first floor of the Noyes Alumnae House.  Park in the lot behind the Noyes House.  Enter campus at 4701 N. Charles Street (just south of Homeland Ave.) and follow signs.

 

Getting away from Victorian architecture, the Roland Park-Homeland Company began developing the former Perine Estate into Homeland in the 1920s.  Tudor, French Country, and Early American styles combine with Colonial architecture to give this historic neighborhood a decidedly English flavor and special charm.  The Olmsted Brothers landscaping and series of miniature lakes at its center impart a romantic touch.  Join Barbara Stevens, who literally wrote the book on the history of Homeland, and her husband Jim on a stroll through this neighborhood filled with architectural jewels.

Meet at the park on the southeast corner of Charles St. and St. Albans Way (about ¼ mile south of Northern Parkway).  Park on the street.

Begun in the 1830s, Franklintown is one of the first planned communities in the country.  The brainchild of William H. Freeman, the historic district is designed around a central wooded oval with radiating lots and included a hotel and commercial district, all set adjacent to an even older mill village.  Join Bill Eberhart and Anne Gossett, longtime Franklintown residents, to walk through the collection of mill buildings and houses in this quaint rural village that may be the oldest planned suburb in the country. 

 Meet at the parking lot of the Mill Race Tavern (5201 N. Franklintown Rd., 21207).  Park in the lot.

 

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©2007 Baltimore Heritage, Inc. • 11-1/2 West Chase Street • Baltimore, MD 21201