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MARYLAND
Founded as the sole Catholic colony in strongly
Protestant America, and isolated as the northernmost
slave state, MARYLAND has always been unusual.
Within its small, irregularly-shaped area, its
attractions range from the frantic, boardwalk
beaches of Ocean City to the sleepy fishing villages
of the Chesapeake Bay, and the bustling urban
center of Baltimore to peaceful Appalachian hill
country.
Once one of the world's most productive fishing
areas, Maryland's Chesapeake has recently been
brought back from the brink of complete annihilation
due to pollution and overfishing. Its abundant
oyster stocks are a thing of the past, but legendary
soft-shell blue crabs and sweet rockfish are more
plentiful than ever, and now support a diverse,
decentralized economy, buoyed by the hundreds
of weekend boaters who cruise from one to another
of its colonial-era towns.
Maryland's heritage isn't quite as obvious as
Virginia's, with nowhere near as many historical
sites, but it boasts plenty of firsts for the
United States, including the first Catholic Cathedral,
gas-lit street and telegraph line between Baltimore
and Washington DC. Kent Island on Maryland's Eastern
Shore was the third permanent English settlement
(behind Jamestown and Plymouth Rock) in 1631.
And during the War of 1812, the British forces
attempted a last-ditch effort to wrest back the
colonies, in which they burned down much of Washington
DC and moved onto the shipyards of Baltimore.
In a valiant battle, they were staved off at Fort
McHenry; the fort's resistance inspired an onlooker,
Francis Scott Key, to write the words to the United
States' national anthem, The Star-Spangled Banner.
Maryland's largest city is the busy port of Baltimore,
a quirky and engaging metropolis with a revitalized
urban waterfront, thriving cultural scene and
eclectic neighborhoods that characterize its diverse
residents.
Western Maryland stretches over a hundred miles
to the Appalachian foothills, its rolling farmlands
noteworthy chiefly for the Civil War battlefield
at Antietam. Just twenty miles south of Baltimore,
along the Chesapeake Bay, picturesque Annapolis
has served as Maryland's capital since 1694. Some
of the state's most worthwhile destinations, from
the pretty fishing and yachting town of St Michaels
to the untouched wilderness of Assateague Island,
are across the Chesapeake Bay on the eastern shore,
connected to the rest of the state by the US-50
bridge but otherwise still a world apart – except
for the sprawling resort of Ocean City.
To
view Vacation Rental Homes in MARYLAND click here.
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