The city of Baltimore has
been dubbed the “city of neighborhoods.”
Seventy-two designated historic districts exist that have been
traditionally occupied by distinct ethnic groups. Baltimore’s inner harbor was
once the second leading port of entry for immigrants to the United States and a
major manufacturing site. The streets form a unique grid pattern lined with
tens of thousands of brick and formstone faced rowhouses where people have been
creating an identity with ardor and conviction since the city’s beginnings. Baltimore’s
citizens have formed strong coalitions and clashed in opposition to established
values.
Historically, Baltimore has
been a volatile and challenging location in which to live. The Second
Continental Congress met there, making Baltimore the Capitol of the United
States from December 1776 to February 1777. The city is about to celebrate the
200th anniversary of the Battle of Baltimore during the War of
1812. After burning Washington DC, the
British attacked Baltimore the night of September 13, 1814. US forces stationed
at Fort McHenry successfully defended the city’s harbor. From the bow of a
British ship where he was negotiating the release of an American prisoner,
Francis Scott Key, a Maryland lawyer, witnessed the battle and later wrote the
poem, “The Star Spangled Banner,” which was to be set to music and named the
national anthem of the United States. The Baltimore Riot of 1861 was led by
Confederate sympathizers, resulting in Baltimore’s occupation by northern troops
stationed there to prevent Baltimore’s secession from the Union. A
traditionally working class port town, the workers rose up in the Great
Railroad Strike of 1877. In 1904 the Great Baltimore Fire burned more than
seventy blocks to the ground. The Black population, growing to nearly 50
percent, and presently 64%, staged the Baltimore Riot of 1968 after the
assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Baltimore is a city of firsts. From a long list, Baltimore has had the
first--post office system in the US, general meeting of the Quakers, water
company, sugar refinery, Sunday newspaper in America, investment banking house,
electric refrigerator, hydrogen gas illuminated streets, Catholic seminary,
canning of oysters, national nominating convention for President of the US,
dental college in the world, public supported high schools for girls, telegraph
line, ice cream freezer, Jewish Community Center, YMCA, black labor union, animal
welfare association—American Humane Society, and African American to serve on
the Supreme Court—Thurgood Marshall. Johns Hopkins, adopting the German model,
was the first research university and Henrietta Lacks, an African American
woman from Baltimore, without her consent, provided the cancer cells that
became the Hela immortal cell line used by cancer researchers worldwide. Today Baltimore continues to
make history as a vital center for the performing arts, five Fortune 1000 companies,
the filming of the award winning television series, The Wire, and a plethora of movies from Sleepless in Seattle to Silence
of the Lambs. It is the home of famous
film director, John Waters, the National Aquarium, the football contender, the
Ravens, and a Major League baseball team, the Orioles, who play in the
architecturally beautiful Camden Yards .The site of the 2012 NRHC Conference,
Baltimore calls us to be movers and shakers, to locate ourselves amid diversity
and forge new and vibrant ways to connect and to sustain life through science,
literature, social science, business, education, art and culture. Only amid
opposing forces can creativity abound.
Questions? mroman@cse.edu |
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