Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland)

Coordinates: 39°18′03″N 77°01′20″W / 39.30083°N 77.02222°W / 39.30083; -77.02222
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Bushy Park
Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland) is located in Maryland
Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland)
Location of Bushy Park in Maryland
Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland) is located in the United States
Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland)
Bushy Park (Glenwood, Maryland) (the United States)
LocationGlenwood, Maryland
Coordinates39°18′03″N 77°01′20″W / 39.30083°N 77.02222°W / 39.30083; -77.02222
Built1771
Governing bodyPrivate

Bushy Park is a historic slave plantation located at Glenwood, Howard County, Maryland, United States. It is located on a 3,940 acre land patent named "Ridgley's Great Park".[1]

Bushy park is known as the home of Charles Alexander Warfield. Warfield married Elizabeth Ridgley of Laurel in 1771 and settled in a log home at "Bushy Park". The same year he started construction on his slave plantation manor home.[2] On 19 October 1774, Warfield and his neighbors travelled to Annapolis and burned the Peggy Stewart in retaliation to sanctions on Americans following the Boston Tea Party. Paintings of the incident are displayed in the State House at Annapolis and the Court House at Baltimore.

In 1866, Charles D. Warfeild sold the 270-acre and 160-acre Bushy Park tracts containing an eight-room stone and frame house, including two tenant houses, blacksmith shop, 250-tree apple orchard and 73-tree peach orchard.[3] The property later was owned by the "Hammond" family of the Major Charles family line. The manor stood for over 150 years, burned in 1933, and was demolished in 1947. A new house was built over the original foundation. In 1978, the property was purchased by the Clevenger family and had been subdivided down to 342 acres, but was still actively farmed. In 1983, it had been subdivided down to a 190-acre parcel named "Bushy Park Farm" and sold again.[4] A portion of the original estate became the Carr's Mill Landfill, which became a site of hazardous waste dumping by Western Electric in the 1970s. Howard County spent millions of dollars to cap the landfill and dispose of hazardous materials after contamination of groundwater on the site.[5] Warfield is buried at Bushy Park. The walled cemetery remains, but the majority of the 1300-acre farm has been redeveloped as the Western Regional Park, operated by Howard County.[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Barbara W. Feaga. Howard's Roads to Past. p. 72.
  2. ^ Griffith Families: Being Principally the Descendants of William Griffith, Died C. 1699, Through More Than 300 Years and Twelve Generations, in Male and Female Lines : Primarily of Montgomery & Frederick Counties, Maryland, But Including Numerous References to the Family Found in Other Counties and States. p. 31.
  3. ^ "Two Valuable tracts of land for sale at auction". The Baltimore Sun. 8 March 1866.
  4. ^ "A True Colonial, Circa 1771". The Washington Post. 16 September 1996.
  5. ^ Erik Nelson (16 March 1995). "Options offered to deal with contaminated dirt". The Baltimore Sun.
  6. ^ Joshua Dorsey Warfield. The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland.