City Tour of Gaithersburg MD
Gaithersburg began in 1765 as a tiny agricultural settlement called Log
Town. In 1850, the post office was named "Forest Oak." The town
officially became Gaithersburg when it was incorporated on April 5, 1878.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad came to Gaithersburg in 1873. The railroad
brought a large summer community to town as the ease of travel allowed
people to escape Washington, D.C., during the hot summer months. Agricultural
businesses expanded as area farmers were able to ship products faster
with less risk of spoilage. The brick station and freight house building
were designed by Ephraim Francis Baldwin, a Baltimore architect, and constructed
in 1884.
The City is named after Benjamin Gaither who built a house in 1802 on
the property where the famous Forest Oak tree used to grow. The tree was
over 275 years old in 1975, when a boring was taken to determine its age.
The Oak tree witnessed much change along the "Great Road West,"
Maryland Route 355, in its close to 300 years of existence. The tree saw
the coming of famous generals like George Washington and Edward Braddock
traveling between Georgetown and Frederick and the commercial development
of the road in the modern era. In the summer of 1997 this city landmark
was knocked down in a storm.
In 1899 the Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory was built as part of an
international project to measure the earth's wobble on its polar axis.
The Gaithersburg Observatory and five others in Japan, Italy, Russia and
the United States gathered information that is still used by scientists
today, along with information obtained from satellites, to determine polar
motion; the size, shape, and physical properties of the earth; and to
aid the space program through the precise navigational patterns of orbiting
satellites. The Gaithersburg station operated until 1982 when computerization
rendered the manual observation obsolete.
The Gaithersburg City Hall building was once the home of Edward P. Schwartz
who, in 1913, established a famous peony garden on land that stretched
from the railway station to Hutton Street. The garden included 410 varieties
of peonies from all over the world. Each spring the garden was a tourist
attraction visited by admirers, including President Woodrow Wilson. The
City purchased the estate in 1958 and renovated the house for City Hall
offices.
On June 14, 1961 the National Bureau of Standards (now National Institute
of Standards and Technology) broke ground on its first Gaithersburg building.
The move of this government agency brought an incredible amount of growth
to the City. The complex maintains standards for scientific research and
housed in the complex are the standard meter and kilogram to which all
others are compared to for accuracy. The organization's coming gave Gaithersburg
the designation as "Science Capital of the United States." When
the Bureau moved to the area, other science related firms came to do business
in the community.
Gaithersburg has undergone significant changes in recent years. The City
is now an urban area and suburb of Washington, D.C. It has become a major
regional location for high-technology companies while commercial agriculture
is close to non-existent. The rolling fields of wheat are now roads, housing
developments and commercial enterprises, but at the same time a number
of historic communities and traditions have been preserved. As the City
enters the next millennium and continues to grow it will retain many of
the qualities of a small town with a rich diverse heritage.
Gaithersburg Links
City of Gaithersburg
Montgomery County Public Schools
Gaithersburg Chamber of Commerce
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