City Tour of Laurel MD
The Story of Laurel is essentially a story of people. As a municipality,
it is not old, as Marylanders measure such matters. From the point of
view of early settlement, however, it is extremely so. Only a scant generation
separated the landing of the Calverts at St. Mary's City in 1634 and the
arrival of Richard Snowden. "The Immigrant," to occupy his 10,000
acres stretching westward from South River in northern Anne Arundel County
well into what--more than a century later--would be Montgomery. St. Mary's
County was erected in 1637. Calvert followed thirteen years later. In
the same year Anne Arundel came into being. By 1658 Charles had become
a political entity. Not until 1695 did Prince George's take form from
a realignment of Calvert and Charles.
Richard Snowden, Friend, came to the friendly shores of Maryland from
Wales in 1658 and the fact that his generous grant of land lay almost
a hundred miles north of the Calverts' landing place tells something of
the character of the early Marylander. Settlement literally raced up the
shoreline of navigable rivers and bays and to the credit of the Maryland
Colonial a contributing factor was the generally peaceful relationship
existing with native Indian tribes. Captain Henry Fleet, trader, explorer,
translator extraordinary and tower of strength to the Calverts on their
arrival had lived among the Indians for years and known the Potomac intimately
up to the head of Tidewater where Georgetown now stands. He counseled
the Calverts well and was rewarded in 1635 with West St. Mary's Manor,
Maryland's first recorded land grant.
Thanks to the absence of military aggressiveness by the Maryland colonizers
a generally peaceful relationship existed.
It was, then, a rather peaceful area that awaited Richard Snowden in
1658. We read, here and there, of the changing nature of our Port Tobacco
Creeks, the Eastern Branch of the Anacostia River and the silting of the
upper reaches of the mighty Patuxent. One May place credence in such speculative
recording; Richard Snowden erected his home, not on the bank of South
River where some shoreline was his, but very near the Patuxent, southeast
of today's Laurel. In the middle 17th century access to navigable streams
was urgent and necessary. There were no roads of importance, nor would
there be for another century. Only the waterways permitted reasonable
mobility.
Laurel was not yet, but as successive generations of Snowdens took up
the reins of the family fortunes the advent of the other became inevitable.
A third Richard Snowden became sole owner of the family's shared iron
enterprise and all of his life he was identified as Richard Snowden, "the
Iron Master" , or "The Iron Monger". One finds both in
the early records. This Richard died in 1763.
Laurel had been settled in the 18th or early 19th century as "Laurel
Factory" a designation it retained until June 14, 1875, when it officially
took its present name. The Snowdens had very early established an iron
works along the Patuxent and then expanded, later, into mills and factories.
In 1824 Nicholas Snowden established a cotton mill which employed a
hundred persons and flourished with typical Snowden success. This was
expanded to include a main factory of woolen hats, another turning out
blankets and a saw mill. With the death of Snowden on March 8, 1831, business
conditions in Laurel deteriorated. The vast Snowden holdings of six thousand
acres were divided among the numerous heirs. Dr. and Mrs. Jenkins presented
69 acres of their own portion to Georgetown College in 1849-50. This choice
land represents most of Laurel's present day business district.
Horace Capron who had married Louisa Snowden erected the Patuxent Cotton
Manufacturing Co. in 1835 with the aid of his brother-in-law, Dr. Jenkins
and O.C. Tiffany and Co. Capitalized at more than a quarter million dollars
-- a princely sum for those days -- the project thrived for twenty years
and gave employment to five hundred townspeople. Tragically, it burned
to the ground in 1855, but was rebuilt and continued on until obsolescence
necessitated its removal in the mid 1940's.
With the construction of its mills it must be accepted that the first
half of the 19th century witnessed a building boom, with some 500 mill
workers to be housed. To the credit of some city planner of long ago lot
lines and thoroughfares were established and strictly observed. This can
be noted by the few surviving mill houses at the west end of Main Street.
We are not told by written town records the nature of Laurel's local government
in these early days. Quite likely there was none; the complexities of
the times were few as we note our complexities today. When the mills which
represented the chief employment of the community burned in 1855, Laurel
sank into a lethargic decline.
In 1870, Laurel left its fledgling status and took on the rights and
responsibilities of incorporated government. Maps of the day would designate
the wheelwright and the blacksmith as highly important persons in the
economy.
The original incorporation stipulated "Commissioners of Laurel"
with five elected representatives serving as such. These were:
James Curley
Edward J. Phelps
George W. Kellog
Joseph A. Miles
John A. Talbott
Mr. Curley was elected President of the first board. It is of interest
that his grandson, James P. Curley was a later Mayor and also that Edward
Phelps, son of Edward J. held the same office seven times. For twenty
years this form of government functioned to the satisfaction of local
residents.
In 1890 by act of the Maryland Legislature Laurel was incorporated a
second time by amendment with Mayor and City Council and divided into
three wards. Also in 1890 agitation for an electric power plant, privately
operated, and extended street paving projects met with success and water
and sewer improvements followed shortly after.
In 1937 Postmaster General James H. Farley, in dedicating a new Laurel
Post Office pointed out that just one hundred years earlier in a similar
dedication with Edward Snowden as Postmaster, this had been Laurel Factory.
Not until June 14, 1875, was the name shortened to Laurel.
In 1899, on the northeast corner of Montgomery and Eighth Streets, was
built the FIRST HIGH SCHOOL IN PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY. If ever there was
a story of obstacles overcome by one man's determination it is that of
Laurel's seven-times Mayor, Edward Phelps, in pursuance of this project.
When the low bidder failed to give bond and declined to proceed with the
contract, Edward Phelps himself assumed the risk of putting up the school
at the low-bid price and lost a thousand dollars of his own money in doing
so. As long as this 1899 school building stands, the civic-mindedness
of Laurel's Edward Phelps will need no other attestation.
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