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Pfefferkorn House and Granary

Coordinates: 39°17′41.1″N 76°59′20.4″W / 39.294750°N 76.989000°W / 39.294750; -76.989000
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Pfefferkorn House and Granary
Pfefferkorn House and Granary is located in Maryland
Pfefferkorn House and Granary
Location of Pfefferkorn House and Granary in Maryland
Nearest cityWest Friendship, Maryland
Coordinates39°17′41.1″N 76°59′20.4″W / 39.294750°N 76.989000°W / 39.294750; -76.989000
Built1844
Architectural style(s)Saltbox

Pfefferkorn House and Granary, or Lichendale is a historic slave plantation house located in West Friendship, Maryland near Glenelg, Maryland in Howard County, Maryland, United States.

The Lichendale farm is 450 acres combined from the 1837 Walter Brown, 1848 Gerald Hobbs and 1855 Thomas Jenkins farms.

The Lichendale mansion was built on the site in 1872 for the Shipley Family. 450 acres of land from "Hobbs Rest", "Poverty Discovered", and "Cumberland" were purchased by Laura Shipley, wife of the late Ethelbert E. Shipley from 1871-1872. The estate was inherited by her daughter Ethel and her husband Milfin Hood who sold the property after the deaths of their two daughters Betty and Carol in 1931. The estate was purchased by the Pfefferkorn family.[1][2]

The Lichendale mansion burned in 1946.[3] A wooden granary built between 1841 and 1868 was relocated in 1972 onto the Northern foundation and clad in grapevine seam brick. The Pfefferkorn house is a five bay wide, two story tall brick structure on a fieldstone foundation.[4][5]

Outbuildings on the site include an 1873 Victorian playhouse, smokehouse, shed and four gable barn.

The house and estate are on a 51-acre remainder parcel. The farms of state Senator Robert H. Kittleman inherited by county executive Allan Kittleman, and former county executive Norman E. Moxley's son's estate "Popular Springs Garden Invasion" reside on subdivisions of the original farm, sheltered by the Pfefferkorn Natural Resource Area owned by Howard County.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Winfield Scott Downs (1963). Encyclopedia of American biography: New series, Volume 32. American Historical Company American Historical Society.
  2. ^ Eleanor Schissler (29 March 2001). "Pfefferkorn was sailor, entrepreneur, landlord". The Columbia Flier.
  3. ^ The Christian Advocate. 26 October 1911. p. 1463.
  4. ^ "HO-566" (PDF). Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  5. ^ MD 32 Planning Study, from MD 108 to Interstate 70, Howard County: Environmental Impact Statement. 2005.