Maryland
Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009MARYLAND derives its name from Maria/Mary Arundel, wife to King Charles 1st of England. Layers of history overlap. Past British and French influence is still reflected in city, town names, and Victorian architecture and American Civil War battlefields. Strongest is the Maritime influence, still in existence because of the State’s geographical position on Chesapeake Bay which has the longest shoreline in the US.
Capital Annapolis is home to the United States Naval Academy yet colonial buildings abound to retain an ‘old world character’ that woo tourists to enjoy the old architecture of, inns, shops and restaurants, beautiful historic homes and museums.
The large port city of Baltimore has innumerable attractions; The Waterfront with restaurants, antiques, art galleries, ships and monuments and fine aquarium, many museums with remarkable collections and an interactive science center and ‘Italian Quarter’ of fine restaurants.
North Bay on Chesapeake Bay is the home to the lovely town of Havre de Grace, a favorite of photographers and painters. Unusual museums – from decoy ducks and Canal operations to Maritimes, as well as lighthouses, wildfowl parks and of course beaches, boating and yachting in and around the bay.
Festivals are also a way of life. Regular annual events host Wine shows, Flowers, fruit, arts and crafts, foods and seafood, sporting, family and children’s entertainment. Sailboat regatta’s, fun runs, jousting tournaments, horse shows, musicals, flag days, Celtic, African-American, American Indian, Scottish, Italian and All Nations festivals of music, food and entertainment to name only a few of the 100’s throughout the year.
As a major cultural center, Maryland and particularly Baltimore hosts many visual and performing arts events – a ‘culture vulture’s delight’!