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A "Privy" Event in North Baltimore
Homewood House Museum will
be host for and beneficiary of the 69th annual Maryland
House and Garden Pilgrimage, a tour of eight private homes
and gardens and three public buildings in northern
Baltimore and Baltimore County, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Saturday, May 13.
Visitors can tour all of the sites — including
Homewood House at 3400 N. Charles St. — for $25, or
pay $10 for admission to an individual site. A tour book
with information on all the locations is included. Proceeds
will be used to restore Homewood House's original
19th-century privy. Tickets may be purchased in advance
through Homewood House or on the day of the tour at any
house visited. For tickets or information, call 410-516-
5589 or visit the Maryland House & Garden Pilgrimage Web
site at
http://www.mhgp.org.
Whether you define privy as "private or secret" or "an
outhouse," the word aptly describes the 2006 North
Baltimore Maryland House and Garden Pilgrimage. Visitors
will have the rare opportunity to see eight of northern
Baltimore City and adjacent Baltimore County's most
beautiful private homes, many of which contain collections
of 18th- and 19th- century American and English furniture,
decorative arts and paintings. Other homes boast some of
the area's most magnificent private gardens. Also included
on the tour are the Women's Club of Roland Park and Saint
David's Church, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary
this year.
The tour encompasses Roland Park and the adjacent
Baltimore County area of Woodbrook to the north. Roland
Park, laid out in the 1890s, made conscious use of the
topography of the landscape to enhance a suburban
development. Today, the area retains its original character
and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Baltimore County just north of the city, like the area that
became Roland Park, was home to country estates and summer
residences in the 19th century, allowing it to retain much
of its rural setting to this day. Homewood House Museum, a
National Historic Site just south of Roland Park, was built
as a summer residence in 1802 for Charles Carroll Jr.
Although there were originally many buildings on the
Homewood property, only two contemporary with the house
remain standing today: the barn or carriage house (now used
as a theater), and Homewood's privy, located at what was
the edge of Homewood's formal gardens. The survival of this
type of structure is extraordinarily rare. Made of brick
with a wood shingle roof and two entrances, the privy
retains its original domed ceiling and chestnut paneling,
as well as the remains of 100-year-old graffiti inscribed
by students of the Country School for Boys (now Gilman
School).
As with any historic structure, the privy's battle
against the elements is ongoing. The funds raised through
the North Baltimore Maryland House and Garden Pilgrimage
will support Homewood's efforts to stabilize the privy,
repair the roof, repoint the bricks, and restore losses to
the interior paneling.
"This is a terrific opportunity for Homewood, and the
House & Garden Pilgrimage is always a fun day," said
Homewood curator, Catherine Rogers Arthur.
The Maryland House and Garden Pilgrimage is a
non-profit organization whose primary purpose is to help
preserve and restore architecturally and historically
significant properties in Maryland. During its 69-year
history, it has made major contributions to historic
preservation throughout the state.
Homewood House Museum is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Tuesday through Friday, and noon to 4 p.m., Saturday and
Sunday. Tours of Homewood are offered every half hour with
the last tour beginning at 3:30 p.m. Museum admission is $6
for adults, $3 for students and children over 6 years of
age, and $5 for seniors. Call 410-516-5589 or visit
http://www.jhu.edu/historichouses for additional
information.
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