William Klender, Baltimore Sun photo
The long-time mayor of Baltimore (from 1947-59) and Little Italy mainstay helped bring the major-league Orioles home (in 1954, when the hapless St. Louis Browns relocated here) and was the sire of a political legacy that included a future mayor (Thomas D'Alesandro III) and Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (Nancy Pelosi).
William Hotz/Baltimore Sun
Colts fans huddle under umbrellas and sheets of plastic as they watch the Colts defeat the Minnesota Vikings 24-14 at Memorial Stadium in 1968.
Baltimore Sun
Cars park along the carriage lane of N. Charles Street near 32nd Street in 1963. At the time, residents of the area were upset over a proposal to install parking meters.
Frank Gardina / Baltimore Sun
Arcade Pharmacy is seen at the corner of Hamilton Avenue and Harford Road in 1957. The pharmacy closed in 1997.
A. Aubrey Bodine / The Baltimore Sun
Framed by the columns of the pavilion, a family walks through the snow in Union Square Park in 1941.
Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun
Cars park along the 500 block of N. Stricker Street in the Harlem Park neighborhood.
The Baltimore Sun
The former summer home of H.L Mencken overlooks the Jones Falls Valley from a hill in Mount Washington in 1979.
Baltimore Sun/Baltimore Sun
A Western Maryland Railway bridge crosses Reisterstown Road in Owings Mills in 1944.
Robert F. Kniesche / Baltimore Sun
Homes are seen in the unit block of Admiral Boulevard in Dundalk in 1963.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
Young boys sit on the Baltimore city line marker at the corner of Hanover Street and Jack Street in Brooklyn in 1937.
Edward Nolan, Baltimore Sun photo, 1956
Long Baltimore's industrial showpiece, Beth Steel employed some 75,000 workers at its Sparrows Point steel mill and Baltimore shipyard, making steel for structures throughout the country and, during World War II, producing scores of Liberty ships for use in the war effort. Now all but abandoned, the fate of the mill and the acres of surrounding property remain uncertain.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The Mechanic Theater closed in 2004 and was razed ten years later. The France fountain was redesigned with a nautical theme in 1998.
Robert Kniesche / Baltimore Sun
Sagamore Farm's oval-shaped training barn and indoor track is seen along Belmont Road in Reisterstown in 1955.
The Baltimore Sun
East Baltimore Street in 1917 featured a view of the iconic Tower Building, the Rivoli movie theater and Newark Shoe store.
William Klender/Baltimore Sun
Shops line York Road in Cockeysville near an underpass of the Northern Central Railroad in 1939.
Baltimore Sun
Cars back up on East Mt. Vernon Place at St. Paul Street in 1937 as traffic was diverted from Charles Street while foresters removed an ancient Ash tree.
Richard Childress/Baltimore Sun
A pair of single family homes along Pennsylvania Ave. in Towson frame the Ridgely Condominiums high rise under construction in 1974.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Trains of the Union Bridge-based Maryland Midland Railroad now use line that passes over Reisterstown Road.
Baltimore Sun
Downtown Towson is seen looking south on York Road from Shealy Avenue in 1922.
Robert K. Hamilton, Baltimore Sun photo
The bandleader who added "hi-de-ho" to the world's music vocabulary and made a cultural icon out of "Minnie the Moocher" moved to Baltimore in 1918, when he was 10. Check out the 1980 movie "The Blues Brothers" -- that's Calloway playing Curtis, the janitor, alongside John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The 51-foot tall Male/Female sculpture stands at the entrance to Pennsylvania Station above a parking garage built when the south-side tracks were removed.
Baltimore Sun file photo
First Miss Nancy, then her daughter, Miss Sally, helped a generation of Baltimore pre-school-age children learn manners, deportment and other essential life skills. Ask anyone in their 50s or older about Mr. Do Bee, the Magic Mirror or the "Romper Room" prayer ("God is great, God is good. Let us thank him for our food. Amen") and prepare to listen as the floodgates of memory open.
Baltimore Sun
Two-way traffic and a street car move along Charles Street above the south-side tracks at Pennsylvania Station in the 1930s.
Baltimore Sun
A vest pocket park is formed by the intersection of Park Ave, Liberty Street and Fayette Street in the early 1900s.
William H. Mortimer, Baltimore Sun photo
For decades the go-to destination for Baltimore shoppers, the corner of Lexington and Howard streets was home to four department stores: Hecht's, Hochschild's, Hutzler's and Stewart's (pictured). For decades, no Christmas was complete without at least one shopping trip to this commercial nerve center. They're all gone now -- Hutzler's remained the longest, closing in 1989.
Baltimore Sun
Horse drawn carts travel alongside street car tracks on Howard Street in 1905.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
A variety of stores fill the Cherry Hill Town Center. The Cherry Hill Branch of the Enoch Pratt Library moved to the shopping center in 1998 into space formerly occupied by the Hill Theater.
Robert F. Kniesche / The Baltimore Sun
Snow blankets Federal Hill along Key Highway in Baltimore's Inner Harbor after a storm in 1958.
Baltimore Sun
The Washington Monument stands in the center of a dirt covered Charles Street shared between horse drawn wagons and early cars in 1904.
Walter McCardell / Baltimore Sun
Police direct traffic on South Hanover Street at the intersection with Cromwell Street in Port Covington in 1949.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves on South Hanover Street through the intersection with Cromwell Street in Port Covington.
Richard Stacks / The Baltimore Sun
A pedestrian crosses East Lombard Street above S. Chester Street in 1962.
Baltimore Sun
Cars are parked along East Monument Street at St. Paul near the Loyola College and High School building (left) in the 1920s.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
The Winans mansion, designed by architect Stanford White in 1882, has been used as a school for girls, a funeral home and doctors' offices. Now it is used as office space for Agora Inc.
Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun photo
Opened in 1888, this beautiful Victorian-era greenhouse is one of the showpieces of Baltimore's 745-acre Druid Hill Park, one of the oldest landscaped public parks in the U.S. It is now known officially as the Howard Peters Rawlings Conservatory & Botanic Gardens (named for our current mayor's father, a long-time state delegate).
Ellis Malashuk/Baltimore Sun
A pile of stumps smolders after trees were cleared near the Sheppard Pratt gatehouse during the rerouting and widening of Charles Street in 1957.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Dark Lane was officially designated a street in 1817. Two hundred years later, the glorified alley is a bit darker, surrounded by tall buildings on three sides.
Baltimore Sun
Homes line West Hoffman Street at Park Avenue near the Fifth Regiment Armory in 1937. Deemed a blight by the Mount Royal Association, the homes were razed for a park.
George Cook / Baltimore Sun
Businesses are seen along Main Street in downtown Sykesville in 1953.
William L. La Force Jr., Baltimore Sun photo
Baltimore's last amusement park closed for good in 1973, in the wake of extensive damage caused by Hurricane Agnes. Some remember the park for its role in the city's civil rights struggle; in July 1963, demonstrators demanded Gwynn Oak be integrated (by August, it was). Others remember it for rides like the Wild Mouse, as scary a roller coaster as any 12-year-old Baltimorean would ever want to ride.
Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun photo
The Rheb family has been delighting Baltimore's collective sweet tooth since 1917. They closed their stall at Lexington Market in 2008, but you can still get the city's best sugar rush at their Wilkens Avenue store.
Baltimore Sun
The Wade Wing of the Foster-Wade Building is seen in 1928 a few months after its completion on the Spring Grove Hospital campus. The Foster Clinic, seen with columns, was built in 1914.
Lloyd Pearson / Baltimore Sun
Engine Company No. 46 is seen on Reisterstown Road in 1975. The fire station was built in 1919.
The Baltimore Sun
Residents walk down Cooksie Street in Locust Point in 1941.
Richard Stacks, Baltimore Sun photo
Home of Baltimore's major outdoor sports teams, including the Colts and Orioles, from 1950-1997. Much as they love Oriole Park at Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium, many Baltimore sports fans still shed a tear when they think of Memorial Stadium, where Johnny Unitas and Brooks Robinson spent their big-league careers, where Frank Robinson won a Triple Crown and Art Donovan yielded ground to no man.
Richard Stacks, Baltimore Sun photo
The Baltimore native and Frederick Douglass High School grad, appointed chief counsel for the NAACP in 1940, successfully argued against school segregation before the U.S. Supreme Court, which outlawed the practice with its 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision. He was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Lyndon Johnson in 1967 -- the first African-American to serve on the court -- and remained there until 1991.
Ralph L. Robinson/Baltimore Sun
Visitors enjoy the annual Holiday Train Garden at Baltimore Fire Department's Glen Avenue station in 1976.
Baltimore Sun / The Baltimore Sun
Two-way traffic moves along South Street looking north from Water Street in 1917.
Kim Hairston / The Baltimore Sun
The Ray of Hope Baptist Church recently celebrated its 40th anniversary at the corner of Harford Road and Parkside Drive.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
Trees now line much of East Lombard Street as part of the city's long term effort to increase the urban tree canopy.
William Klender / Baltimore Sun
Construction of a culvert that would eventually box in the Jones Falls is seen near Penn Station in 1958. The Jones Falls Expressway, constructed above the river, was completed to Guilford Avenue in the early '60s.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Emma's Tea Spot now occupies the former Arcade Pharmacy at the corner of Hamilton Avenue and Harford Road.
Baltimore Sun
Traffic and streetcars cross the Hanover Street Bridge in 1940.
Baltimore Sun
National Central Bank, once known at The German Bank of Baltimore City, is seen at the northwest corner of Baltimore and Holiday Streets in 1931.
William Klender / Baltimore Sun
Cars fill the parking lot at Memorial Stadium during the first Orioles Opening Day in 1954.
Clarence B. Garrett, Baltimore Sun photo
A two-time mayor of Baltimore (1943-47 and 1963-67) who served as governor of Maryland from 1951-59 -- and as a Republican, hard to believe in this traditionally Democratic state -- McKeldin was long one of the Free State's most beloved pols. He was also a firm believer in civil rights, when that wasn't always the most popular position for a politician to espouse.
Xavier Plater / Baltimore Sun
Surrounded by Baltimore rowhouses, the home, built in 1848, is one of the oldest in Bolton Hill.
Baltimore Sun
Johns Hopkins Hospital (top right) and East Baltimore is seen looking down East Fayette Street from the Shot Tower in 1943.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Traffic travels south on the Jones Falls Expressway passing The Baltimore Sun building.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Once the center of upscale department store shopping in Baltimore, Howard Street stores have been largely abandoned or repurposed over the last fifty years.
Baltimore Sun file photo
The king of ragtime was a Charm City native, born on Forrest Street in 1887. His compositions include such classics as "Love Will Find a Way" and "I'm Just Wild About Harry."
Baltimore Sun
Cars park along the 500 block of N. Stricker Street in 1945.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Howard County's first firehouse at Church Road and Main Street is now the Firehouse Museum. The museum's collection of firefighter memorabilia and displays is open to the public on weekends.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
Roman-style brick architecture typical of many homes in Charles Village is seen on the Northwest corner of 25th Street and Calvert Street in 1969.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The businesses have changed but Eastern Avenue still the economic center of Highlandtown.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Over the years Towson Plaza was enclosed and expanded, incorporating much of the original shopping center into what in now the four-story Towson Town Center.
Joseph DiPaola / Baltimore Sun
Tracks damaged from flooding in Hurricane Agnes are seen outside the Sykesville Train Station in 1973. The station on the B&O Line was designed by architect Ephraim Francis Baldwin.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Businesses are seen along Main Street in downtown Sykesville.
Hans Marx, Baltimore Sun photo
Founded in 1827 (its cornerstone was laid the following year by Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence), the B&O was long one of the nation's premier railroads. Though the railroad itself has largely disappeared, its legacy remains strong in Baltimore's B&O Railroad Museum, the magnificent B&O Railroad building on Charles Street (now home to the high-class Hotel Monaco) and, let us not forget, a key Monopoly property.
Baltimore Sun files
Who is Coppin State University's namesake?
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
A pedestrian crosses Charles Street near Read Street. This section of Charles Street became one-way Northbound in 1963.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
St. Ambrose Catholic Church added a convent and rectory in 1955. The street car line stopped running on Park Heights Avenue in 1949.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
HarborView and The Pier Homes at Harborview are seen along Key Highway after Baltimore received a dusting of snow on Wednesday.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
The three-way intersection of Englewood Avenue, Gwynn Oak Avenue and Windsor Mill Road is seen in Woodlawn.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The Charles L. Benton Jr. Building now occupies the corner of Baltimore and Gay Street. The Tower Building disappeared from the city skyline in 1986.
Robert F. Kniesche, Baltimore Sun photo
The Bard of Baltimore, for decades the proud wielder of America's most acerbic pen, was an Evening Sun mainstay for decades (which is why he's quoted on the wall of our Calvert Street lobby). But we'd include him even if he wrote for somebody else.
Baltimore Sun file photo
Erected in 1911, this 289-foot tower was once headquarters for the Emerson Drug Co., manufacturers of the antacid Bromo Seltzer (for decades marketed in blue bottles, which explains why a giant blue bottle sat atop the tower until 1936). Although Bromo Seltzer left Baltimore long ago, the distinctive tower remains (is there a skinnier office building anywhere?), now used as an artists' space. (Pictured: A postcard of the Bromo Seltzer Tower building, postmarked July 23, 1915)
Baltimore Sun
A crowd gathers by the toll plaza for the opening of the new Susquehanna River Bridge in August 1940.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
The Jacob France Memorial Fountain is seen in the center of Hopkins Plaza shortly after its construction near the Morris A. Mechanic Theater in 1967.
Baltimore Sun
The No. 9 trolley line runs along Ellicott City's Main Street in 1955. The line, which traveled back and forth from Catonsville Junction and began running in 1899.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves along Hanover Street past the Baltimore city line marker (right) in Brooklyn. The stone in was placed in 1919 after a general survey of the city's boundaries.
Ralph Robinson / Baltimore Sun
The back of the Sunpapers building is seen on Guilford Avenue in 1975 during the construction of the Jones Falls Expressway.
William Klender / Baltimore Sun
Soap box derby cars speed down the starting ramps on the 2400 block of E. Baltimore St. in 1950 during a heat in the Sunpapers Soap Box Derby.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The Johns Hopkins Hospital campus now fills much of the East Baltimore skyline.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
Mulberry Street runs alongside of the Central Enoch Pratt Free Library in 1948. In the distance at Park Avenue is the heart of Baltimore's Chinatown community.
Robert F. Kniesche/Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves East through the center of Essex along the 400 block of Eastern Boulevard in 1964.
Baltimore Sun file photo
"Run right to Read's" was an advertising slogan that Baltimoreans heeded for generations, until the chain was bought out by Rite Aid in the 1980s. The lunch counter of the flagship store, at Howard and Lexington streets, was the site of a pre-Rosa Parks civil rights demonstration by Morgan State College students in January 1955; the fate of the long-abandoned building is still being deliberated.
William Klender/Baltimore Sun
A crew of postal employees sort Christmas mail by hand at Baltimore's Main Post Office on Calvert Street in 1956.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
A northbound Amtrak Acela crosses the Susquehanna River Bridge at Havre de Grace.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Seen during Wednesday's snowstorm, this section of Holiday Street in front of City Hall is now a parking lot. Streetcar service ended here in November 1963.
Paul Hutchins/Baltimore Sun
The mansion of millionaire Ross R. Winans stands near the southeast corner of Preston and St. Paul streets in 1967 shortly after the neighboring Donaldson mansion had been torn down.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The home, formerly known as Jencks Mansion and more recently the Hackerman House, was reopened in June by the Walters Art Museum following a four-year, $10.4 million renovation.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The Lord Baltimore Hotel is seen through a small gap in the canyon of gray office buildings formed by Bank of America Center (right), the G.H. Fallon Federal Building and the Garmatz Federal Courthouse (not pictured) along South Hanover Street.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The mill dam now known as Round Falls is the main surviving element of the Timanus Mill which was torn down in 1933. The19th Century iron-work arch bridge was replaced in the 1970s in order to span the Jones Falls Expressway.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Traffic crosses the 101-year-old Hanover Street bridge between Port Covington and Cherry Hill.
Baltimore Sun
Delivery trucks line up in front of businesses along Eastern Avenue at Eaton Street in Highlandtown in 1940.
April Saul / Baltimore Sun
Sophie Lericos gets a kiss from the Oriole Bird, then know as Big Bird, on Opening Day at Memorial Stadium in 1981.
The Baltimore Sun
Several inches of snow coat the Barye Lion Statue and the park at West Mount Vernon Place in 1938.
Baltimore Sun file photo
Founded by Colts great Gino Marchetti, Gino's was Baltimore's premier fast-food chain for much of the 1960s and 1970s; McDonald's was strictly a second choice. The last of the original restaurants closed in 1991, but happily, since August 2011, a new generation of Gino Giant hamburgers is being served at the revived chain, with restaurants in Towson, Glen Burnie and elsewhere.
Barbara Haddock Taylor / Baltimore Sun
Lynne Brick's Belvedere Square gym occupies the majority of the former Hochschild Kohn department store building on York Road.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
Residences along Druid Park Lake Drive are reflected in the Park's reservoir in 1933.
Barbara Haddock Taylor/Baltimore Sun
The carriage lane of N. Charles Street near 32nd Street remains unmetered today with parking limited to two hours for those without a residential permit. Curbside parking along the main lanes of Charles Street is metered.
Baltimore Sun
Strainer's Cafe and row homes are seen along the 1600 block of Clinton St. in 1940. The block was known as Copper Row, and was housing for workers from the Baltimore Copper Smelting Company beginning around 1850.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
Orange cones and barrels line much of Central Avenue during the second phase of the long term streetscaping project.
William Klender / The Baltimore Sun
Sherwood Episcopal Church, an 1830s gothic revival style church, overlooks businesses along York Road in Cockeysville in 1939.
William Klender/Baltimore Sun
A Baltimore & Ohio train passes above a crew beginning construction on a new bridge over Loch Raven Road in 1957 prior to widening the roadway.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The train yards are gone but the 1728-foot long Orleans Street Viaduct remains a primary route for drivers traveling between East and West Baltimore.
Robert Kniesche / Baltimore Sun
Paddlewheel steam ships and fireboats are docked at a pier at the end of President's Street on Baltimore's inner harbor in 1939.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Liberty Dog Park fills a block-long, narrow greenspace between Liberty Street and Park Avenue in downtown Baltimore. It is bounded by Fayette Street on the north side and Baltimore Street on the south.
Baltimore Sun file photo, 1936
One of opera's greatest sopranos -- no one who ever heard her would debate otherwise -- married Baltimore socialite Carle Jackson in 1936. Shortly thereafter, they moved into Villa Pace, the Greenspring Valley mansion she would call home until her death in 1981. In the 1940s, she was one of the guiding forces behind the founding of the Baltimore Opera Company.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Homes are seen in the unit block of Admiral Boulevard in Dundalk.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
The colonial style Baltimore Federal Savings and Loan building is seen at 19 E Fayette Street in 1951. In 1989, the bank, then known as Baltimore Federal Financial, failed and was taken over by the government.
Clarence Garrett / Baltimore Sun
Canton National Bank is seen on the corner of S. Clinton and Elliott streets after a robbery in 1963.
A. Aubrey Bodine / The Baltimore Sun
The Jencks Mansion, as it was know as in 1953, is seen on Mount Vernon Place.The mansion was built around 1848 by Dr. John Hanson Thomas.
Barbara Haddock Taylor / Baltimore Sun
Towson Commons replaced the stores along the 400 block of York Road in 1992. After struggling in recent years, the retail space is working on a turnaround. New owners have secured several tenants including L.A. Fitness, Chipotle and CVS pharmacy.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Homes are seen on the 6700 block of Brentwood Ave. in Dundalk.
Paul Hutchins, Baltimore Sun photo, August 1965
To watch Brooks Robinson play third base, which he did for the Orioles from 1955 to 1977, was to observe perfection. The man could hit, too, but it was his glove that earned him a place in baseball's Hall of Fame, and in the hearts of Orioles fans everywhere.
Robert F. Kniesche / Baltimore Sun
Ships fill the piers at Bethlehem Steel along Key Highway in Baltimore's Inner Harbor after a snowstorm in 1958.
Clarence Garrett / Baltimore Sun
Hochschild Kohn department store is seen on the corner of Belvedere Avenue and York Road in November 1983, a month before it closed. It had opened in 1948 as the company's second suburban location.
Algerina Perna, Baltimore Sun photo
Known officially as the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Cathedral Street house of worship (now you know where the street got its name) was completed in 1821. It was designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, the architect responsible for the U.S. Capitol.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Filled with shops and entertainment venues, Baltimore's Inner Harbor is now one of the city's main attraction for tourists and residents.
Lloyd Pearson / Baltimore Sun
The Coast Guard cutter Eagle unfurled its sails and skimmed out of the Inner Harbor below the new construction of the Outer Harbor Bridge in July 1976. The bridge opened for traffic in March 1977 as the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
With the conversion to cashless tolling, drivers no longer have to stop at the toll plaza at the Thomas J. Hatem Memorial Bridge. The bridge over the Susquehanna between Perryville and Havre de Grace was named for Hatem, a longtime Harford County politician in 1986,
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Cars park along Dolphin Street near the Fifth Regiment Armory. Congressional Medal of Honor Park now occupies the area where Hoffman Street and Park Avenue once intersected.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
A woman stands along the street car tracks near St. Ambrose Catholic Church on Park Heights Avenue in 1948.
Baltimore Sun
Tracks of the Western Maryland Railway's Port Covington Yard lead toward the Gould Street Generating Station in South Baltimore in 1940.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The high rise buildings of Harbor East have replaced much of the industrial landscape once found at the end of President Street.
Baltimore Sun
The Timanus Grist Mill is seen along the Jones Falls near the Cedar Avenue Bridge in the early 1900s.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
The University of Maryland School of Medicine campus (right) now occupies much of the west side of downtown Baltimore.
Lloyd Fox / The Baltimore Sun
Fifty years later, an opening day crowd of 44,182 watches the Orioles lose to the Yankees in Oriole Park at Camden Yards, 8-4.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
In 1964, Baltimore's inner harbor was a bustling industrial waterfront with freighters filling the piers along Pratt Street.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
The Foster-Wade Building is the oldest surviving patient care building on the Spring Grove Hospital Campus. Founded in 1797, Spring Grove is the second oldest continuously operating psychiatric hospital in the U.S.
Baltimore Sun file photo
Among TV anchormen, none were more revered locally than this team, a fixture on WJZ, Channel 13, from 1977 to 1987. Turner (left) came first, starting at the station in 1962; Sanders arrived a decade later. Turner died in 1987, Sanders in 1995. Local news has not been the same since.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Traffic passes below a train on the CSX freight line on Loch Raven Road near 25th Street.
Baltimore Sun file photo, 1964
A stunning example of feminine pulchritude, Starr was a mainstay of Baltimore's infamous Block for decades; she even owned the legendary Two O'Clock Club for years. She quit stripping professionally in 1975, later sold jewelry at a Carroll County mall and is now happily retired at her home in rural Twelve Pole Creek, W.Va.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The U.S. Coast Guard barque cutter Eagle sails below the Francis Scott Key Bridge on its way to Baltimore for Fleet Week.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Edmondson Village Shopping Center has struggled in recent years due to area crime and competition from larger shopping malls, but continues to host an eclectic variety of stores.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The 188-year-old Sherwood Episcopal Church was built on five hillside acres in Cockeysville donated by Frances Thwaites Deye Taylor.
Clarence B. Garrett / The Baltimore Sun
Cars fill the parking lot near the U.S. Public Health Service hospital in Wyman Park in 1959. It was built in 1934 as the Baltimore Marine Hospital.
Frank Miller / Baltimore Sun
An A&P grocery and the Hill Theater bookend a shopping center in Cherry Hill in 1946.
Frank P. Kalita / The Baltimore Sun
Seen in 1950, Dundalk's Shipping Place is the commercial heart of the old neighborhood. The pair of brick commercial buildings, the Dunkirk (left) and the Dunleer, were built in 1929 and 1930.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Standing on a roundabout in the center of Charles Street, the Washington Monument has been a focal point in the Mount Vernon neighborhood since its completion in 1829
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves along East Mt. Vernon Place between St. Paul Street and Charles Street.
Edwin Remsberg, Baltimore Sun photo
For nearly 40 years, until it was shuttered for good in 1995, no place in the Baltimore area was more popular with kids than this 52-acre wonderland off Route 40 in Ellicott City. Where else could kids cavort with Old King Cole, the Old Woman in the Shoe and Humpty Dumpty? Much of the Forest's exhibits continue to enchant from the grounds of nearby Clark's Elioak Farm.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
Looking North on Roland Avenue, traffic passes the entrance to Gilman School.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
The Gould Street Generating Station is seen beyond The Baltimore Sun plant which began printing at the former rail yard site in 1992.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
Looking south from 11th Street, Baltimore Avenue appears relatively empty for a July day in Ocean City in 1943.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
St. Paul Street crosses the Jones Falls Expressway near Penn Station in Baltimore.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The National Central Bank building was razed with several other buildings in the late 90s to build a full block parking garage originally intended to keep Alex Brown Inc. in the city.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
The New Bethel House Of Prayer now occupies the former fire station space at 5116 Reisterstown Road. Engine Company 46 moved into a new station at 5500 Reisterstown Road in 1980.
Lloyd Fox, Baltimore Sun photo
If you were a young duckpin bowler in Baltimore in the '60s and '70s, your dream was to appear on this Saturday-evening WBAL, Channel 11, show. Host John Bowman would interview you, his warm baritone hopefully making you a little less nervous, and you'd stride onto the WBAL studio lanes to do battle against some equally nervous foe. Win six times, and you retired as an "undefeated champion." Greater glory could no kid imagine. (Pictured: 'Pinbusters' trophy won by WBAL radio reporter John Patti as a youngster.)
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
One of several parking lots are seen as Orioles fans climb the stairs to the upper deck at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Fayette Street at Pearl is now part of the University of Maryland at Baltimore campus. The Baltimore VA Medical Center, left, was completed in 1992.
Baltimore Sun
A southbound double-decker bus drops a passenger at the corner of Read Street and Charles Street in 1938.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Converted to a four unit apartment building, the Mount Washington summer home of H.L Mencken was was recently listed for sale by owner.
Weyman Swagger / Baltimore Sun
A driver turns left onto northbound York Road from Chesapeake Avenue in Towson in 1964. Shops in the 400 block of York Road included Smrcina's dry cleaners, Wilson Electric and the Towson Bootery.
Albert D. Cochran / The Baltimore Sun
The Central Avenue canal, seen in 1954, once served as a corridor to transport goods down to the harbor.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The Central Enoch Pratt Free Library, which opened in 1933, is nearing the completion of a $115 million renovation.
Baltimore Sun
Nested up against a turn in the Pennsylvania Railtoad, row houses line the 1700 block of Ellsworth Street in 1944.
Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun photo
The German food was delicious, the artwork omnipresent (so much so that it fetched more than $10 million when it was auctioned off at Sotheby's), the giant ball of string endearingly quirky. Highlandtown just hasn't been the same since Haussner's closed up shop in 1999.
The Baltimore Sun
A widened section of Roland Avenue is seen under construction near the entrance to Gilman School in 1915.
Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun
The Rodman Guns, installed in 1866, still adorn the ramparts of Fort McHenry. The statue of Col. Armistead now stands near the visitor's center on the other side of the fort.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
The York Road underpass, built in 1930, became obsolete when the trains stopped running. It was removed in the early 90s.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
A pedestrian crosses East Monument Street at St. Paul up the hill from Center Stage which moved into the former Loyola College and High School building in 1975.
Baltimore Sun
A child stands on Oella Avenue below the streetcar bridge at Ellicott City in 1939. The No. 9 streetcar ran on the line that was originally part of the Catonsville and Ellicott City Electric Railway Company.
Amy Davis / Baltimore Sun
Stephanie Nitti of Canton dances with the Oriole Bird during the 7th inning stretch at Oriole Park during the home opener against the Minnesota Twins.
William Mortimer, Baltimore Sun photo
See, there's this little horse race at Pimlico every May ... (Pictured: Secretariat at the 1973 Preakness Stakes.)
Baltimore Sun file photo, 1942
This memorial to the men who died defending their city during the War of 1812's Battle of Baltimore (which occurred in September 1814, a juxtaposition of dates that has confounded schoolchildren for generations) was completed in 1825. That's it on the city's flag and seal. (Pictured: Battle Monument rubber collection during World War II)
Baltimore Sun
The statue of John Eager Howard in Mount Vernon shows a coating of snow during a storm in 1934. The statue was erected in 1904 on land that was once part of Howard's estate.
Barbara Haddock Taylor / The Baltimore Sun
The Canton House (right) replaced the billboards at the corner of South Street and Water Street when it was built in 1923.
Amy Davis / Baltimore Sun
A motorist drives East over the Fort Avenue bridge over the Locust Point rail yard toward Fort McHenry.
Baltimore Sun file photo
After narrowly beating long-time incumbent Samuel Friedel in the 1970 Democratic primary, Mitchell became the first African-American to represent the state in the U.S. Congress. He remained a member of the House for 16 years and was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
A dusting of snow coats Federal Hill and the Ritz-Carlton Residences along Key Highway in Baltimore's Inner Harbor during last Friday's storm.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Petroleum Fuel & Terminal Company storage tanks now occupy the former site of Copper Row on Clinton Street.
Baltimore Sun file photo
Find this red, white and blue buoy out in the middle of Baltimore Harbor, and you've reached the spot from which Francis Scott Key watched the bombardment of Fort McHenry on the night of Sept. 12, 1814. You might have heard a poem he wrote about it, one that talks about "the rockets' red glare" and "bombs bursting in air."
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
With many of the long abandoned homes razed over the past few years, the 1700 block of Ellsworth Street today consists entirely of vacant lots,
Frank Kalita / The Baltimore Sun
Seen in 1948 from the corner of Broadway and Eastern, the Broadway Market (center) has been a focal point for the Fells Point neighborhood for more than 200 years.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The columns of the 1850 Greek Revival Pavilion frame last week's snowy scene in Union Square Park.
George H. Cook / The Baltimore Sun
In 1950, heavy equipment pulls old pilings that supported Light Street piers . A section of the old Baltimore Basin was filled and a parking area, called Sam Smith Park, was added. The filled area also included a new entrance to Calvert Street.
Paul Hutchins, Baltimore Sun photo
The 33 locations of Baltimore's favorite restaurant chain served as neighborhood gathering places from 1932 into the 1990s. True Baltimoreans know that Starbucks has nothing on a hot cup of Joe from a White Coffee Pot.
Baltimore Sun
A woman walks past Howard County's first firehouse at the intersection of Main Street and Church Road in Ellicott City in 1951. The building, built in 1889, was discontinued as a firehouse in 1923.
Frank A Miller, Baltimore Sun photo
The Jazz Age novelist responsible for "The Great Gatsby" lived in Baltimore while his wife, Zelda, was undergoing psychiatric treatment. He rented a mansion in Towson, and while there wrote his novel "Tender Is the Night." The couple, embodiments of Jazz Age excess, are buried together in a Rockville cemetery.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
Several inches of snow coat the Barye Lion Statue and the park at West Mount Vernon Place after Wednesday's snowstorm.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
The Ridgely Condominiums high rise catches the early morning sun near a vacant lot where the houses along Pennsylvania Ave once stood. Several new condominium projects are currently in the works in Towson.
Ellis Malashuk / Baltimore Sun
Street car lines are seen over Fayette Street looking west from Pearl Street in 1946.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves along the 5400 block of York Road in the Govans neighborhood in North Baltimore.
Baltimore Sun
Cars are seen parked along Dark Lane between St. Paul Street and Calvert Street in 1923.
A. Aubrey Bodine / The Baltimore Sun
Trinity Assembly of God Church is seen at the corner of Harford Road and Parkside Drive in 1948.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Postal employee Tru Wright separates packages from letters before feeding a belt for automated sorting at the Baltimore's Main Post Office at the start of the biggest week of the year for shipping.
Perry Thorsvik, Baltimore Sun photo
Legend has it that duckpin bowling -- smaller balls, smaller pins -- originated in Baltimore, at lanes run by the legendary John McGraw (of Orioles and, later, New York Giants fame). But here are a couple facts: Baltimore remains one of the few places you can bowl duckpins, and nobody was better at it than the legendary Elizabeth "Toots" Barger (pictured, right, with duckpin champ Cliff Kidd Sr.) , the Hamilton native who 12 times won the prestigious Evening Sun tournament.
William L. Klender, Baltimore Sun photo
Perennially ranked among the top one or two hospitals in the country, the Johns Hopkins Hospital is a source of great pride among Baltimoreans, not to mention great health care. Since its opening in 1889, it's also provided a surefire way to tell whether someone is really from Baltimore or not: if you say John Hopkins, you're definitely not from around these parts.
Baltimore Sun file photo
From 1946 to 1983, Baltimoreans could enjoy their Chinese food in dining rooms with such names as the Longevity Room, Cheat-Chat and Forbidden Quarters. The New China Inn didn't serve its food in little white cartons with wire handles, but there was no better Kung Pao chicken to be found anywhere.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
The Canton National Bank building at the corner of Elliott and S. Clinton streets is now a private residence.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
The statue of John Eager Howard on Charles Street in Mount Vernon shows a coating of snow during Thursday's winter storm -- the first of the season.
Joseph A. DiPaolo Jr./Baltimore Sun
Homes are seen under construction on the 6700 block of Brentwood Ave. in Dundalk in 1955.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Traffic passes the historic Sheppard Pratt gatehouse on Charles Street in Towson. The gatehouse was renovated in 2013 to be used as a guesthouse for visiting staff and lecturers.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Liberty Street (left) and Park Avenue are seen looking south from Fayette Street. Park Avenue now ends at Baltimore Street.
Baltimore Sun file photo, 1939
For much of the 20th century, the 1000 block of E. Lombard St. was Baltimore's go-to lunch stop; names like Weiss', Jack's and Attman's still make the mouth water. Go ahead and have yourself a corned beef sandwich; happily, Attman's is still there.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Football fans cheers as the Ravens take the field in the rain prior to defeating the San Francisco 49ers 20-17.
Albert D. Cochran / Baltimore Sun
Streetcars are backed up seven deep in front of City Hall during a snowstorm on March 3, 1960.
Richard Stacks, Baltimore Sun photo
The greatest quarterback in the history of the NFL. Here in Baltimore, to suggest otherwise is to pick a fight.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
After the Public Health Service hospitals were closed in the 1980s, the Wyman Park Building continued as a private institution serving military families. Today, Johns Hopkins Community Physicians provide outpatient services on its lower floors, while the upper floors are used for university academic and administrative offices.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
A statue of Col. George Armistead, commander of Fort McHenry during the War of 1812, overlooks the Patapsco River alongside a battery of Rodman Guns in 1928.
Kim Hairston / The Baltimore Sun
A pedestrian walks along Eastern Ave. at the intersection of Broadway. Fells Point's historic Broadway Market in the background is undergoing a major renovation and is expected to reopen this year.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
A small green space now occupies the north side of Lexington Street at St Paul. The surviving building on the right is now the Public Defender's Office.
Joseph DiPaola, Baltimore Sun photo
Since 1921, the slogan "Polock Johnny's is my name; Polish sausage is my game" has been a sure sign of good food to be had in Baltimore. It used to be that Polock Johnny's were everywhere: Lexington Market, Towson, Hampden, Greenmount Avenue, Ocean City. Now only two remain, at Security Square Mall and inside Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Still the best Polish sausages anywhere, and ordering one with the works is as close to gustatory heaven as you'd want to get.
Baltimore Sun file photo
Opened by the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad in 1850 (which makes it the oldest surviving big-city passenger station in the U.S.), the station earned its place in history in 1861, when Union troops heading from it to the B&O's Camden Station, were set upon by local Southern sympathizers, resulting in the first bloodshed of the American Civil War.
A. Aubrey Bodine / Baltimore Sun
The home of Edward and Nancy Venable is seen on West Lanvale Street in 1956. Poet and diplomat William Force Stead, also lived at the home, known as Villa Caprice.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
While Ocean City has grown dramatically over the years, this stretch of Baltimore Avenue still has many home built in the 1940s.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Built in the early 1900s, homes on Northwest corner of 25th Street and Calvert Street are characteristic of the Charles Village neighborhood.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
Southbound Pennsylvania Railroad steam engines pull coal cars over the Susquehanna River Bridge between Havre de Grace and Perryville on a winter day in 1951.
Monica Lopossay, Baltimore Sun photo
We used to think this was the oldest ship in the U.S. Navy, dating to 1797. Turns out it isn't, but it's still old -- built in 1855 -- and proudly welcomes visitors to the Inner Harbor, where it's been berthed since 1968.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
The Wayside Cross, a 99-year-old monument (left), dedicated to Baltimore Countians who served during World War I, still stands at the intersection of York Road from Shealy Avenue in downtown Towson.
The Baltimore Sun
Commercial office buildings are seen along the north side of Lexington Street at Saint Paul in 1917.
Walter McCardell, Baltimore Sun photo
It sure didn't look like a restaurant from the outside. There was no printed menu, and he kept the front door locked. If you were a regular customer, you knew to ring the buzzer to get in. And for nearly four decades, until it closed in 2008, Morris Martick's Restaurant Francais was the best French restaurant in Baltimore. Longtime patrons still dream of his sweet potato soup and bouillabaisse.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves East through the center of Essex along the 400 block of Eastern Boulevard.
The Baltimore Sun
Workers put the finishing touches on Preston Gardens along St. Paul Street in 1919. The park replaced a neighborhood that Mayor James Preston considered a slum and was the home to many African-Americans.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Visitors enjoy the 64th annual Holiday Train Garden at Baltimore Fire Dept. Engine Co. 45 on Glen Avenue. The display will be open to the public through January 5.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
A resident walks his dog down Cooksie Street in Locust Point.
Ralph Dohme / Baltimore Sun
A motorist drives East over the Fort Avenue bridge over the Locust Point rail yard toward Fort McHenry in 1960. The bridge was torn down and replaced later that year.
William LaForce / The Baltimore Sun
A crowd of 36,100 sits in Memorial Stadium in 1969 in perfect baseball weather as Red Sox edged the Orioles in 12 innings, 5-4.
Jerry Jackson / Baltimore Sun
Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank purchased Sagamore Farm in 2007, renovating the property including the historic training barn.
A. Aubrey Bodine/Baltimore Sun
Baltimore's changing skyline is seen from the west side of downtown from a high-rise on Freemont Ave in 1967.
Baltimore Sun
Baltimore County's Woodlawn's business district had its own bank, Equitable Trust, a drug store and a branch of the old Fulton Laundry in 1963.
Weyman Swagger/Baltimore Sun
Towson Plaza, seen along Fairmont Road in 1975, was an open-air mall built in 1952 near Goucher College.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Druid Lake is now surrounded by equipment during the construction of two underground storage tanks that will hold more than 50 million gallons of drinking water.
Baltimore Sun
The Edmondson Village Shopping Center, seen here in 1951, opened in May 1947. It contained an eclectic group of businesses over the years, including a bowling alley, the Dugout Restaurant and a Hess Shoe store with live monkeys on display.
Clarence Garrett / The Baltimore Sun
Traffic crosses the Orleans Street Viaduct in 1955. The bridge was built in 1936 to a pass over the Pennsylvania Northern Central Division rail yards and the Jones Fall Valley.
Lloyd Pearson, Baltimore Sun photo
Mayor for life. Hizzoner. Mayor Annoyed. Willie Don. You don't earn that many nicknames unless you've been loved and admired (or hated and despised) by lots of people; no Baltimore mayor wore the title more proudly. Sure, he served eight years as governor of Maryland after leaving City Hall in 1987, but he'll always be Mayor Schaefer to us.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
A Baltimore County school bus travels east on Edmondson Avenue at Dutton Avenue near the former trolly transfer point at Catonsville Junction.
Leroy Merriken, Baltimore Sun file photo, 1931
The Bambino was born on Emory Street in Baltimore; his father ran a saloon on Camden Street (near the current centerfield at Oriole Park at Camden Yards) and the Babe spent some 10 years at St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys in West Baltimore before signing with the minor-league Orioles in 1914. Sure, he earned his fame in Boston and New York, but once a Baltimorean, always a Baltimorean.
Barbara Haddock Taylor / Baltimore Sun
A stone abutment is all that remains of the trolley bridge over Oella Avenue in Ellicott City. The former streetcar line was converted to a walking trail in the 1990s.
Kim Hairston / The Baltimore Sun
Dundalk's Shipping Place, now part of the National Register of Historic Places, continue to be used as street level storefronts with apartments above.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Walgreens is now the primary tenant of the former Baltimore Federal Savings and Loan building at the corner of Fayette and St. Paul.
Richard Childress / Baltimore Sun
Traffic moves along the 5400 block of York Road in the Govans neighborhood in North Baltimore in 1973.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
Sykesville Station is now Baldwin Station, an upscale restaurant that opened in 1997. CSX trains use the repaired tracks up to 10 times a day.
Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun photo
Baltimore's last surviving movie palace opened in 1939 and is still showing movies. A $3.5 million renovation completed in October 2013, just in time for its 75th anniversary, restored the building's art-deco splendor. (Pictured: Baltimore filmmaker John Waters and Harris Glenn Milstead - aka Divine - at the 1988 premiere of "Hairspray" at the Senator Theatre.)
Baltimore Sun
Traffic flows through the intersection of Liberty Street (left) and Park Avenue looking south from Fayette Street in 1937.
Frank P. Kalita / Baltimore Sun
A streetcar sits at Catonsville Junction, the terminus of streetcar lines 8, 9, and 14, in June 1953.
Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun photo
Bare-bones seafood joints like Connolly's, which closed in 1991, once ringed the Inner Harbor area; it was a safe bet that the crabs you ate there in the afternoon had been harvested from the bay that morning. They don't make 'em like Connolly's anymore.
Baltimore Sun
A No. 19 streetcar heads north along Hanover Street between Pratt and Lombard in 1941 while the Lord Baltimore Hotel is visible in the distance. Hanover Street was lined with wholesale produce merchants.
Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
Cars travel on Main Street in Ellicott City today. The popularity of automobiles eventually led to the trolley's demise on June 19, 1955.
Jerry Jackson / The Baltimore Sun
Nearing its 100th anniversary, Preston Gardens recently reopened after a $6.75 million renovation.
Kim Hairston / Baltimore Sun
The 2400 block of E. Baltimore St. hasn't seen a soap box derby in decades, but Arbutus has been hosting an annual race since 1966.
Readers: Think you know your Baltimore? Try answering our weekly trivia question. Some weeks will be ridiculously easy, some weeks a bit more challenging.
Here’s last week’s trivia:
QUESTION: For whom is Coppin State University named?
ANSWER: Fanny Jackson Coppin, a teacher and missionary, who lived 1837-1913