Boonsboro Reflections: Odd Fellows Hall
The Independent Order of Odd Fellows fraternal organization traces back to 17th Century England where the masses endured lawlessness, disease and poverty. Well-meaning people from different trades and walks of life found it necessary to group together and contribute...
Boonsboro Reflections: John Christian Brining
Two prominent Boonsboro businesses can be traced back to John Christian Brining, Sr., who was born in Wurttemberg, Germany, on August 10, 1810. During the Brining families’ journey to America in 1817, their vessel was shipwrecked off the coast of Norway and while...
Boonsboro Reflections: Shafer Park
Shafer Park is a lasting tribute to the vision of Boonsboro’s leaders and the generosity and commitment of its citizens. In the 1930’s, Mayor John Hershberger noted that the “homecoming week” (perhaps the precursor to Boonsborough Days) created an “inconvenience and...
Boonsboro Reflections: The Heart of Maryland
David Belasco’s successful and influential career as a theatrical producer and playwright stretched between 1884 and 1930. A frequent visitor to Boonsboro, he wrote, directed, or produced more than 100 Broadway plays including The Heart of Maryland. This highly...
Boonsboro Reflections: The Heck Brothers
Boonsboro must have been a chaotic community in September 1862. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia had just invaded the north, occupying Frederick and advancing to take Harper’s Ferry. But George McClellan’s Army of the Potomac pursued him from the east and, on...
Boonsboro Reflections: Boonsboro & World War I
American families sacrificed greatly during the two years (1917-1918) that the United States fought in “The War to End All Wars.” Of the approximately 4.7 million men and women that served in the regular U.S. forces, National Guard and draft units, over 116,500 were...
Boonsboro Reflections: Keeping the Peace in Boonsboro
Elected sheriffs have been enforcing the law in Washington County since 1777, fifteen years before Boonsboro was founded. Since then, 79 individuals have been elected Washington County Sheriff, confronting all manner of criminal disturbances and, until 1835, serving...
Boonsboro Reflections: Boonsboro’s Flag
Boonsboro’s flag was first unfurled in 1975. After Mayor Edward. T. Weaver and town council endorsed the idea of creating a flag for Boonsboro, they turned to Pat Lemkuhl, a faculty member at Boonsboro High School. She organized a flag design contest and Wayne...
Boonsboro Reflections: Boonsboro’s Post Office
Benjamin Franklin was appointed first Postmaster General by the Continental Congress in 1775 and only 26 years later, in 1801, a U.S. Post Office opened in the budding town of Boonsboro. Patrick Conn, proprietor of the Eagle Hotel (now, Inn BoonsBoro), became our...
Boonsboro Reflections: Boonsboro’s Covered Bridge
Images of covered bridges evoke dreams of slower, simpler times in American history. Over the past 200 years 120 such iconic structures carried traffic over Maryland waterways, but today only 6 survive. Snook's Creek flows from South Mountain, crossing Alt 40...
Boonsboro Reflections: Merger of Republican Club & Wash Co Free Library
In 1904, the Republican Club and Wash Co Free Library collections were joined.
Boonsboro Reflections: Library Delivered Books to Communities
The Washington County Free Library opened in Hagerstown on August 27, 1901 and the first librarian, Mary Titcomb, was determined that it would truly serve all of Washington County. She was unusually creative in finding ways to make the library collection widely...