Eutaw Farm and the Creation of Northeast Baltimore

Oct 20, 2021
6 - 7pm EDT
Online
Registration is required
This event is free

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Contact

Homewood Museum
410-516-5589

Description

Homewood Museum and Doors Open Baltimore, the citywide festival of architecture and neighborhoods, present a virtual talk by archaeologists Jason Shellenhamer and Lisa Kraus, who will share the results of their six-years of field work and research in Herring Run Park, which has uncovered the remains of one of Baltimore's largely forgotten great estates, Eutaw Farm. Like most of Baltimore's homes of the rich (and sometimes famous), including the Carrolls of Homewood and the Garretts of Evergreen, the history of Eutaw speaks to a wealthy white family's rise and fall. But the archaeology of Eutaw Farm also reveals remarkable and astonishing stories about the development of Northeast Baltimore and the founding families of Baltimore, those you may have heard of and those whose stories have never before been told.

About the speakers:

Lisa Kraus and Jason Shellenhamer are professional archaeologists with a combined 40 years of experience in historical archaeology. They are also the co-directors of the Herring Run Archaeology Project, a free, community-based archaeology program in Baltimore City. Since 2015, they have conducted excavations, research, and public outreach at the Eutaw Farm site in Herring Run Park and the Ship Caulkers' Houses in Fells Point.

This virtual event is part of Doors Open Baltimore, a citywide festival of architecture and neighborhoods sponsored by the Baltimore Architecture Foundation. Homewood Museum is able to present this program free of charge thanks to the generous support of Tom McCracken, McCracken Consulting LLC.

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Registration

Registration is required

Please register in advance

Contact

Homewood Museum
410-516-5589