Frederick County, Maryland - Equity Court Records - BGF-2 333-344 - HOUSE, PHILLIPS, CAVENTY, GREEN, TUCKER, LUCKER, NISINANGER, HARVEY, HARRISON, WILES, TURNER, RINGGOLD - Aug 1860 John HOUSE - Petition William HOUSE d/ May 1819 (Will written 8 Oct 1818) s/ George HOUSE (eldest son married at age 19) (inherited 100 acres) s/ Caleb HOUSE (100 acres) d/ Leah w/o James PHILLIPS .....Mely w/o ______ CAVENTY - Ohio .....Mariah w/o ______ GREEN - Ohio .....Racheal w/o _______ TUCKER - Virginia?? s/ Daniel HOUSE, dec'd (5 children by 2nd wife) .....Nelson HOUSE .....Anna HOUSE .....Sarah HOUSE .....Rebeckah HOUSE .....Marandah HOUSE d/ Rachel w/o William LUCKER (2 negroes) d/ Ruth (d/ 30 yrs ago) w/o Christian NISINANGER - Loudoun Co, VA (gave them 2 negroes and 100 acres) d/ Mary wid/of David HARVEY - Zanesville, Ohio (gave her 98 acres) d/ Sarah, dec'd w/o Thomas HARRISON - Kentucky s/ John HOUSE (remainder to him and sister Elizabeth) d/ Elizabeth w/o Thomas WILES (32 acres) Housekeeper - Delilah TURNER(?) (30 acres) Execs/ John S. FRAZIER and Thomas MARLON, (both now dec'd) Witnesses: Jossaw Y. YANFUN, William JACOBS, James FRAZIER, and Jacob COLEMAN Land - "Resurvey on Long Bottom", 39 acres; on SE side of Catoctin Creek. - "More Bad Than Good", 5 acres; Tracts were divided by Catoctin Creek and surrounded by SHAFER's land, RINGGOLD's land and tract "The Spring Secured". Located on county road from Broad Run to Frederick, about 5 miles NW of Jefferson, adjoining lands of SANDERS, John HOUSE, J. RINGGOLD ROUTZAHN and SHAFFER. On 31 Dec 1822, Administration was granted to John HOUSE, Thomas WILES and w/ Elizabeth with sureties as Jacob THOMAS and Abraham DEAVER Jr. Trustee was John HOUSE Jr with surety as Peter WHIP. Sale was held on 27 Sep 1860, high bidders were: - John RINGGOLD for 39 acres at $18/acre - Christopher RINGGOLD for 5+ acres on west side of Catoctin Creek at $91.75/acre William HOUSE petitioned the court to object to the 5-acre sale, claiming he had been sold that land 20 some years ago, but had not finished paying for it. Distribution of $1,234.07; court costs, $212.86 - John HOUSE, surviving admin, $1,021.23 Closed 14 Dec 1860. -- www.MidMdRoots.com ==================
On November 14, 1832, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, last surviving signer of The Declaration of Independence, and the owner of vast tracts of land in Frederick County, died in Baltimore. On November 14, 1850, Edward Yerbury Goldsborough, who practiced medicine in Frederick, died at Richfields, just north of Frederick. He was born December 5, 1797, the son of William Goldsborough. On November 14, 1926, the Rev. A. S. Kipe laid the cornerstone for the Brunswick Church of God. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
On November 13, 1870, the Mount Pleasant Reformed Church was consecrated in services conducted by the pastor, the Rev. A. R. Kramer, and the Rev. Dr. Daniel Zacharias of the Evangelical Reformed Church in Frederick. On November 13, 1911, William P. Maulsby, who entered the Union Army as a private and rose to the rank of colonel during the Civil War, and who fought at Gettysburg, Harper's Ferry and Monocacy, died. He was a Frederick lawyer and was considered especially effective in jury trials. He was born February 21, 1843. On November 13, 1972, Frederick County Sheriff Richard O. Baumgardner pleaded innocent to charges of embezzling county funds, misconduct and allowing a convicted felon to leave the jail unsupervised. He was later convicted. On November 13, 1978, a contract was signed by the Frederick Board of County Commissioners, the Maryland Board of Public Works, and CAM Construction to build the fourth Frederick County Courthouse at the southwest corner of West Patrick and South Court Streets in Frederick. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
On November 12, 1814, the second All Saints Episcopal Church was consecrated on North Court Street in Frederick. On November 12, 1885, John Henry Crum, who practiced medicine at Burkittsville and Jefferson, died. He was born in Jefferson on August 7, 1854. On November 12, 1905, Frances Elizabeth Browne, an elementary school teacher for 40 years who was instrumental in the founding of the Esther E. Grinage Kindergarten Association in 1937, was born in Washington. She died February 20, 1997, at the Carroll Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Washington. She was buried at Lincoln Cemetery in Suitland, MD. (The Esther Grinage Kindergarten was the first such school for Negro children in modern times in Frederick.) On November 12, 1912, the cornerstone was laid for the Georgianna Houck Simmons Nurses Home at Frederick City Hospital. On November 12, 1913, in a letter to The Sun of Baltimore, a Civil War veteran confirmed the Barbara Fritchie story. On November 12, 1950, a memorial was placed in the triangle where Woodsboro Pike (old MD 194) and Maryland 550 meet in the town of Woodsboro to honor residents who served in both World War I and World War II. On November 12, 1973, Rose Hill Manor, the last home of Maryland's first Governor, Thomas Johnson, was awarded the first plaque by the Frederick County Landmarks Foundation. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury Wasps1965@comcast.net <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net>
On November 11, 1777, Thomas Johnson of Frederick was inaugurated for his second one-year term as governor of Maryland. On November 11, 1850, Professor George Edward Smith, three-time mayor of Frederick, an Orphans' Court judge, and a Register of Wills, was born on a Washington County farm. He died in his Frederick County Courthouse office on January 24, 1927. On November 11, 1860, John Thomas Willard, who practiced medicine in Wolfsville, MD, died there. He was born in April of 1832 at Broad Run, in Frederick County. On November 11, 1881, Felix Munshour was hanged in the Frederick County Jail courtyard on West South Street in Frederick for the murder of his cousin, James L. Wetzel. On November 11, 1924, The Statue of Victory was unveiled in Memorial Grounds Park, the former cemetery of the German Reformed Church, at West Second and North Bentz Streets in Frederick. It was the first monument erected locally to honor Armed Forces veterans from the county who served in World War I. On November 11, 1929, the Thurmont Memorial Park Association deeded its park to the town in special ceremonies. It has been a part of Thurmont's park system ever since. On November 11, 1994, Shirley D. Peterson, a former commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, was selected to succeed Dr. Martha Church as president of Hood College. On November 11, 2007, Erni Nasher, the man who brought pizza to Frederick in 1955, celebrated his 100th birthday. He was born in Karvin, Austria on November 11, 1907. He died January 28, 2009 at Citizens Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Frederick. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury Wasps1965@comcast.net <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net>
On November 10, 1805, Tilghman Biser was born near Burkittsville. He was the first physician who "persistently advocated the administration of cold water to cases of fever." He died May 12, 1894. On November 10, 1849, John Casper Fritchie died at age 69. He was survived by Barbara, his wife of 43 years. On November 10, 1922, William A. Stultz became the last person executed at the Frederick County Jail. He was hanged for the murder of Frederick City Policeman John Adams on August 9, 1922. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
On November 9, 1778, Thomas Johnson began his third one-year term as Maryland Governor. On November 9, 1819, Thomas Sim Lee, second and seventh governor of Maryland, died at Needwood near Petersville. He was born October 29, 1745. On November 9, 1925, the bylaws of The Sgt. Lawrence Everhart Chapter of The Sons of The American Revolution, located in Frederick, were adopted. On November 9, 1931, Walker N. Jolliffe, the pioneer real estate entrepreneur who developed Rockwell Terrace in Frederick, died at the Maryland State Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Sabillasville. He was an active Rotarian and member of Calvary Methodist Church. On November 9, 1931, David M. Denton, who would become the superintendent of The Maryland School for The Deaf in 1967, was born in Robbinsville, NC. In November 2004, he published his first book - Listening to Deafness: An Old Song Sung Differently, the story of his life, his loves and his journey to fulfill his calling to aid the deaf. On November 9, 1945, Margaret Minerva Robinson, the first principal and first teacher at Girls High School in Frederick in 1889, died at the Home for The Aged on Record Street, now the Record Street Home. She was born March 24, 1857, in Harford County. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury Wasps1965@comcast.net <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net>
On November 8, 1865, Decatur Dorsey, who was born at New London and who entered the Union army in Howard County, was awarded a Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions at Petersburg, VA, on July 30, 1864. On November 8, 1882, an autopsy was performed on the body of John Israel Groff, who was shot and killed by Frederick City Policeman Charles A. Porter. On November 8, 1887, James McSherry, who had been appointed by Gov. Henry Lloyd to fill the vacancy created by the death of Judge John Ritchie, was elected to the Frederick County Court. He became chief judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals on January 25, 1896. On November 8, 1903, Grace Reformed Church on East Second Street in Frederick was dedicated. On November 8, 1907, the City Opera House re-opened after extensive renovation. "Buster Brown" was the opening performance. The Opera House was located in the building which also housed Frederick City Hall and is today the location of Brewer's Alley on North Market Street. On November 8, 1980, a fire, caused by an electrical short circuit in the first floor of the Brunswick YMCA, destroyed the historic three story building. A new site on Souder Road, next to the Brunswick Cooperative, was purchased and a new "Y" was built. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
Frederick County, Maryland - Equity Court Records - BGF-2 318-333 - RIDENOUR, WHITE, ROUZER, LANDERS, PENNELL, EILER - Oct 1857 Frederick WHITE, John ROUZER and William C. LANDERS vs Frederick W. RIDENOUR, et al Andrew RIDENOUR d/ Nov 1859, intestate widow - Mary Ann Louisa s/ Frederick W. RIDENOUR, a minor s/ Washington A. RIDENOUR, a minor Land - "Creagers Scheme" and "Hammer", 23 acres; from Thomas GURLEY in 1850; adjoining lands of Charles RIDENOUR, Adam EYLER and Henry ROUZER. Previously to Thomas GURLEY Sr. from John FLOHR, attorney of Nancy SMITH, in 1848. - "Resurvey on Five Mill Seats", 4 acres, adjoining the other tract; from John C. EYLER and Edwin F. EYLER in 1852. Located on road from Mechanicstown to Sabillasville, about 2 1/2 miles from Mechanicstown and 4 1/2 miles from Sabillasville. It had a weatherboarded house with carpenter shop attached, log stable, hog pen, wood house, wash house, spring near the house, an orchard and it was well timbered. Administrator was Frederick WHITE with sureties as William SEFTON and John NEED. Guardian was Robert G. McPHERSON; testimony was heard from John S. PENNELL who testified he had known the complainants since the 1840's and stated the widow's name was Ann, the descendant had three children, one from the first wife being age seven, and they had lived in Mechanictown. Also testifying was Adam EILER who claimed the widow's name was Ann and only knew of two children, the eldest being age six. Trustee was Frederick WHITE with surety as John Milton COVER; sale was held in Mechanicstown on 26 May 1860 without an offer. Then, on 11 Aug 1860, sale was made to highest bidder: - William C. LANDERS at $275 Distribution: court costs, $103.96 - Frederick WHITE, 58% of mortgage, $87.88 - John ROUZER, 58% of mortgage, $24.81 - William C. LANDERS, 58% of mortgage, $58.35 Closed 22 Oct 1860. -- www.MidMdRoots.com ====================
I searched all variations of the name and looked for Virginia service and found ONLY one listing: Daniel McCollum died 1842 service in Virginia, buried at (today's) Preston, W. Va. This would have still be part of Virginia until the breakway during the Civil War. Gordon Crooks -----Original Message----- From: Stephanie Miller via Sent: Friday, November 06, 2015 11:27 PM To: MDFREDER@rootsweb.com Subject: [MDFR] Revolutionary Patriots of Frederick County, Maryland 1775-1783 Hello, If there anyone on the list that has “Revolutionary Patriots of Frederick County, Maryland 1775-1783”? I would appreciate a look up for the surname “McCollum”, there are various spellings McCallum, McCollom, etc. Thank you very muck. Stephanie in Oregon Visit www.MidMdRoots.com for Old Court Records, Tombstone Inscriptions, Old Newspaper items, etc ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MDFREDER-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hello Stephanie and Fellow Listers: I have a book entitled "Maryland - Revolutionary Records" by Harry Wright Newman published in 1938. The only entry remotely close to the surnames you listed is the following: Maryland Federal Bounty Lands Grants Soldier Rank Acreage Received Date of Issue Warrant Number Daniel McCollon Pvt. 100 11-Jan-1796 11,537 Happy Hunting! Donna Heller Zinn of Newville, Cumberland Co., PA. Quoting Stephanie Miller via <mdfreder@rootsweb.com>: > Hello, If there anyone on the list that has ?Revolutionary Patriots > of Frederick County, Maryland 1775-1783?? I would appreciate a look > up for the surname ?McCollum?, there are various spellings McCallum, > McCollom, etc. Thank you very muck. Stephanie in Oregon > Visit www.MidMdRoots.com > for Old Court Records, Tombstone > Inscriptions, Old Newspaper items, etc > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > MDFREDER-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
On November 7, 1780, Clement Hollyday sold the land on which Brunswick sits today, to Leonard Smith, who later laid out the town. On November 7, 1791, former Maryland Gov. Thomas Johnson surrendered his position as Chief Judge of the General Court of Maryland so that he might assume his duties as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of The United States. On November 7, 1815, Daniel Fundenburg recorded a deed for a plat of Lewistown. On November 7, 1820, John Fessler, famous clockmaker of Frederick, died. On November 7, 1821, the Frederick County Agricultural Society was organized with William E. Williams as president. On November 7, 1924, forest fires raged around Frederick County. On November 7, 1935, Manual Silva Varela was murdered at his Doubs home. Alfred Brown, the son of Varela's common law wife, was later convicted for the crime and sentenced to life in prison. On November 7, 2004, a dedication service was held at Calvary United Methodist Church, West Second & North Bentz Streets in Frederick, for the first bells to be placed in the 74-year-old tower of the church. The Revs. Kenneth Dunnington, Kathryn Woodrow and Robert Manthey officiated. The cost of the project was approximately $155,000. On November 7, 2009, Staff Sgt. Charles Isaac Cartwright of Oceanside CA, son of H. Michael and Carol Ann Cartwright of Union Bridge, MD, was killed in action in Farah Province, Afghanistan, during his second tour there. He had previously served three tours in Iraq. He was born March 23, 1983 in Westminster MD. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
Hello, If there anyone on the list that has “Revolutionary Patriots of Frederick County, Maryland 1775-1783”? I would appreciate a look up for the surname “McCollum”, there are various spellings McCallum, McCollom, etc. Thank you very muck. Stephanie in Oregon
Hello, If there anyone on the list that has “Revolutionary Patriots of Frederick County, Maryland 1775-1783”? I would appreciate a look up for the surname “McCollum”, there are various spellings McCallum, McCollom, etc. Thank you very muck. Stephanie in Oregon
On November 6, 1882, Dr. Bernard O. Thomas, Sr., who practiced medicine in Frederick from 1906 to 1965, and who was medical examiner for Frederick County for 10 years, was born near Adamstown. He died at his Watkins Acres home on April 15, 1969. On November 6, 1912, Edward Schley Delaplaine, later a judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals and an active local historian, set a school record in a traditional 5-mile race at Washington & Lee University in Lexington, VA. He was awarded a gold medal and a place on the school's track team. He won the race in 30 minutes and 40 seconds, eclipsing the old record by more than a minute. On November 6, 1946, D. John Markey, of Walkersville, lost to two-term Maryland Governor Herbert R. O'Conor in the race for a U. S. Senate seat. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury Wasps1965@comcast.net <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net>
On November 5, 1781, John Hanson, of Frederick, was elected by Congress as the first "President of the United States in Congress Assembled." On November 5, 1824, William White, who practiced medicine in Thurmont, then called Mechanicstown, was born in Taneytown MD. He died February 6, 1885. On November 5, 1912, Dr. Franklin Buchanan Smith, the first health officer for both Frederick City and Frederick County, died of typhoid fever. He was buried in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. On November 5, 1963, 9-year-old Donald K. Smith, son of Floyd and Marie Smith of Old Annapolis Road, was critically injured when attacked by three dogs belonging to Gilmore "Jake" Hamilton. On November 5, 1973, Claude Delauter went to bed unaware that within 24 hours he would become the first African-American elected to Frederick City's Board of Aldermen. Elizabeth Burkett became the first woman elected to the Board of Aldermen in the same election. On November 5, 1991, Frederick County voters rejected a change in county government from the commissioner form to the charter form by a 3-1 margin. On November 5, 1994, Dr. George R. Houston Jr., the endowment fund manager for Georgetown University, was installed as the 23rd president of Mt. Saint Mary's College, now University, in Emmitsburg. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
Frederick County, Maryland - Equity Court Records - BGF-2 296-318 - DRAPER, HAYS, STOUFFER, MAIN, WOLFE, CUSTARD, LEATHERMAN - Oct 1857 Daniel MAIN vs Samuel HAYS, et al Land - "The Range about the Three Miserable Knobs", 93 acres; adjoins "Yosts Claim Enlarged"; from John WISEMAN/WISNER Jr. in 1824; to (siblings): - Andrew DRAPER - William DRAPER Jr - Elizabeth DRAPER - Hopenell DRAPER - Nancy DRAPER, died intestate - Isaac DRAPER - David DRAPER - Daniel DRAPER, died intestate - Joseph DRAPER Isaac DRAPER was insolvent and his trustee, David WOLFE Jr. conveyed Isaac's interests to Andrew DRAPER. Afterwards, he purchased from Adam CUSTARD, sheriff, all the undivided interests of Andrew DRAPER (2/7 share). Daniel LEATHERMAN purchased all the interests of William DRAPER and David DRAPER by deed from Jacob YOUNG of D., constable. Judgment against David DRAPER by Jacob NEFF and w/ Barbara. Judgment against William DRAPER by Daniel MAIN and George LIZAR. Hopenell DRAPER married Samuel HAYS and lives in Pennsylvania. Elizabeth DRAPER married a Mr STOUFFER and lives out of state. Testimony was heard from Jacob YOUNG of D. who stated old William and Mary DRAPER were in possession of the land until William's death, then Mary DRAPER and Joseph DRAPER lived there. Trustee was Daniel MAIN with sureties as Jonathan ROUTZAHN and Frederick MAIN. Sale was held on 13 Mar 1858, in Myersville; however, no sufficient bid was obtained. Later, private sale was made to Jacob WOLFE Jr at $400. Distribution: court costs, $118.68 - Daniel MAIN, 2/7, $80.37 - Daniel LEATHERMAN, 2/7, $80.37 - Hopewell HAYS, 1/7, $40.18 - Elizabeth STOUFFER, 1/7, $40.18 - Joseph DRAPER, 1/7, $40.18 Closed 25 Jun 1860. -- www.MidMdRoots.com ==================
On November 4, 1732, T Thomas Johnson, Maryland's first governor, was born in Calvert County. He died on October 26, 1819, at Rose Hill Manor in Frederick, the home of his daughter. On November 4, 1782, Fredericktown resident John Hanson completed his one-year term as President of the United States in Congress Assembled under the Articles of Confederation. On November 4, 1843, the property where the Methodist Episcopal Church was located on West Church Street in Frederick, was sold to Anthony Kimmel for $800. The sale followed the construction of a new church on East Church Street which was eventually replaced, more than 100 years later, by the first parking garage in Frederick. On November 4, 1865, Daniel P. Myers, 10, was beaten to death with a club wielded by Sambo Stephen Rozell Bowens, 15, on a farm near Walkersville (Dearbought). Originally sentenced to hang, Bowens' sentence was commuted to life in prison. On July 19, 1880, Bowens was paroled. On November 4, 1942, Edward S. Delaplaine and Patrick M. Schnauffer were elected judges of the county's Circuit Court in an upset. Edward F. Nikirk was elected state's attorney, and W. Jerome Offutt was elected to the House of Delegates. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
On November 3, 1796, Richard Potts of Frederick was appointed chief judge of the courts of Frederick, Montgomery, Washington and Alleghany counties. On November 3, 1815, Edward Owings was murdered on his farm between Libertytown and Woodsboro by slaves belonging to the estate of his late father. Four of the six charged with the murder were convicted and later (January 26, 1816) hanged. Their names were Jonathan, Harry, Nimrod and Solomon. On November 3, 1821, Tippo Saib, an Indian elephant, was exhibited at George Baer's Carriage House on North Court Street in Frederick across the street from All Saints Episcopal Church. On November 3, 1937, Henry Clay Fleagle, the last surviving veteran of The Civil War from Frederick County, died at his Thurmont home. He was born November 11, 1842. Later in the year, Civil War veteran Thomas H. Shelton, 95, moved to the Ladiesburg area from Washington County, to be closer to his remaining family. He, thus, became the last veteran of that war to live in the county. On November 3, 1972, Dr. John Bernard McClellan, Sr., well-known Frederick veterinarian, died suddenly at his Fairview Avenue home in Frederick. He was the father of James E. "Doc" McClellan, who later served in the Maryland House of Delegates for 16 years. The elder McClellan was buried at Mt. Olivet Cemetery after services at the Smith, Fadeley, Keeney and Basford Funeral Home. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net> Wasps1965@comcast.net
On November 2, 1705, Dorcas Sedgewick, daughter of Joshua and Elizabeth Sedgewick and future wife of Maryland's first governor, Thomas Johnson, was born. She died December 11, 1770. On November 2, 1783, Dr. Francis Brown Sappington married Anne Ridgley. He practiced medicine in Libertytown and died in 1839. He was also among the founders of the Maryland Medical and Chirurgical Faculty in 1799. On November 2, 1883, Walkersville was connected by telephone to Frederick, adding to the telephone network that was building across the county. On November 2, 1901, Horace Zacharias and Joseph l. Carty purchased the Schissler property on East Second Street on behalf of the Grace Reformed Congregation. The purchase price at auction was $5,940. On November 2, 1906, the cornerstone was laid for the James Mifflin Hood Memorial Wing at Frederick City Hospital. The wing was removed during a remodeling of the hospital some years later. On November 2, 1908, the Rev. E. L. McLean and his family first occupied the rectory of Grace Reformed Church, located at 28 East Third Street in Frederick, which was directly behind the church. The property was purchased from Albert Maynard for $4,700. On November 2, 1933, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt made her second stop in Frederick in four months when she had dinner at Miller's Restaurant on East Patrick Street. She was accompanied by Col. Louis Henry Howe, secretary to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The First Lady had eaten dinner at the Francis Scott Key Hotel on July 26. On November 2, 1940, Challedon, who was bred and raised on a Walkersville area horse farm, won his second Pimlico Special. The horse, with his victory in the Santa Anita Derby, brought about the air conditioning of The Tivoli Theater in downtown Frederick, now The Weinberg Center for the Arts. On November 2, 1975, the first service of the Brunswick Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was held in the Moose Lodge. If anyone can add information to these History Moments, or would like to suggest an item for another calendar day, please contact me privately. John W. Ashbury Wasps1965@comcast.net <mailto:Wasps1965@comcast.net>