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    1. [MDFR] History Moment - 6-7-16
    2. John Ashbury via
    3. On June 7, 1727, Benjamin Tasker received a patent for 7,000 acres of land in Frederick County which he called Tasker's Chance. Frederick Town was later laid out on part of this tract. On June 7, 1815, Revolutionary War General Roger Nelson, severely wounded at The Battle of Camden, and father of future U. S. Attorney General John Nelson, died. He was a native of Frederick and was originally buried in All Saints Cemetery on East All Saints Street. His body was moved to Mt. Olivet Cemetery in 1913. On June 7, 1825, Richard Doddridge Blackmore, author of the historical novel Lorna Doone, was born at Longworth, Berkshire, England. Lady Ellen Thompson, who with her husband operated Glenellen Academy in Ijamsville from 1878 to 1888, claimed that she was the actual author of the novel. Blackmore died January 20, 1900. On June 7, 1967, a corporation headed by Frederick businessman Richard R. Kline purchased The Barbara Fritchie Home on West Patrick Street in Frederick with the intentions of restoring it and placing Fritchie memorabilia in it. This was not the original Fritchie home, but rather a replica built during the 1926. The original home was demolished after a flood in 1868. On June 7, 1987, the monument to Francis Scott Key at Mt. Olivet Cemetery was rededicated after its restoration. On June 7, 2004, the Board of Trustees of Mount Saint Mary's College voted unanimously to change the school's designation to university, effective immediately. The school was founded in 1808 in Emmitsburg. On June 7, 2006, Frederick Bricks Works, Inc., located on East South Street in Frederick for 115 years, broke ground for a new facility in the Riverside Industrial Park on Monocacy Boulevard. 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>

    06/07/2016 12:18:11