More Than Meets the Eye: History of Maryland Through Prints, 1750-1900
Room 2: Evangelical Religion and Reform

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Library of Maryland History
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Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: 410-685-3750
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Maryland History In Prints: 1752-1900
by Laura Rice


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

[image] Almshouse

Engraved by S. Smith
Printed by J. Cone
Baltimore, ca. 1824

Engraving, hand colored 
 

In November 1773, "An Act for the Relief of the Poor" in Baltimore County became law.  The Maryland General Assembly passed the act as the "continual increase of the poor [there] is very great, and exceedingly burthensome.there shall be an alms and work-house erected."  County magistrates and justices of the peace were charged with committing "any rogues, vagrants, vagabonds, beggars, and other idle, dissolute and disorderly persons.who follow no labour, trade, occupation or business, and have no visible means of subsistence whereby to acquire an honest livelihood, there to be kept at hard labour for any term not exceeding three months."  Those who violated work house rules or attempted to run away were subject to restriction or elimination of relief benefits, whipping, or hard labor.

A joint venture between Baltimore City and County, the almshouse served as a hospital for those unable to afford private medical care. It also functioned as a home for the mentally ill, and as orphan asylum, prison, and factory. During times of recession, the almshouse also became a vital source of economic survival for the working poor. Children were bound out by the institution to neighboring businessmen seeking apprentice labor. The treatment of the sick and mentally ill provided an opportunity for local medical students to treat patients and perform autopsies. 

The original building stood on West Biddle Street; trustees relocated the institution to an estate called "Calverton," in a more rural area, in 1820. The estate house is the center section pictured here. Bounded by Pulaski, Presstman, Lexington, and Franklin Streets, the almshouse occupied this property until 1866.  Calverton burned in 1875.
 
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Room 1: Immigrants in Maryland
Room 2: Evangelical Religion and Reform
Room 3: Rowdies and Riots
Room 4: Changes in the Land

Exhibit Home Page

CONTENTS: Room 2
9. House of Refuge
10. Almshouse
11. House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Children
12. View of Jone's Falls, Baltimore. Representing the first Baptismal Rites performed there by the Revd. James Osbourn, Septr. 13th 1818
13. Maryland State Bible Society A.D. 1853
14. [The Floating School]

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