Free Walking Sightseeing Tour #4 in Baltimore, United States

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Tour Facts

Number of sights 20 sights
Distance 10.8 km
Ascend 280 m
Descend 306 m

Explore Baltimore in United States with this free self-guided walking tour. The map shows the route of the tour. Below is a list of attractions, including their details.

Activities in BaltimoreIndividual Sights in Baltimore

Sight 1: H.L. Mencken House

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1294 meters / 16 minutes

Sight 2: Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum

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Baltimore and Ohio Railroad MuseumJGHowes / Attribution

The B&O Railroad Museum is a museum and historic railway station exhibiting historic railroad equipment in Baltimore, Maryland. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) company originally opened the museum on July 4, 1953, with the name of the Baltimore & Ohio Transportation Museum. It has been called one of the most significant collections of railroad treasures in the world and has the largest collection of 19th-century locomotives in the U.S. The museum is located in the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's old Mount Clare Station and adjacent roundhouse, and retains 40 acres of the B&O's sprawling Mount Clare Shops site, which is where, in 1829, the B&O began America's first railroad and is the oldest railroad manufacturing complex in the United States.

Wikipedia: B&O Railroad Museum (EN), Website

1015 meters / 12 minutes

Sight 3: Paca-Pratt Building

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Paca-Pratt Building

Sonneborn Building, also known as Paca-Pratt Building, is a historic loft building in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Designed by Theodore Wells Pietsch, it is a nine-story loft building constructed in 1905 of "fireproof" reinforced-concrete construction, faced in buff-colored brick, with a coursed ashlar foundation and stone trim. Its detailing reflects the Neoclassical Revival of the early 20th century. It was built for Henry Sonneborn and Company as a vertical clothing manufactory and was the tallest and largest strictly manufacturing building in the city of Baltimore.

Wikipedia: Sonneborn Building (EN)

362 meters / 4 minutes

Sight 4: Wilkens-Robins Building

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Wilkens-Robins Building

Wilkens–Robins Building is a historic loft building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It was built in 1871 and is a five-story, six-bay brick structure with a cast iron front. It is approximately 80 feet (24 m) tall, 50 feet (15 m) wide, and 110 feet (34 m) deep with a gently sloping roof. The facade features an expanse of oversized windows and are the highlights of one of the few surviving cast-iron facades in Baltimore.

Wikipedia: Wilkens–Robins Building (EN)

432 meters / 5 minutes

Sight 5: L. Frank & Son Building

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L. Frank & Son Building

L. Frank & Son Building is a historic retail building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a four-story brick commercial building with a cast-iron façade, built about 1875. It was constructed for Samuel Stein & Bros., and occupied by a dealer in iron ranges and furnaces, and later a series of shoe and clothing manufacturers.

Wikipedia: L. Frank & Son Building (EN)

132 meters / 2 minutes

Sight 6: The Hippodrome Theatre at the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center

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The Hippodrome Theatre at the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center

The Hippodrome Theatre is a theater in Baltimore, Maryland.

Wikipedia: Hippodrome Theatre (Baltimore) (EN)

262 meters / 3 minutes

Sight 7: Westminster Presbyterian Church

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Westminster Presbyterian Church

Westminster Hall and Burying Ground is a graveyard and former church located at 519 West Fayette Street in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is currently part of the grounds of the University of Maryland's School of Law. It occupies the southeast corner of West Fayette and North Greene Street on the west side of downtown Baltimore. It sits across from the Baltimore VA hospital and is the burial site of Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849). The complex was declared a national historic district in 1974.

Wikipedia: Westminster Hall and Burying Ground (EN), Website

497 meters / 6 minutes

Sight 8: Brewers Exchange

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Brewers Exchange

Brewers Exchange, also known as Murdock Place, is a historic office building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a three-story Renaissance Revival style building designed by Joseph Evans Sperry (1854-1930) and built in 1896. The façade is faced with terra cotta and includes such decorative elements as two-story half-round Ionic pilasters, cartouches, pediments, window surrounds, a garland frieze, and a balustrade at the edges of a flat roof. It was used by the exchange for only a short time.

Wikipedia: Brewers Exchange (EN)

361 meters / 4 minutes

Sight 9: Hutzler Brothers Palace Building

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Hutzler Brothers Palace Building

The Hutzler Brothers Palace Building is a historic flagship department store building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States and built by Hutzler's. It was constructed in 1888, with a south bay added in 1924.

Wikipedia: Hutzler Brothers Palace Building (EN)

1209 meters / 15 minutes

Sight 10: Henry August Rowland House

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The Henry August Rowland House is a historic row house at 915 Cathedral Street in Baltimore, Maryland. Built in the 1880s, this nondescript row house is historically important as the home of physicist Henry Augustus Rowland from 1889-90 until his death in 1901. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and declared a National Historic Landmark in 1975.

Wikipedia: Henry August Rowland House (EN)

470 meters / 6 minutes

Sight 11: Washington Monument

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The Washington Monument is the centerpiece of intersecting Mount Vernon Place and Washington Place, an urban square in the Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood north of downtown Baltimore, Maryland. It was the first major monument to honor George Washington (1732–1799).

Wikipedia: Washington Monument (Baltimore) (EN)

226 meters / 3 minutes

Sight 12: Garrett Jacobs Mansion

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The Garrett Jacobs Mansion is a historic home located in the Mount Vernon neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. Built in 1853 by Samuel George, the home gets its name from its last and most famous owner, Mary Frick Garrett Jacobs, who, with her husband Robert Garrett, transformed the home into a prime example of the Gilded Age mansions of the city.

Wikipedia: Garrett Jacobs Mansion (EN)

80 meters / 1 minutes

Sight 13: Walters Art Museum

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Walters Art Museum is a public art museum located in the Mount Vernon section of Baltimore, Maryland. Founded and opened in 1934, it holds collections from the mid-19th century that were amassed substantially by major American art and sculpture collectors, including William Thompson Walters and his son Henry Walters. William Walters began collecting when he moved to Paris as a nominal Confederate loyalist at the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, and Henry Walters refined the collection and made arrangements for the construction what ultimately was Walters Art Museum.

Wikipedia: Walters Art Museum (EN), Website

190 meters / 2 minutes

Sight 14: Benson Building

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Benson Building

Benson Building, also known as the IPC Building, is a historic retail and office located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is on the corner of East Franklin and North Charles Streets. The main side is on Charles Street and has seven bays with store windows and entrances on the first floor, and office windows on the upper floors. The recessed storefronts feature bronzed aluminum infill panels above and below the glass panes. It was constructed in 1911 and the principal original occupant was C.J. Benson and Company, a local interior decorating and furniture establishment.

Wikipedia: Benson Building (Baltimore, Maryland) (EN)

133 meters / 2 minutes

Sight 15: Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

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Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, also called the Baltimore Basilica, is a Catholic cathedral in Baltimore, Maryland. It was the first Catholic cathedral built in the United States after the nation's founding, and was among the first major religious buildings constructed therein after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution.

Wikipedia: Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (EN)

533 meters / 6 minutes

Sight 16: Terminal Warehouse

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Terminal Warehouse Deb Kiley / CC BY-SA 3.0

Terminal Warehouse, also known as the Flour Warehouse of Terminal Corporation, is a historic warehouse building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It has a common bond brick exterior accented by a rusticated brownstone foundation built originally in 1894, with a steel beam addition constructed in 1912. It was designed by noted Baltimore architect Benjamin B. Owens.

Wikipedia: Terminal Warehouse (EN)

711 meters / 9 minutes

Sight 17: Battle Monument

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The Battle Monument, located in Battle Monument Square on North Calvert Street between East Fayette and East Lexington Streets in Baltimore, Maryland, commemorates the Battle of Baltimore with the British fleet of the Royal Navy's bombardment of Fort McHenry, the Battle of North Point, southeast of the city in Baltimore County on the Patapsco Neck peninsula, and the stand-off on the eastern siege fortifications along Loudenschlager and Potter's Hills, later called Hampstead Hill, in what is now Patterson Park since 1827, east of town. It honors those who died during the month of September 1814 during the War of 1812. The monument lies in the middle of the street and is between the two Baltimore City Circuit Courthouses that are located on the opposite sides of North Calvert Street. It was sponsored by the City and the "Committee of Vigilance and Safety" led by Mayor Edward Johnson and military commanders: Brig. Gen. John Stricker, Maj. Gen. Samuel Smith and Lt. Col. George Armistead.

Wikipedia: Battle Monument (EN)

338 meters / 4 minutes

Sight 18: Alex. Brown & Sons Building

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The Alex. Brown & Sons building is a historical structure located at 135 East Baltimore Street in Baltimore, Maryland. During the 20th century it served as the corporate headquarters for the banking firm Alex. Brown & Sons, the oldest in the United States when it was purchased by Bankers Trust in 1997. The two-story building, completed in 1901 and designed by the partnership of J. Harleston Parker and Douglas H. Thomas. Jr., survived the 1904 Baltimore fire. The building was modified on the Calvert Street side and in the interior by the firm Beecher, Friz, and Gregg in 1905.

Wikipedia: Alex. Brown & Sons Building (EN)

842 meters / 10 minutes

Sight 19: McKeldin Square

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McKeldin Square

McKeldin Square is an area of Downtown Baltimore, located near the Inner Harbor at the corners of Pratt and Light Streets.

Wikipedia: McKeldin Square (EN)

1685 meters / 20 minutes

Sight 20: Old Town Savings Bank

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Old Town Savings Bank, also known as Cala Brothers, is a historic loft building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a three-story loft structure designed by architect Frank E. Davis (1839-1921) and constructed in 1871. Both the street façades are cast iron, four bays wide on Gay Street and eight bays wide on Exeter Street. It is a Full Cast Iron Front building. It operated as a bank until about 1940, then housed a wholesale distributor of tobacco and confectionery.

Wikipedia: Old Town Savings Bank (EN)

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Disclaimer Please be aware of your surroundings and do not enter private property. We are not liable for any damages that occur during the tours.

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