Hampden first came into being in
1802 as a cluster of houses built for workers who manned the newly erected
flour and cotton mills along the Jones Falls Stream Valley. James Hughes was
the first of a number of cotton mill owners who harnessed the water of the
Jones Falls to power the flour and later, the cotton mills. Hampden was a
part of a number of grain milling operations located along the many streams
in the counties surrounding Baltimore City. The creation of these mills in
turn spurred the growth of the port of Baltimore which exported the milled
grains around the world. In 1810, the first cotton mill was opened on the
Jones Falls by Washington Manufacturing Company in what is now Mount
Washington.
By the 1830's, after the invention of the cotton gin, most of
Hampden-Woodberry's flour mills were converted to cotton mills. In the
1870's the mill workforce increased from 616 to 2,931 people. This growth
was propelled by the expansion of the Woodberry Mill and the building of the
Meadowmill, which was the largest of the mills. Cotton duck, used to make
sails for ships of all kinds, was in huge demand. By the 1890's,
Hampden-Woodberry produced almost 80% of the world's cotton duck and was one
of the biggest mill sites in the country. Most of the original residents of
Hampden were immigrants from England, Germany and Poland. As the industrial
revolution grew, people left farming communities from the adjacent counties
and as far away as Pennsylvania to work in the mills.
Hampden derived its name from a
developer, Henry Mankin, who named the town after John Hampden, a key figure
in the English revolution of the 17th century. Hampden, a member of
Parliament, took issue with a tax levied to pay for the royal navy. Hampden
maintained that the tax was a form of taxation without representation.
Others rallied around the cause that sparked a revolution in 1637. John
Hampden, a member of a growing capitalist class, was viewed as a hero and
champion of the people.
Hampden's economic power grew
throughout the 19th century fueled by the cotton mills. At the turn of the
20th century, the workers of Hampden-Woodberry made up one of the largest
workforces in the nation. During the first decade of the century several
labor strikes resulted in improved wages and working conditions. During
World War I, the demand for cotton duck kept the mills operation at full
capacity. In the 1920's more labor strikes took place for pay increases and
better working hours. This time, the strikes were not only unsuccessful but
the mill owners began to move operations to the rural South in search of
lower labor costs. The mills in Hampden-Woodberry were able to weather this
setback and production at the mills increased to fuel the war effort during
World War II. But the 1960's and 1970's saw the demise of the mills as
demand of their products dried up.
Fortunately, the mills have
been renovated by forward thinking companies and developers and enjoy a new
lease on life. Mills now house artist studios, health clubs, high tech
companies and more. The area within Hampden known as Stone Hill, one block
deep along 2900 and 3000 blocks of Keswick Road, is a perfect example of the
revitalization of the mill communities. An old community that is not a
restored museum village or over-preserved, but comfortable and lived-in,
preserved through the passing on of property and values from generation to
generation since the community began about 160 years ago as mill housing.
While the textile mills were bustling, benevolent paternalism was in vogue
and one of the forms it took was workers housing. David Caroll owned some
200 houses in the valley - built them, maintained them and rented them at
nominal fees to the workers. Some were built on the west of the Jones Falls,
where today they cluster at the foot of Television Hill; others were built
on a hill north of Mt. Vernon Mill No.2, and the final group was 46 houses
erected on a hill on the other side of the mill. This last group of houses,
due to the two feet thick stone walls, gives Stone Hill its name.
Stone Hill is a little known place. There aren't many ways into the
neighborhood - by car from Keswick Avenue, or by foot along Pacific Street
or up a flight of concrete steps from Chestnut Street. The steps, which are
directly opposite the old Mt. Vernon Mill No.2 are evocative: they are a
physical link between today's residential neighborhood and the bygone
industrial complex that built the houses. The combination of the whirr of
the machines in the old mill building and the chatter of women walking up
Chestnut Street make climbing the steps a trip in time. (For more on Stone
Hill, See "Stone Hill: The People and Their Stories" by Guy Hollyday, sold
at Hometown Girl, 1000 West 36th Street in Hampden.)
Brick Hill, bounded by Falls Road and 33rd Street between Chestnut and
Falscliff, is another example of a renewed mill village. Part of the area is
the most intact mill village in the nation as acclaimed by CHAP. This area
includes the old mill, now a "creative business center", the old manor home
and the only surviving horse stable, now a loft home and party facility "The
Elm: A Charming Place to Have a Party". These homes also overlook the Jones
Falls Valley and enjoy access to the river and the future site of a
Greenway.
Hampden had always been an almost self-sufficient community. There was work.
There were places to worship, to recreate and to shop. Residents could find
just about everything they needed right in the stores along 36th Street,
known as "The Avenue." The Avenue was the main street of Hampden and a focal
point for residents. On any Saturday night the street was thronged with
people shopping, seeking entertainment or visiting with friends. When the
mills closed completely, in the 1960's and '70's, residents moved out of the
area and the stores that were once filled with customers became vacant.
In the early part of
the 1970's, The Avenue clearly needed a shot in the arm to help get going
again. This did not come until the 1990's when, attracted by low rents, a
few entrepreneurs with vision, opened for business. Since then the Hampden
commercial district has been on an economic upswing. Today, The Avenue and
the area in general are thriving." source:
http://www.livebaltimore.com/nb/list/hmpdn/ |