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Moving - Derwood, Maryland
If you are planning to relocate your
family into or out of Derwood, MD, you need a dependable
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In the meantime, enjoy this brief history
of Derwood, MD.
A Brief History of Derwood, Maryland
In the late 1800's Derwood, previously
just a crossroads with a blacksmith shop and a post office,
began its transformation into a small but thriving
community. The catalyst was the opening of the Metropolitan
Branch of the B & O Railroad, a 43-mile link between
Washington, DC, and the B & O "main-stem" at Point of Rocks,
MD. The "Met" played an important role in the growth of
central Montgomery County and the development of towns and
villages along its right-of-way.
Although the Post Office had been
operating since 1883, 1886-1889 are significant dates to
remember, as it was during this time that the second Derwood
station was built (the first was an open "waiting shed"). It
was a small Victorian Gothic board and batten structure
designed by E. Francis Baldwin, the architect for the B & O
Railroad, Baltimore Division. It was constructed at a cost
of $682.55. Other stations designed by Baldwin, which are
still standing, can be seen in Kensington, Rockville,
Gaithersburg, Dickerson, and Point of Rocks.
The Derwood station served not only as a
commuter stop but also as a freight and baggage station and
an office for handling agricultural and dairy products for
the local area. Aside from the railroad and surrounding
farming operations, the only other industry was Schwartz's
mill (a flour mill) built in 1887 on Chieftain Avenue. The
Montgomery County Sentinel of April 15, 1887 noted that the
three-story, 32 x 56 structure was to be built directly
across the tracks from the railroad station. The B & O built
a siding there to serve it.
As the community grew so did the need for
housing. The majority of the homes in Historic Derwood today
are examples of turn-of-the-century vernacular architecture
which housed the workers in the community. Other structures
of interest are a church located on the site at 15812
Esquire Court (now used as a Masonic Lodge meetinghouse); a
now vacant warehouse and store built in 1903 at the corner
of Chieftain and Derwood Rd; and Hall's General Store, now a
residence (15833 Derwood Rd). In addition, there is a 1903
Colonial Revival house built by store keeper Clarence
Hoskinson which later became the home of the town's miller,
Richard Schwartz (15919 Chieftain Avenue). It remains an
architectural jewel with its palladian window, pediments,
and strong dentilled cornice. These buildings, taken
together, represent a grouping of harmonious styles,
textures and scale which convey a common history, and are
typical of communities which existed in many areas of the
county in the later part of the nineteenth century.
A century ago, passenger revenues were
sought by the railroads, and by the late 1880's the
"high-water mark" in passenger traffic had probably been
reached. The May 1887 schedule for the "Met" listed ten
inbound trains a day from Derwood to Union Station in
Washington, DC. The fare for the hour-long trip was 60 cents
with some special group reductions. But sandwiched between
the more established communities of Rockville and
Gaithersburg, Derwood did not experience the accelerated
growth that those cities enjoyed as a result of the
railroad. Derwood's population remained small: B & O
publications list it as 72 in 1905, 170 in 1917, and 225 in
1928.
Passenger traffic fell steadily in the
1900's as the automobile grew in numbers. As a point of
comparison, the 1935 schedule listed only two inbound and
two outbound stops each day at Derwood. Then on January 7,
1954, 67 years after its construction, Schwartz Mill caught
fire in the early morning hours and was destroyed, as was
the Derwood station. The fire put an end to the mainstay of
commercial rail traffic there. This, combined with the
decline in passenger traffic, made the rebuilding of the
station impractical and Derwood station as a stop on the B &
O line ceased to exist.
In 1974 the old Derwood post office
closed and was reopened in its present location in the
Redland Shopping Center. It retained the name "Derwood
Branch" thereby designating the 20855 Zip Code area as
present day Derwood. The Derwood area was originally
referred to as "Deer Park" and it is possible that "Deer
Park" later became "Deer Wood" which local idiom translated
into "Derwood."
With the construction of the Metro's Red
Line to Shady Grove in 1984, the last remaining bits of
evidence of the B & O station and the mill in Derwood were
erased. But perhaps the Metro's terminus, some 300 yards
further north of Redland Road, will be the new "Derwood
Station." It has already brought to Derwood the growth and
development that the B & O did not.

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