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Moving - Reisterstown, Maryland
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Please read and enjoy the brief history of Reisterstown, MD.
A Brief History of Reisterstown, Maryland
John Reister was born in 1715 in Germany.
Reister was educated in Germany and had knowledge of many
rural living skills. September 1738 he sailed from Rotterdam
to Philadelphia. He settled in York, Pennsylvania and in
1746 married Margaret Sohn, daughter of a local innkeeper.
In 1746 Mr. Reister purchased 50 acres of land west of the
present town of Westminster. He carved a farm out of the
wilderness making it his home for the next 12 years. All six
children were born there. In 1758 he acquired 20 acres on
the Conewago Road (Reisterstown) and called it "Reister's
Desire". He moved his wife and six children to this land.
They built an inn or tavern. This tract was too small for
successful farming. On January 1, 1763 Mr. Reister purchased
83 acres of land which adjoined his property. This purchase
gave him land on both sides of the main road. This became
the center of Reisterstown. Life on the frontier was not
easy. Food was their first concern and water and woods
supplied an abundance of fish and game. Fruit trees were
planted for future orchards. He opened a successful tavern
and inn: "a place of public entertainment for travellers and
strangers." According to the Maryland Historical Trust the
building at 218 Main Street (pictured at left) is close to
the original site of John Reister's tavern. What cannot be
determined is whether today's building is in any way a
remnant of this tavern.
By 1785 all of the Reister children were married and settled
on land given to them by their father. They were a very
self-sufficient family group. John Reister Jr. married Mary
Yohn, and they took up residence on the east side of the
road opposite the inn. In addition to farming his father's
land, John Jr. was a blacksmith and a carpenter and he
operated a distillery producing rye whiskey for the tavern.
Margaret married Peter Trine. The Trines stayed in
Reisterstown a short time and then moved the family back to
York, Pennsylvania where Peter established his own tannery.
Mary married John Beckley, a skilled blacksmith, who opened
a shop in the rear of his house.
Catharine married Roland Smith and together they became the
first merchants in the area, operating the Reister store
south of the inn. Philip married Eve Gardner, and they
managed the Reister Inn. Elizabeth married Henry Weist, who
operated a tanyard in the rear of their home which is now
410 Main Street.
Historic Reisterstown, well over 200
years old, originated from a tract of land called "Reister's
Desire". Reister's Desire, twenty acres on the Conewago
(Reisterstown) Road, south of the roads going north to
Hanover and west to Westminster, was acquired by John
Reister on March 2, 1758.
When traveling to Annapolis from his land
in Frederick County (now Carroll County) John Reister must
have noted that the point where the Pipe Creek Road (now
Westminster Pike) joined with the older road to Pennsylvania
was only sixteen miles from Baltimore Town. This would
provide an ideal site for a settlement, and the fork would
be an excellent location for an inn. While in Annapolis he
learned about a twenty acre tract of unpatented land half a
mile south of the junction of the roads. It was located just
south of an Indian trail leading to the Patapsco River now
known as Cockeys Mill Road.
A tavern, which provided lodging as well
as food or drink, was constructed as soon as possible.
Acquisition of property gave John Reister a stretch of land
extending along both sides of the Conewago Road almost five
eighths of a mile. As early as 1787 the name Reister's Town
had been acknowledged by the Electors of Baltimore County.
The first businesses catered to travelers - taverns, a
store, smithshops, saddleries, and a tannery - they were
soon followed by other types of commercial establishments.
With the acquisition of more land the whole area north and
south of the Reister land, became known as Reisterstown.

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