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April 2008
FARMER BARRY
HERE WITH THE
ANNUAL SPRING
FARM & GARDEN
REPORT.
As is traditional, our
April meeting will focus
on gardening and the
outdoors. Our first speaker will be Callie
Schwartz from the Patterson Park Audubon
Center. She’ll bring us up to date on the many
activities the Audubon offers to the community
and an exciting plan to renovate the
Virginia Baker Recreation Center. Our second
speaker is Roy Hoopengardner from the Dundalk
Florist and Garden Center. He will talk about
container and small space gardening, and will
answer all your questions so be prepared to rake
in a lot of information.
We let it slip at last month’s meeting that there is
a new committee being formed. We don’t have a
catchy name for it yet (suggestions welcome), but
for now we’ll just call it the Green Committee. It’s
purpose will be to show the way for individuals to
save money by being environmentally aware and
to make Butchers Hill the most proactive
Baltimore neighborhood in environmental issues.
This is a subject near and dear to me and I hope
everyone will share in my enthusiasm. Keep an
eye on the chat room and expect an email blast
with more details, and watch the other neighborhoods
turn green with envy.
-Barry Glassman
President BHA
SPRING CLEAN-UP
SCHEDULED APRIL 19TH
Come Out, Greet your Neighbors --
Spring Cleanup Saturday, April 19th,
10-12.
Once again, Butchers Hill will join
the Mayor’s ninth! annual Spring
Cleanup. We invite everyone to help
clean and weed our alleys, streets and
gutters for spring. Rain or shine, we
hope to see you outside greeting your
neighbors and helping to make our neighborhood a nicer place
for everyone. With fewer than 30 blocks or some 800 houses,
we can spruce up the community quickly and efficiently.
City-sanctioned brown bags will be dropped off at the
major intersections before 10 am that morning. Or you
can come to the school, corner of Chester and Fairmount,
any time between 10 and 12, to get the special cleanup
brown bags and to borrow rakes, brooms, shovels or
gloves. Contact person: Sandy 410-371-8346. Please
place filled brown bags back on corners by 1:00 pm:
North/South – Washington, Chester, Collington,
Patterson Park; East/West – Fayette, Fairmount,
Baltimore, Lombard, Pratt.
After the Cleanup, come celebrate at The Life of Reilly,
2031 E. Fairmount Avenue, or join up with your
immediate neighbors if your block has advertised an
after-party. Thanks!
FLEA MARKET AND CRAFT FAIR UP NEXT!
Do you like fresh air?
Do you like great music?
Do you like seeing your neighbors?
Do you like buying or selling great stuff?
Do you love being in Patterson Park and seeing it full of people who
can experience it?
Do you make great crafts you’d like to sell?
Do you support a not-for-profit organization that could make use of a
free booth and help advertise the flea market?
Can you donate 2 hours of your time to support BHA and the Education
Committee?
Come out and play with us on May 10th for the Flea Market and Craft
Fair.
Calling for volunteers for the May 10th Flea Market
Distributing Posters during late April – early May
On May 10
- Set up from 7 AM - 9 AM
- Clean up from 2:30 PM – 4 PM
- Work the BHA flea market booth
– anytime between 8 AM – 3 PM
- Work the BHA food booth – anytime between 9 AM – 3 PM
Contact Tori Simms, 410-675-4948.
To reserve your space email Bev.
For updated information about the Flea Market:
http://www.butchershill.org/about/neighborhood.shtml#flea.
Plan Now for a Bloomin' Good Time!!
Mark your calendars--Sunday, June 8th (12 noon to 5 pm) is the
Butchers Hill Garden Tour with Art Along the Way. Do you
have a garden--large or small--you would like to share with
visitors? Are you an artist interested in selling your work in one
of the beautiful Butchers Hill gardens? Would you like to
"garden sit" or help plan and promote the Tour or the party
afterwards? Or do you just want to buy a ticket? To volunteer
or for more information, contact Joe Rehak.
BHA COMMITTEES AND MONTHLY MEETINGS
- Crime Prevention/Block Representatives: Wednesday, April 16th, 7 PM, 2105 E. Baltimore St. The
committee meets monthly to share information from our block representatives and to coordinate action. New
block representatives wanted; if interested e-mail or call
Carolyn, 410-522-4991.
- Police ask that residents call 410-666-DRUG to report repeated suspected drug activity, but always call 911 if
you need immediate police response. Protect your car from break-ins, Do not leave anything valuable or
tempting in your car, not even a quarter. GPS’s are now a favorite theft item.
- Butchers Hill Citizens on Patrol (C.O.P.): Butchers Hill Citizens on Patrol (C.O.P.) has been regularly
patrolling the neighborhood for over six years, and conducts its walk-arounds on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays
of the month. We meet at 7:30 p.m. at the intersection of Patterson Park Ave. and Lombard St. All are
welcome. For more information, please contact
Evan Helfrich, 410-342-2148.
- Community Representative, School 27 School Improvement Team: Carolyn Boitnott, 410-522-4991.
- Education Committee: Monday, April 14th, 7 PM, 232 S. Patterson Park Ave. Topics will include: Schools
in the neighborhood to support; fund raisers; Adopt a Teacher program. If you are interested in supporting
either of the elementary schools in the neighborhood, please contact Tori Simms, Carolyn Boitnott or Martha
Del Pizzo. Contact: Tori Simms, 410-675-4948.
- Flea Market Committee: Thursday, April 10th, 7 PM, 232 S. Patterson Park Ave. Join us and work on the
next flea market. Contact: Tori Simms, 410-675-4948.
- House Tour Planning Meeting: Thursday, April 17th, 7 PM, 2029 E. Pratt St. All are welcome! Contact
Sue Noonan, 410-522-6773 or Dee Lundelius.
- Membership Committee: No meeting this month. For information contact
Kathy Hackett, 410-327-2447. E-mail
BHAmember@gmail.com to request a new neighbor packet. NEW
NEIGHBORS: See the Moving In link on our web site: www.butchershill.org.
- Book Club: Book Club I -2029 E. Pratt St.,"The History of Love" by Nicole Krauss. Book Club II-108 S. Chester
St.,"The Unbearable Lightness of Being" by Milan Kundera(see cal. for date and time).Interested in joining?
Please contact: Anne Puckett, 410-675-8765.
- Land Use: Monday, April 21st, 7PM, at the White House, 27 South Patterson Park Ave. The Land Use
Committee reminds homeowners in the 2100 and 2200 blocks of E. Baltimore St. and the 2200 block of E.
Pratt St. that you live in a City historic district. All exterior work and painting must be submitted to CHAP and
Butchers Hill. We're happy to help with any questions. Contact Virgil Bartram: 410-327-4964. CHAP's number
is 410-396-4866.
- BHA Executive Committee – date change: Thursday, April 10th at 7:30 PM, 2002 E. Pratt St. Contact
Barry Glassman. (Future meetings will be held the 2nd Thursday of the month)
- Streetscape Committee - date change: Thursday, April 3rd, 7 PM at 2225 E. Lombard Street. The
current Streetscape Committee’s focus is education and assistance with trash and litter – helping to keep our
streets healthy and attractive, free from trash, litter, & animal waste. Contact:
Connie Brines, 410-539-2827.
- Newsletter: The deadline for all articles, ads, and notices for the MAY issue of the BHA newsletter is
Wednesday, April 16th. Contact Patricia Clark.
§ APRIL BUTCHERS HILL GENERAL MEETING, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2ND §
Meeting 7:00 PM. St. Andrew’s Church hall, Chester & Lombard. Contact Barry Glassman
AGENDA: Callie Schwartz Audubon Society Center/Roy Hoopengardner Dundalk Florist & Garden
BHA MARCH GENERAL MEETING NOTES
Reports from each chair of the standing committees
as well as the new
Marketing and Promotions Committee, Garden Tour
Committee, Parking Committee and The Trees and
Murals Committee - were presented. The 2008
Association budget was presented and passed. Guest
speaker, Scott Levitan, gave an informative
presentation about the “Biotech Park” being built
adjacent to Hopkins Hospital. For more detail go to:
http://butchershill.org/association/minutes.shtml.
2008 BHA House Tour
If you would like to be on the 2008 Butchers Hill
Association House Tour, volunteer to housesit, or
recommend a unique Butchers Hill home for the
Sunday, October 12th house tour please notify Dee
Lundelius or Sue
Noonan. The BHA committee
will be interviewing candidates at the end of April.
Dear Friends of Butcher's Hill,
Commodore John Rodgers' Dr. Seuss Day on March 3rd was a huge success. Once again, it wouldn’t have
been possible without support from Butcher's Hill community members. A special thank you to the people
who came out to read to a class: Carolyn and John Boitnott, Sandy Sales, Ann Puckett, and Bill Harper. An
EXTRA SPECIAL thank you to Carolyn Boitnott for helping recruit readers and for all of her hard work
that she does for CJR each and every day. It is appreciated! Thanks Butcher's Hill!
Jeana Patti, 4th grade teacher
ARCHITECTURE IN THE FEDERAL STYLE
Federal style architecture reached its vogue before
the Butcher's Hill post Civil War building boom. But
by spotting the few examples of Federal-Style row
houses in or near Butchers Hill, one can discover
some of the earliest development in the neighborhood.
A free-standing Federal-Style house typically had its
entrance centered on the long side of the house, with the
roof pitched down toward the entry. A partial story under
the roof often included narrow dormer windows. The
outside typically featured elegant, balanced proportions in
the fenestration, with decoration confined to just a porch
or entry. These entry doorways in became light sources
featuring transoms and side lights. In some cases, the
transom consisted of an elaborate oval fan with delicate
mullions in geometric shapes. The Federal Style also
emphasized delicate interior embellishments.
The Baltimore Federal row house echoes
freestanding examples, but with a simpler
implementation. The facades often have two bays of
windows. Door transoms are simple rectangles, typically
without sidelights. As seen in the 1900 block of Gough
Street, some houses have partial top floors with two
partial height casement windows. Other Federal row
houses have partial top floors under their roof with a
dormer that centers on the roof rather than centering on
the windows below. Examples can be found in the 500
block of South Ann Street.
Before the Civil War, Upper Fells Point was densely
developed with Federal row houses that were in vogue at
that time. One can spot a few examples of these houses
near the southwest corner of Butchers Hill. Federal row
houses are found at 130 South Washington Street and
120-122 South Castle Street. These houses are
surrounded by later Victorian architecture built after the
Civil War.
Towards the northeast corner of Butchers Hill, we
find a solitary Federal row house at 2218 East Fairmount
Avenue This again shows early development. The area
near this part of Fairmount is where the original butchers
stockyards were located in the early half of the 19th
Century.
— Virgil Bartram
SAVE THE DATES!
2008 Butchers Hill Events:
Spring Clean Up – Saturday, April 19
Spring Flea Market – Saturday, May 10
Garden Tour – Sunday, June 8
Potluck Picnic – Wednesday, July 9
Fall Flea Market – Saturday, September 13
House Tour - Sunday, October 12
Holiday Potluck – Sunday, December 7
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
BUILDING HEALTHY GREEN COMMUNITIES at the Patterson
Park Branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library – Tuesday, April 29,
2008, 6 – 7:30pm
Community associations, leaders, activists and individuals
interested in taking action to better the environment and their
neighborhoods are invited to attend. There will be a discussion
of the fundamentals of creating healthy neighborhoods and
presentations of what local organizations are doing to help
communities. Presentations and projects by Baltimore City, Civic
Works, Community Greens, Common Ecology and Parks and
People. This event is free.
Location information: Patterson Park Branch of the Enoch Pratt
Free Library, 158 N. Linwood Avenue.
For more information visit www.baltimoregreenweek.org
Please take the time to fill out the survey about Patterson
Park being conducted by Friends of Patterson Park,
Audubon Society, and the Department of Recreation &
Parks…it can be found at the following link:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=C2_2fEwk69QbJLOXJG00GuFg_3d_3d
The Southeast Anchor Library, in Highlandtown, is sponsoring
the Fairy Tale Fling on April 5th. Leave the evil stepsisters at
home and join us for a celebration of fairy tales and faraway
lands. Dress up in regal attire and get your picture taken on a
royal throne. Decorate a crown, create a magic wand, and
design your own family crest...all before the clock strikes
midnight. At 1 p.m. enjoy Horn's Punch and Judy Show.
Southeast Anchor Library, 3601 Eastern Avenue, Saturday,
10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, 410-396-1580, sel@prattlibrary.org
NEWSLETTER DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED
Thanks to Tish Brown for her years of service delivering the
Newsletter to the unit and 100 blocks of South Patterson Park
Avenue. We wish her well as she recovers from surgery. We
are looking for someone who would be able to deliver the
Newsletter to those blocks once a month. Please contact Sandy,
410-558-0149.
COMMUNITY DUMPSTER, Tuesday, April 8th, Lombard St. & S. Collington
Ave. For neighborhood residents only. No building materials, refrigerators,
water heaters, washers, dryers, stoves, batteries, wet paint, automotive parts
(including tires and rims), or hazardous materials.
The dumpster generally arrives around 10 AM and leaves around 2 PM.
Please use the open end of the dumpster to walk your items inside. Do NOT
throw over the side. There will generally be people inside the dumpster.
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