Discover Historic Rolling Mill:
Kingsley Methodist Church (248 Williams Street)
Malamphy’s Saloon (508 Park Street) and The Malamphy Bottling Works 218 Williams Street
Cumberland Outdoor Club (209 Emily Street, 400 Park Street, and 529 Maryland Avenue)
Bird’s Eye View of Cumberland, Maryland 1906, by T.M. Fowler (shows Cumberland’s historic Rolling Mill neighborhood in the foreground)
Preservation Maryland:
PM Offers Assistance to City of Cumberland & Opposes Costly Demolition Project
PM Applauds Cumberland Citizens and the Institute for Justice
The Maryland Historic Trust Inventory forms by Genevieve Keller determined the entire Rolling Mill neighborhood to be historically significant, not just the part that was nominated and listed on the National Register:
“Maple Arch,” 114 Park Street (a magnificent Italianate home of one of Cumberland’s great Civil War heroes)
National Register of Historic Places Nominations:
The Rolling Mill National Historic District
The Francis Haley House, 634 Maryland Avenue
Cumberland YMCA, 205 Baltimore Avenue
16 Altamont Terrace (Cumberland’s first hospital built circa 1851)
Queen City Station Hotel and B&O Rolling Mill HABS/HAER/HALS architectural and architectural history Documentation – completed prior to their demolition in the 1970s and 1980s to satisfy historic mitigation requirements of the National Historic Preservation Act:
Queen City Hotel & Station, West Side of Park Street
Rail Rolling Mill, Elm Street and Local Alley
Bolt and Forge Shop, Spring Street
To download a PDF of the Rolling Mill Historic Walking Tour Brochure click here.