Skip to main content

Allegany County Maryland--History

Ku Klux Klan Field Day 1925

Media Items
Body

COMING!
Western Maryland Field Day Saturday, May 23, 1925
Women of the Ku Klux Klan
Cumberland, Md.

The Biggest Event in the History of Klancraft.
Patriotic Americans Everywhere are Planning to Come.

We Have Perfected an Amazing Programme, Which Will Last Throughout the Day.

Aerial Stunt Flying, Day and Night, Aerial Fire Works, Night and Day, Ground Fire Works
Speakers of National Renown in Ku Klux Circles Will Lecture at Intervals throughout the Afternoon. Also Many Added Attractions you Can't Afford to Miss.

Cross burning at Vale Summit

Media Items
Body

Cross-Burning by the Ku Klux Klan in Vale Summit

by Anton Urbas

During the early stages of the 1921-24 coal strike that swept through the George's Creek coal basin, a group of men from our village formed a cell of the Ku Klux Klan. The identity of these individuals was a closely guarded secret among those families whose men were a part of this cell. As youngsters, endowed with a keen perception, we viewed these crude attempts of maintaining secrecy of identities as a throw-back of the Middle Ages-nothing escaped us.

Frederick Douglass, Cumberland's Emancipation Celebration, 1879

Media Items
Body

rederick Douglass, Cumberland's Emancipation Celebration

The following article appeared in the September 24, 1879 edition of the Washington Post. It was forwarded to me by the Allegany Museum. The fairgrounds reference were at that time located in South Cumberland:

"On this day, September 23 1879, Marshal Frederick Douglass arrived by express train at Cumberland’s Queen City hotel. Douglass was to lecture for the Emancipation celebration.

Black soldiers buried separately at Antietam

Media Items
Body

Black soldiers buried separately at Antietam
Officials seek information

SHARPSBURG (AP) — Eight black soldiers who served in the two World Wars are buried in the back corner of the Antietam National Cemetery, separated from their white contemporaries because of segregation.

A few names are barely legible on the weathered headstones: Pfc. Howard S. Puller of West Virginia; Sgt. Littleton Goens of Maryland; Lee I. Lavender, a cook.

African-American Marriage Licenses, Garrett County

Media Items
Body

African-American Marriage Licenses, Garrett County

The following information is from a posting written by Gene Miller, a staff member of the Takoma Park, Maryland Library. 

"The African-American community in southern Garrett County from about 1870 -1930 is not well-documented. It was small, numbering fewer than 200 at its largest, but still large enough to have built its own church building, the Bethel A.M.E. Church at the corner of N.5th and E. High Sts. Many worked at the railroad resorts/hotels for which southern Garrett County was renowned.

Martin Luther King Day county holiday in 1994

Media Items
Body

Martin Luther King Day official holiday in 1994

RICHARD KERNS

CUMBERLAND Confronted by representatives of the Allegany County NAACP complaining about recent incidents of racism in Allegany County, and a poor minority hiring record in county government, the Allegany County Commissioners agreed Monday to make Martin Luther King Day an official county holiday in 1994.

Garrett's first murder case

Media Items
Body

The first person to commit murder and be hanged in Garrett County was John Herbert Smith, a former slave. The PDF file tells the full story of the murder of Josiah Harden, and Smith's arrest, escape and final execution.

This 1908 postcard depicts the Western Maryland Railroad Depot at Gorman, Maryland, the community where the murder took place. At the time of the murder in 1883, Smith was a railroad construction foreman. The railroad was most likely the West Virginia Central and Pittsburgh which eventually merged into the Western Maryland.