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Reservoir Hill is a beautiful, historic residential neighborhood adjacent to Druid Hill Park. It is home to stately Victorian town homes, restored apartment buildings, and a diverse mix of residents from all backgrounds and all walks of life who together function as a unified community.
Several neighborhoods identify themselves within the larger Reservoir Hill Neighborhood:
Upper Eutaw / Madison:
Bounded by North Avenue, Druid Hill Park, Eutaw Place and Madison Avenue.
Historic Mt. Royal:
Bounded by Mt. Royal Avenue and North Avenue
Brookfield - Newington:
2200 block Brookfield Avenue
800-900 blocks Newington Avenue
Bolton / Park Neighbors, Inc.:
1900-2000 Block Park Avenue
700 Block Reservoir Street
2000 Block Reservoir Street |
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Reservoir Hill is a diverse community, committed to maintaining its diversity. Many people involved in the fine arts live in the neighborhood, which is convenient to the Maryland Institute College of Art as well as to downtown Baltimore. Three forms of mass transit serve the neighborhood. An active community association, churches, a synagogue, and a strong public elementary school are among the anchor neighborhood institutions. Reservoir Hill continues to attract enthusiastic new residents because of its convenient location, distinctive housing, historic ambiance, and vibrant community life. The Baltimore Zoo, the Victorian tradition of Druid Hill Park, the romantic 19th century flower conservatory, the hiking trails and the City Reservoir with its lighted fountain are all symbolic of the rare ambiance which the neighborhood projects. Proximity to the Jones Falls expressway, Penn Station, and the Johns Hopkins University are all added attractions. |
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The stately three- and four-story Victorian rowhouses, once the homes of wealthy Baltimore merchants, offer elegance and architectural details unlike any other section of Baltimore. Many of the structures date from the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. The architecture ranges from Victorian to intricate Queen Anne style houses to Georgian Revival mansions to simple porch-front rowhouses. The houses are beautiful and spacious, with carved mantles, hardwood floors, pocket doors, and 10 – 11 feet ceilings. Reservoir Hill also is the home of four multi-story apartment buildings that were built early in the 20th century and renovated in the past decade. |
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Reservoir Hill, part of a community formerly known as Mount Royal, was developed as an upscale residential community in the last three decades of the 19th century. Early homeowners included wealthy merchants and industrialists such as the Blausteins, Hechts, and Hamburgers. Famed writer Gertrude Stein lived there at the turn of the century.
With the invention of the car, wealthier homeowners moved away from the growing city, and a streetcar line extended to Mount Royal facilitated an increase in population. World War I brought even more housing pressures as wartime workers poured into the shipyards. The neighborhood became less affluent but remained stable as working class families, Jewish and non-Jewish began to settle there. Still, through the 1930s, the community remained a predominantly middle-class Jewish community peppered with synagogues, delis, schools, and shops.
Even with the renewed housing pressures of World War II, and through the giddy post-war 1950s, Mount Royal remained a family, residential neighborhood, but the shocks of social upheaval of the 1960s brought about the neighborhood’s lowest point. Slowly, during the 1940s, the Jewish population began to leave, replaced by working class whites, a departure that picked up speed in the 1950s and 1960s, eventually leading to a predominately African-American community. The panicked flight of neighbors during the 1960s left the way open for massive purchases by irresponsible landlords who allowed the houses to deteriorate.
In the mid 1970s, Baltimore’s innovative “Urban Pioneer” program brought new residents to the area. These new homeowners worked with long-time residents to address some of Reservoir Hill’s biggest challenges. In 1972, the neighborhood became an urban renewal area, and city officials changed its name to Reservoir Hill.
Reservoir Hill residents developed a comprehensive revitalization plan in 1996, and a follow-up to that plan in 2002. In cooperation with Baltimore City and a host of partners, Reservoir Hill residents and staff have implemented numerous key components of the plans, which call for major investments in both physical infrastructure and human capital. The vision of Reservoir Hill is a vibrant, mixed-income community where empowered residents work together to solve problems common to the community.
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| This list may not include all schooling options for this neighborhood. For more information on Baltimore schools, visit the Live Baltimore School Links. |
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John Eager Howard Elementary School
Mount Royal Elementary/Middle School
Midtown Academy (a "new school", funded in part with public funds and developed by residents of Reservoir Hill and Bolton Hill. Operates in Bolton Hill.)
Westside Elementary School
William H. Lemmel Middle School
Frederick Douglass High School
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Beth Am Synagogue
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Bible Revival Deliverance Church (Apostolic Faith)
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Christ Apostolic Church of America
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First Emmanuel Baptist Church
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Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church
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St. Francis Neighborhood Center
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St. Mary’s Church of Christ
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Union Temple Congregation
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Reservoir Hill:
Reservoir Hill Improvement Council
2001 Park Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21217
410-225-7547 Tel
410-225-7455 Fax
John Ruffin, Executive Director
jruffin@reservoirhill.net
Carl Cleary, Neighborhood Development
ccleary@reservoirhill.net
Historic Mt. Royal:
Gail Blackwell
(410) 462-5047
onegail@hotmail.com
Upper Eutaw/Madison:
Joan Pullian
(410) 462-1904
UEMNA@hotmail.com
Bolton-Park Neighbors, Inc.:
Richard B. Pazornik, President
(410) 902-8252
richbpaz@aol.com
Brookfield-Newington:
Antwan Clark
(410) 908-2999
crc_consultingwork@yahoo.com
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Average Home Sales— Prices by neighborhood
Baltimore I-Map — City mapping tool for cultural, civic, and property information
Baltimore Citistat— City agency accountability tool
Crime Mapping— Search recent crime data by address through the Baltimore Police Dept.
Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators Alliance— Track a variety of data through their interactive mapping system
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