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		<title>The Gritty History (and Gentrification) of Fells Point</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/fells-point-baltimore-250-year-history-grit-gentrification/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jun 2023 13:26:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ann Bond Fell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barbara Mikulski]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bertha's Mussels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cat's Eye Pub]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Duda's Tavern]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Edith Massey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fells Point]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fells Point Fun Festival]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frederick Douglass]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Waters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Society for the Preservation of Federal Hill and Fell's Point]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War of 1812]]></category>
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<h2 style="font-size:1.5rem; margin-bottom:0.5rem; letter-spacing:2px;" class="plateau-five text-center"><b>By Ron Cassie</b></h2>

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<span class="text-center clan">
<h6 style="font-size:1rem;">Opening photo: Thames Street, foot of Broadway, May 1940. <i>—Courtesy of Tony Norris</i></h6>
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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center"Sports</h6>
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<h1 class="title">The Gritty History (and Gentrification) of Fells Point</h1>
<h4 class="text-center">
Baltimore City annexed Fells Point some 250 years ago this month, but the waterfront neighborhood has an epic story all its own.
</h4>

<img decoding="async" class="mobileHero" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint_thumbnail.jpg"/>



<h4 class="text-center" style="padding-top:2rem;">By Ron Cassie</h4>

<h5 class="text-center">Opening photo: Thames Street, foot of Broadway, May 1940. <i>—Courtesy of Tony Norris</i></h5>





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<p>
<b>THE OUTBREAK OF WAR IN 1812</b>, a disconcerting letter from Capt. Richard
Moon to the Secretary of the Navy was reprinted in <i>The Weekly Register</i>, a Baltimore-based
magazine among the most widely read of its era.
</p>
<p>
Referring to himself as the “[former] commander of the privateer Sarah Ann,”
Moon reported his Baltimore-commissioned schooner had been captured. Worse,
Moon wrote, the British claimed six members of his crew were, in fact, treasonous
subjects of the king and “are to be tried for their lives.” Among those imprisoned was
George Roberts, described as “a coloured man and seaman” and someone Moon knew
to be born in the U.S., married, and living in Baltimore. Only following further correspondence between diplomats did the seamen escape execution.
</p>
<p>
After his release from a Jamaican prison, Roberts continued to fight the British
on the high seas, signing on as a gunner aboard the Chasseur. Newly constructed in
the shipyard of Thomas Kemp at the corner of Washington and Aliceanna in Fells
Point, the topsail schooner quickly became the best-known of the swift Baltimore
clippers. In 1813, the Chasseur raided six British vessels, sending all but one up in
flames when they were finished. The following year, its crew, including Roberts,
divested another dozen and a half British merchant ships of their cargo, the spoils
shared among its captain, seamen, and shipowner. (During war, the difference
between pirates and privateers depended upon one’s perspective. Governments in
need of naval help sanctioned the often lucrative, if risky, seizure of its opponent’s
vessels by normally illegal means.)
</p>
<p>
The Chasseur, from which the popular <a href="https://chasseurbaltimore.com/">Southeast Baltimore bar</a> takes its name,
also became famous for boldly proclaiming a single-handed blockade of the British
Isles. In total, the Fells Point docks were home to 58 such privateering vessels,
credited with the capture of more than 500 ships. The attempted British invasion of
the Baltimore harbor in the fall of 1814 (think “Star-Spangled Banner”) was in good
measure to rid the “nest of pirates” from Fells Point.
</p>

<p>
<p>
When the Chasseur returned and saluted Fort McHenry after the war’s end, its
crew were hailed as heroes. The already legendary schooner was dubbed the “Pride
of Baltimore.” Its ship’s captain, the renowned Thomas Boyle, who had lost men
in battle and had been wounded himself, praised Roberts for displaying “the most
intrepid courage.” Readjusting to civilian life as a free Black carpenter and laborer,
the ex-privateer purchased a home for $150 on Ann Street in Fells Point. Such was
Roberts’ reputation, that over the ensuing decades, despite the horrific racism of the era, he marched in uniform alongside the city’s prominent citizens
on civic occasions. His 1861 obituaries—he lived to 95—recalled
his patriotism, “many hair-breath escapes,” and desire to always
be remembered as “one of the defenders of his native city should
the necessity have arrived [again] to take up arms in its defense.”
His “brave character,” it was noted, was “adorned with amicable
[and charitable] disposition,” such that “news of death will cause
heartfelt sorrow.”
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Battle
between the
<i>Chasseur</i>, a Fells
Point privateer, and
British schooner
<i>St. Lawrence</i> off
Havanna, 1815. <i>—Adam Weingartner, public domain, via Wikimedia Commons</i></center></h5>
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<p>
Roberts’ service was not unique, however. It’s estimated 20
percent of the War of 1812 privateers were African American. Other
Black Americans, free and enslaved, worked in Fells Point’s busy
shipyards, building the vessels that undid the British navy and merchant
fleet. (In a terrible irony, they were also forced to caulk ships
used in the foreign and domestic slave trade.)
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Free Black seaman
and a hero of the
War of 1812,
George Roberts <i>—Courtesy of the Maryland Center for History and Culture, PVF</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
It’s no coincidence the Caulkers Association, one of the first
Black trade unions in the U.S., was formed in Fells Point or that a
Black former ship’s caulker named Isaac Myers founded the Chesapeake
Marine Railway and Dry Dock Company in Fells Point, a
cooperative that employed 300 workers at its peak. Nor is it a coincidence
that <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/from-fells-to-free-celebrating-frederick-douglass-200th-birthday/">Frederick Douglass</a> learned to read and write in Fells
Point and escaped slavery posing as a free Black sailor. The same
month that Douglass escaped from Fells Point, 133 people of African
descent were shipped from Baltimore to New Orleans for enslavement
on Louisiana plantations.
</p>
<p>
Some 250 years ago this month, on the cusp of the American
Revolution, Baltimore City annexed both nearby Jonestown and
Fells Point, taking its early shape. But from its clipper ships and
compelling Black history to its yellow fever outbreaks and child labor horrors; from its boarding houses, brothels, and
bars to its inflow of Polish immigrants and landmark
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/senator-barbara-mikulski-daughter-of-polish-grocers-rise-to-the-senate/">“Stop the Road” battle</a>; from its rebirth in the 1970s to
its ongoing gentrification—the iconic waterfront neighborhood
with its “Belgian block” cobblestone streets
has a gritty, colorful, complicated story all its own.
</p>
<p>
And let’s not forget the tales of sailors getting
shanghaied from Fells Point pubs; or the tattooed,
hard-drinking, blacksmith and ward boss George Konig
Sr., whose election-day street fights with the Know-Nothings in the 1850s were straight out of <i>The Gangs
of New York</i>; and a certain bar where <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/edgar-allan-poe-baltimore-charm-city-culture-history-poetry-poet-festival/">Edgar Allan Poe</a> is
said to have had his last bender. Its narrow lanes and
alleyway are filled with secrets and stories.
</p>
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	<video controls="false" autoplay="true" name="media" muted="true"><source src="https://player.vimeo.com/progressive_redirect/playback/831565098/rendition/720p/file.mp4?loc=external&signature=1adc808c40a6ff5d9d3fafb03504b51c4e7c1c8f251240fbe08264aeadb8c1c0" type="video/mp4"></video>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Fells Point reflections. <i>—Video by J.M. Giordano</i>
</h5>

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<span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE=" width:auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint-T.png"/></span>
he hamlet that sprouted on the small,
hook-shaped peninsula on the northwest
branch of the Patapsco River was on land
purchased by Quaker William Fell, who
followed his brother Edward here from Lancashire,
England. It’s a bit confusing because all the male Fells
seem to be named either William or Edward, but it was
William’s son Edward, a colonel in Maryland’s provincial
army, who first laid out the budding town’s streets
in 1763. The Fell family cemetery, awkwardly squeezed
today between rowhouses on Shakespeare Street, contains
the remains of William Fell, his son, Edward Fell,
and his son, William. (There was no Admiral Fell. The <a href="https://www.admiralfell.com/">Admiral Fell Inn</a>, it's been said, takes its name from an episode
about a drunk admiral, not named Fell, stumbling into
the harbor—“the admiral fell in.” Management at the inn
has changed hands since it opened in 1985 and says the
name is merely a play on words, but it’s too good of a story
not to repeat.)
</p>
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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint_Bond.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Early Fells
Point developer,
Ann Bond Fell. <i>—Courtesy of the Maryland Center for History and Culture, 1986.105.4</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Edward Fell advertised his plan to sell plots of his land
near “Baltimore-Town, Maryland on a Point known by the
Name of Fell’s-Point” a year earlier in the old <i>Maryland
Gazette</i>. Grammarians will note the apostrophe after the
family name, which has dropped out of general use, but not
without heated debate over the years. More importantly,
it was not Col. Edward Fell who ultimately developed the
wooded, 100-acre lot he inherited on the water and the
surrounding 3,000 acres he consolidated. He died at 33.
Rather, it was his first cousin and wife, Ann Bond—once described
as “the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/city-of-hope-jim-rouses-columbia-md-turns-50-years-old/">Jim Rouse</a> of her day”—who sold the plots.
</p>

<p>
Wealthy in her own right, Ann Bond Fell proved a shrewd
businesswoman. She vigorously promoted Fells Point,
which was competing with Baltimore Town for investment.
She fended off gossipy attacks in the local broadsides and
rumors of unhealthy water in Fells Point. She also struck
up forward-thinking contracts, which stipulated that purchased
property would revert to her if not developed within
two years. (The City of Baltimore might take a cue from Ms.
Fell in its dealings with developers and slumlords.) She later
remarried a well-to-do county landowner, but not before she
made him sign a prenuptial agreement, ensuring her holdings
would be passed down to her children.
</p>
<div class="picWrap">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint_Fells-map.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
18th-century
Fells Point street
map. <i>—Courtesy of the Society for the Preservation of Federal Hill and Fell’s Point.</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
If it isn’t obvious yet, the neighborhood street names—Ann, Bond, Fells, as well as Lancaster, Thames, Shakespeare,
Aliceanna, Caroline, Bank, Gough, Wolfe, and Washington—
date to this 1700s period, marking “The Point” as
one of the oldest active waterfront communities in the country.
Fleet Street, it’s believed, pays homage to Capt. Henry
Fleet, a British Chesapeake Bay explorer. Other names have changed. Wilk Street, now Eastern Avenue, was known as “the
Causeway”—a notorious stretch of “houses of ill-fame” frequented
by sailors. Market Street became Broadway, which since 1786 has
been home to one of the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/five-things-to-know-about-broadway-market-in-fells-point/">city’s oldest public markets</a>.
</p>
<p>
The names of Fells Point’s lively alley streets have changed,
too. Though not necessarily for the better. Strawberry Alley, home
to the Methodist church attended by Frederick Douglass as a young
man, became Dallas Street. (Douglass later returned and built five
rowhouses on the street, including one available on Airbnb, that
remain to this day.) Happy Alley became Durham Street, which
today is full of murals and mosaics celebrating the girlhood home
there of Billie Holiday. The alliterative Argyle and Apple Alleys
were renamed Regester and Bethel Streets.
</p>
<p>
The rebranding of the “alleys” to “streets” after the Civil War
might be considered the first attempt at gentrification in Fells Point.
</p>
<p>
The leveling of two majority-Black alley streets—sections of
Dallas and Spring, part of a “slum clearance” effort on the edge of
Upper Fells in the late 1930s—might be the second. They were demolished
to make room for white immigrant families—in what became
the Perkins Homes housing project. Recently, the majority Black residents of Perkins Homes have been moved
out and the low-rise Perkins buildings have been
knocked down in favor of a new mixed-use development,
which is supposed to include a percentage of
housing that is affordable for its former tenants.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Pay day for the stevedores, c. 1905. <i>—Library of Congress</i></center></h5>
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<span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="width:auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint-R.png"/></span>
emarkably, the streets of Fells Point, like
many in the earliest years of the city,
were not formally segregated during its
so-called “golden era,” which peaked
with the War of 1812 and lasted until the Civil War.
(Baltimore’s infamous housing segregation law,
which stated that no Black resident could move onto
a block in which the majority of the residents were
white and vice versa, came in 1910.) All seven of the
residential alleys in Fells Point had white and Black
households, as Mary Ellen Hayward, author of <i>Baltimore’s
Alley Houses</i>, discovered when she examined
the city’s first directory to note “householders of color”
in 1808. Eight of the larger streets, too, were at least somewhat integrated with Black caulkers, laborers,
laundresses, blacksmiths, barbers, and their
children—a trend Hayward traces through subsequent
directories. When Douglass, known as Frederick
Bailey as a boy, lived in Fells Point with the
slave-owning Auld family, “a [nearby] German baker
had a shop on the southwest corner of Aliceanna
and Happy Alley,” Hayward writes, “but there was
also a ‘colored grocery’ on the same block.”
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap">

<img class="singlePic" 
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</div>
<p>
Two of the oldest wooden homes standing in
Fells Point, at 612 and 614 Wolfe Street, became
homes to Black caulkers in the 1840s and 1850s.
All during these decades, as tobacco receded as an
economic driver in Maryland, the free Black population
in Fells Point and Baltimore grew dramatically.
</p>
<p>
Two of the more unlikely stories of the period
involve a self-taught Black artist named Joshua Johnson 
and a French-speaking Black Cuban immigrant
named Elizabeth Clarisse Lange, both of whom lived in 
Fells Point. Born into slavery, 
Johnson, became an accomplished and sought-after formal
portrait artist and is
recognized as the first African-American professional painter in the United States. Lange, meanwhile, is under consideration by the Vatican for canonization.
From 1818 to 1828, with fellow immigrant
Marie Magdelaine Balas, she offered previously unavailable
free education to children of color out of
her Fells Point home. Later known as Mother Mary
Lange, she founded the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/educationfamily/mother-mary-lange-school-first-baltimore-catholic-elementary-to-open-in-60-years/">first permanent African-American religious order of nuns</a>, the Oblate Sisters of Providence,
and the school that evolved into Saint Frances Academy in East Baltimore
(and recently graduated the 2023 NCAA Women’s Basketball
Tournament Most Outstanding Player, Angel Reese).
</p>
<p>
But even with the presence of Douglass, who, at about 12 years
old, purchased his first book, <i>The Columbian Orator</i>, from Nathaniel
Knight’s bookstore on Thames Street—perhaps worth consideration
as Baltimore’s first radical bookshop—it is not correct to view Fells
Point through the lens of slavery and abolition, says local Black historian
Lou Fields.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Black maritime business owner Isaac Myers, c. 1875. <i>—LIBRARY OF CONGRESS</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
“The proper lens is economic, it’s about the building of Baltimore,
and because the Inner Harbor is naturally shallow and Fells
Point has a deep water port, that’s where life gets started,” says
Fields, who has been leading Douglass tours of Fells Point for 23
years. “At that time, it was a maritime community. Everybody was
working to make a dollar, a quarter, or whatever it was.” He notes
that some of the first whites to come to Baltimore from Europe were
indentured servants: “The first Blacks who came to The Point, like
the first whites, came to supply a labor force to clear land, build
houses, and build roads.” Landowners found they were more suited
to the work than the Indigenous people—Baltimore is part of the
ancestral land of the Susquehannock and Piscataway tribes—so
they brought in more enslaved people from the Eastern Shore and
Southern Maryland.
</p>
<p>
“That said, Frederick Douglass’
life changed dramatically because
he was sent to Baltimore,” continues
Fields. “He might not have survived
otherwise. But once he’s here,
he also sees Black men, women, and
children auctioned off at the foot of Broadway and others separated
from their families and put on ships headed to New Orleans.”
</p>
<p>
Eventually, Douglass joins the East Baltimore Improvement Society
on what is now Durham Street, where he gains some education
from older free Black ship caulkers and meets his future wife. There
were physical confrontations between white workers and Black
workers for jobs on the docks—and Douglass nearly gets killed when
he’s attacked by several men—but he also writes about a pair of Irish
immigrants who encourage him to escape.
</p>
<p>
“The light broke in upon me by degrees. I went one day down on
the wharf of Mr. Waters; and seeing two Irishmen unloading a scow
of stone, I went, unasked, and helped them,” recalls Douglass in
his 1845 memoir. “When we had finished, one of them came to me
and asked me if I were a slave. I told him I was. He asked, ‘Are ye a
slave for life?’ I told him that I was. The good Irishman seemed to be
deeply affected by the statement. He said to the other that it was a
pity so fine a little fellow as myself should be a slave for life. He said
it was a shame to hold me. They both advised me to run away to the
north; that I should find friends there, and that I should be free.”
</p>
<p>
“Fells Point is a place with a lot of history, a lot of issues, a lot
of different people from all walks of life thrown together in a tight
geographic area,” Fields says. “It’s the most fascinating neighborhood
in the city.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Local historian
Lou Fields stands next
to the Frederick Douglass
memorial sculpture.<i>-Photography By J.M. Giordano</i></center></h5>
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="width:auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint-B.png"/></span>
y the 1960s and into 1970s, much of Fells
Point was set for demolition. Viewed by city
leadership as a waterfront slum, Fells Point
was deemed better to pave than preserve.
The shipbuilding yards had disappeared with the
advent of the steamship, which required a deeper channel
than even Fells Point offered. The canning industry,
which overlapped and then replaced the shipbuilding
industry and once filled more than a hundred packing
houses around the harbor, had all but disappeared as
well, following longer growing seasons and a booming
trucking industry to the south and west.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Tugboats at Fells Point, circa 1950s.<i>—Photography by Tom Scilipoti</i>
</h5>
</div>

<p>
Rukert Terminals on Brown’s Wharf remained
one of the last surviving cargo warehouses in operation.
The toxic Allied-Signal chromium plant in now-rebranded
Harbor Point was still a major employer.
However, there were few others beyond the sprawling
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/h-s-bakery-at-70/">H&S Bakery</a> plant.
</p>

<p>
Synonymous with Fells Point since 1878, Baker-Whiteley’s tugboats remained a daily sight on the
water, echoing the past as the neighborhood’s future
became the subject of intense debate, activism, and
lawsuits. (The tugboats would leave, too, in the early 1980s, moving to Locust Point after the New York-based
McAllister Brothers acquired Baker-Whiteley. In
general, port business didn’t so much leave Baltimore
as migrate further out around the harbor from Fells.)
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, transportation planners laid out an
east-west expressway across Lancaster Street to connect
I-70 in the west to I-83 in the center of Baltimore—with I-95 east of Fells Point, one of the final
pieces of Maryland’s interstate network.
</p>

<p>
The city told residents the highway was inevitable,
and their rowhouses and businesses stood in the way
of progress. With few options, many took the marketpriced
checks and relocation fees and left, some happily
no doubt, for the suburbs. Whole blocks, almost
a hundred homes and structures in all, were condemned
to make room for a massive interchange over
today’s Harbor East and a six-lane, elevated highway
through the heart of Fells Point’s historic district.
</p>
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<img class="singlePic" 
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</div>
<p>
It was in the middle of the Fells Point “Stop the
Road” citizen uprising in 1972 that <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/berthas-fells-point-closure-regulars-pay-respects-to-bar-that-changed-the-neighborhood/">Tony and Laura
Norris</a> stumbled across a dingy bar called The Lone
Star among the vacant rowhomes and dilapidated
boardinghouses. Both were musicians and teachers,
but Laura had gotten ill and couldn’t work for a period
and while they were figuring out what to do next, a
friend ventured to Fells Point looking for office space.
Unable to find anything suitable, a realtor pointed
him toward a small saloon for sale. “He came back
and said, ‘Let’s buy a bar,’” the now-82-year-old Tony
Norris recalls. “So, I called a Baltimore friend who was
in California teaching, and said, ‘Loan me $3,000,’ or
whatever it was for the down payment. At that time,
you could buy almost everything in the neighborhood.
I think we paid $14,000 for the liquor license
and the building, but there wasn’t much there. There
was an old room in the back that had a kitchen that
had never been finished. One of our customers who
was handy said, ‘Well, I’ll help fix the kitchen up.’”
</p>
<p>
Among some junk and antiques in a midtown garage, Norris
found a stained glass window dedicated to the memory of a mysterious
Bertha E. Bartholomew, which went on display with back lighting
behind the bar. That memorial window provided the inspiration for
one of the city’s beloved institutions of the past half-century, and
most well-traveled bumper sticker ever—EAT BERTHA’S MUSSELS.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>From top: Bertha’s
owners Laura and Tony Norris
in front of their beloved
bar and restaurant today; the memorial stained glass
window and the inspiration
for the name of Bertha’s.<i>—PHOTOGRAPHY BY J.M. GIORDANO</i></center></h5>


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<p>
When Bertha’s opened, a few other bars changed hands and an
otherwise-declining neighborhood—that easily could have gone the
way of Philadelphia’s waterfront community, which had recently been
waylaid for I-95—became invigorated by an unlikely youth movement.
</p>
<p>
Which isn’t to say there weren’t colorful old joints or neighborhood
stalwarts that stuck around. There were always a lot of bars (and
complaints about bars) in Fells Point, the nature of an old port of call.
Helen’s Corner, run by Helen Christopher, whose merchant marine
husband had been lost at sea, catered to tugboaters. Now the Admiral’s
Cup, Christopher sold it in 1985 with the stipulation she could
continue living upstairs for the rest of her life. <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/jimmys-restaurant-to-reopen-celebrating-old-and-new/">Jimmy’s Restaurant</a>,
a greasy spoon and gathering spot for shift-workers and politicians
alike, had been around since the late ’40s. The Acropolis night club,
owned by the same Greek family, featured belly dancing. Miss Irene’s
at Thames and Ann—home to The Point today—remained a smokey, rough-around-the-edges bar with cheap beer, a big
pool table, and hard-drinking regulars.
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Leadbetters
Tavern, the Cat’s Eye
Pub, and The Horse You Came In On in the 1970s.<i>—COURTESY OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF FEDERAL HILL AND FELL’S POINT</i></center></h5>
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<p>
But The Thames Café (“Thames and Dames”) got
sold and remade as Leadbetters Tavern, named after
the blues musician Lead Belly. A well-known Baltimore
figure named “Turkey” Joe Trabert opened
Turkey Joe’s a few doors from Bertha’s. A 1775-built
tavern called Al’s and Ann’s on Thames Street was
rechristened The Horse You Came In On in 1972, after
a long-haired, twentysomething named Howard Gerber
bought it with a down payment won at Pimlico.
Things were a bit looser in those days. The day that The Horse You Came In On opened, a friend of Gerber’s literally
rode a horse through the front door and up to the bar. Some believe
the saloon is not only the oldest continuously operating bar in the
U.S., but also the last stop of Edgar Allan Poe before he was found
delirious in the street on Election Day 1849. (One theory holds Poe’s
death resulted from a Mobtown practice known as “cooping,” in
which eligible voters were kidnapped, drugged, or forced to drink,
and then disguised to cast multiple ballots.)
</p>
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<p>
In 1975, Irish-American Kenny Orye, who convinced some he
ran guns for the IRA, and Tony and Ana Marie Cushing opened the
<a href="https://catseyepub.com/">Cat’s Eye Pub</a> on Thames Street, taking their name from a West Virginia
distillery where Orye’s uncle bought his moonshine. Contrary to what’s been published elsewhere,
Ana Marie Cushing says with a smile,
the previous Harbor View tavern
there had not been a biker hangout,
but a lesbian bar. By the late 1970s
and early ’80s, the Cat’s Eye’s back
room had become a place to be after
closing time, recalled Steve Bunker,
a former seaman who operated the
nearby China Sea Trading Company with a parrot perched on his
shoulder. “At 3 a.m. you could run into politicos, hookers, sailors,
deal-makers, illegal Irishmen, riffraff, and refugees,” Bunker, who
now lives in Maine, wrote years later in the Fells Point newsletter.
“You didn’t ask too many questions about your stool mates, you just
drank your beer, passed a joint, and enjoyed the company.”
</p>
<p>
Before Orye died from an overdose at 33 in 1987, he organized
an Irish wake at the Cat’s Eye for a departed IRA leader. It was equal
parts publicity stunt to raise awareness for the IRA cause and joke
on city officials and the press: The body in the casket wasn’t real.
Five years after Orye’s death, longtime Cat’s Eye bartender Jeff
Knapp, who normally resembled Abe Lincoln and once snuck into
the St. Patrick’s Day parade dressed as the patron saint of Ireland,
was honored with a New Orleans-style jazz parade for his funeral.
</p>
<p>
Ghost tours of Fells Point claim the ghosts of Orye and Knapp
still work the Cat’s Eye bar.
</p>
<p>
The music and bar crawl culture developed over time as more
pubs opened kitchens and got permits for live music. But things
were not excactly popping in the early ’7os. “When [Bertha’s] first opened, someone would say, ‘Let’s go over to The Horse
or the Cat’s Eye for a beer’—there was this sense we
were all in it together—and you’d get into your car and
drive around the corner and have no trouble parking
right in front,” the now-84-year-old Tony Norris says.
“It was that empty down here.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Dreamlander
Edith Massey in
front of her store, Edith’s
Shopping Bag.<i>—EAST BALTIMORE DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT COLLECTION. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, BALTIMORE COUNTY.</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
The Fells Point art scene had begun blossoming
earlier. By the late ’60s, the old Hollywood Bakery on
Broadway had turned into a full-blown artist colony of
former Maryland Institute College of Art students. Divided
into 22 rooms and studios, the entire place rented
for $100 a month, giant bakery ovens included. Others
began squatting in and renting previously condemned
houses from the city while the “Stop the Road” fight
continued in the courts. By 1973, at least 15 houses that
the city had bought out earlier were rented to people
who wanted to live in and repair them. A $7,500 home
went for $75 a month with the generous provision that
repair materials could be deducted from the rent—the nascent start of a now-50-year rehabbing movement.
</p>
<p>
The Fells Point Gallery, founded in 1969 by MICA alumni, became a
destination. Then, a second-hand bookstore opened. Many still looked
down upon “seedy” Fells Point at the time, but others saw it as Baltimore’s
version of Greenwich Village. The <a href="https://www.fpct.org/">Fells Point Corner Theatre</a>,
now in Upper Fells, raised its first curtain, appropriately, at the corner
of Shakespeare and Broadway in 1970. The still-thriving <a href="https://www.vagabondplayers.org/">Vagabond
Players</a> moved into the former Corral’s Bar on Broadway in 1974.
</p>

<p>
In the late ’60s, John Waters, Glenn Milstead, aka Divine, and
friends began making pilgrimages to Fells Point, finding new partners
in subversion. MICA graduate Vincent Peraino, who was among
the influx of artists, became Waters’ set designer. Susan Lowe, a
painter who later dated Orye (some of her paintings still hang in the
Cat’s Eye), appeared in nearly every Waters film. Other Fells Point
Dreamlanders included Mink Stole, George Figgs, Paul Swift, Peter
Koper, and Bob Adams. “The Hollywood Bakery, that was Vincent’s
commune, and it was right next door to Pete’s Hotel, where <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/edith-massey-the-egg-lady-in-her-own-words-actress-john-waters-films/">Edith
Massey</a> worked as a bartender and we hung out,” Waters recalls with
a laugh. “It was the worst possible time down there and it was the
cheapest possible place. Drinks were 30 cents. Divine hated it. He
called it a ‘hobo bar.’”
</p>
<p>
Waters shot all over Fells Point and Massey opened a thrift store,
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/edith-massey-the-egg-lady-in-her-own-words-actress-john-waters-films/">Edith’s Shopping Bag</a>, with Adams following her memorable appearance
as “the Egg Lady” in Waters’ 1972 movie hit,
<i><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/pink-flamingos-john-waters-divine-celebrates-50th-anniversary/">Pink Flamingos.</a></i>
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2">

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<p>
“Fells Point was welcoming to all kinds of people,
that was the thing that was so amazing,” Waters continues,
noting he once did a fashion shoot at the Apex
adult movie theater on Broadway, which somehow coexisted
among the churches and families in Upper
Fells. “Paul Swift would jump up and dance naked
on the bars. They weren’t gay bars. It was gay and
straight. It was trans. Trans even then, and everybody
really got along. It was just cultural outlaws that didn’t
fit in their own minority.”
</p>
<p>
“The artists would hang around with the tugboat
guys and stevedores in the bar—we used to open at 8
a.m. for guys getting off their night shifts—that’s just
how it was then,” says Cushing.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Fells Point
Fun Festival, late 1960s,
with a “Stop The Road”
banner hanging on the
side of a building.<i>—COURTESY OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF FEDERAL HILL AND FELL’S POINT</i></center></h5>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The Art Gallery building,
c. late 1970s.<i>—COURTESY OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF FEDERAL HILL AND FELL’S POINT.</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
At the same time, pioneering preservationists had
moved to Fells Point. One visionary was Lu Fischer,
who lived in Ruxton and was married to a doctor but
bought a waterfront rowhouse with intentions of restoring
it, unaware a highway was planned through
her block. “Perhaps no other town on the eastern seaboard
boasts 18th-century houses facing the water
such as we have here in Fells Point,” she wrote in a letter
to <i>The Sun</i> in 1966. Former Councilman Tom Ward
helped found the <a href="https://www.preservationsociety.com/">Society for the Preservation of Federal
Hill and Fell’s Point</a> the following year. Bob Eney,
who’d grown up in Dundalk before a stint in the Army
and a career as a department store display artist in
New York, was another champion. Photographing and
documenting some 200 homes and buildings, Eney
led the successful campaign to get Fells Point listed
on the then-new National Register of Historic Places
in 1969—the first inclusion from Maryland—wooing
officials with walking tours, drinks, and dinners at
Haussner’s in nearby Highlandtown.
</p>

<p>
According to Eney, one of then-Vice President Spiro
Agnew’s female staffers, who secretly supported the
Fells preservationists, passed their completed National Register forms to Agnew to speed approval. Not realizing the obstacle
that placement on National Register would present to the highway he
and local contractors favored, Agnew dutifully forwarded them on and
“in three days we were on the National Register,” Eney recalled in 2004.
“The contractors [who’d been bribing him for years] were furious with
Agnew because he was so dumb. He had no idea what he had done.”
</p>
<p>
The annual <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/fells-point-fun-festival-celebrates-neighborhoods-old-and-new-in-50th-year/">Fells Point Fun Festival</a>, in fact, was first organized as
an anti-highway fundraising effort. At the 1969 annual street party,
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/senator-barbara-mikulski-daughter-of-polish-grocers-rise-to-the-senate/">Barbara Mikulski</a>, a then-33-year-old social worker, shouted her opposition
as future Mayor William Donald Schaefer tried to make his case
for the highway. “The British couldn’t take Fells Point, the termites
couldn’t take Fells Point,” announced Mikulski, part of group calling
themselves Radio Free Fells Point. “And we don’t think the State Roads
Commission can take Fells Point either.”
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap">

<img class="singlePic" 
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</div>
<p>
The granddaughter of Polish bakers, Mikulski is a link between
Fells Point’s long immigration history and the fight to the stop the
highway. “My great-grandmother landed in Fells Point somewhere at ‘the foot of Broadway,’ which is what we called that
area then, not Fells Point,” Mikulski says. “When
she came to this country and lived on Chester
Street near Holy Rosary, she could read, but she
was from Poland. One of the things she did to learn
English was to buy a newspaper and go down to
the Broadway Market and practice the language
and the exchange of money, and so on. People were
helpful and she could trust that she wasn’t going
to be taken advantage of. The churches were like
settlement houses because they were bilingual.”
</p>
<p>
Prior to the Eastern-European wave, Fells Point
was the arrival station for thousands of farmers
and laborers from Germany and Ireland. <a href="https://www.archbalt.org/parishes/all-parishes/st-patrick-broadway/">St. Patrick’s
Church</a>, now serving a Spanish-speaking congregation
on Broadway, is the city’s oldest Catholic
parish, dating to 1792. Germans came to Baltimore early and often, with many fleeing their homes after the failed 1848-1849 revolution. The Irish, in the 1840s and 1850s, arrived as refugees, some in desperate condition as they were pulled onto the Fells’ docks from vessels known as “coffin ships” because of the number who succumbed during the Atlantic crossing.
</p>
<p>
But by the 1870s, Poles were the dominant immigrant group. The first Roman Catholic Polish parish—St. Stanislaus Kostka on South Ann Street—formed in 1880. The city’s first Polish newspaper launched in 1891. A second parish, Holy Rosary Church, where Sunday morning Mass is still said in Polish, was founded in 1887. St. Casimir’s in Canton was founded in 1904. Which is not to romanticize the immigrant experience. Women—and children—went to work in the Fells canneries and as seasonal laborers on Maryland farms. Mikulski later bought a house on Ann Street in part, she admits, because it was in the path of the highway. “She was ready to lie down in front of the bulldozer,” says Tony Norris, the Bertha’s owner, who has known Mikulski since the early ’70s. The Norrises subsequently traded rowhouses with
Mikulski and remained a neighbor for 20 years. When
she was elected to Congress in 1976, her Eastern Avenue
office was only steps from her grandparents’ bakery.
</p>

<p>
“It was a great neighborhood because people tended
to live, work, worship, and shop in the same area,”
says Mikulski, who was born in 1936 and retired from
Congress in 2017, after becoming the first woman to
chair the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee.
</p>
<p>
“In terms of the battle of ‘the Road,’ there was the
parochial crowd, the preservationists, [artists], the business
owners—we were all in it. Were the town hall meetings
contentious?” Mikulski adds. “<i>It’s Bawlmer, hon.</i>”
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Barbara Mikulski
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<p>
The fundamental problem behind the conception of
“the Road”—including the stretch known as <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/highway-to-nowhere-baltimore-expressway-demolished-black-neighborhoods/">“The Highway
to Nowhere”</a> that got built through majority-Black
West Baltimore—is officials did not appreciate the value
of working-class neighborhoods, Mikulski says. “That
was certainly the attitude of Robert Moses,” the New
York highway builder who first designed Baltimore’s
planned east-west highway. “He did not see the value,
he didn’t see the jobs that were there, and he didn’t see
what I call the social capital. It was the relationships
that were, and are, important in those communities.”
</p>
<p>
The artifacts, both living and dead, of those Polish
roots are all over. Sophia’s Place, a Polish deli selling
stuffed cabbage, among other specialties, continues in
the renovated Broadway Market, as does Ostrowski’s
Polish deli on Bank Street. Patterson Park’s monument
to Gen. Pulaski, a Revolutionary War hero, and the
Katyn Memorial in Harbor East hardly need mention.
</p>
<p>
Eventually other groups came, though situated farther
from the waterfront. After World War II, there was a
huge <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/baltimore-lumbee-indians-upper-fells-point-claim-their-history/">migration of Lumbee Indians</a> from North Carolina
into Upper Fells. The Baltimore American Indian Center
on Broadway was founded in 1968. And, of course, all
up and down Broadway and Eastern are dozens of Mexican
and Central American businesses and restaurants.
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Cocina Luchadoras,
Sophia’s Place, and
Cat’s Eye Pub.<i>—PHOTOGRAPHY BY J.M. GIORDANO</i></center></h5>
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<p>
It’s ironic perhaps, but ever since “the Road”
though the Fells “slums” was defeated for good in the
late ’70s, gentrification has been a sensitive subject.
</p>
<p>
By 1985, former warehouses and
factories were already being turned into
expensive apartments. “Speculators see
Fells Point as an opportunity,” Bunker,
the former owner of the China Sea Trading
Company, said in a <i>Sun</i> story.
</p>
<p>
“It’s just not the same,” Manuel Alvarez, a chief engineer for the
departed Baker-Whiteley tugboat company, told the same reporter,
adding he had little desire to visit Fells Point anymore. “It’s just too...trendy. It’s not just the way it used to be.”
</p>

<p>
In an oral history a generation later, Ed Kane, who founded the
Baltimore water taxi operation in the ’70s, said he thought Fells
Point “still doesn’t know what it wants to be when it grows up.” It’s
been in “state of transition,” he said, for “more than 200 years.”
</p>
<div class="picWrap">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint_Ghost-sign.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
A ghost sign reading
“Vote Against Prohibition”
remains visible
today.<i>-PHOTOGRAPHY BY J.M. GIORDANO</i>
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Gentrification remains a concern for some of the older folks
who recall places like Leadbetters, which was <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/leadbetters-tavern-closing-by-the-end-of-june/">sold in 2016</a>, and the
Wharf Rat, which was one of the oldest buildings and bars in the
city when it was sold in 2021. They say the original English character
of its zigzagging streets and tiny pubs is all but gone.
</p>
<p>
Duda’s Tavern, in a storied Thames Street building that once
boarded sailors, is still a <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/dudas-tavern-celebrates-70-years-in-fells-point/">family-run operation after more than 70
years</a>. The Norrises, however, are in the process of <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/berthas-fells-point-closure-regulars-pay-respects-to-bar-that-changed-the-neighborhood/">selling Bertha’s</a>.
</p>
<p>
A Starbucks has opened, and the Atlas Restaurant Group continues
to buy up property and open bars and restaurants, raising
questions about Fells Point losing its idiosyncratic touches. Some
worry the H&S Bakery plant will leave and be replaced by a highrise
office or condo complex like those in Harbor East—where
height restrictions were lifted in the 1990s for the subsequent
development projects.
</p>
<p>
The numbers speak for themselves: The median home price in
Fells Point rose from $77,600 in 1990 to $349,650 in 2014. The
percentage of residents with a BA degree or higher was 33 percent in
1990 and 70 percent by 2014.
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2">

<img class="singlePic" 
src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/JUNE_FellsPoint-The-Thing-About-2.png" />

</div>
<p>
With gentrification what often comes is a loss of what sociologists
call “third places,” where people spend time between home
and work. First United Evangelical, an 1851 German church on Eastern
Avenue, for example, is now luxury apartments. The 96-yearold
Patterson duckpin alleys are currently under conversion to
condominiums—though some lanes may remain after a protest.
</p>
<p>
However, the 19th century St. Michael’s Church in Upper Fells is
now a brewpub and the former St. Stanislaus today hosts a yoga and
fitness studio—21st century “third places.” There are others, like the
cozy Greedy Reads bookstore, which opened in 2018.
</p>
<p>
Six years ago, the upscale Sagamore Pendry hotel on Thames
opened inside the long-vacant, recreation-pier building—once home
to the fictitious headquarters of the Baltimore Police Department in
the ’90s show <i>Homicide: Life on the Street</i>.
</p>
<p>
The question may be, does it matter whether Fells Point residents
know the Pendry was first constructed as a $1 million—a pricey
sum in 1914—dual-purpose maritime warehouse/state-of-the-art
ballroom and recreation center for the Fells immigrant community?
</p>
<p>
Is preservation still a rallying point and part of the
glue that binds the Fells Point community together, and
if so, for how long?
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Society
for the Preservation of Federal Hill
and Fell’s Point president David
Gleason sits in front of the
1765-built Robert Long House.<i>-PHOTOGRAPHY BY J.M. GIORDANO</i></center></h5>
</div>
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<p>
“When I was a kid, it was a different world, we didn’t
have all these cars, these high-rises and yeah, a lot of
houses were vacant,” says 46-year-old Andy Norris, who
took over running Bertha’s from his parents and lives
in Upper Fells. “My parents would say, ‘Go outside and
play,’ and I’d take a ball and beat the ball against a vacant
house and then three other kids would be hanging
out with me and we’d play a game of some kind.
</p>
<p>
“I get the new business owners and the changes,”
Norris continues. “I don’t hate it, like a lot of the oldtimers.
They’re coming from a good place. In their
minds, they’re doing the best thing that they can do
for the neighborhood. I believe that. Now, is it the best
thing for the neighborhood? I don’t know. The thing
about Fells Point is that had so much character, and
characters, such charm. But people got older and sold
their places and the new people, who are buying them,
this is how they see their future.”
</p>
<p>
Norris acknowledges the water and rowhouses will
be always be here. As will reappointed warehouses and
Thames’ Belgian block streets. But what else?
“What I guess I mean, is that a neighborhood or is
that just brick and stone?”
</p>
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</div>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
A Baltimore Water Taxi floats away from Fells Point pier. <i>—Video by J.M. Giordano.</i>
</h5>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/fells-point-baltimore-250-year-history-grit-gentrification/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Show Support for Your Favorite Restaurants with This Nifty Merch</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/show-support-for-your-favorite-restaurants-with-this-nifty-merch/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Sep 2019 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Style & Shopping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baby's on Fire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bertha's Mussels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Duck Duck Goose]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Restaurant Merch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[restaurants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sticky Rice Baltimore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Charmery]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=17090</guid>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1200" height="798" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-large" alt="Studiojuly2019 021 Myers" title="Studiojuly2019 021 Myers" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers-768x511.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers-900x600.jpg 900w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers-480x319.jpg 480w" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div>
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			<p>Do you ever love a restaurant so much you want to take a piece of it home with you? And no, we’re not talking about petty theft of salt and pepper shakers or a short-lived box of leftovers.</p>
<p>Many beloved local restaurants sell swag, so you can flaunt your adoration for them anytime. Our own collection includes a navy blue long-sleeve from McFaul’s IronHorse Tavern of Parkville, a coffee mug dotted with strawberries from Ocean City’s Bayside Skillet, and a bumper sticker from the ever-quirky Papermoon Diner. 						</p>
<p>And while you might get a new addition to your closet, the restaurant also gets a boost in the name of free advertising. 						</p>
<p>Restaurant consultant Arlene Spiegel of Arlene Spiegel &amp; Associates in New York City notes that restaurant merchandising is a way to make sure that a given brand stays with a guest. 						</p>
<p>“Whether it’s a T-shirt, an umbrella, or a jar of barbecue sauce,&#8221; Spiegel says, &#8220;the whole idea is that the brand is extended beyond the brick and mortar of the restaurant itself.&#8221; </p>
<p>If you want to show support for your favorite spot, check out some of these nifty merch options. </p>
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			<h5>Bertha&#8217;s Mussels Bumper Sticker: (Free with meal)</h5>
<p>Anyone who’s been to Fells Point in the past few decades will know this classic seafood staple. Matching the Kelly green shade of the restaurant’s exterior, Bertha’s gives out a sticker that serves as a piece of simple, straightforward advice we should follow more often: Eat Bertha’s Mussels.</p>

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			<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-012-myers.jpg" alt="STUDIOjuly2019_012_myers.jpg#asset:120691" title="STUDIOjuly2019_012_myers.jpg#asset:120691" /></p>
<hr />

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			<h5>The Charmery Engraved Ice-Cream Scoop ($20) </h5>
<p>Why stop at simply taking home a pint of one of the Charmery’s eccentric flavors? Recreate the experience by treating yourself to an ice-cream scoop engraved with the shop’s logo. </p>

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			<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-004-myers.jpg" alt="STUDIOjuly2019_004_myers.jpg#asset:120689" /></p>
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			<h5>Baby&#8217;s on Fire Mug (10)</h5>
<p>Show off your love for records and your dedication to caffeine by grabbing a cute white mug with the logo of Mt. Vernon’s finest. Better still, stop in for<br />
 a cup of coffee and buy a mug for whomever you call ‘baby.’ </p>

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			<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-011-myers.jpg" alt="STUDIOjuly2019_011_myers.jpg#asset:120690" /></p>
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			<h5>Sticky Rice Star Wars Shirt ($16)</h5>
<p>Whether you’re a sci-fi buff or a connoisseur of high-quality tater tots, Sticky Rice has something for everyone. Meld the two passions together by checking out this T-shirt, and we can (almost) guarantee that you’ll be the only person in the room wearing tater-shooting-spaceship chic. </p>

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			<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/studiojuly2019-021-myers.jpg" alt="STUDIOjuly2019_021_myers.jpg#asset:120692" /></p>
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			<h5>Duck Duck Goose Baseball Hat ($30)</h5>
<p>There aren’t many things in this world cuter than baby ducks, which is why we adore the embroidered ducks on the back of the hats from this Fells Point eatery. For a fashion-forward look, wear it backwards to display the ducks to the world. </p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/show-support-for-your-favorite-restaurants-with-this-nifty-merch/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Fell’s Point Fun Festival Celebrates Neighborhood’s Old and New in 50th Year</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/fells-point-fun-festival-celebrates-neighborhoods-old-and-new-in-50th-year/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Sep 2016 17:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[8 Ball Meatball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bertha's Mussels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fell's Point Fun Festival]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fell's Point Main Street]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fells Point]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poppy & Stella]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=30535</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p "="">Back in 1966, as Sen. Barbara Mikulski <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2016/8/8/senator-barbara-mikulski-daughter-of-polish-grocers-rise-to-the-senate" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">spearheaded the crusade</a> against the city’s proposed federal highway expansion—a project that would link I-83 to I-95 while subsequently demolishing a portion of historic Fells Point—preservationists organized the first annual <a href="http://www.fellspointfest.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Fell’s Point Fun Festival</a> as a fundraiser to protect the beloved waterfront neighborhood.
</p>
<p>“They stood up and fought it tooth and nail,” says Joy Giordano, executive director of Fell’s Point Main Street, which stepped in to help revive the event in 2012. “It has truly been a community festival since day one.”
</p>
<p>Though the three-day fête, returning Sept. 30- Oct. 2, maintains its roots as a fundraiser to benefit the <a href="http://www.preservationsociety.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Preservation Society of Fell’s Point</a>, its offerings and attractions have evolved significantly throughout its 50-year run.
</p>
<p>To celebrate the anniversary, thousands will crowd the cobblestone streets surrounding Broadway Square this weekend to browse handmade wares from more than 100 local crafters, sample eats and drinks from fan-favorite food purveyors, and enjoy the festival’s largest <a href="http://www.fellspointfest.net/bands/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">music lineup</a> to-date—featuring upwards of 20 acts ranging from Prince-tribute and ’90s cover bands to local rockers Kelly Bell Band and Jimmie’s Chicken Shack.
</p>
<p>Dubbed the longest-running community festival in Baltimore City, the gathering aims to be inclusive for locals and visitors alike, with attractions including an art wall curated by seniors at MICA, a family-friendly Kids Zone with face-painting and balloon animals, and an International Plaza on the 600 Block of East Broadway showcasing Hispanic music and culture.
</p>
<p>One of the many noteworthy changes implemented over the years occurred when organizers got rid of the festival’s beer gardens in 2013. Thanks to a new open container provision, attendees can now drink anywhere inside the festival&#8217;s grounds.
</p>
<p>Giordano says that, in the midst of the neighborhood’s recent development and expansion (The Rec Pier’s Sagamore Pendry Hotel is slated to open in 2017), it’s exciting to bring back a familiar tradition.
</p>
<p>“Fells Point is such a wonderful blend of old and new,” she says. “And the festival is a great opportunity to celebrate our roots and remember what it was, while also taking a look at the vision for what it’s about to be.”
</p>
<p>A number of small businesses in the area also participate by extending their footprint onto the sidewalk for the weekend. South Broadway stalwart Bertha’s Mussels, for example, will be shucking oysters and selling mussels, t-shirts, and its signature “Eat Bertha’s Mussels” bumper stickers outside of the restaurant all weekend long.
</p>
<p>“It’s our busiest weekend of the year,” says co-owner Andy Norris, whose parents Tony and Laura opened Bertha’s, the neighborhood’s first-ever sit-down restaurant, in 1972. “We’re proud to say we’ve been here almost all 50 years—we only missed a few.”
</p>
<p>A lifetime Fells Point resident, Norris says that some of his fondest memories of the festival include seeing community members pedal homemade pierogies and lemon sticks from their stoops in the early ’80s.
</p>
<p>“At that time, so many cool and funky people living here just came out on the street and put everything about themselves into the festival,” he says. “That’s what made it so special—all of their eclectic funkiness. Fells Point was just a raw, artsy gem.”
</p>
<p>Just down the street, neighborhood newbie <a href="http://www.8ballmeatball.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">8 Ball Meatball</a> will be participating in its first-ever fun fest with a sidewalk sale of grab-and-go street food like crab balls and meatball sandwiches.
</p>
<p>“There’s no doubt that Baltimoreans love a good party,” says 8 Ball owner Paul Weitz, who has lived in the neighborhood since 2009. “I love walking around in a big group and popping into all of the bars. The outdoor vibe combined with the waterfront and the façade of the businesses is all a part of the overall uniqueness and aura of Fells.”
</p>
<p>Local boutique <a href="http://www.poppyandstella.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Poppy &#038; Stella</a> will also be getting in on the fun, discounting all of its merchandise by 20 percent throughout the weekend in honor of the festival.
</p>
<p>Owner Kelley Heuisler has enjoyed watching the Fell’s Point Fun Festival evolve in the eight years since she opened her shop, and always bears its history in mind.
</p>
<p>“It’s interesting that Fells Point was almost [gone] 50 years ago,” she says. “The fact that we were able to overcome that, and band together and survive, is a testament to the neighborhood as a whole. The fabric of Fells is a really beautiful representation of the best that Baltimore has to offer.”</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/fells-point-fun-festival-celebrates-neighborhoods-old-and-new-in-50th-year/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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