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The
Kensington Historical Society is proud to announce
their newest publication - hot off the presses:
A Walking Tour of Kensington 2009. Stop by
the Town Hall or local bookshops and pick up a
walking tour booklet today!
Visit
www.kensingtonhistory.org
for
more information.
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The
history of Kensington is reflected in the Victorian
architectural vision of Brainard Warner, known as
the founder of Kensington. Take the
Kensington Historical Society's self-guided Walking
Tour of Kensington, showcasing almost 40 different
homes throughout the surrounding neighborhoods.
View the Warner Mansion and its surrounding open
space. Enjoy the historic one-room Noyes Library,
now a unique children's library. Be sure to visit
the still-operating train station, to find out why
Kensington is known as Town where the train
still stops and the people still walk."
The area around the Rock Creek basin where Kensington
now sits was largely agricultural until 1873, when
the B&O Railroad completed a rail line, which
crossed Montgomery County. The community first sprouted
at the spot where the railroad line intersected
the old Rockville-to- Bladensburg Road. This early
settlement initially was known as Knowles Station.
In the early 1890s, Brainard Warner, a Washington
financier, purchased parcels of land to build a
planned garden community, and added
a public library and a local newspaper. Inspired
by a recent trip to London, Warner first named his
subdivision Kensington Park. After incorporation
in 1894, the town was renamed Kensington.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is one of the oldest
railroads in the United States, with an original
rail line from the port of Baltimore, west to the
Ohio River at Wheeling and Parkersburg, West Virginia.
Kensington continued to develop as a summer refuge
for Washington residents wishing to escape the capital's
humid summers. As years passed, it became a year-round
home for all of its residents. The large, southernmost
section originally mapped out by Brainard Warner
remains largely unchanged since its inception, and
is a historically protected zone. |
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Kensington
is home to many signature events that draw visitors
from near and far. >more
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Town
of Kensington
3710 Mitchell Street
Kensington, MD 20895
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Tel:
301-949-2424
Fax: 301-949-4925
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