Boyds, Maryland
Boyds is an unincorporated community in rural Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, located approximately 27 miles (43 km) north of Washington, D.C.[1] Its ZIP Code is 20841.
Boyds, Maryland | |
---|---|
Boyds, Maryland, seen from Maryland Route 117 | |
Boyds Boyds | |
Coordinates: 39°11′01″N 77°18′46″W | |
Country | United States |
State | Maryland |
County | Montgomery |
Population (2010) | |
• Total | 10,460 |
Time zone | UTC-5 (Eastern (EST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-4 (EDT) |
Zip code | 20841 |
Area code(s) | 240 and 301 |
According to the United States 2010 Census, the ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) for Boyds covers an area of about 26 square miles (67 km2) and has a population of 10,460.[2] Black Hill Regional Park, Little Seneca Lake, and Seneca Creek State Park are located in Boyds.
History
The community was named for Colonel James Alexander Boyd (1823–1896), a Scottish immigrant who was a construction engineer for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Boyd built a temporary village to house construction workers as the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad built the Metropolitan Branch line after the American Civil War. The railroad line began service in 1873. After the railroad station opened, a mill, stores, and other businesses were established in the area. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad opened a brick railroad station in 1887. The railroad station was demolished to make way for installation of a second track in 1927. A wooden station was built as a replacement, but it was later taken down.[3] Commuter Rail service (primarily to Washington, D.C.) is still provided at Boyds by the MARC system.
James Boyd established dairy farms in the area and lived in the town until his death in 1896.[4]
Boyds Negro School
Boyds Negro School, located at 19510 White Ground Road, was the only public school erected for African Americans who lived in the area from 1896 to 1936. Boyds Negro School is a Maryland Historic Site.
Boyds Negro School is a small, one-room school house, containing a small number of desks, a blackboard, and an authentic potbelly stove, as well as a framed picture of abolitionist Frederick Douglass.
Subjects taught in the school included spelling, cooking, reading, singing, and weaving.[5]
Boyds Negro School was renovated by the Boyds Historical Society in 1989. The Boyds Historical Society filled the building with furnishings so the school would look as it did in the early 1900s.
In 2006, termites caused major damage to the wooden floor boards, and the school building was renovated. Boyds Negro School reopened on June 28, 2008, one of Montgomery County's annual heritage days.[6]
Boyds Negro School is currently open to the public on the last Sunday of every month, from 2:00 to 4:00 PM, April through October or upon request.[7]
Boyds Mercantile and Stores
The first Boyds Country Store was opened in 1873, the same year that the railroad was connected to the town. It was run by James E. Williams. The store served as a market of goods for both citizens and passers-bye in Boyds, as well as a meeting place for the townspeople in the afternoon.
Colonel Boyd built a second store across the road in 1895. It housed the general store and post office on its first floor and a town hall on the second floor along with a dance hall.
As time went by, the town hall became smaller and smaller as the building was used for additional purposes until it was finally torn down for salvageable lumber in the early 1940s. In the evenings, families would gather on the front porch of the general store; the parents talking and their children playing out on the lawn in front of the store. After the first country store became vacant in 1946, it was bought in an auction by Brice P. Selby. He was known to allow his customers to buy on credit, resulting in not much cash profit for him and his store. However, Selby was well known as a kind and generous soul.
A third store, known as the Boyds Country Market, exists on Barnesville Road across from the site of the old town hall. Boyds Country Market was built by Will Williams in 1933.
The first two Boyds Country Stores, as well as the town hall, old Hoyle's Mill, and a hardware store were all destroyed in the development of the surrounding area.
A small post office was located at the back of the country store from the early 1930s until 1974, when it was relocated to a new building on Barnesville Road, where it still sits today.[8]
Recent development in and around Boyds
Boyds has until recently been a predominantly rural area. The first phase of modern development occurred in the 1980s, following the creation of the man-made Little Seneca Lake. However, since the 2000 Census, there has been enormous population growth in the zip code, particularly in the areas near Germantown and Clarksburg. Large home developments with thousands of residents each, such as The Vistas near the intersection of Route 118 and Richter Farm Road, have rapidly replaced farmland and forest.
Geography
More recently, there has been some discussion as to the exact southern boundary of Boyds. Survey maps show that the community's southern boundary runs along Little Seneca Creek.
Demographics
The residents of Boyds are 38.6% white, 9% Hispanic, 13.8% black, 35.3% Asian, 3.3% mixed or other.
References
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Boyds, Maryland
- Zip-codes.com
- Soderberg, Susan C. (1998), The Met: A History of the Metropolitan Branch of the B&O Railroad, Its Stations and Towns, Germantown, Maryland: Germantown Historical Society, pp. 51–53
- Clan Boyd Society, International. "Colonel James Alexander Boyd." Accessed December 10, 2008.
- Coleman, Margaret: Montgomery County: A Pictorial History, 1984
- "Historic school to reopen for Heritage Days". www.gazette.net. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2009-10-08.
- "Boyds Historical Society".
- Virts, Arthur: Boyds: a Character Study, 2008
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boyds, Maryland. |
- Map of Boyds
- Black Hill Regional Park – Montgomery County Department of Parks
- Boyds Civic Association
- Boyds Historical Society