Rachel Carson House (Colesville, Maryland)

The Rachel Carson House is a historic house at 11701 Berwick Road in Colesville, Maryland, an unincorporated area near Silver Spring, Maryland. Built in 1956, this typical suburban ranch-style house was where writer Rachel Carson wrote her classic work Silent Spring in 1962. The house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1991 for its association with Carson.[3]

Rachel Carson House
Exterior view facing east of the Rachel Carson House
Location11701 Berwick Rd., Silver Spring, Maryland
Coordinates39°2′48″N 77°0′2″W
Built1956
ArchitectRachel Carson
Architectural styleModern Movement, Other
NRHP reference No.91002058
Significant dates
Added to NRHPDecember 4, 1991[1]
Designated NHLDecember 4, 1991[2]

Description

The one-story house is typical of its era, finished in brick with an asphalt shingle roof. The interior, virtually unchanged since Carson lived there, contains a living room to the right of the entry, with Carson's study to one side, on the corner of the house. A kitchen and dining room are at the rear, behind the living room. Bedrooms are to the left of the entry. A basement contains a bedroom and bathroom and a multi-purpose room, as well as unfinished space.[4]

Carson's original landscaping is largely intact, with only a small area of lawn. The wooded landscape of evergreens, azaleas and daffodils is in keeping with her desire to keep a "woody section" of the yard.[4]

History

Designed by Carson and built for her use, the new home provided "all the special things that I need." She began writing Silent Spring at the house in 1958, rarely using the Maine cottage where she wrote The Edge of the Sea published in 1955. As Carson continued work on the book, the nature of the research, involving public documents and correspondence with scholars, and her own health encouraged her to spend more and more of her time at home in Silver Spring. After the publication of Silent Spring in 1962, Carson spent most of the next two years in Silver Spring before her death on April 14, 1964.[4]

gollark: Note that it actually displays minutes now, and uses a consistent font for status information.
gollark: I have now made "minor UI enhancements".
gollark: OIR™ now has advanced™ currently listening count technology within it. This obsoletes the current architecture diagram.
gollark: Sometimes the compiler can't be bothered to make functions have return values, so it just uses speculative execution exploits to harvest them from RAM indirectly.
gollark: Then it continues a few instructions after where the error was.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. "Carson, Rachel, House". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved 2008-06-17.
  3. "Maryland Historical Trust". National Register of Historic Places: Properties in Montgomery County. Maryland Historical Trust. 2008-06-08.
  4. Miller, Page Putnam; Topolski, Jill; Horn, Vernon (June 7, 1991). "National Register of Historic Places Nomination:Rachel Carson House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.