Troy (Dorsey, Maryland)

Troy, also known as Troy Hill Farm, is a historic slave plantation home located at Elkridge, Howard County, Maryland, United States. It is associated with the prominent Dorsey family of Howard County, who also built Dorsey Hall.[2]

Troy
LocationInterstate 95 and Maryland Route 176 (6500 Mansion Lane), Elkridge, Maryland
Coordinates39°11′46″N 76°45′47″W
Area50 acres (20 ha)
Built1808 (1808)
Architectural styleGeorgian
NRHP reference No.79001137[1]
Added to NRHPJune 22, 1979

History

The lands of "Troy" were surveyed by Hon. John Dorsey in 1694, where he moved in 1696 with 2 slaves. The property stayed in the family though his great-grandson Col. Thomas Dorsey (-1790) of the American Revolution whose estate sold it in 1808. Troy was inherited by Basil Dorsey in 1714, followed by Caleb Dorsey who reduced the land to 1,016 acres (411 ha) which was split into two unequal parts in 1760 and given to Sarah Dorsey and Thomas Dorsey. Thomas Dorsey would use the root cellar as a meeting place with Benjamin Warfield of Cherry Grove during the revolutionary war.[3] Thomas's widow Elizabeth split Troy several times to pay debts. Vincent Bailey acquired 652 acres (264 ha) including Troy for $6,520.[4] A stone house named "Troy Hill" was built about 1808 on the foundation of an earlier Dorsey house by Vincent Baily and is representative of the late Georgian style in Maryland architecture.[5] The 2 12-story fieldstone house is three bays wide and two deep. Outbuildings included a stone barn, smokehouse and dairy. Situated on a hill, the fieldstone basement is unusually large with four rooms.

An 1830 fire destroyed the original wood paneling. In 1880, the house was modified with cottage styling. In 1942, the house was modified again into a "Colonial Revival" style. Further modification occurred by owner Pedro De Valle. Donald Doll was the last resident before the state purchased the property on 16 December 1958 to destroy it to make way for the I-95 project. The house was left in a state of purposeful neglect until Howard County purchased the stripped house and 52 surrounding acres in September 1971 for $67,500.[6] In 1978, Howard County proposed to build an interpretative gardening center at the house.[5][7] In 1989, the state offered a $350,000 matching grant for renovation, but a spring 1991 fire gutted the building before it was spent.[6]

Current status

Most of the surrounding Troy Hill farm has been converted into office parks or highway with the exception of one large area of wooded parkland surrounding the unrestored Troy House. In 2012, County Executive Ken Ulman proposed converting the remainder of the Troy Hill estate and wooded parkland into a Tennis Center. After costs escalated, the plans were changed to clear-cut most the wooded parkland around the historic structure to implement revenue-generating ball fields and soccer fields for the parks system, allowing the Troy house to stand in the parking lot as a possible meeting house or restaurant.[8][9]

Troy was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.[1] In 2015, the group Preservation Howard County placed the house on its top 10 most endangered list.[10]

gollark: It might have been another one with a normalized axis, I forget.
gollark: https://lucasnorth.uk/sapply/ I think?
gollark: It doesn't, this just uses people's self-reported scores from one of the three-axis compasses.
gollark: I should try linear regressioning this, could be fun.
gollark: Not updated in ages though.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. Seeking Freedom The History of the Underground Railroad in Howard County. p. 65.
  3. Barbara Feaga. Howard's roads to the past. p. 67.
  4. Howard County Historical Society. Images of America Howard County. p. 110.
  5. Pamela James; Mark R. Edwards; Mary Warren (June 1976). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Troy" (PDF). Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  6. Sinclair, Molly (5 August 1993). "Properties Offer a Glimpse of Other Eras". The Washington Post.
  7. "HO-44" (PDF). Retrieved 17 June 2014.
  8. Rector, Kevin (17 April 2012). "Howard won't build proposed Elkridge tennis complex". The Baltimore Sun.
  9. Lavoie, Luke (26 September 2014). "First phase of $45 million, 101-acre Troy Park in Elkridge set to open". The Baltimore Sun.
  10. Yeager, Amanda (26 May 2015). "Former school tops Howard County's endangered sites list". The Baltimore Sun. Troy: A three-story stone house built in 1820 in Elkridge. The tract of land where it sits is said to have been the site of military planning during the Revolutionary War. The house is in need of significant repair.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.