Major General James G. Blunt

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Pikesville Arsenal was a 19th-century United States Army fortification near Pikesville, Maryland, under control of the Army Ordnance Department. 39°22′31″N 76°43′21″W / 39.3752212°N 76.7224592°W / 39.3752212; -76.7224592

Origins

After War of 1812, the Army built Pikesville Arsenal at a safe point north of Baltimore, Maryland.[1]

In 1853, Campbell Morfit established a laboratory at Pikesville Arsenal and investigated gun metal. Campbell Morfit and James Booth authored a book on the subject of gun metal for the Ordnance Department.

American Civil War

Confederates lived at Pikesville Arsenal during and after the American Civil War.

Decommissioning

The Army left Pikesville Arsenal in 1879. Confederate veterans lived at the former arsenal from 1888 until 1932.

State of Maryland acquired ownership of Pikesville Arsenal in 1935. The state headquartered Maryland State Police at the former arsenal since 1950. The old facility now houses the Maryland State Police Museum.

References

  1. ^ United States. Congress (1861). American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive, of the Congress of the United States. Gales and Seaton. pp. 258–.