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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Village_of_Cross_Keys
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Village of Cross Keys

Coordinates: 39°21′19″N 76°38′45″W / 39.35527°N 76.64572°W / 39.35527; -76.64572
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Village of Cross Keys
The Village of Cross Keys
The Village of Cross Keys
CountryUnited States
StateMaryland
CityBaltimore
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)EDT
ZIP code
21210
Area code410, 443, and 667

Village of Cross Keys is a privately owned upscale area of Baltimore, Maryland. It is located off Maryland Route 25 (Falls Road) between Northern Parkway and Cold Spring Lane, and is home to luxury condos and upscale small shops.

Baltimore financier and mall developer James Rouse, founder of The Rouse Company, purchased the Frederick Law Olmsted Jr.-designed Baltimore Country Club Golf Course near his Roland Park home for $1,700,000 in 1963, site unseen.[1] The 5,000-person village was built on the historic property in 1965. Michael D. Spear was the development director, later becoming CEO of the Rouse Company. It was the first in a series of planned communities developed by Rouse. Office space was occupied by Rouse until the company moved to its next development in Columbia, Maryland.

The retail component of the village declined with competition from Towson Town Center and The Shops at Kenilworth to the north and Harbor East to the South. The retail and office property was acquired by Ashkenazy Acquisition Corporation in 2012.[2][3]

The office and retail components of the property were acquired from Ashkenazy by Caves Valley Partners in 2020 and are undergoing significant leasing activity and reinvestment.[4]

History

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The original iteration of the community at Cross Keys was named after an 18th century inn on Falls Road, then called Falls Turnpike Road, near Coldspring Lane. The inn initially provided overnight accommodations for travelers who transported goods to and from Baltimore; when freight and passenger traffic was diverted from the turnpike to the Baltimore & Susquehanna Railroad, the inn remained a social center for local residents. The community in the area originally was mostly African-Americans—it was one of a series of free-born settlements along Falls Road, along with communities at Mount Washington, Bare Hills, and Shawan. The Cross Keys area was once known as West Roland Park, in reference to the adjacent neighborhorhood, however, it was listed as Cross Keys Village on early maps, and referred to simply as "The Road," or "The Falls Road," by its residents. The homes in the early settlement were clapboard bungalows which housed workers who likely worked in the nearby Jones Falls Valley mills. Only a few of the original 76 houses which made up the village before its redevelopment in the mid-20th century remain, with many having been demolished.[5]

Notable residents

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See also

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Further reading

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  • Holechek, James (May 8, 2003). Baltimore's Two Cross Keys Villages: One Black. One White. iUniverse, Inc. ISBN 9780595273584.

Notes

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  1. ^ Joseph Rocco Mitchell, David L. Stebenne. City Upon a Hill. p. 53.
  2. ^ Mirabella, Lorraine (March 7, 2012). "Village of Cross Keys sold to retail and property investor". The Baltimore Sun.
  3. ^ Simmons, Melody (June 18, 2018). "J. Jill is the second Cross Keys retailer leaving for the Shops at Kenilworth". American City Business Journals.
  4. ^ Gunts, Ed (July 22, 2021). "Caves Valley Partners announces new tenants for The Village of Cross Keys, one year after buying it". Baltimore Fishbowl.
  5. ^ Rasmussen, Frederick N. (May 31, 2003). "Cross Keys was a village long before the Rouse era". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  6. ^ Harry Roe Hughes. My Unexpected Journey: The Autobiography of Governor Harry Roe Hughes. p. 123.
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39°21′19″N 76°38′45″W / 39.35527°N 76.64572°W / 39.35527; -76.64572