Statue of "Hope" marks the burial place of 2,468 Confederate soldiers (346 identifiable) who died in the Civil War battles of Antietam and South Mountain.
Historic mountain top country inn-weddings, retreats, conferences, B&B guests and in-house catering.
Focuses on battlefield medicine practiced at Battle of Antietam. Exhibits include re-creation operating theater, interpretive panels/objects relating to care of wounded and effects on civilian population.
The farmhouse served as staging area as John Brown and his army prepared for Harpers Ferry raid, during the summer of 1859. National historic landmark.
1840s mill worker's house, changing exhibits of Laurel's history from an industrial mill town to the present. Research library and museum shop. Group tours by appointment.
Eighteenth-century Georgian architecture, boasts a reproduction kitchen and an original 18th-century summerhouse. Stroll the grounds with over 70 acres of fields and wooded paths - an oasis of tranquility in a bustling world.
Hands-on activities interprete life in a turn-of-the-century railroad town. Exhibits on local history/visitor information.
Home of the Chesapeake Baysox, Class AA affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles. Complete family entertainment venue. Fireworks, promotions, mascots, kids' play area and carousel.
The 1852 middle-class rooming house of Mary Surratt who was part of the conspiracy to assassinate President Lincoln.
State-of-the-art archival facility with one-hour tours available of research center, office areas, laboratories, and records' storage area.