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$150,000 View on Map
WPD2655
1080 Craftswood Rd
Catonsville, MD (in city)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Townhome
$190,000 View on Map
TDD4053
204 Suter Rd
Catonsville, MD (in city)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Home

Updated Kitchen with Ge Stainless Steel Appliances (Refrigerator, Dish Washer, Oven/Range, Exaust Fan/Hood) Vinyl Floor.

$260,000 View on Map
MPA8360 41 Photos
38 Badger Gate Ct
Catonsville, MD (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Townhome
1400 sq.ft.
Updated Kitchen with Vinyl Floor, Stainless Steel Appliances (Refrigerator, Dish Washer, …more»
$335,000 View on Map
TDG2580 11 Photos
2116 Edmondson Ave
Catonsville, MD (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
1535 sq.ft.
$225,000 View on Map
TGA9220
5935 Hilltop Ave
Baltimore, MD (0.8 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1100 sq.ft.
$175,000 View on Map
TGM6556
4421 Old Frederick Rd
Baltimore, MD (1.9 miles)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Multiple Family Home
$165,000 View on Map
DGW2372
2621 Purnell Dr
Baltimore, MD (2.4 miles)
3 Bed, 1+ Bath Home
$34,500 View on Map
WGW5891
3716 Edmondson Ave
Baltimore, MD (2.6 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
1512 sq.ft.
$225,000 View on Map
DJW2395
1015 Saint Charles Ave
Baltimore, MD (2.6 miles)
5 Bed, 2 Bath Multiple Family Home
$229,000 View on Map
JDA5507
4429 Clifton Rd
Baltimore, MD (2.6 miles)
5 Bed, 3 Bath Home
4500 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Catonsville, MD

Catonsville is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. The population was 39,820 at the 2000 census. Catonsville is bordered
by Woodlawn to the north, by the City of Baltimore to the east, by Elkridge to the south, and by Ellicott City to its west.
Catonsville is the home of University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), a public research university with over 12,000 students.

Europeans were the second group to settle the area now known as Catonsville. It is generally believed by historians that native tribes, known as the Piscataway, established villages here before the European colonists arrived. This tribe occupied the land between the Potomac to the Chesapeake Bay and up the Patapsco River. Catonsville was located along the Piscataway Trail. The colonists and the tribes got along until the mid 17th century, when the English government ended the practices of Catholic Missionaries in the area. It is believed that the tribes were driven from their villages and some were hunted by slave catchers. As happened in many areas of the early colonial America, diseases unknown to the tribes were spread by the colonists. Eventually, the tribes moved north under the protection of the Iroquois.

With most of the natives scattered, the colonists expanded across Maryland. Present day Catonsville was settled in the 1700s. In the early 1800s, a county road along the Patapsco River—named the Frederick Turnpike, later designated Route 144—was opened by the Ellicott family to service traffic between their flour mill, Ellicott Mills, and Baltimore. Catonsville as we know it today was settled along this route by Richard Caton, under the authority of his father-in-law Charles Carroll, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Travelers along "the turnpike" (as it was then known) rested and conducted business in the area, causing Catonsville to grow.

The large Victorian and Colonial homes located in Catonsville were built by wealthy Baltimoreans. Originally, these communities were used as summer residences to escape the heat in Baltimore. Eventually, as in many communities with the introduction of the automobile and electric trolley, families began to reside in Catonsville year round. Baltimore has attempted over the years to annex Catonsville, the last attempt in 1918, but all attempts were rebuffed. The community remains an unincorporated town in Baltimore County. It is home to Spring Grove Hospital Center, the nation's second oldest continuously operating psychiatric hospital, as well as the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

Catonsville was briefly made quite famous during the 1968 protest by the "Catonsville Nine", during which draft records were burned by Catholic anti-war activists.

In 2002, the Maryland legislature issued a proclamation declaring Catonsville to be "Music City, Maryland" due to a concentration of musical retail stores, venues and educational facilities in the area.

In 2007 Money magazine ranked Catonsville the 49th best place to live in the USA, third best in Maryland and Virginia. Catonsville's rich history engenders its continued small business growth and local pride.

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December 15, 2011

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