"Chamber of
Commerce Founded in 1924" Seventy-five years ago local business
owners met in the Firemen's building and organized the Westminster Chamber of Commerce. The story appeared in the July 25, 1924 issue of
the Westminster American Sentinel newspaper: |
The Chamber and the Historical Society collaborated on a
brochure entitled, "Carroll County and Westminster" published in 1954. The text provided a overview of county history and the City
of Westminster:
"Carroll County, comprising parts of
Baltimore and Frederick counties, was created January 19, 1837, by the act of the General
Assembly of Maryland. The county was named in honor of one of its largest
landholders, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, signer of the Declaration of Independence.
This county is the twentieth in formation and the
tenth in area in the state. Westminster is the county seat. Carroll County has
a number of incorporated cities surrounding Westminster. These cities furnish labor
for several nationally known industries such as the Black & Decker Co. at Hampstead,
The Blue Ridge Rubber Co. at Taneytown, the Lehigh Portland Cement Co. at Union Bridge and
the Lincoln Manufacturing Co. at New Windsor. The Western Maryland and Baltimore
& Ohio Railroads long have been the carriers for county industrial and farm products
to the large marketing area. Carroll County is connected by a modern system of
roadways. Its heart is the super highway beginning from the southern tip of the
county and running north through Westminster to the Pennsylvania border.
The land was settled largely by people of British
and German extraction. The former group brought with them the Roman Catholic, the
Episcopalian, the Methodist, the Quaker, and Presbyterian denominations; while the latter
brought Lutheran, the German Reformed, and the Church of the Brethren.
According to old records, the first Methodist church in America was built in 1764 by Rev. Robert Strawbridge of Ireland at Sam's Creek, New Windsor district. Nearby, the first Methodist class meeting was held in the log cabin of John Evans, which still stands in its original setting.
The churches of the county have fostered some of
our educational institutions, such as the parochial schools of the Roman Catholic church;
and the Western Maryland College and the Westminster Theological Seminary under the
Methodist Church. The former Blue Ridge College of New Windsor, originally owned by
the Church of the Brethren, is now the site of the Church World Service Center under
control of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America. To this Center come
many thousand tons of food and clothing from all over the United States to be sorted and
shipped from here to the needy war sufferers of the world. Especial interest has
been aroused nationally and internationally by the shipping of heifers with their
volunteer sea-going cowboys.
Among the celebrities born on Carroll County
soil, Francis Scott Key, author of the Star Spangled Banner, probably holds first rank.
On January 7, 1806, his sister Ann was married to Roger Brooke Taney, destined to
be Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Taneytown was named in honor of
the Taney family.
In 1809 Jacob R. Thomas of Carroll County
invented the harvester and reaping machine. Later, Obed Hussey, his cousin,
McCormick and others developed his idea into the practical machine that revolutionized
farming in America and the rest of the world. Betsy Patterson of Springfield Manor
achieved rather tragic fame when she married Jerome Bonaparte in 1803, for Napoleon,
pre-empting the powers of the Pope, soon annulled the marriage.
Among other interesting personalities are the
distinguished General Mordecai Gist of the American Revolution; William Rinehart, the
sculptor; Frederick Dielman, the etcher; Frank Brown, former Governor of Maryland; and
William L. Seabrook, the writer.
To Carroll County goes the honor of establishing
the first complete Rural Free Delivery service in the United States. On this
original tour 2700 pieces of mail were distributed in addition to a pig and two chickens.
Numerous items of historical interest are being
collected and filed by the Historical Society of Carroll County, 206 E. Main Street,
Westminster. The property on which the Society is located belonged originally to
William Winchester, the English gentleman who founded the town. The Flemish bond
brick home was built around 1807 by Jacob Sherman, a retired Pennsylvania Dutch tavern
Keeper. The building is in a very good state of preservation considering its age.
Fireplaces in the kitchen and basement have the original cranes from which kettles
were suspended. A number of the doors are hand made with the big iron latches and
hinges characteristic of the period. The wrought iron nails were made by the local
blacksmith.
Within this home Alexander Graham Bell once
lunched with Mary B. Shellman, the first telephone operator of Carroll County and one of
its most public spirited citizens.
Visitors are cordially invited to see the antique
furniture, documents and curios on permanent display in the headquarters of the Historical
Society of Carroll County.
WESTMINSTER
Westminster is the county seat of Carroll County.
Passing over the interesting developments of the more than a century of progress,
the latest census gives its population as 6400 plus. Approximately four blocks wide
and two miles long, it has about 25 miles of paved streets and alleys.
At least ten churches are located in the city and
several within a few minutes drive. A wide-awake Chamber of Commerce and an
energetic Retail Merchants Association have the business interests of the city at heart.
Industrially, Westminster might well be classed with many cities larger in area and
population.
The water system, not owned by the corporation,
furnishes an adequate supply of excellent water. Its sewerage system, less than 25
years old, is in excellent condition and is owned and operated by the city. The
medical profession is proud of its new Carroll County War Memorial Health center available
to any local physician.
Western Maryland College, a miniature town of
700, co-educational, church-owned but non-denominationally operated, brings additional
home owners, business, sports, and cultural advantages to the town. Westminster has
two primary schools, three High schools, four elementary schools including a parochial
school. These are taking care of the present educational needs, the public schools
being a part of the county school system.
The government of the city is vested in a mayor
and five councilmen. A volunteer fire department, with around-the clock drivers
employed, not only serves the city, but the surrounding county area when needed.
If Westminster is not your home town, this is an
invitation to visit an almost self-sufficient city where most of the essentials of good
living can be obtained without going to larger communities. We welcome you." |
| As the title to the above brochure
implies, the Chamber also promoted Carroll County. The organization formally changed its
name to the Carroll County Chamber of Commerce in 1973.
|
| Photo caption: | T. W. Mather, Jr., (back row, far right)
posed with the employees of T. W. Mather and Sons, Westminster, in c. 1910. Mr. Mather was
a founder of the Westminster Chamber of Commerce in July 1924. J. Leland Jordan
Collection, Historical Society of Carroll County, gift of the Commissioner of Carroll
County, 1955. |