Morrell Park is a neighborhood community located in southwest Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
Morrell Park | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
State | Maryland |
City | Baltimore |
Time zone | UTC-5 (Eastern) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT |
ZIP code | 21230 |
Area code | 410, 443, and 667 |
History and geography
editMorrell Park, together with Westport, Violetville, and Mount Winans, were originally part of a tract of land named "Georgia," or "Georgia Plantation," and later called "Mount Clare." This survey, which measured 2,368 acres (9.58 km2), was deeded to Dr. Charles Carroll in 1732. Essentially, it is a hill.
The current Morrell Park is bounded by Hollins Ferry Road, the B&O Railroad tracks and Gwynns Falls to the east, I-95 to the north, Caton Avenue to the west and CSX Transportation tracks to the south.
At one point the neighborhood had trolley tracks running down Washington Boulevard; today the only mass transit serving the neighborhood is MTA Bus line 36, formerly MTA Bus line 11.
Its estimated mortgage is $469. Its estimated rent is $1,135. 67 percent of people own homes in Morrell Park. The common home is a Rowhouse. The median house purchase price is $68,750.
Schools
editMorrell Park has one public school in the neighborhood, Morrell Park Elementary/Middle School.[1] Digital Harbor High School serves Morrell Park families, although it is not located in the neighborhood.
Recreation
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (February 2022) |
Morrell Park ' community center cost over 4.5 million dollars
Churches
edit- Church On The Boulevard (formerly Evangelical Bible Church) / 2444 Washington Boulevard / 21230
- New Covenant Community United Church (formerly St. Marks United Church of Christ) / 1805 Wickes Avenue / 21230
- New Beginnings Seventh-Day Adventist Church (formerly Sexton United Methodist Church) / 1721 Sexton Street / 21230
- The Purpose Center / 2728 Washington Blvd / 21230
References
edit- ^ "Morrell Park Elementary/Middle School | Baltimore City Public Schools". Retrieved May 20, 2021 – via baltimorecityschools.org.