74B-013 Hazelwood (NR) 18611 Queen Anne Road Queen Anne (M-NCPPC)
74B-014 Goodwood 17200 Clagett Landing Road Upper Marlboro vicinity
Built in late 18th century, enlarged c. 1800 and 1860, Hazelwood is a large, three-part frame house which represents 3 discrete building periods. The earliest structure was the one-and-one-half-story, gambrel-roof south section, near which the two-and-one-half-story, side-gabled Federal style north section was built c. 1800. The three-story, front-gabled central section, built c. 1860, joined the two earlier sections. Several outbuildings stand on the grounds. Hazelwood was the home of Revolutionary War Major Thomas Lancaster Lansdale who built the north section just before his death in 1803. It is a prominent landmark overlooking the site of the important 18th century port town of Queen Anne. Hazelwood was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.
Built in 1799, with twentieth-century additions, Goodwood is a two-story, brick rural villa of the Federal style, with walls laid in Flemish bond, keystone lintels and particularly fine entrance detail. It was built by George Calvert, and later adapted as the west wing of the massive three-part Greek Revival style mansion built circa 1830 for Calvert’s daughter, Rosalie Eugenia Carter. The central block and east wing were destroyed by fire in 1934, and subsequent additions were constructed at the west end. The surviving original section is a unique example in the county of a Federal rural villa. Originally called Mount Alban by Calvert, it became known as Goodwood in the 1830s.
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