Baltimore City Council
File #: 08-0069    Version: 0 Name: City Streets - Renaming - North Avenue to Harriet Ross Tubman Boulevard and Caroline Street to Frederick Douglass Avenue
Type: Ordinance Status: Failed - End of Term
File created: 3/10/2008 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action:
Enactment #:
Title: City Streets - Renaming - North Avenue to Harriet Ross Tubman Boulevard and Caroline Street to Frederick Douglass Avenue FOR the purpose of changing the name of North Avenue to Harriet Ross Tubman Boulevard and the name of Caroline Street to Frederick Douglass Avenue.
Sponsors: Belinda Conaway, James B. Kraft
Indexes: City Property - Renaming, Renaming, Streets
Attachments: 1. 08-0069 - 1st Reader.pdf
* WARNING: THIS IS AN UNOFFICIAL, INTRODUCTORY COPY OF THE BILL.
THE OFFICIAL COPY CONSIDERED BY THE CITY COUNCIL IS THE FIRST READER COPY.
INTRODUCTORY*
CITY OF BALTIMORE
COUNCIL BILL

Introduced by: Councilmember Conaway
At the request of: Louis Fields c/o Baltimore Black Heritage Trails, African American Tourism Council of Maryland, Inc.
Address: P.O. Box 3014, Baltimore, Maryland 21229
Telephone: 410-783-5469
A BILL ENTITLED

AN ORDINANCE concerning
Title
City Streets - Renaming - North Avenue to Harriet Ross Tubman Boulevard and Caroline Street to Frederick Douglass Avenue

FOR the purpose of changing the name of North Avenue to Harriet Ross Tubman Boulevard and the name of Caroline Street to Frederick Douglass Avenue.
Body
BY authority of
Article 26 - Surveys, Streets, and Highways
Section 7-3
Baltimore City Code
(Edition 2000)

Recitals

Both Frederick Duglass and Harriet Tubman have strong connections to the City of Baltimore.

Frederick Douglass lived in Fells Point as a slave youth from 1826 to 1838. On Monday, September 3, 1838, he escaped by means of the Underground Railroad from slavery to freedom in the north.

In 1850, one year after her escape from the Eastern Shore, Harriet Tubman came to Baltimore and made her first Underground Railroad rescue, leading her niece, Kessiah Jolley, north to freedom.

Why North Avenue and Caroline Street?

North Avenue was once subjected to the restrictive housing covenants laws enacted by the City of Baltimore (e.g., Ordinance 10-510) and was an invisible, but very real, border for segregated housing within the City.


Caroline Street is the location where Douglass lived, played, wal...

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