Maryland

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Maryland

a state of the eastern US, on the Atlantic: divided into two unequal parts by Chesapeake Bay: mostly low-lying, with the Alleghenies in the northwest. Capital: Annapolis. Pop.: 5 508 909 (2003 est.). Area: 31 864 sq. km (12 303 sq. miles)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Maryland State Information

Phone: (410) 974-3901
www.maryland.gov


Area (sq mi):: 12406.68 (land 9773.82; water 2632.86) Population per square mile: 573.00
Population 2005: 5,600,388 State rank: 0 Population change: 2000-20005 5.70%; 1990-2000 10.80% Population 2000: 5,296,486 (White 62.10%; Black or African American 27.90%; Hispanic or Latino 4.30%; Asian 4.00%; Other 4.10%). Foreign born: 9.80%. Median age: 36.00
Income 2000: per capita $25,614; median household $52,868; Population below poverty level: 8.50% Personal per capita income (2000-2003): $34,257-$37,446
Unemployment (2004): 4.30% Unemployment change (from 2000): 0.70% Median travel time to work: 31.20 minutes Working outside county of residence: 46.50%

List of Maryland counties:

  • Allegany County
  • Anne Arundel County
  • Baltimore (Independent City)
  • Baltimore County
  • Calvert County
  • Caroline County
  • Carroll County
  • Cecil County
  • Charles County
  • Dorchester County
  • Frederick County
  • Garrett County
  • Harford County
  • Howard County
  • Kent County
  • Montgomery County
  • Prince George's County
  • Queen Anne's County
  • Saint Mary's County
  • Somerset County
  • Talbot County
  • Washington County
  • Wicomico County
  • Worcester County
  • Counties USA: A Directory of United States Counties, 3rd Edition. © 2006 by Omnigraphics, Inc.

    Maryland Parks

    Parks Directory of the United States, 5th Edition. © 2007 by Omnigraphics, Inc.

    Maryland

    Seventh state; adopted the U.S. Constitution on April 28, 1788

    State capital: Annapolis Nicknames: The Old Line State; Free State State motto: Fatti maschii, parole femine (Latin “Strong deeds, gentle words”) State bird: Baltimore oriole (Icterus galbula) State boat: Skipjack State cat: Calico State crustacean: Maryland blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) State dinosaur: Astrodon johnstoni State dog: Chesapeake Bay retriever State drink: Milk State fish: Rockfish (Morone saxatilis) State flower: Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta) State folk dance: Square dance State fossil shell: Ecphora gardnerae gardnerae State gem: Patuxent river stone State horse: Thoroughbred State insect: Baltimore checkerspot butterfly (Euphydryas phaeton) State reptile: Diamondback terrapin turtle (Malaclemys terrapin) State song: “Maryland, My Maryland” State sport: Jousting State team sport: Lacrosse State summer theater: Olney Theatre (Montgomery County) State theater: Center State (Baltimore) State tree: White oak (Quercus alba)

    More about state symbols at:

    www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/01glance/html/symbols/00list.html
    http://www.mdkidspage.org/StateSymbols.htm

    SOURCES:

    AmerBkDays-2000, p. 324
    AnnivHol-2000, p. 70

    STATE OFFICES:

    State web site:
    www.maryland.gov

    Office of the Governor
    State House
    100 State Cir
    Annapolis, MD 21401
    410-974-3901
    fax: 410-974-3275
    www.gov.state.md.us

    Secretary of State
    16 Francis St
    Jeffery Bldg 1st Fl
    Annapolis, MD 21401
    410-974-5521
    fax: 410-974-5190
    www.sos.state.md.us

    State Archives
    350 Rowe Blvd
    Annapolis, MD 21401
    410-260-6400
    fax: 410-974-2525
    www.mdarchives.state.md.us

    Legal Holidays:

    Day after ThanksgivingNov 25, 2011; Nov 23, 2012; Nov 29, 2013; Nov 28, 2014; Nov 27, 2015; Nov 25, 2016; Nov 24, 2017; Nov 23, 2018; Nov 29, 2019; Nov 27, 2020; Nov 26, 2021; Nov 25, 2022; Nov 24, 2023
    Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary, Fourth Edition. © 2010 by Omnigraphics, Inc.
    The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

    Maryland

     

    a state on the Atlantic coast of the USA, on both shores of Chesapeake Bay. Area, 27, 400 sq km. Population, 3.9 million; urban population, 76.6 percent of the total (1970). The capital is Annapolis, and the largest city and principal port is Baltimore.

    The eastern part of Maryland is a coastal lowland. The central part is occupied by the Piedmont Plateau (maximum elevation, 400 m), and the western region, by the Appalachians (maximum elevation, 1, 024 m). The climate is temperate, mild, and humid. The average January temperature is 2°-3°C, and the average July temperature, 25°-27°C. The annual precipitation is more than 1, 000 mm. There are hardwood forests on the slopes of the Appalachian Mountains.

    The principal branch of the economy is industry, which employed more than 20 percent of the labor force in 1970. Maryland’s industry relies mainly on imported raw materials and is concentrated in Baltimore and its suburbs. The leading branch of industry is ferrous metallurgy. The Bethlehem Steel Corporation’s plant in Sparrows Point (near Baltimore) is one of the largest steel plants in the USA. Other important industries are machine building (shipbuilding), radio electronics, aircraft and missiles, chemicals, oil refining, food processing (primarily canning of vegetables and fish), and the garment industry, as well as the manufacture of large metal structural components. As of 1972, the capacity of Maryland’s electric power plants was 6.1 gigawatts.

    Animal husbandry accounts for more than two-thirds of the value of commercial agricultural production. In 1971 there were 430, 000 head of cattle, including 170, 000 dairy cows, and 220, 000 pigs. Poultry farming is also well developed. Truck farming is important on the coastal lowland, primarily on the Delmarva Peninsula. Tobacco is grown in Maryland. Off the coastal areas fish, shrimp, and oysters are caught.

    V. M. GOKHMAN

    The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
    References in periodicals archive ?
    One of the Marylanders writes home miserably: "I am now in the worst part of the world."* General Campbell takes one look at their unit, and is shocked and sickened, and, no doubt, feels a certain sense of foreboding.
    LH: Without a doubt, an overwhelming majority of Marylanders support a fair and independent redistricting process.
    It's up to us to welcome and include everyone as Jesus did, and speak out--as Marylanders did yesterday--for justice and nondiscrimination."
    Throughout the book, however, Burnard makes better use of it as a descriptive attribute of identity much like "settler" or "planter," one of several points of reference around which wealthy Marylanders defined themselves.
    The House Economic Matters Committee voted to require Marylanders who buy beer kegs to register their names and addresses so police can find them if they allow youths to drink the alcohol.
    Pro-choice Marylanders were plainly worried and came out in droves to hand out "Vote FOR Question 6" leaflets at the polls.
    Four years ago, the justices struck down a Maryland law that barred Marylanders from deducting from city or county "piggyback" taxes any income tax they paid to other states on money earned there.
    MNA's Nurses Night in Annapolis on February 18, 2019 created an opportunity for nurses to meet with their State Senators and Delegates to discuss issues affecting the nursing profession and the health of Marylanders.
    Speaking in an interview with this paper in Harper City, the chairman of Easy Town Zone#3, Mleh Woart, lauds Senator Morias for the initiatives and call on other Marylanders to emulate similar gesture.
    The Daily Record also honors leading Marylanders through eight annual awards events: Maryland's Top 100 Women, Influential Marylanders, 20 in Their Twenties, VIP List, Most Admired CEOs, Innovator of the Year, Leadership in Law and Leading Women.