Oaklands (Laurel, Maryland) Explained

Oaklands, Contee
Coordinates:39.0759°N -76.8614°W
Built:1798
Architecture:Federal

Oaklands or Contee was a slave plantation owned by the Snowden family,[1] and remains as a historic home surrounded by residential development.

Description and history

The house is a three-story Federal architecture manor of brick construction,[2] [3] [4] and was built by Major Thomas Snowden and his wife Eliza Warfield from Bushy Park, Howard County. The 2000acres estate extended westward into modern Howard County. Richard Snowden inherited it from his father. His oldest daughter Anne Lousia Snowden inherited the estate and married Capt. John Contee, for whom "Contee" station of the B&O railroad was named.[5] [6]

In 1911, the estate was purchased by Charles R. Hoff and his wife who was a descendant of the Snowden family.[7]

Slavery

Overseers of this plantation in the mid-1800s were described as particularly cruel to their slaves. Dennis Simms, born in 1841, recalled such in 1937 as part of the Library of Congress Slave Narrative project. "We had to toe the mark or be flogged with a rawhide whip, and almost every day there was from two to ten thrashings given on the plantations to disobedient Negro slaves...We all hated what they called the 'nine ninety-nine', usually a flogging until fell over unconscious or begged for mercy. We stuck pretty close to the cabins after dark, for it we were caught roaming about we would be unmercifully whipped. If a slave was caught beyond the limits of the plantation where he was employed, without the company of a white person or without written permit of his master, any person who apprehended him was permitted to give him 20 lashes across the bare back...We were never allowed to congregate after work, never went to church, and could not read or write for we were kept in ignorance. We were very unhappy...(captured runaways) besides being flogged, would be branded with a hot iron on the cheek with the letter 'R'." Simms said he knew two slaves so branded.[8]

Present

The Oakland manor is surrounded by residential development. Access to the property is off of 13700 Oaklands Manor Drive.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oaklands . 25 December 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141226051249/http://mdihp.net/dsp_county.cfm?search=county&id=18227&viewer=true&updated=N&criteria1=O&criteria2=PG . December 26, 2014 . Maryland Inventory of Historic Properties . Maryland Historical Trust . March 3, 1999 .
  2. Book: Prince George's County and the Civil War: Life on the Border. Nathania A. Branch Miles . Monday M. Miles . Ryan J. Quick . 100.
  3. Book: The placenames of Maryland, their origin and meaning . Hamill Kenny Museum and Library of Maryland History, Maryland Historical Society. 1984. 67.
  4. Web site: Historic Sites and Districts Plan . June 2010 . Prince George's County, Maryland . . 25, 99 . August 15, 2021 .
  5. Book: Joshua Dorsey Warfield. The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland. 0-8063-7971-5. 363. 14767982.
  6. Book: Harriet Tubman. Tubman, Douglass, and Other Maryland Slave Narratives. Frederick Douglass. Reverend Noah Davis. Josiah Henson. James W. C. Pennington. John Thompson.
  7. Book: Colonial mansions of Maryland and Delaware . John Martin Hammond . 96.
  8. Web site: Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936 to 1938 . September 19, 1937 . Dennis . Simms . 63–64 . Library of Congress . August 25, 2021 .