River Hill, Columbia, Maryland Explained

River Hill
Settlement Type:Village
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Maryland
Subdivision Type2:City
Subdivision Name2:Clarksville
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1990
Named For:River Hill Farm

River Hill is the last[1] and westernmost village to be developed in the town of Columbia, Maryland, United States, though some residents maintain addresses in Clarksville. The village is home to 6,520 residents in 2,096 housing units in 2014. The area was used as a game preserve by James Rouse to entertain clients and personal hunting during the buildout of the Columbia project.[2] In 1976, County Executive Edward L. Cochran selected the 784-acre parcel owned by Howard Research and Development for an alternate location for a county landfill; a task force selected Alpha Ridge Landfill instead.[3] Residential construction started in 1990.[4] It is bounded by Maryland Route 108 and Maryland Route 32, and is centered on Trotter Road.[5] The village is divided into two neighborhoods: Pheasant Ridge and Pointers Run, with about 6,500 residents.[1]

The original plan called for the village to be connected to the rest of Columbia via an extension of Little Patuxent Parkway. In addition, a dam on the Middle Patuxent River would have created a large lake in that watershed. However, with the rise of the environmental movement, a large part of the watershed was made into a park, with approximately half of its acreage devoted to open space, which includes the 900acres of the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area.[1] In 1998, the county initiated managed deer hunting in River Hill, becoming the first time hunting was permitted in the Columbia development since the land purchases of 1963–1966.[6] River Hill is largely disconnected from the rest of the city, accessing Columbia Town Center only by roads on the periphery of the city.

The original plan called for 90acres to be devoted to apartments, but the rural neighbors wanted a lower population density.[7] The county zoning board decided upon 33acres for apartments. Consequently, River Hill has the most open space of all the villages.[4]

Etymology

River Hill is named for River Hill Farm, claimed to be one of the first plantations in Maryland to free its slaves, and demolished by the Rouse Company to build Pointer's Run.[8] River Hill consists of the communities of Pheasant Ridge and Pointer's Run. Pheasant Ridge is named after Henry Howard's (1772–1773) 195-acre slave plantation land tract patented on November 16, 1745, later inherited by John Beal Howard.[9] [10] [11]

The street names are derived from the works of Walt Whitman and James Whitcomb Riley.[1] [12]

Education

The Howard County Public School System is a shared public school system serving the village:[13]

Notable people

See also

References

External links

39.2097°N -76.9189°W

Notes and References

  1. http://riverhill.columbiavillages.org/ "River Hill Community Association"
  2. Web site: River Hill. July 13, 2014.
  3. News: The Baltimore Sun. Howard's first-choice landfill site gets a low rating from task force. 8 December 1976. Micheal J. Clark.
  4. Marx, Paul.
  5. http://www.columbiavillages.org/index.html "Map"
  6. News: Hunters prepare for managed deer hunt in Howard County. The Gettysburg Times. January 5, 1998. January 5, 2014.
  7. News: The Washington Post. Fugitives From Suburbia Protest Expansion of Columbia. R.H.Melton. June 30, 1983.
  8. Book: New City Upon a Hill. Joseph Rocco Mitchel, David L Stebenne. 145.
  9. Book: Collection Research: Land Owners & Patents, 1670–1812 ACCESSION NO. A.3.a. iii Property Owners, Land Names, & Acreage – covering Anne Arundel (Howard), Baltimore, Frederick, and Montgomery Counties.
  10. Book: The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland. Joshua Dorsey Warfield. 436.
  11. Web site: Pheasant Ridge Records. July 4, 2014.
  12. Kellner, Barbara."How the Streets of River Hill were Named ", columbiamaryland.com, accessed May 29, 2009
  13. http://www.hcpss.org "Howard County Public School System"
  14. News: The Baltimore Sun. School-boundary bitterness affects races for council Tensions remain in Columbia's River Hill 'It's very upsetting' Lancos feels impact in effort against Ulman. October 18, 2002. Larry Carson.